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Rivers of War: Snippet Seventy Four
Last updated: Thursday, May 12, 2005 17:53 EDT
CHAPTER 30
Monroe glanced at Houston. For the first time since hed met him, the young captain was obviously at a complete loss for words. In fact, he was almost gaping like a fish. Whatever else hed expected from Driscol, clearly enough, Houston hadnt anticipated that coldly furious tirade.
No, not tirade, Monroe cautioned himself. It was the lieutenants harsh wordsthe tone, even more than the words themselvesthat had infuriated some part of Monroe. That part of him which was Virginia gentry by birth, and whose status had grown great with time.
Yet the fact remained that Driscol had said nothing which, in substance if not with the same pitiless condemnation, Monroe hadnt heard said time and again. Hed even said as much himself.
It was indeed true, as Driscol had charged, that as governor of Virginia, Monroe had had to sentence the leaders of a slave insurrection. Would-be insurrection, to be more accurate, sinceas was usually true in such casesin-formers had revealed the slaves plans before they could set them into motion. Monroe had been astonished, at the time, at the hostility which his lenient policy had generated from most of his fellow gentlemen. Hed hung the leader Gabriel and several others, because as governor he was charged with maintaining public order and existing laws and property relations. But that had seemed enough, to him, for the purpose. To go further would have been simple crueltyyet that had been precisely what many others wanted. Why? For no better reason than Driscols very accusationtheyd been gentlemen, aggrieved by the impudence of slaves, demanding vengeance for their injured dignity.
Monroe took a deep breath, calming and dispelling that stupid, vicious, gentlemans anger. Driscols charge cut to the very soul of the nation, after all and Monroe knew it. If most men might not wrestle with the problem of slavery, the greatest of them did. George Washington had done so, in his own austere wayand, in his will, he had freed his slaves. Thomas Jefferson, in his far more volublesome might say, histrionicmanner, had done the same. Hed once concluded a denunciation of slavery with the words, I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just; that his justice cannot sleep forever.
And Madison, too, in his quiet manner. Hed already told Monroe that once he was no longer president, and could finally retire from public life, he hoped to convince Dolley to move to Ohio. So he could, at least in his own person, finally be rid of slavery.
The president hadnt had much hope of success, however. His wife Dolley was Quaker-born, not southern, and had no theoretical attachment to the peculiar institution. But she also had an improvident son, and enjoyed her wealth. And slavery was profitable.
Money. In the end, Monroe knew, it all came down to that. For him, as much as any man of his class. Nothing else, nothing more. Certainly nothing more exalted. Just the endless, well-nigh irresistible seduction of Mammon who was surely a demon.
He almost laughed, then. Leave it to Lieutenant Patrick Driscol to call a gentleman a demon worshipper, and do it to his face!
That wry thought was enough finally to bring the statesman to the helm.
Actually, Lieutenant, the secretary of state said calmly, your objections strike me as speaking well for your qualifications in this mission. Very well, in fact.
Driscols eyes narrowed, and his head turned partway from the window.
You must be joking.
Not at all. Monroe couldnt convince a man who wouldnt look at him. His years as an ambassador to France and England and Spainfailures and successes alikehad taught him that. Please, Lieutenant Driscol, will you simply listen to me?
Courtesyespecially when it came unexpectedlydid the trick. Driscol turned completely away from the window and faced him squarely. True, the mans eyes were still cold, and his slightly lowered brow could have butted a bull senseless, but . . . he was listening. And Monroe knew how to talk. Far better, if not in formal speeches, than a youngster like Houston.
All of it is a Gordian knot, Lieutenant. All threads tangled together. A republic which rests in good part on slaveryyet it is a republic. Which means, among other things, that it must respect the property of its citizens until such time as those citizens decree otherwise. Or would you have me take the power, and wield it like a despot? And if so, why do you think the end result would be better? How well did Napoleon do, after he became emperor? You served under him, I believe.
Driscols jaws tightened. So I did. I left his service ...after some time in Spain. Just butchery, that was.
Monroe nodded. The contradictions continue, on and on. The United States is also a nation coming into being by robbing the lands of other nations yet it is a nation, and one that you would see grow yourself. Why else did you come here from Europe? Did far more than that! He pointed at Driscols stump. Gave that nation your own arm.
Itll all unravel, Driscol growled. See if it doesnt.
Perhaps it might, Monroe allowed. But in what manner? Id gladly see it unravel myself, if I could be sure all the threads wouldnt be lost, the good along with the bad.
You dont unravel a Gordian knot.
Precisely. Now, finally, it was time for a smile. One of Monroes best and he was good at smiling, even if he did it rarely. A Gordian knot needs to be cut. So who better to ask than someone like you, Patrick Driscol?
After the secretary left, a few minutes laterdragged away by his aides once they found out where hed goneDriscol glared at Houston.
How in the name of creation did he talk me into this madness?
Houston had recovered his own equilibrium by now, along with his good cheer. Patrick, you cant be that iron-headed. Do you think a man has the career hes hadwith the presidency still to come, most likeif he doesnt know how to talk people into things? He placed an arm over Driscols shoulder and gave him a friendly, reassuring little shake. Think of this way. You can always console yourself with the knowledge that you were swindled by an expert.
Driscol grunted. The sound was half sour, half . . .
Not.
Its an interesting idea, Ill give it that. The core of its yours, I assume? Monroes too much the proper gentleman to have come up with it, even leaving aside his English heritage. Only a daft Irishman would think this scheme could work.
The lieutenants pale eyes moved to John Ross. Always a sergeants, those eyes, never an officers. You wont have agreed, of course.
Hesitantly, Ross shook his head.
No, of course not. So far I dont see wherehe shot Houston an apologetic glanceits fundamentally any different from whats been proposed many times before. We move across the Mississippiand you take our land.
He shook his head again, this time more firmly. Its simply not just. Its our land, and you cant even claim the right of conquest. Weve been your allies, most of the time.
Houston was a little afraid that the Cherokees bluntly stated opposition would deter Driscol. Instead, it seemed to have just the opposite effect.
Oh, its justice you want from the white man, is it? Well, its good to see the Irish have no monopoly on blithering idiocy. You might as well expect an Irishman to get justice from a Sassenach, as so many did and do. Let me explain something to you, my proud young Cherokee. Looking for justice from the mighty is the work of fools. Youd do far better to look for redress in the form of vengeance. Or havent you figured out yet thats really Houstons scheme?
Ross eyes widened.
So did Houstons.
I never
Then Sam realized what Patrick meant. At which point, his eyes widened still further.
I know the stories, Driscol continued, even if I cant cite the verses. So, tell him. Sam. Tell him what finally happened to the Trojans, in the end. His eyes swept the room. Tell all of them. Henry, too. Hes got as much right to know as any.
Everyone was staring at Houston, now. He cleared his throat. Well, its just a story . . .
Theyre all just stories, Driscol rasped. Which means ones just as good as anotherif people act by it.
Well, ah ...true enough. According to the poet Virgilhe was a Roman, not a Greeksome of the Trojans survived and fled to Italy. After many adventures. And . . . they founded Rome.
The whole story.
Sam sighed. Driscol was glaring again. He was so glad hed never been a soldier whod had to serve with Driscol as his sergeant. The man was a veritable troll!
Well, yes. And in the end, of course, the Romans conquered the Greeks. So the Trojans got their vengeance. Mind you, it took about a thousand years, and there were a lot of twists and turns.
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