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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Her Christmas at the Hermitage, by
-Helen Topping Miller
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Her Christmas at the Hermitage
- A Tale About Rachel and Andrew Jackson
-
-Author: Helen Topping Miller
-
-Release Date: July 6, 2021 [eBook #65782]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Tim Lindell, Stephen Hutcheson, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
- produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
- Digital Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HER CHRISTMAS AT THE
-HERMITAGE ***
-
-
-
-
-
- HER CHRISTMAS
- AT THE
- HERMITAGE
-
-
- A Tale about Rachel and Andrew Jackson
-
- BY
- HELEN TOPPING MILLER
-
-
- LONGMANS, GREEN AND COMPANY
- NEW YORK · LONDON · TORONTO
- 1955
-
- LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO., INC.
- 55 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK 3
-
- LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO. Ltd.
- 6 & 7 CLIFFORD STREET, LONDON W 1
-
- LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.
- 20 CRANFIELD ROAD, TORONTO 16
-
- HER CHRISTMAS AT THE HERMITAGE
-
- COPYRIGHT · 1955
- BY LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO., INC.
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THE RIGHT TO REPRODUCE THIS BOOK, OR ANY
- PORTION THEREOF, IN ANY FORM
-
- PUBLISHED SIMULTANEOUSLY IN THE DOMINION OF CANADA BY
- LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO., TORONTO
-
- FIRST EDITION
-
- LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER 55-9896
-
- Printed in the United States of America
-
-
-
-
- HER CHRISTMAS
- AT THE HERMITAGE
-
-
-
-
- 1
-
-
-Hannah was fat and her knees were getting stiff. When she had a chance
-to rest on the well-polished stool before the fireplace, it was a
-groaning misery for her to get up again. Her head, wrapped in a starched
-white turban, thrust forward followed by a lunge of her shoulders till
-finally her legs could be persuaded to lift her erect. But once on foot
-she glared at the black women who giggled in corners, and at toothless
-old Moll. Moll had come all the way from Virginia. She remembered the
-long terrifying journey down the river to the Cumberland, the Indians,
-the hardships. She was privileged. She had no work to do now.
-
-“You black trash better stir your stumps,” Hannah snapped, “Heap of
-company comin’. You, Betty, you put more sage in that dressin’. I raised
-them turkeys. Ain’t goin’ to have ’em ruint. Mis’ Jackson, she like her
-turkey seasoned high.”
-
-Betty, narrow-faced and thin-lipped, gave an irritated shrug. But she
-did not look about for sympathetic support from the others, from the
-heckling tyranny of old Hannah, knowing that it would be nonexistent.
-Betty was a pariah on the plantation, holding her place only because she
-was the best cook in the county. Last year she had been sent back from
-Pensacola for rebellious behavior. It was whispered that she had been
-ordered whipped by General Jackson, had escaped that bitter disgrace
-because the General’s lady had a heart as soft as butter. No other house
-servant at the Hermitage had ever been ordered whipped and the stigma of
-her disgrace lay now over Betty’s peaked brows, her bitter mouth. Nobody
-ever talked to her, they all shied away from her aura of wickedness. All
-but Emily Donelson, Rachel Jackson’s favorite niece.
-
-“You let Betty alone,” Emily ordered now, looking up from counting out
-silver on a long table. “Dilsey, you see that Simmy rubs all these
-spoons with fuller’s earth and soda. Let’s see—I count fifty-two.
-There’ll be Hutchingses and Hayses, Eastins, Donelsons—we’ll have to set
-two tables and the children may have to wait. Has Sary got the napkins
-ironed good and stiff?”
-
-“Sary ironin’ in the washhouse now, Young Miss. She just yelled for Goby
-fetch her more charcoal to hot her irons up good.”
-
-“Hannah, you come along with me while I ask aunt Rachel to unlock the
-press. We’ll need all the long tablecloths and they’ll have to be
-pressed. I’ll need four more spoons. These are those lovely French ones
-uncle Jackson brought from New Orleans. You tell Simmy to be mighty
-careful with them, Dilsey. Come along, Hannah. People may begin coming
-in today. There’s a lot to do.”
-
-“Young Master Jack, he comin’?” asked Hannah boldly, grinning at the
-bright flush that warmed the young girl’s face.
-
-Emily, fifteen, imperiously lovely, red-haired, shook her head sadly.
-“Uncle Jackson won’t let him come. I think it’s mean. He’s making Jack
-stay on in that old law school when he wants to be at home for
-Christmas.”
-
-“Learnin’,” commented Hannah. “It mighty fine. Do Mis’ Rachel read to me
-outen her Bible, glory just shine around. And when the General spout big
-words out of books I gits shivers up my back.”
-
-Emily hurried along the bricked way that set the kitchen apart from the
-big house. The wind was fresh and keen off the Tennessee hills and she
-drew her shawl close around her slender shoulders. In the house huge
-wood fires burned in three fireplaces but the hall where the curving
-stairs came down was chilly. She opened the dining room door and slipped
-inside quickly.
-
-Rachel Jackson, with a Negro woman helping and a half-grown boy up on a
-stool, was getting china down from a high corner cupboard.
-
-Aunt Rachel was getting heavy, Emily noted, and her breath quick and
-short. She gasped occasionally as she bent over the table, counting the
-plates the Negress set down, laughing a little as she straightened and
-drew a long breath.
-
-“Law, I must be getting old, Emily. I get so short-winded every time I
-exert myself the least bit. I declare these china plates are still the
-prettiest ones I’ve got. Not a nick in one of them. That’s because I’ve
-always washed them myself. These came all the way from Pittsburgh by
-boat. My gracious, that was twenty-seven years ago! Brother Samuel went
-all the way up into Kentucky some place with the wagon to meet the boat
-and bring the goods to Nashville to your uncle Jackson’s store. Indians
-were everywhere too, those days. I was so nervous I couldn’t sleep till
-Brother Sam got back and my husband too—he was away off to Philadelphia.
-Sam was gone forty six days and my husband gone for two months.”
-
-“You’ve been alone so much, aunt Rachel. If ever I get a husband I won’t
-let him leave me for even one day.”
-
-Rachel let her breath out slowly. There was that little pain again, that
-came sometimes. She used Magic Sanitive Salve faithfully as her husband
-directed but it didn’t seem to do much good.
-
-“When you get a husband he’ll go where duty calls him and you won’t be
-able to hold him back any more than any other woman. But it does look as
-though duty called Andrew Jackson more than most men and into more
-dangerous places. I declare I still like these old plates best of all.
-Maybe it’s because they were the first nice things ever I owned.”
-
-“Uncle Jackson likes the dangerous places,” Emily said. “He wouldn’t
-have missed all that Indian fighting and defeating the British at New
-Orleans for anything.”
-
-Rachel pursed her lips. “He didn’t like that business of being governor
-of Florida any better than I did. Thank the Lord we got away from that
-place! So hot there in Pensacola and all that babble-gabble around you,
-all Spanish so you couldn’t tell if they were calling you names or not.
-I was mighty thankful to turn my face back towards Tennessee and poor
-little Andy was sick every minute we were there.”
-
-“It was the mosquitoes,” declared Andrew Jackson, Junior, from his high
-perch on the stool. “They poisoned me. I can’t help it if my hide is
-thin. And all that pepper in the victuals—onions too, and I never could
-bear onions. What else do you want from up here, Mama? Nothing left but
-soup tureens and teapots.”
-
-“We’ll need two tureens. Your Papa thinks he hasn’t had anything to eat
-unless he has soup. Count those plates again, will you, Emily? My head’s
-all in a swivet. As many crowds of people as I’ve fed on this place
-you’d think I’d get used to it but I always forget something.”
-
-Hannah came in then for the tablecloths that Sary would press. Little
-Negroes would hold the corners and edges high so that they would not
-touch the floor and when the five-yard lengths of damask were glistening
-smooth they would be carried in ceremoniously and spread over a spare
-bed till Christmas morning.
-
-Rachel Jackson liked to be proud of her table, and this was Christmas,
-the first Christmas that she had had her husband at home with her for
-more years than she liked to remember. She walked through the rooms of
-her beautiful, new brick house trying not to feel too sinfully proud.
-Her new, lovely Hermitage, built under the huge trees exactly where she
-had wished it to be looked out upon the fields of the plantation through
-windows that in the parlors were curtained with lace.
-
-Upstairs and in her own big bedroom below were the fine French beds the
-General had bought in New Orleans. Seven crates of beautiful furniture
-on which the freight bill alone had been two hundred and seventy-three
-dollars. Her own bed was elegantly fluted, of mahogany, with high posts,
-a mosquito canopy of the finest muslin and a knotted Marseilles
-counterpane.
-
-There was the new sideboard in the dining room too, and in the cellar
-gallons of the best brandy, old Madeira, claret and porter, bottles of
-bitters in green glass and boxes of candied fruit. The turkeys and
-chickens old Hannah had raised so faithfully were fat, and five turkeys
-were being readied for roasting now in the kitchen. Rachel paused at a
-south window and looked out across the wide lawn, a bit bleak now that
-the trees were bare and all the flowers of her garden brown and dead
-from frost. The pillared portico made her heart expand with pride.
-
-A far cry, this palace of a house from the old log blockhouse in which
-they had lived for so many years, where she had lain alone for so many
-desolate nights, thinking of that audacious firebrand of a man she had
-married, that Andrew Jackson who had spent so much of a long life
-fighting enemies, red and white. Fighting the Creek and the Cherokee,
-fighting the British. Fighting Jesse Benton and young Charles Dickinson,
-who had died after that grim, dreadful duel in Kentucky.
