The Conqueror eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 710 pages of information about The Conqueror.
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The Conqueror eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 710 pages of information about The Conqueror.

“That would not be my way of doing, sir,” said Robert.  “I’d fight the rival chieftain to his death.  Perhaps this Burr is not so real a Catiline as you think him.  Nobody has a good word for him, but I mean he may not have the courage for so dangerous an act as usurpation.”

“Courage is just the one estimable if misdirected quality possessed by Burr, and, whetted by his desperate plight, no length would daunt him.  A year or two ago he hinted to me that I had thrown away my opportunities.  Pressed, he admitted that I was a fool not to have changed the government when I could.  When I reminded him that I could only have done such a thing by turning traitor, he replied, ’Les grands ames se soucient peu des petits moraux.’  It was not worth while to reason with a man who had neither little morals nor great ones, so I merely replied that from the genius and situation of the country the thing was impracticable; and he answered, ’That depends on the estimate we form of the human passions, and of the means of influencing them.’  Burr would neither regard a scheme of usurpation as visionary,—­he is sanguine and visionary to a degree that will be his ruin,—­nor be restrained by any reluctance to occupy an infamous place in history.”

They had reached his doorstep in the Broadway.  The house was lighted.  Through the open windows of the drawing-room poured a musical torrent.  Angelica, although but sixteen, shook life and soul from the cold keys of the piano, and was already ambitious to win fame as a composer.  To-night she was playing extemporaneously, and Hamilton caught his breath.  In the music was the thunder of the hurricane he so often had described to his children, the piercing rattle of the giant castinets [sic], the roar and crash of artillery, the screaming of the trees, the furious rush of the rain.  Robert Hamilton thought it was a battlepiece, but involuntarily he lifted his hat.  As the wonderful music finished with the distant roar of the storm’s last revolutions, Hamilton turned to his cousin with the cynicism gone from his face and his eyes sparkling with pride and happiness.

“What do I care for Burr?” he exclaimed.  “Or for Jefferson?  Has any man ever had a home, a family, like mine?  Let them do their worst.  Beyond that door they cannot go.”

“Burr can put a bullet into you, sir,” said Robert Hamilton, soberly.  “And he is just the man to do it.  Jefferson is too great a coward.  For God’s sake be warned in time.”

Hamilton laughed and ran up the stoop.  His wife was in the drawing-room with Angelica, who was white and excited after the fever of composition.  Mrs. Hamilton, too, was pale, for she had heard the news.  But mettle had been bred in her, and her spirits never dropped before public misfortune.  She had altered little in the last seven years.  In spite of her seven children her figure was as slim as in her girlhood, her hair was as black, her skin retained its old union

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The Conqueror from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.