The Senate adjourned a few moments
after Betty left the gallery. There was little
conversation in the cloak-room. The Senators were
very tired, and it surely was a brain of bubbles that
could indulge in comment upon the climax of the great
finished chapter of the old Republic.
North put on his hat and overcoat
at once and left the Capitol. After the close
confinement in heated and vitiated air for sixteen
hours, the thought of a cab was intolerable:
he shook his head at the old darky who owned him and
whom he never had been able to dodge during his twenty
years’ service in Washington, plunged his hands
into his overcoat pockets, and strode off with an
air of aggressive determination which amused him as
a fitting anti-climax. The darky grinned and
drove home without looking for another fare. His
Senator not only had paid him by the month for several
years, but had supported his family for the last ten.
North inhaled the pure cool air, the
delicious perfume of violet and magnolia, as Betty
had done. Once he paused and looked up at the
wooded heights surrounding the city, then down at the
Potomac and the great expanse of roofs and leaves.
The Washington Monument, the purest, coldest, most
impersonal monument on earth, looked as gray as the
sky, but its outlines were as sharp as at noonday.
North often watched it from the window of his Committee
Room; he had seen it rosy with the mists of sunset,
as dark as granite under stormy skies, as waxen as
death. Normally, it was white and pure and inspiring,
never companionable, but helpful in its cold and lofty
beauty.
“It is a monument,”
he thought, to-night, “and to more than Washington.”
He turned into Massachusetts Avenue
and strolled along, in no hurry to find himself between
walls again. He was not conscious of physical
fatigue, and experienced no longing for bed, but his
brain was tired and he enjoyed the absence of enforced
companionship and continued alertness, the cool air,
the quiet morning in her last sleep.
Betty, like all brilliant women who
love passionately, had over-imagined, in her solitude
and excitement. It is true that North had felt
the bitterness of defeat, that his mind had dwelt upon
the miserable and blasting thought that after years
of unquestioned statesmanship and leadership, of hard
work and unremitting devotion, his will had had no
weight against hysteria and delirium. But both
bitterness and the sense of failure had been dismissed
in the moment when he had, once for all, accepted
the situation; and that had been several days before.
Since then, he had shoved aside the past, and had
given his undivided thought to the present and the
future. He had uttered his “aye”
almost indifferently; it had been given to the President
days since.
Nevertheless, his brain, tired as
it was, did not wander from the great climax in his
country’s history. To that country at large
this climax meant simply a brief and arrogant chastisement
of a cruel little nation; the generals would have
been quite justified in sending their dress clothes
and golf sticks on to Havana; but North knew that
this officious “police duty” was the noisy
prologue to a new United States, possibly to the birth
of a new Constitution.
“Is this the grand finale of
the people’s rule?” he thought. “They
have screamed for the moon as they never screamed before,
and this time they have got it fairly between their
teeth. Well, it is a dead old planet; will its
decay vitiate their own blood and leave them the half-willing
prey of a Circumstance they do not dream of now?
Dewey will take the Philippines, of course. He
would be an inefficient fool if he did not, and he
is the reverse. The Spanish in Cuba will crumble
almost before the world realizes that the war has begun.
The United States will find itself sitting open-mouthed
with two huge prizes in its lap. It may, in a
fit of virtue which would convulse history, give them
back, present them, with much good advice and more
rhetoric, to their rightful owners. And it may
not. These prizes are crusted with gold; and
the stars and stripes will look so well in the breeze
above that the pride of patriotism may decide they
must remain there. And if it does—if
it does… The extremists in the Senate will grow
twenty years in one… With the bit between their
teeth and the arrogance of triumph in their blood—”
He found himself in front of his own
house. He turned slowly and looked intently for
a moment toward I Street. His face softened, then
he jerked out his latchkey, let himself in and went
directly to the library. He still had no desire
for bed, and threw himself into an easy-chair before
the andirons. But it was the first time in several
days that he had sat in a luxurious chair, and the
room was full of soft warmth. He fell asleep,
and although he seemed to awaken immediately, he could
only conclude, when the experience which followed
was over, that he had been dreaming.
He suddenly became aware that a chair
beside him was occupied, and he wheeled about sharply.