-
-Rachel shut her lips tight, remembering. All for her, that hot-headed
-encounter. All for her the bullet Andrew Jackson still carried so
-dangerously near to his heart that it could not be removed. Jesse
-Benton’s bullet had shattered the General’s arm too, so that he had
-carried the arm in a sling through all the Indian war in Alabama. The
-arm still ached at night when a cold wind blew.
-
-A fighting man whose eyes too quickly kindled to blue lightnings, whose
-reddish hair seemed to burn with some flame within him that was never
-cooled. Her own gentle counsel could damper it down now and then, but
-only briefly. Given the provocation, his temper leaped alive like a
-drawn sword and he became then, his wife was thinking sadly, as
-dangerous and unpredictable as one of those wild stallions that snorted
-and charged about the Hermitage meadows.
-
-The amazing contradiction about him was that in his letters, in their
-quiet conversations in the big bright bedroom, he voiced only one
-passionate desire: to be able to live on here quietly for the rest of
-his days in this home he had built. He yearned, so he had written her so
-many times, to be free of wars and politics, answerable to no one but
-the call of his heart. Not to Madison nor Monroe nor any other
-president. Not to Sam Houston nor Governor Billy Carroll of Tennessee,
-nor even to Major John Eaton who seemed, in Rachel’s mind, to be forever
-grooming Andrew Jackson for some job or other, always important, always
-controversial and inevitably always far from the Hermitage.
-
-She saw them now, riding up the drive from the muddy road, the General
-and John Eaton. Her husband sat very tall and a little gaunt on the
-saddle and his gray horse seemed always to sense the mood of his master
-and hold his head very high. Andrew Jackson’s hair, graying a little
-now, blew wildly over his ears under his beaver hat. His high collar and
-stock hid the thinness of his throat.
-
- * * * * * * * *
-
-He had been such a skinny lad, Rachel Jackson remembered, when John
-Overton had brought him, a stripling lawyer, to her mother’s house on
-the Cumberland, in that spring of 1789. And now it was 1823! Where had
-the years gone? The Widow Donelson had taken him in, and there in the
-house had been Rachel, Rachel Robards then, reconciled briefly to her
-violent, unpredictable husband, Lewis Robards, after a separation that
-had seen Rachel vilified, discarded, and abused.
-
-The widow had tried hard to put some meat on that lanky young lawyer’s
-frame, but now, thirty-four years and four wars later, he was still too
-thin, still coughed too much and was weakened by digestive distresses
-from living too long on parched corn and other scanty fare.
-
-Philip, the horse handler, came running out to take the bridles of the
-mounts and even through the windowpanes Rachel could hear her husband
-giving Philip orders in his high, arresting voice, the same voice that
-had commanded the defeat of General Pakenham at New Orleans, shouted
-defiance at Red Feather at Tohopeka and the Spanish governor at
-Pensacola.
-
-Now he came shouting into the house. “Mrs. Jackson! Mrs. Jackson! Where
-are you?”
-
-Never had they called each other by their Christian names. In letters
-they wrote, “My dearest.” At home he was the General, to her, or simply
-Husband. She was Mrs. Jackson, the woman he honored, adored, had fought
-for and would defend fiercely till her last breath.
-
-“Here, Husband!” She hurried out into the hall where the two men were
-handing their damp cloaks to a servant. “Mr. Eaton, you are welcome as
-always here. Come in to the fire.”
-
-“Feels like snow.” John Eaton slapped his gloves against his knee, shook
-moisture from his high-crowned hat. “Misting now, but it’s getting
-colder. Miss Emily,”—he made a courtly bow as they entered the warm
-parlor—“you grow more beautiful every day. How any young man can stay
-away from you is a puzzle in my mind.”
-
-Emily made her curtsy. “You flatter me, sir.”
-
-“All our girls are pretty,” stated the General, moving a chair near to
-the fire for his wife. “It’s the air here on this hill. We keep ’em here
-as long as we can, then sometimes we have to let ’em go home to their
-mothers, but not for long. Be seated, Mrs. Jackson. You look weary, my
-dear.”
-
-“She is tired,” Emily said. “She’s been putting out dishes and silver
-all day, attending to the Christmas dinner. Uncle Jackson,” she began
-timidly, “if Jack should ride home for Christmas—”
-
-“He won’t,” declared the General testily, getting down his long clay
-pipe from the mantelpiece. “He won’t because I wrote and gave him his
-orders not to come. I told him that the important thing for him now is
-to finish his schooling and get admitted to the bar. I’ve raised that
-boy.” He filled the pipe and handed it to Eaton. “You smoke that, John.
-I like my old corncob best. I raised that boy, Andrew Jackson Donelson.
-Going to make a gentleman and a scholar out of him. He’ll have the
-chance I never had, he and young Andy.”
-
-“Jack Donelson is your nephew, Mrs. Jackson?” Eaton drew on the pipe to
-which Emily held a spill she had lighted at the fire.
-
-“My brother’s son. But we’ve had him here with us since he was four
-years old. Andy, our adopted son, is my brother Severn’s boy. We took
-him four days after he was born.”
-
-“Twins,” remarked the General. “Severn’s wife was mighty frail and one
-baby was all she could nurse. So we took Andy off her hands. All named
-after me,” he grinned, “a whole covey of ’em, Donelsons, Hutchingses and
-Hayeses.”
-
-“I must see about supper, Mr. Jackson. You gentlemen will excuse me?”
-Rachel got up too quickly and the little pain caught at her and she put
-a quick hand to her breast.
-
-“I’ll go, aunt Rachel, you sit still and rest,” Emily volunteered
-quickly.
-
-“I want her to sit here and listen to my news,” said the General,
-thumbing down his pipe. “You too, Emily. Let the women attend to the
-supper. About a dozen of ’em around, ought to be able to manage to feed
-us.”
-
-Rachel had turned pale. “Oh, no!” she cried. “Not Pensacola again! Not
-another war. I can’t bear it. You said we’d stay at home. Mr. Jackson,
-you swore we’d live here in peace in our new Hermitage.” Distress
-sharpened her voice, her eyes dimmed, and she dabbed at them nervously
-with a corner of her white shawl.
-
-“Compose yourself, my dear,” comforted her husband. “This news I’ve
-brought is exciting. You’ll be pleased. You’re being offered an
-opportunity to go where few women have ever gone—American women,
-anyway.”
-
-“But I don’t want to go anywhere,” Rachel almost wailed. “I’ve been to
-Kentucky and Florida and Washington and Natchez and New Orleans and I
-hated all those places. I just want to stay in my home and I want you to
-stay in it with me. Mr. Eaton, we’ve been separated more than we have
-been together all these years we’ve been married, Mr. Jackson and I, and
-now were both getting old.”
-
-“Old? You call yourself old, dear lady?” protested Eaton. “Why, the best
-part of your life is ahead of you.”
-
-“It could be,” she sighed, pressing her hands together, strong,
-sun-browned hands that had helped to steer a heavy boat down the Ohio
-River, that had gripped the rein on many a weary ride through the
-wilderness, poured lead into bullet molds when savage enemies howled
-outside the stockades, spun thread, planted rosebushes, tenderly
-comforted many a child. “It could be,” she repeated, “if only I could
-have those years in my home with my husband.”
-
-The General’s eyes twinkled. He rapped out his pipe on an andiron,
-brushed tobacco from his tight, snuff-colored trousers.
-
-“I’m disappointed in you, my dear,” he bantered. “Here I bring you news
-that you could have a chance to cross an ocean and see a new, strange,
-fascinating world, and you don’t even want to hear about it.”
-
-“The ocean?” gasped Emily. “Oh, no, uncle Jackson!”
-
-Rachel’s face had drained gray. She pressed both hands hard on her chest
-where the pain sprang alive, shutting off her breath, making her ears
-throb. Eaton half rose from his chair, looking at her uneasily.
-
-“Stop teasing her, General,” he warned. “Tell her about President
-Monroe’s magnificent offer—which you don’t mean to accept.”
-
-Andrew Jackson took a pose on the hearth, a boyish grin lightening his
-long face. Emily drew a breath of relief, laid her hand against Rachel’s
-cold cheek.
-
-“It’s all right. Uncle Jackson is just having one of his jokes.”
-
-Rachel relaxed a little. “I don’t like jokes,” she sighed. “Not when
-they scare me half to death.”
-
-“But this is a splendid joke, my dear,” insisted her husband. “John and
-I laughed about it all the way home—especially we laughed at what
-Secretary Adams said about it. President Monroe has offered to send me
-as ambassador to Russia.”
-
-“Russia!” both women cried at once.
-
-“But you aren’t going, uncle Jackson?” Emily asked when the silence had
-stretched too long. “Why, it’s thousands and thousands of miles away!
-They have wolves there and snow all the year—I read it in a book.”
-
-Rachel had never had time to read many books. There had always been too
-much to do. Russia was as vague, as far, and as uncivilized as China or
-Africa in her gentle mind. She sat rigidly waiting.
-
-“I am not going to Russia,” announced the General finally.
-
-“What was it Secretary Adams said?” Emily asked.
-
-Jackson’s laughter pealed. “When the idea was talked about in Washington
-and Monroe proposed to the cabinet to send me over there—to get me out
-of the country, my love. That’s his motive and I’m not at all deceived
-by the flattering language of the letter of invitation. I know what
-James Monroe had in mind. Your husband is a disturbing influence in
-these United States. Mrs. Jackson,”—he leaned over and gave her a tweak
-on her soft arm—“your husband stirs up fights.”
-
-“Marches an army in Florida and sets the governor back on his haunches,”
-put in Eaton. “Beats a British army with a little handful of farmers and
-hunters. And pirates! A dangerous man, Mrs. Jackson. He licked the
-Creeks and the Cherokee and made this southwest safe to live in. And
-there are some people who are talking around among themselves that
-Andrew Jackson ought to be President of the United States.”
-
-“Well, he can’t be!” said Rachel firmly. “I won’t hear of it. He’s not
-strong nor well, you know that, John Eaton. He can’t even eat plain
-victuals half the time, and he coughs at night no matter how much salve
-I rub on his chest. Besides,”—she got to her feet, smoothing out her
-black silk skirt—“I don’t want to live in any palace—anywhere! Not in
-Russia. Not in Washington. I’d rather be a doorkeeper in the house of
-the Lord than to live in the finest palace ever was.”
-
-“You haven’t told us what Secretary Adams said,” persisted Emily.
-
-“It was really a compliment,” Eaton told them, “though I doubt if Adams
-intended it that way. He listened to the president’s proposal and
-snorted. He snorts very eloquently, the little man. ‘Send Andrew Jackson
-to represent this country in the court of the Czar,’ said he, ‘and that
-would be the end of peace with Russia!’”
-
-The girl’s laughter rippled. She flew across the room and kissed the
-General’s chin. “You quarrelsome old thing! What a pity they don’t know
-you as we know you, that soft heart you carry around under all those
-medals—and bristles!”
-
-He kissed her, then pushed her away, his mouth set firmly. “Flattery
-will get you nothing, young woman! I am not going to let Jack Donelson
-come home for Christmas. A long trip for a few days’ visit. He spends
-too much now, the young rascal. All these youngsters,” he told Eaton,
-“think the old man is made of money. Thirteen-cent cotton and shippers
-take more than half of that. Sell a fine colt and you get less than the
-worth of the hay to raise him.”
-
-“You shouldn’t have bought all that expensive furniture, Mr. Jackson,”
-worried Rachel. “We could have got along with what we had.”
-
-“We lived in a log blockhouse then. Haven’t you earned a decent bed to
-sleep in, my dear, after thirty-two years of putting up with me?”
-
-“But if the children need the money—” Rachel always spoke of her
-numerous nieces and nephews who considered the Hermitage their part-time
-home as “the children.”
-
-“They just think they need it. Including you, my spoiled pet.” He gave
-Emily a pinch, ignoring her downcast face. “All spoiled, the whole pack
-of you. Young Andy worst of all. Where is that scalawag, anyway? And
-where’s supper? Are we supposed to fast till Christmas? I’ve smelled
-cakes baking around this place for days and get set down to boiled meat
-and hominy. Right now I could eat a hog, tail, squeal, and all.”
-
-“I’ll see if it’s ready, Uncle.” Emily hurried out.
-
-The General looked sharply at his wife. “Don’t encourage this
-foolishness, my dear! That boy has got to buckle down to his law. Andy
-too, as soon as he’s old enough.”
-
-“Those two—Miss Emily and your nephew—are in love?” asked Eaton.
-
-“I hope not. After all, they are first cousins.”
-
-Rachel said nothing. Her gentle face, with the round, firm chin, the
-dark eyes that held too often a brooding look under arched brows, grew
-thoughtful. Young love could be so beautiful! Oh, she knew! She knew!
-Never through all these years of struggle and anxiety and separation had
-her own love faltered for this stormy, dynamic, explosive man who was
-her husband. His word was law, but even a just law could be harsh when
-it bruised what was young and sweet and trusting.
-
-She went quietly out of the room and John Eaton watched her go, saw a
-troubled look darken the General’s long face. A face hewn from a hickory
-log, General Coffee had said once, at New Orleans. Only the eyes could
-tolerate pain and now they darkened with hurt, following Rachel.
-
-“A sorrow—a great sorrow that she has no children of her own,” he said.
-“All her family—prolific all of them. Her mother bore ten children but
-her daughter has none. So she has to mother a whole tribe and suffer
-every small disappointment with them. These lads—Andrew Jackson
-Donelson, young Andy and Andrew Hutchings are sons to her—to me too. The
-problem is that I have to hurt her with my firmness to make men out of
-them. Too much softness in the Donelson strain. I have been blessed by
-it, but now I must fight against it and defeat it in those boys. It’s
-not easy to do, John, not for a man who loves his wife as I love Rachel
-Jackson.”
-
-“You did not tell all your news, General.”
-
-Andrew Jackson shook his head. “Let her enjoy her Christmas. We’ve had
-mighty few of them together.”
-
-A bell rang outside, and the General looked in dismay at his hands.
-“Supper’s ready and I forgot to wash. Come along with me, John. You,
-George!” He raised his voice in a shout. “Come here and mend this fire.
-Feels like snow!”
-
-
-
-
- 2
-
-
-Her room under the eaves of the Hermitage was big and bright. The walls
-were covered with paper in a small, gay design; there were ruffled
-curtains at the windows. They looked down on the meadow where even on
-this chilly morning Andrew Jackson’s mares and colts picked at the
-frosty grass, lifting their heads now and then to watch for Philip to
-come trudging down from the stables to pour buckets of water and grain
-into the feeding troughs.
-
-Later, Emily knew, every animal would be led back to the barns to be
-brushed and polished ready to meet the General’s critical eye.
-
-The room was chilly. She had not bothered to light the fire laid on the
-hearth. She had delayed too long sitting up in her warm feather bed, a
-shawl around her shoulders, reading and rereading the letter. It made
-her heart beat quickly and her cheeks burn to read it, and when she
-pressed it against her heart it seemed to glow there, warming her all
-over.
-
-He loved her! In stiff, formal, slightly legal language he had written
-it, plain to see, and the words danced before her eyes and got into her
-blood and did pirouettes there like little live things with silver bells
-on their feet. Lovely words! She kissed the letter now and then hid it
-inside her Bible that lay on the table beside the bed. What a pity that
-so much that was beautiful and wonderful must be hidden or face the
-chilly breath of adult disapproval!
-
-“If you marry your own cousin all your children will be idiots,” the
-older people said, looking sombre, so desperately certain that they were
-right. They were the elders and knew the truth as young people could not
-be assumed to know it, not having lived long enough for experience to
-lay its cold blight upon them.
-
-“I gave Andrew Jackson Donelson orders not to come home,” her uncle
-Jackson had said. The thrill in Emily’s heart was touched by panic now
-as she hurried into her clothes. Her chemise, chilly and crisp, the
-cramping stays, the long white ruffled drawers and petticoats. Her
-fingers were clumsy with cold and dread as she struggled with the
-fastenings. For Jack was coming! Already he was on the way. He must be
-riding southward on that road from Kentucky this minute, school left
-behind him—forever, the letter said.
-
-He knew where he was needed, he had written. Aunt Jackson needed him. So
-would the General.
-
-“Circumstances have arisen that will make it needful for our uncle to
-have assistance,” ran the letter. “So I shall return to offer my aid and
-I hope at that time that it will be proper for me to make my addresses
-to your family, my dear Emily, and request your hand in marriage.
-Farewell, then, my love, till I enter the gate at the Hermitage.”
-
-There would be some kind of furious explosion of displeasure from uncle
-Jackson, she knew. He would be wrathy at being disobeyed, but her
-experience with the tempestuous old warrior led Emily to hope faintly
-that eventually he would give in. Especially if aunt Rachel should shed
-a few tears. That was his history, storming, shouting orders and
-blasting somebody with angry words, then softening instantly if he saw a
-look of hurt in Rachel Jackson’s eyes.
-
-Breakfast, when the General was away, was usually a quiet meal at the
-Hermitage. Rachel never slept very well and rose, still and determined,
-setting about the multitude of tasks before her, level-eyed and grave.
-But when Andrew Jackson was at home there was hubbub. He was always
-noisy and impatient in the mornings, eating rapidly, summoning one
-servant after another to give orders about the cattle, the horses, the
-winter plowing. Negroes hurried in, stood hat in hand listening
-obediently. There was bedlam in the dining room when Emily went down on
-this morning of Christmas Eve.
-
-“Mix some bran with the oats for those nursing mares,” uncle Jackson was
-barking at Philip.
-
-“Yes, sah, Mista Jackson. That Truxton filly, she got sore foots. You
-want me to put tar and grease on her foots, sah?”
-
-“Don’t get it too hot. You blistered all the hair off last time. Here!”
-Jackson slapped a piece of ham between the halves of a huge biscuit and
-handed it to the slave. “Eat that and get moving.”
-
-“Yes, sah. Thank you, sah.”
-
-“I need somebody around this place to take some of these chores off me,”
-grumbled the General. “You, boy!” He glared at Andrew, Junior, who was
-wolfing down a plateful of egg. “You go see to that filly’s feet. Got to
-learn. Got to learn some time.”
-
-Young Andrew’s sensitive mouth jerked and his great eyes looked uneasy.
-“It’s raining, Papa,” he protested.
-
-“It may turn to snow. It felt very raw to me when I went out to the
-dairy this morning,” Rachel put in gently.