His sense of companionship was justified; a man sat
there. North stared at him, more puzzled than
surprised, endeavouring to fit the familiar face to
some name on his long list of acquaintances, and wondering
who in Washington could have given a fancy-dress ball
that night. His visitor wore his hair in a queue
and powdered, a stock of soft lawn, and a dress-coat
of plum-coloured cloth cut as in the days of the founders
of the Republic.
Although it was some moments before
North recognized his visitor, his resentment at this
unseasonable intrusion passed quickly; the personality
in the chair was so charming, so magnetic, so genial.
He was a young man, between thirty and forty, with
a long nose, a mobile mouth, dark gray-blue eyes full
of fire and humour, and a massive head. It was
a face of extraordinary power and intellect, but lit
up by a spirit so audacious and impulsive and triumphant
that it was like a leaping flame of dazzling brilliancy
in some forbidding fortress. He was smiling with
a delighted expression of good fellowship; but North
experienced a profound conviction that the man was
weighing and analyzing him, that he would weigh and
analyze everybody with whom he came in contact, and
make few mistakes.
“Who the deuce can he be?”
he thought, “and why doesn’t he speak?”
And then it occurred to him that he had not spoken,
himself. He was about to inquire with somewhat
perfunctory courtesy in what manner he could serve
his visitor, when his glance fell on the man’s
hands. He sat erect with a slight exclamation
and experienced a stiffening at the roots of his hair.
The hands under the lace ruffles were the most beautiful
that ever had been given to a man, even to as small
a man as this. They were white and strong and
delicate, with pointed fingers wide apart, and filbert
nails. North knew them well, for they were the
hands of the man whom he admired above all men in the
history of his country. But until to-night he
had seen them on canvas only, in the Treasury Department
of the United States. His feeling of terror passed,
and he sat forward eagerly.
“The little lion,” he
said caressingly, for the man before him might have
been his son, although he had been in his tomb with
a bullet in his heart for nearly a century. But
he looked so young, so restless, so indomitable, that
the years slipped out of the century, and Hamilton
once more was the most brilliant ornament of a country
which had never ceased to need him.
“Yes,” he said brightly,
“here I am, sir, and you see me at last.
This is that one moment in the lifetime of the few
when the spirit burns through the flesh and recognizes
another spirit who has lost that dear and necessary
medium. I have been with you a great deal in your
life, but you never have been able to see me until
to-night.” He gave his head an impatient
toss. “How I have wished I were alive during
the last three or four months!” he exclaimed.
“Not that I could have accomplished what you
could not, sir, but it would have been such a satisfaction
to have been able to make the effort, and then, when
I failed, to tell democracy what I thought of it.”
North smiled. All sense of the
supernatural had left him. His soul and Hamilton’s
were face to face; that was the one glorified fact.
“I have been tempted several times lately to
wish that we had your aristocratic republic,”
he said, “and that I were the head and centre
of it. I have felt a strong desire to wring the
neck of that many-headed nuisance called ‘the
people,’ and proceed as if it were where the
God of nations intended those incapable of governing
should be and remain without protest.”
“Oh, yes, you are an aristocrat.
That is the reason I have enjoyed the society of your
mind all these years. You were so like me in many
ways when you were my age, and since then I seem to
have grown older with you. I died so young.
But in you, in the last twenty years, I seem to have
lived on. You have built an iron wall all round
those terrible fires of your youth, and roofed it
over. It is only now and then that a panel melts
and the flame leaps out; and the panel is so quickly
replaced! I too should have conquered myself like
that and made fewer and fewer mistakes.”
“God knows what I might not
have been able to do for my country. I have been
mad to leap into the arena often enough.”
“You are not dead. No man
is, whose inspiration lives on. More than one
of us would be of shorter stature and shorter gait
if we never had had your accomplishment to ponder
over. And as to what the nation would have been
without you—”
“Yes!” cried Hamilton.
“Yes! How can any man of ability submit
to death without protest, shrug his shoulders cynically,
and say that no man’s disappearance causes more
than a whirl of bubbles on the surface, that the world
goes on its old gait undisturbed, and does as well
with the new as the old? Look at Great Britain.