-
-“It rained on me at Fort Mimms and Chalmette,” snapped Andrew Jackson.
-“You have ridden miles in the rain, my love—so has this fellow! What are
-you, son, a lump of salt that a little rain can dissolve you? Or are you
-a paper man cut out to dance on a string while somebody picks a banjo?”
-
-“No, Papa, I’ll go.” The boy hastily wiped his lips. “But Philip won’t
-pay any attention to me. He’ll just tell me to keep out of the way of
-that mare’s heels.”
-
-“Make him obey you! How are you going to be master of this place when
-I’m gone if you can’t win the respect of the people? I may not be here
-much longer. I never thought to live long enough to sleep under this
-roof. Put that stuff on your wrist and be sure it’s not too hot.”
-
-“You’ve been going to die before spring ever since I can remember, uncle
-Jackson,” teased Emily, when the boy had gone out.
-
-“It’s that cold he gets in his chest every time he gets wet,” Rachel
-said. “And you get it too and so does Andy.”
-
-“Let him get toughened up then,” growled the General. “You spoil all
-these young ones, my dear. Andy will have heavy responsibilities when
-I’m gone. He has to be trained to meet them. I’ve done fairly well with
-Andrew Jackson Donelson for all you women trying continually to soften
-him up. He’ll make a man.”
-
-Emily’s heart was a bit happier. Uncle Jackson did need someone to help
-him, as Jack had written. She hoped that when Jack arrived, when the
-storm of her uncle’s ire had subsided, that the General would welcome
-young Jack’s assistance. Inevitably, it was certain, the General would
-be off again on some public service or other. He protested, he fumed,
-but always, when he was convinced that the call came from the people, he
-obeyed, and Rachel would be left alone again with the burden of this big
-plantation.
-
-The slaves were willing but aunt Rachel was too soft with them, as she
-was too gentle, by the General’s standards, with the young people who
-surrounded her. She was continually protesting the overseer’s decisions,
-protecting shirkers and malcontents from punishment. She was too
-indulgent with young Andy—a spoiled boy already who, his cousin was
-convinced, was never going to learn the value of money.
-
-Rachel excused herself now and hurried out—to see that the boy was
-adequately protected from the weather, Emily suspected. She would wrap
-him in coats and scarfs and when he returned from the pasture or the
-stable he would be put to bed, his feet soaked in hot mustard water and
-a plaster of goose grease and pepper on his chest if he so much as
-sneezed. Jack would be out there, seeing to the mares, without being
-told, his sweetheart believed worshipfully. Jack would be a great help
-to aunt Rachel.
-
-“I’ll do my own room, aunt Rachel,” she called, as she went back through
-the house. “The girls have so much to do today.”
-
-In the big buttery Rachel turned the keys in her hands anxiously. “I
-declare I keep forgetting how many people you counted, Emily.”
-
-“I counted fifty-two, but with the weather so bad some of them might not
-get here. You know how awful the roads get when it rains very long. I
-wish it hadn’t rained today. I was going to have the boys cut some
-greens for me and decorate the house. There’s a big holly tree out there
-beyond the tulip grove covered with red berries.”
-
-“Send George,” her aunt suggested. “Mr. Jackson gave George his old
-oilskin coat and a pair of boots. You could put holly on the
-mantelpieces. It would look right pretty but it would dry out mighty
-quick, I’m afraid. Emily, do you reckon Mr. Jackson has any idea of
-going to Russia? My patience, that would be a terrible place to go!”
-
-“He said he had refused the appointment, aunt Rachel.”
-
-“I know. But he refused to be governor of Florida too, and first thing I
-knew here I was packing to go to Pensacola. Emily, all I ask is so
-little—just to be allowed to stay in my home with my husband and my
-family. I don’t suit proud places. Sometimes I feel that Mr. Jackson
-must be ashamed of me.”
-
-“Nonsense, aunt Rachel!” Emily gave the quivering figure a quick hug.
-“Uncle Jackson thinks you are perfect.”
-
-“I wish I wasn’t getting so fat! It shortens my breath so.”
-
-In her own room Emily quickly made her bed and hung her clothes away in
-the big wardrobe. Then she sat at the window again to read her letter.
-Words she had passed over lightly before in her happy daze now leaped
-out to trouble her. “Circumstances that have arisen,” Jack had written.
-A cold kind of prescience oppressed the girl, shot through with a
-breathless excitement, as though she had heard a trumpet blow.
-
-It had come to her that there was always about Andrew Jackson that
-atmosphere of great events impending. Always when he seemed most
-intimate, familiar and dear, there was a cloak of aloofness shutting him
-in, a remote and dedicated sort of mystery. As though even when he was
-thinking homely thoughts—a lame mare, a fire that needed replenishing—he
-was listening to some far, calling drum. As though never could he belong
-entirely to this Hermitage, this woman that he loved, the young people
-he scolded and indulged impartially. Emily was very young and a trifle
-naïve, but there was a wisdom deep in her that recognized the destiny
-that cloaked this man she loved like a garment of silver, and her young
-mind dreaded it even while it thrilled her.
-
-She remembered John Eaton’s words, that people were saying that Andrew
-Jackson should be President of the United States. She remembered, too,
-aunt Rachel’s positive declaration that this he could not be! No palaces
-for her, she had announced—but had there been a tinge of desperation in
-that declaration? Did aunt Rachel feel the pressure of destiny too, that
-remote glory that invested her man on horseback?
-
-It would be exciting, Emily was thinking, to live in that new
-president’s palace in Washington. The British had burned it in
-retaliation for the sack of Toronto by the American forces, but it had
-been rebuilt, finer than ever, she had heard, and now it was as
-important as Buckingham Palace. Aunt Rachel had no wish to be a queen in
-a palace. Only too well Emily knew that aunt Rachel would be an unhappy
-queen.
-
-“But I would love it!” she said suddenly aloud.
-
-Silks and satins, servants bowing, diplomats with medals and ribbons on
-their gleaming shirt bosoms, sentries and bands playing, her thoughts
-raced and thrilled.
-
-If only she and Jack could be guests in that palace! It was wonderful
-even to think about. She sat in a roseate dream for a chilly half hour,
-while her own fate hovered near, unfathomed. The fate that would make
-her, Emily Donelson, a young queen in a palace—and an unhappy queen!
-
-
-
-
- 3
-
-
-On Christmas Eve the servants all grew tense and garrulous with
-excitement. The field workers, freed from toil for three days, were in
-and out of their cabins, hanging around the kitchen door till Betty’s
-sharp tongue sent them packing. The rain had ended but the day was bleak
-and cloudy with the air bringing a threat of snow. But a wind rose and
-though it whined in the great chimneys and sent whorls of smoke and
-ashes drifting out into the rooms, Rachel was grateful for the wind.
-
-At least it would dry up the mud so that the rutted, marshy road out to
-the Hermitage would be passable for the carriages and wagons of the
-Christmas guests. Some who had a long way to come would arrive before
-night, and there was a frantic activity of black women airing blankets,
-ironing the stored dampness out of bed linen, making down pallets in the
-upper rooms and even in the hall. George lugged in ticks freshly stuffed
-with hay and these were beaten flat with whacking brooms before feather
-beds and quilts were spread over them.
-
-The long tables in the dining room were set with the second-best linen
-and china. The ceremonial draping with the finest cloths would wait for
-Christmas morning. In the cellar the General and black Joey counted
-bottles of Madeira, of good Jamaica rum and peach brandy, broached
-charred kegs of whisky pounding in spigots, filling jugs that would be
-set out for the holiday “dram” for every slave on the plantation.
-
-In the smokehouse Rachel directed the slicing of the heavy slabs of fat
-middling that would go, one to every cabin. There would be a chicken for
-each family too, and this year every hand on the place would be measured
-for a new pair of shoes. The shoemaker would come and stay for weeks and
-the smell of the cured hides would be heavy on the air, but at least
-every one of the more than a hundred black feet would be shod. That was
-the big worry for Rachel, shoes. In summer the field hands preferred to
-trudge behind a plow or drag a cotton sack barefooted, but in winter the
-frosty ground brought chills and lung fevers and there was an endless
-sound of coughing in the quarters and inevitably some of the people
-died.
-
-A fearful responsibility, all these black souls, but today they were all
-happy and noisy, adding to the confusion in the house by their laughter
-and singing—singing hushed whenever the voice of the master was heard
-belowstairs but begun again as soon as a door slammed on him.
-
-In her room Emily lovingly folded the Christmas gift she had knitted for
-Jack Donelson. A crimson muffler with stripes and a fringe of bright
-blue at either end. It narrowed a little in the middle where she had
-knitted a bit too tight, but she stretched it to make it even before she
-wrapped it in a square of white paper and tied it with a ribbon bow,
-sticking a tiny bunch of holly jauntily on top. She had gifts for aunt
-Rachel and uncle Jackson too, linen handkerchiefs she had hemstitched
-with neat, tiny stitches, then washed and bleached and ironed, with Sary
-standing around to keep the irons hot. She wrapped these too, along with
-the gifts for her own family, aware of the curious eyes of the two girls
-who were making an extra bed in the corner of the room. Some of the
-cousins would sleep in here, likely enough two of them with her in her
-own bed.
-
-They would giggle and whisper about their beaus half the night and ply
-her with questions that she would evade, quite certain that she was
-fooling no one. She and Jack were a family anxiety, she knew. It was all
-part of that silly old superstition that cousins should not marry. Jack
-had more brains than all his relatives put together, she was fiercely
-certain; he was the cleverest and steadiest of all the Donelson clan; he
-was almost as smart as uncle Jackson. How could a brilliant young man
-like Jack have children that were idiots?
-
-“And I’m not a stupid fool either!” she said suddenly, aloud.
-
-The women, shaking out quilts, broke into delighted laughter. “No, Miss
-Emily, you sho’ ain’t no fool,” cried the older one, “You about the
-smartest white Miss we got, savin’ Mis’ Rachel herself.”
-
-“Thank you, ’Relia. Don’t use that pillowcase. It’s got a rip in the
-seam.”
-
-“Hit the very las’ one, Miss Emily. Done use every pillowcase Mis’
-Jackson got.”
-
-“Give it to me then. I’ll mend it. We can’t have guests sleeping on
-rags.”
-
-“Not Miss Mary Eastin, no ways. She want everything mighty fine. Best we
-got ain’t none too good for Miss Mary.”
-
-“Oh, Mary will sleep with me. She always does.”
-
-“Her hair mighty pretty. Smooth and shiny as a new colt. Got a nice long
-nose too.”
-
-“We’ve all got long noses. It’s the Donelson curse. Mine’s longest of
-all. All of us but aunt Rachel. Somehow it passed her by,” sighed Emily,
-threading a needle.
-
-“Ain’t flat like mine, anyhow,” ’Relia echoed the sigh. “If the good
-Lord was to give me my dearest wish it would be to have a nice long nose
-like you got, Miss Emily.”
-
-“Ain’t nobody satisfy,” stated Becky, the other maid. “White folks all
-wantin’ hair be curly. Colored folks all putting grease on they hair,
-make it straight. You reckon we be white when we git to Heaven, Miss
-Emily?”
-
-“Law, we be angels with big white wings,” declared ’Relia. “Lord don’t
-want no black angels around, he got to make us white. I wants me a pyure
-white robe, white as Mis’ Rachel’s tablecloth. I goin’ put on my robe
-and sing praises to the Throne, day and night.”
-
-“Are you going to sing tonight, Becky—all of you? It wouldn’t be
-Christmas if you people didn’t build a big fire out there behind the
-smokehouse and all gather round and sing.”
-
-“Look a little like snow,” said Becky, peering out the window. Becky
-hated the cold. She burned more wood in her cabin than any other servant
-on the place, Emily had heard her aunt complain. From the window now she
-could see the wagon coming down the lane loaded with firewood, George
-walking beside the team, cracking his whip and shouting. Great fires
-would roar in every fireplace in the house, over the holidays. Rachel
-Jackson was nervous about fire. Someday the General was going to burn
-the Hermitage to the ground, she was always prophesying.[1]
-
-A carriageload of cousins and aunts arrived shortly after the family had
-finished dinner, and there was a confusion of greetings, band boxes and
-parcels to be carried in, shawls, bonnets and cloaks laid off to be hung
-up by maids, cold hands and feet to be warmed by the fires, the scurry
-of excited children. Then all the food had to be warmed up and brought
-in again and the guests fed.
-
-Emily hurried about, setting out plates, getting down glasses for the
-General, who insisted that everyone must have a tot of hot spiced rum to
-ward off a chill. She had little chance to slip to the front of the
-house to watch the drive from the windows, but while the company were
-eating, with Rachel hovering around and the General being the affable
-host, she did steal away to stand behind the long curtains, searching
-the approaching avenue anxiously.
-
-Dusk was beginning to gather under the great trees. The smoke from the
-many chimneys eddied and settled to the ground. A few thin snowflakes
-drifted by on the wind, then drops of rain spattered the windowpanes.
-Bad weather for a young man riding alone. So many things could happen on
-a long journey. A horse stumbling at a ford, footpads on the road lying
-in wait for a solitary traveler, even the danger from Indians was not
-ended.
-
-She was growing more tense with anxiety by the minute but she must not
-betray her unease, must keep her demeanor calm and be most surprised of
-all when Jack came riding in, or her uncle would never forgive her for
-hiding her letter. She had let the curtains fall when Andrew, Junior,
-came up behind her.
-
-“Who you watching for, Emmy?”
-
-She managed a light laugh. “Anybody! I hope if more are coming tonight
-they’ll get here before dark. We’d better light the candles. It’s going
-to be a gloomy night.”
-
-“George is getting his fire going,” Andy looked from the window. “I
-suppose I’ll have to go out and help Papa dole out the Christmas Eve
-gifts all around. Looky yonder, the people are coming out with their
-cups and mugs and sacks already! You’ll have to light the candles,
-Emily. I’ve got to go out and be Young Marse Jackson.”
-
-“It’s an honor, Andy. There are a lot of Donelson boys. You were the one
-chosen.”
-
-“I know. It’s hard to live up to sometimes, ’specially when Jack’s
-around. I know he’s smarter than I am and Jack’s a fool for work and
-duty as I get reminded all the time.”
-
-“You mustn’t be jealous. After all, they did pick you to be their son
-and heir. You’ll have everything, being Andrew Jackson’s son.”
-
-“You have to admit, though, that Papa’s a hard man to follow. Came up
-from the direst kind of poverty, made it all for himself. I hear that
-too. And how he got thrown into that prison where his brother died,
-because he wouldn’t black some British officer’s boots.”
-
-“He was no older than you are now, then, Andy. He’s just trying to
-inspire you. You’d better hurry. I hear the cellar door slamming. That
-means uncle Jackson and Joey are fetching out the jugs. Oh, Heaven,
-there’s aunt Rachel out there without her cloak! I’ll get it before she
-takes a chill. Run, Andy!”
-
-Under the big trees all the Negroes on the place were gathering. George
-had persuaded the big bonfire to burn in spite of the thin, misting
-rain. Children, black and white, crowded close to it, their voices
-shrill with excitement. Little Negro boys poked sticks into the blazing
-fire, waved them smoking in air, dancing about till Betty laid about her
-with a switch, ordering the brands extinguished.
-
-“You set the young Misses’ dresses afire,” she screamed at them.
-
-On long trestles the parcels of meat were laid out and the chickens,
-tied by the feet and squawking, were brought from the chicken house and
-handed around, one hen or rooster to a family. Instantly there was a
-bedlam of screaming joy, chickens’ necks being wrung, cries of, “Thank
-you, Massa, thank you, Mist’iss!” The General with Andy beside him and
-Joey at hand to lift a jug stood at the end of the table. A line formed,
-cups in hand.
-
-“No crowding now—and no sneaking back to the end of the line for a
-second drink!” warned Andrew Jackson.
-
-Headless chickens flopped on the ground, prodded by shrieking little
-Negroes with sticks. Emily wrapped a heavy cloak around her aunt’s
-shoulders, pulled her own shawl tighter as they watched the line of
-people file by to receive their portion of Christmas cheer. Even the
-small ones got a tot, weakened with water, and as each child passed
-Andrew Jackson tweaked a lock of kinky hair or pulled an ear, sending
-the small black person off into a hysteria of shrieks and giggles.
-
-George had put a great washpot over the flames and when the water was
-hot the women would douse their fowls in the steaming cauldron and there
-would be a great chattering and ripping off of feathers, but before that
-all the people would gather in a phalanx to sing.
-
-“We must go in and light all the candles,” Emily told a group of women.
-“The house must be bright when they sing.”
-
-“You go, Emily,” Rachel said. “I ought to stay here. Becky and Dilsey
-both wanted that white rooster and they’re sure to get into a fight.”
-
-“Let Mr. Field attend to it. It’s his business to keep the people in
-order, aunt Rachel. You are a hostess with a houseful of guests, you
-have enough to worry you.”
-
-Rachel went reluctantly into the house, and presently every room was
-ablaze with firelight and candlelight. The other women and children
-drifted in, and Andy came too, standing before the fire balancing
-uneasily on first one foot, then the other.
-
-“Mama,” he began abruptly, “you know Papa said he was going to give me
-that chestnut colt. Why can’t he give it to me for Christmas? He gave
-Jack the sorrel and promised the chestnut to me when it was grown. Now
-every time I speak to Philip about it he says it’s not old enough to
-break yet. A two-year-old colt ought to be old enough to break to the
-saddle. You know that, Mama.”
-
-Rachel looked harassed. “Son, Philip knows about the horses more than I.
-Your Papa has every confidence in Philip’s judgment. You have horses to
-ride. Good safe horses too. And that new saddle and bridle and
-everything. Goodness knows they cost plenty.”
-
-“You’re too young to ride a stallion colt, Andy,” put in one of his
-Donelson aunts.
-
-“I should ride some old bag of bones like Duke, I suppose?” flared the
-boy.
-
-“Duke is a noble old horse,” stated Rachel sternly. “He carried your
-Papa through two wars. He’s earned his rest and feed.”
-
-“And he still pays for his keep by dancing on three feet whenever
-anybody whistles ‘Yankee Doodle’,” laughed Emily. “Andy, you’re only
-fourteen. Plenty of time for you to wrestle fractious stallion colts.”
-
-“You could be killed,” worried his mother, “and you’ve got to live to
-comfort me in my old age. Sometimes I feel like it’s coming on mighty
-fast.”
-
-“Nonsense, Rachel, you’ve got twenty good years ahead of you,” argued
-one of her sisters-in-law, “and all the struggle is behind. This fine
-house now—and everything fine in it and all the worry behind you.”