She hasn’t a single great man in all her eleven
million square miles to lead her. That is answer
enough to a theory which some men are sincere enough
in believing. This country always has needed
great leaders, and sometimes she has had them and
sometimes not. The time is coming when she will
need them as she has not done since the days when three
or four of us set her on her feet.”
North stood up suddenly and looked
down on Hamilton. “What are we coming to?”
he asked abruptly. “Monarchy?”
The guest tapped the toe of his little
slipper with the tips of his beautiful fingers.
He laughed gayly. “I can see only a little
farther ahead than your own far-penetrating brain,
sir. What do you think?”
“As I walked home tonight, the
situation possessed my mind, which by some process
of its own seemed to develop link after link in coming
events. It seemed to me that I saw a thoroughly
disorganized people, unthinkingly but ruthlessly thrusting
aside all ideals, and— consequently—in
time—ready for anything.”
Hamilton nodded, “If they had
begun with my ideal, they would have remained there.
Now they will leap far behind that—when
there is a strong enough man down there in the White
House. Certain radical changes, departures from
their traditions and those of their fathers, will
school them for greater changes still. In some
great critical moment when a dictator seems necessary
they will shrug their shoulders and say, ‘Why
not?’”
“I believe you are right, but
I doubt if it comes in my time.”
Hamilton shook his head. “Every
state in Europe has its upper lip curled back above
its teeth, and who knows, when the leashes snap, what
our fate will be, now that we have practically abandoned
our policy of non-interference in the affairs of the
Eastern Hemisphere? If all Europe is at somebody’s
throat in the next five years, we shall not escape;
be sure of that. Then will be the great man’s
opportunity. You always have despised the office
of President. Work for it from this day.
The reaction from this madness will help you.
Democrats as well as Republicans will turn to you
as the one man worthy of the confidence of the entire
country.”
“Not if they guessed that I
meditated treason, sir. Nor should I. I agree
with you that your ideal was the best, but there is
nothing for me to do but to make the best of the one
I’ve inherited. If I am aristocratic in
my preferences, I am also a pretty thoroughgoing American.”
“Yes, yes, I know, sir.
You never will meditate what, if premeditated, would
be treason. But when the great moment comes, when
your patriotism and your statesmanship force you to
admit that if the country is to be saved it must be
rescued from the people, and that you alone can rescue
it, then you will tear the Constitution down its middle.
This country is past amendments. It must begin
over again. And the whole great change must come
from one man. The people never could be got to
vote for an aristocratic republic. They must be
stunned into accepting a monarchy. After the
monarchy, then the real, the great Republic.”
The two men looked long into each
other’s eyes. Then North said,—
“I repeat that I never should
work nor scheme for the position that such a change
might bring me. Nevertheless, believing, as I
do, that we are on the threshold of a new and entirely
different era in this country, if the time should
come when I felt that I, as its most highly trained
servant, could best serve the United States by taking
her destinies entirely into my own hands, I should
do so without an instant’s hesitation.
I have done all I could to preserve the old order
for them, and they have called me traitor and gone
their own way. Now let them take the consequences.”
Hamilton set his mobile lips in a
hard line. His eyes looked like steel. “Yes,”
he said harshly, “let them take the consequences.
They had their day, they have gone mad with democracy,
let them now die of their own poison. The greatest
Republic the world ever will have known is only in
the ante-room of its real history.” He stood
up suddenly and held out his hand. “Good-bye,
sir,” he said. “We may or may not
meet again before you too are forced to abandon your
work. But I often shall be close to you, and
I believe, I firmly believe, that you will do exactly
as I should do if I stood on solid ground to-day.”
North took the exquisite hand that
had written the greatest state papers of the century,
and looked wonderingly at its white beauty. It
suddenly gave him the grip of an iron vise. North
returned the pressure. Then the strong hand melted
from his, and he stood alone.
Exactly in what the transition from
sleep to waking consisted, North was not able to define.
There was a brief sense of change, including a lifting
of heavy eyelids. Technically he awoke. But
he was standing on the hearthrug. And his right
hand ached.
He shrugged his shoulders.
“What difference does it make
whether he appeared to my waking eyes or passed through
my sleeping brain and sat down with my soul?”
He plunged his hands into his pockets
and stood thinking for many minutes. He said,
half aloud, finally,—
“Not in my time, perhaps.
But it will come, it will come.”