-
-“If only they don’t decide that Mr. Jackson has to save the country in
-some other awful place far from home!” sighed Rachel. “I declare, with
-millions of men now in this country there ought to be enough to keep it
-going peacefully without Mr. Jackson being dragged away from this place
-again.”
-
-“The trouble is,” remarked the other woman, “that Andrew Jackson was
-never born for peace. Not that he starts any trouble but the minute
-anything does start Andrew is the man they look for to put an end to
-it.”
-
-“He’d start a fight soon enough if anybody picked on Mama,” declared
-Andy. “He’s done that already. That’s why he’s carrying that bullet
-around right close to his heart.”
-
-“Andy!” protested Emily, shocked at the quick whitening of Rachel’s
-face.
-
-The Dickinson duel was never spoken of in her presence.
-
-“That was very bad taste, Andy,” reproved his aunt, “and you should know
-better.”
-
-“But it’s true!” protested the boy, his voice breaking in a contralto
-tremolo. “Even when I was little, boys used to yell at me that my father
-had killed a man—on account of Mama.”
-
-Rachel walked away quickly and they heard the door of her room close.
-
-“Andy, how dreadful—on Christmas Eve!” scolded an aunt, “I’ll go—”
-
-“No,” urged Emily, “she’ll want to be alone, aunt Mary. But I’m ashamed
-of Andy.”
-
-“Everybody picks on me,” mourned the boy.
-
-“Go outside and help your father. And remember that there are things
-never mentioned in your mother’s presence. One of them is Charles
-Dickinson and that tragic duel that happened before you were ever born.”
-
-“Papa did kill him!”
-
-“My boy, I hope that when you are grown a man you will find a woman as
-fine and faithful as Rachel Jackson,” said the older woman gravely. “If
-you are so fortunate as to win a wife like that and a man cast slurs on
-her in public, I think you will be moved to kill him too. Now go on out
-of here before I get the itch to box your ears, big as you are!”
-
-
-
-
- 4
-
-
-In her room Rachel stood before her tall chest, her hands shaking, her
-throat cramping with an agonizing pain. Always in spring, when all about
-was new growth and beauty burgeoning the old terror twenty years past
-came back for a little to haunt her. Now Andy’s callous taunts had
-brought it again out of its grave to tear at her tender heart.
-
-Always it was the same. She saw herself again sitting in the carriage
-beside that race track where the General’s fine horse Truxton, and a
-horse called Ploughboy owned by Charles Dickinson and his father were
-running a race. Gathered around the course was an enormous concourse of
-people: the women in carriages and on horseback wearing their new spring
-bonnets gay with flowers and ribbons, or flowing habits of bright
-velvet; the men jaunty in tight breeches strapped under their ankles,
-ruffled shirts and tall beaver hats. An April wind was blowing sweet off
-the fields.
-
-It was all as sharply clear to Rachel, here in her big room dimly
-lighted by one candle, as it had been on that fateful day when Truxton
-had gone lame in the third heat of the race.
-
-She could even hear again her own voice saying naïvely and more loudly
-than she had intended, “If Truxton hadn’t gone lame he would have left
-Ploughboy out of sight.”
-
-She could hear too that loud, sneering voice that still crackled in her
-ears though the young man who had spoken had lain twenty years in his
-grave. Angry and raucous from a bit too much drink, Charles Dickinson
-had shouted, “About as far out of sight as Mrs. Jackson left her first
-husband when she ran off with the General!”
-
-It comforted her still to remember that she had not been the one who
-repeated that jeering insult to Andrew Jackson. But there had been many
-ready to turn the knife in an old wound, to drag out again and bandy
-about the old, sordid story of Lewis Robards, who had married Rachel and
-discarded her, of the aborted divorce that had clouded Rachel Robards
-Jackson’s second marriage.
-
-A chill ran over her body now as she remembered the furious, insulting
-letters that had been written, the General’s cold terrible rage, the
-town and county taking sides, eventually the irrevocable challenge. Her
-hands shook as she opened a drawer in the chest. Well hidden there under
-lavender-scented linen lay the browning copy of a paper that Andrew
-Jackson would have destroyed instantly, had he known that she still
-hoarded it. It was dated on the 23rd of May, 1806, and the lines that
-were hastily scrawled upon it were burned on Rachel Jackson’s heart.
-
-_On Friday, the 30th. Inst, we agree to meet at Harrison’s Mills, in Red
-River County, State of Kentucky for the Purpose of settling an Affair of
-Honor, between Andrew Jackson and_ _Charles Dickinson, Esq. Further
-arrangements to be made. It is understood that the Meeting will be held
-at seven o’clock in the morning._
-
-It was signed with the General’s familiar scrawl and the neater hand of
-young Dickinson.
-
-Charles Dickinson had been so young! Rachel ached now with remembering
-the anguish of dread for her own beloved and for the young wife and baby
-of the youth Andrew Jackson had set out across the Kentucky line that
-May morning to kill, if he could—if he were not himself slain by a youth
-known to be one of the most famous shots in Tennessee.
-
-Duels were illegal in Tennessee so Jackson had started the day before
-with his friend, John Overton, for the long ride into Kentucky. He had
-tried to slip away without Rachel’s knowledge, tried to belittle the
-danger. And he had come home with a bullet close to his heart, too near
-to be safely removed by the surgeons, and that bullet he carried yet.
-But Charles Dickinson had been brought home dead and for a year the town
-had seethed with furious criticism of the man who had survived that
-duel, Andrew Jackson. The affair had almost ended his public career.
-Rachel had known some moments when she wished that the tragedy had made
-it impossible for Andrew Jackson ever to be chosen for any high emprise
-again.
-
-It had weighed heavily on her heart for years that the affair had been
-on her account, and there had been a long, unspoken family pact that the
-duel was never to be mentioned. She had nursed her husband for weeks
-through that hot summer, and he had hated the inactivity while Rachel
-was grateful that the spring ran cool and deep and the great trees gave
-comforting shade, and that she had her husband, wounded and restless as
-he was, by her side. He had not desired that tragic engagement, she
-knew. Faced with no honorable means of evading it, he had fought fairly
-according to the rules and borne his wound without capitalizing upon it.
-
-She put away the old agreement, smoothed her hair and the lace of her
-collar, rubbed a bit of cotton dipped in rice powder over her swollen
-eyelids. This was Christmas Eve, the past was past, though Truxton’s
-colts still ambled over the meadows, some of them growing old as the
-Jacksons were growing old. Perhaps they would have no more Christmas
-Eves under this roof, this proud house that they loved. Nothing must mar
-this holiday. She would hurry out and tell Andy that he was forgiven.
-The boy was impulsive and thoughtless. He had not meant to wound her.
-
-The house was full of voices; children being led upstairs to bed
-reluctant and protesting, but outside were voices too, the songs of the
-black people gathered to sing to their master and mistress. Rachel
-snatched up a shawl, wrapped her head and shoulders in it and went out
-to stand and listen.
-
-“_Christmas is a-comin’, the goose is getting fat._
-
-“_Please to put a penny in the ole man’s hat_,” caroled the slaves.
-
-She saw her husband standing bareheaded near the fire, his hair blowing
-in the winter wind, the firelight casting deep shadows under his eyes.
-He had a hand on Andy’s shoulder, an arm around Emily. No one heeded the
-mist that blew on the wind. Some of the older women were already picking
-their chickens on the lee side of the smokehouse.
-
-“_Go down, Moses, ’way down in Egypt’s lan’_,” trilled a high voice,
-Becky’s. The humming chorus swelled, burst into tremendous melody.
-“_Tell ole Phar’oh,—let my people go!_”
-
-Go down, Moses! Go down, Andrew Jackson! To Tohopeka, to Mobile, to New
-Orleans, to Pensacola. Go down, Andrew Jackson, and set a people free!
-No, no, moaned the heart of Rachel. Never any more. This was home, this
-was their Hermitage, this was Christmas Eve. Her eyes searched the air,
-challenged the air, the Heavens, as though somewhere out there in the
-murky dark lurked fate in wait for them, a prescience that would not
-lift.
-
-Was it a charm or a curse that invested her man on horseback? What dark
-Nemesis had hovered over that little cabin back in the North Carolina
-sandhills where he had been born? What strange power had preserved him
-when all his family succumbed to the hardships of that time of bitter
-war? What power of destiny had brought him up, an orphaned waif, led him
-through so many conflicts, made him a firebrand and a leader whom men
-would follow as they followed a flag?
-
-Sick and coughing, his frail health her constant anxiety, he inspired
-strong men. Something was brewing now. Rachel felt it, but she must hold
-her tongue and quiet her unease with the drug of hope.
-
-A horse came trotting up the drive and Rachel saw Emily start forward
-eagerly. Then the girl stopped as a slim figure in oilskin slid from the
-saddle.
-
-“It’s Ralph!” Rachel hurried forward to greet the young artist, Ralph
-Earl. Off and on, for many years, the portrait painter had made his home
-at the Hermitage. He had done a fine portrait of the General, wooed and
-won Jane Caffrey, Rachel’s niece. There had been a fine wedding in the
-old log house that still stood there in the yard, but gentle Jane had
-lived only a year. Now Earl was a saddened and lonely man and Rachel
-mothered him after her habit with all young, unmothered creatures. “How
-fine that you got back from the East for Christmas, Ralph!” she cried,
-taking his hand.
-
-“I came to paint your picture,” he said. “The General will never give me
-any peace till I do your portrait, aunt Rachel.”
-
-“Fiddlesticks!” She led him into the house. “You come get warm and dry
-this minute before you take a ptisic. I’ll make a hot toddy for you,
-myself. And you don’t want to paint a picture of a fat old woman like
-me. Nobody would look at it. We’d have to hang it in the wash-house.”
-
-“A portrait of you might be hung on the walls of some very splendid
-place, aunt Rachel,” Earl argued, handing his damp garments to a
-servant.
-
-She looked at him in sudden alarm. “Now whatever do you mean by that?”
-
-“Oh—just an idea I had,” he soothed, seeing her perturbation. “People
-keep getting notions about what Andrew Jackson could do for this
-country. I hear about them—traveling around.”
-
-She clutched at his arm. “No, Ralph—whatever their notions are, he’s not
-going to go dashing off again on some wild adventure or other. He’s not
-strong, you know that. He’ll get that lung fever again and it almost
-caused his death last winter. And besides,”—her eyes misted and her
-voice croaked—“he’d have to leave our home! Our Hermitage!”
-
-“But think of what great things could happen to you, aunt Rachel!
-Someday you might be one of the greatest ladies in the land.”
-
-“I don’t want to be a great lady.” She held tight to the cold hand he
-had laid upon her cheek. “I want to stay here and raise young Andy and
-Andrew Hutchings. I want to see Emily well married and all our people
-taken care of. I never want to have to go dragging out again to make
-calls and leave cards and smile till my face aches. I have had enough of
-that.”
-
-“Just the same I’m going to paint your portrait,” he insisted.
-
-“You paint Emily. She’s filling out, she’s going to be a beauty. The
-General’s got that little picture of me that Anna Peale painted the year
-of that New Orleans battle. He carries it around with him all the time,
-though he wrote to me once and said he didn’t need it, that he had my
-picture engraved on his heart. Nobody could ask for anything more
-beautiful than that, Ralph, no woman alive. He wouldn’t engrave a
-picture of me as I am now, on his heart—an old lady getting fat and out
-of breath!”
-
-“I think he would,” said Earl. “I think he would prize any picture of
-you, aunt Rachel, more than his life.”
-
-“He’s coming in,” she whispered. “I must get his bed warm so he won’t
-cough all night. You’ll have to sleep with Andy tonight. We’ve got a
-houseful already and more coming. And Ralph, don’t you let the General
-get notions about rushing off to be somebody important. It’s time he
-took care of himself.”
-
-“I’ll tell him, aunt Rachel. But you know Andrew Jackson. If any call
-came from the people to serve anywhere, no one could hold him.”
-
-“No,” she said sadly. “Not even I!”
-
-
-
-
- 5
-
-
-Bugles and drums before dawn had trained Andrew Jackson to waken early.
-He tiptoed about in the dark, cracking a toe and muttering in
-irritation, fumbled into his clothes by the lingering glow of a dying
-fire, not wanting to light a candle and wake Rachel.
-
-Then he discovered that she was already gone from the bed, her full
-ruffled night rail was spread out neatly to air, her cap perched on the
-post of the bed. Instantly his voice rose in the familiar falsetto
-shout.
-
-“You, George! Get in here and mend this fire!”
-
-The alacrity with which the man appeared, loaded to the chin with
-lightwood, betrayed that he had been waiting near for a summons. “Yes,
-sah, Gin’ral Jackson! Christmas gif’, sah!”
-
-“Christmas gift! I’ll gift you with my boot if you don’t stir yourself.”
-
-“Yes, sah!” George burst into delighted chuckles. He knew his master
-well. “Mist’iss say, don’t disturb Marse Jackson, she say, let Marse
-Jackson git he rest. I git a fine fire here toreckly.”
-
-The embers stirred, the lightwood crackled and flamed. Andrew Jackson
-liked fire to roar as he liked horses to gallop and men to spring into
-action when he shouted an order. George swept the hearth and set the
-fire tools in order.
-
-“Christmas gif’, Gin’ral,” he repeated meekly.
-
-“Here!” Jackson tossed a two-shilling piece. George caught it in midair,
-grinned and bowed elaborately.
-
-“Thankee, sah! Thankee! Does you go to town I git you to buy me some
-store galluses, please, sah? I like some red galluses, wid big brass
-buckles.”
-
-“Keep your money. Buy candy with it. I’ll get you some red galluses. How
-you hitch your britches up now?”
-
-“Dis yere piece of rope. But it mighty near wore out and Mister Field
-say he goin’ beat the next nigger cut off any his rope. Thankee, sah.”
-
-“Now I reckon every hand on the place will have to have red galluses
-with brass buckles,” snorted the General. “You’re getting measured for
-shoes tomorrow, George. You wash your feet.”
-
-“Yes, sah, sho will!”
-
-Christmas morning! How few Christmas Days he had ever spent in his own
-home, Andrew Jackson was thinking. On the march, in cheerless camps with
-lonely men, in that strange mansion in Pensacola, riding eastward roads
-through Tennessee to Philadelphia, to Washington. And now perhaps the
-road eastward lay ahead of him again. He dreaded telling Rachel, rooted
-as she was to this hillside, fixed as one of the old trees and removed
-with almost as much agony. She might even refuse to take the road again.
-He might face more endless months of loneliness. He looked at the little
-gold-framed miniature that had never been far from his gaze since it had
-been painted so many years ago.
-
-Rachel’s direct eyes looked from it, her strong mouth was relaxed in a
-little smile, the lace cap and fichu she wore softened her high brow,
-where the dark hair curled, her rounded chin. Long earrings gave her an
-effect of gayety that always made him happy when he studied the picture.
-She had looked like that once—in Natchez where he had married her,
-believing her divorced from sadistic Lewis Robards. She needed gayety.
-She had had too much of responsibility, she had seen too much of sorrow.
-
-Today should be gay. He would have fiddlers in and let the young folks
-dance. He would open the best wine and make a big bowl of punch. He
-jabbed his feet into his boots hurriedly, rejecting the heavy braided
-coat for a lighter hunting jacket of leather.
-
-The house was fragrant with the evergreen Emily had hung about, and
-there was a comfortable odor of coffee. In the dining room Rachel was
-bustling about a long table following Hannah who puffed and sputtered at
-two children who kept diving, squealing, under the table to peer out
-from beneath the cloth and pinch Hannah’s fat legs.
-
-“Here—here!” barked the General. “You tads leave Hannah alone. Come out
-of there.”
-
-Instantly the pair, in nightgowns and barefooted, swarmed up his long
-legs like squirrels.
-
-“Christmas gift, uncle Jackson! Christmas gift!”
-
-He planted a spank on each of two small rears. “There’s your Christmas
-gift. Now go and get your clothes on. When you come down properly
-dressed you’ll get your Christmas gift.”
-
-“Mother’s asleep, we don’t know where our clothes are,” protested a
-little boy.
-
-“Wake her up. Wake everybody up. It’s Christmas morning.”
-
-“Yes, sir!” The two obeyed with alacrity, rushing out shrieking, “Wake
-up! Wake up! Christmas gift!”
-
-“We have to get breakfast over so we can set the tables for dinner,”
-said Rachel, “and all the people are slow and lazy this morning. Betty
-says the oven won’t get hot for her spoon bread and Dilsey cut the bacon
-too thick and then went off in a sulk when I scolded her.”
-
-“I’ll get them all up,” threatened the General. He strode out through
-the house to the bricked passage to the kitchen, pulled on a rope
-dangling from a pole. The slave bell clanged loud and long.
-
-“My patience,” Rachel exclaimed, “the neighbors will think the house is
-afire!”
-
-“Git them triflin’ niggers stirrin’, anyways,” said Hannah.
-
-“Get the mugs for the children, Hannah, and tell ’Relia to get herself
-upstairs to help the young ladies. And I want every bed made up right
-away.”
-
-Hannah said, “Yas’m.” She loved ordering the other maids around, being
-middle-aged, faithful and privileged.
-
-Breakfast was a gay and noisy meal. Emily was happy with a new gold
-chain and locket, kissing everybody impartially as she danced around the
-table. Rachel had a pearl brooch with a small blue stone in the center
-and yards of white satin for caps and collars. One little boy pushed his
-toy monkey around the table, perched it on people’s shoulders till
-Andrew, Junior, said impatiently, “Oh, quit it, boy!”
-
-“What are you so excited about?” the General asked Emily, when he had
-followed her into the parlor.
-
-“Why, uncle Jackson, it’s Christmas! And my lovely locket. You shouldn’t
-have given me anything so fine. I’ll put a lock of your hair in it.”
-
-“Put some young fellow’s hair in it—the right fellow, mind you! And were
-you looking down that road to see if Christmas was coming?”
-
-“Oh, no. Just more company. Aunt Rachel says there should be ten more.
-Thank goodness the rain stopped.”
-
-“Froze a little.” He took his pipe from the mantel, and the deep tobacco
-jar. “Kill hogs next week if the cold weather holds. Emily, get your
-aunt out of that dining room. Make her rest if you can.”
-
-“I’ll try, but you know aunt Rachel. She won’t believe the Christmas
-dinner is fit to eat unless she has dipped a spoon in every dish. I
-promised to oversee setting the tables as soon as the girls have cleared
-away. They’re all excited and they’ll get all the forks crooked.”
-
-“In some ways it will be good for Rachel to get away for a while,” he
-mused, half to himself, as he lifted the coal from the fire.
-
-“Away—where?” Emily stiffened.
-
-“Why, I shall have to return to the Senate, my dear. Have you forgotten
-that I have been elected United States Senator from Tennessee? Of
-course, when I go back I shall want my wife to go with me.”
-
-“Uncle Jackson, Jack wrote me—”
-
-“And what,” he interrupted, “did Mister Andrew Jackson Donelson write to
-you?”
-
-_That he loved me_ leaped like a lovely tongue of fairy flame into her
-mind. She blinked very fast to keep uncle Jackson from reading it in her
-eyes.
-
-“He said something about circumstances—about a ground swell in
-Kentucky—he was rather vague—”
-
-He frowned, then his face lightened and his mouth quirked up at one
-corner in a halfway impish grin. “So young Andrew has been hearing
-rumblings in Kentucky.” Always he had refused to call his nephew by the
-family nickname of Jack. “Why didn’t he write to me? Kentucky is the
-fighting ground of our friend Henry Clay. If there are any honors to be
-handed out, the Speaker of the House would like them for himself, no
-doubt? I will tell you this much, Emily, and you will keep it to
-yourself. In spite of all I can do, I have friends determined to push me
-into the forefront again. Now, they are talking about running me for the
-highest office in this land.”
-
-“But that would be a great honor, uncle Jackson. Why must we keep it a
-secret?”
-
-“I don’t want to spoil her Christmas. Some women would be elated at a
-chance to spend a winter in Washington, move in important circles,
-perhaps be elevated to the highest position in this land. But not your
-aunt Rachel. I want to talk her into the right mood, or she might refuse
-to leave here and then I’d be separated from her again for a long time.”
-
-“But she must go! I won’t let her refuse,” argued Emily. “We’ll buy her
-some beautiful clothes. She can be a fine lady.”
-
-“She’s already a fine lady,” he sighed, “but she’d rather go on here
-dosing the bellyache of the most worthless hand I own than to be invited
-to dinner in the proudest house in the country. I love her for her
-simplicity, and I want her to enjoy peace as long as she can, so say
-nothing about any plans, Emily.”
-
-“Yes, uncle Jackson, but you could be wrong about aunt Rachel. The thing
-she wants more than anything is to be with you.”
-
-“And what I most desire is to be with her. I am singularly blessed. It
-troubles me now that I grow old that the people will not let me rest.”
-
-“You could say no. You could refuse when they thrust these
-responsibilities upon you,” she reminded him, grave beyond her years.
-
-He lifted his gaunt shoulders in a ponderous sigh. “This is a great
-country, Emily, my child. Where else could a gangling, country boy with
-no fortune and little education fight his way up to where he is honored
-as I have been honored by my countrymen? I owe America a debt. Speaking
-of debts,” his mood changed, his face grew into a sardonic grimace, “the
-question is—where is the money coming from to pay for all this pride and
-eminence? It costs like the devil to live in Washington and the crops
-this year were disappointing. As things stand now I owe about twice as
-much as I’m worth. Of course there are a lot of people who owe me—”
-
-“Then make them pay,” she counseled. “And you should never have spent so
-much money for this locket, uncle Jackson. I love you without gifts.”
-
-“When I can’t buy a present for a pretty girl, I’ll let them cart me off
-to a debtor’s prison!” he declared. “As for asking my friends to repay
-money I’ve loaned them, that’s something a gentleman can’t do, Emily.”
-
-“Then don’t be a gentleman,” she suggested boldly. “Be a politician.
-They seem to be able to ask for anything they want without any qualms
-whatever.”
-
-He laughed so loudly that some of the guests came hurrying in to hear
-the joke. “When James Monroe makes me ambassador to Mexico or Russia or
-some other heathen spot on this globe, I’m going to make Emily Donelson
-my prime counselor,” he said. “This gal has brains.”
-
-Emily laughed and hurried out to help her aunt. She was feeling easier
-in her mind. If uncle Jackson was harassed about money, he might be
-relieved at hearing that Jack was not going back to school. There was
-young Andy coming along to be educated and Andrew Hutchings, also a ward
-of the Jacksons, and it must cost a tremendous lot to run this huge
-plantation and care for all the people, white and black. And anything
-aunt Rachel wanted she had, whether it was a pair of silk mitts, a
-ten-dollar hat or an expensive suite of furniture shipped in at enormous
-expense from halfway across the country. Somewhere Andrew Jackson found
-the money to gratify Rachel’s every desire.
-
-That expensive saddle for Andy—and her locket—and it was very certain in
-her mind that there were some things that the General needed for
-himself. He needed new clothes anyway. She had noted the shabbiness of
-his braided coat, shiny at the elbows, and all his waistcoats were worn
-on the edges.
-
-Destiny might have planned great things for Andrew Jackson through his
-lifetime, decided his niece, but fate had certainly been stingy with the
-practical rewards.
-
-
-
-
- 6
-
-
-The heavy damask cloths had been spread. Another carriage full of
-cousins and aunts and uncles arrived to fill the house with more
-confusion. Mary Eastin and some of the other girls came to help Emily
-direct the placing of the great piles of china plates, the gleaming
-goblets and compotes that would be filled with uncle Jackson’s wine and
-aunt Rachel’s preserves and relishes. The heavy soup ladle was rubbed
-till it glittered, a mound of apples and nuts was heaped on a tray which
-Emily edged with holly.
-
-Mary Eastin, very young and eager, had a cameo face and a lilting laugh.
-Life would always be gay for Mary. A president’s nephew would one day
-find her irresistible, but now she was a dancing sprite, doing
-pirouettes with a vinegar cruet for a partner, getting in everybody’s
-way.
-
-“You’ll break something, Mary. Do go and coax uncle Jackson to tootle on
-his new flute,” urged Emily.
-
-“He makes such silly noises on it,” protested Mary, “and he screws up
-his face till I’m scared to death I’ll laugh and offend him.”
-
-“But he loves it and it gets politics out of his mind.”
-
-Mary grabbed Emily’s arm. “Emmy, he’s coming isn’t he? I can see it
-sticking out all over you. Emmy, I think all these stuffy old people are
-crazy. If I had a boy in love with me, I’d have him, no matter if every
-Donelson alive croaked themselves to death.”
-
-“Mary, for Heavens’ sake, hush! Things are going to be bad enough—I’m
-just holding my breath.”
-
-“I think it’s wonderful!” Mary’s eyes were full of stars. “Let me tell
-you something though—don’t you start out being a dutiful wife like aunt
-Rachel. A woman can get herself simply _subjugated_ by being so
-worshipful. I mean to keep my spirit and my personality, whoever I
-marry. Aunt Rachel’s kind of wife is going out of fashion.”
-
-Emily bent her brows together. Of course Jack would expect a dutiful
-wife. Hadn’t he been trained by uncle Jackson, who had never known any
-other mode of life except to be master in his house? Jack would expect
-his wife to be a gracious copy of aunt Rachel—with a bit more style
-perhaps, and more ease in company, Emily amended, with no disloyalty.
-Aunt Rachel was good. She did not need a flair for clever conversation
-or the sly, pretty arts by which some women kept men enthralled, but as
-Mary had said, times were changing. Women even went to colleges now and
-read deep books.
-
-Rachel came in then, followed by Hannah and the maids, all carrying
-steaming dishes.
-
-“What are you moppets whispering about?” she asked. “Beaus, I’ll wager.”
-
-“Oh, we’re far too young, aunt Rachel. And too utterly well bred,” Mary
-replied saucily.
-
-“Plotting against the whites,” evaded Emily. “What’s in that dish,
-Dilsey? It smells wonderful.”
-
-“Dilsey’s candied yams are always perfect,” Rachel said. “Mary, you run
-and fetch all the boys and tell them to carry in every extra chair. And
-tell Andy to have George ring the bell. Your uncle and the other men
-have likely wandered off to the stables. I never have put a meal on the
-table yet that didn’t have to compete for their concern with some colt.
-Hannah, we’ll set the ham at this end, and the turkeys at the other.
-Levin can carve at this other table and Mr. Jackson here, and you and
-Dilsey can serve the children their plates. That small table makes it
-crowded, but I couldn’t bear to make the little ones wait. I like all my
-family together at Christmas.”
-
-Her family, all the Donelsons, whom the General, having no kin of his
-own, had taken to his heart generously, as he had taken John Eaton and
-John Overton, Ralph, the young painter, and, twenty years ago, Aaron
-Burr—too bad that charming man had come to be in bad repute!—even Sam
-Houston! Rachel glowed with happiness as the clan came noisily into the
-room. This was as things should be. She took the chair Ralph pulled out
-for her, bent her head in a little prayer of thankfulness, of entreaty
-to God that things would go on like this forever, so long as they lived,
-in peace here at their Hermitage.
-
-Then there was the sudden crash of a door at the rear of the house, a
-chilly gust blew into the room and from the pantry there were squeals of
-delighted welcome from the waiting servants. The inner door was flung
-back and a travel-stained figure strode into the room.
-
-“Christmas gift, everybody!” shouted Andrew Jackson Donelson.
-
-Emily upset her glass as she half rose from her chair. Carving knife
-poised, Andrew Jackson stood drawn back sternly at the head of the
-table.
-
-“Sir!” he barked in a military tone, “you have disobeyed me!”
-
-Andrew Jackson Donelson made a little bow, while the others held their
-breath.
-
-“Uncle, I admit my disobedience,” Jack said humbly. “I have come home
-because now you will have need of me. I have come home to help you win
-the nomination for the office of President of the United States.”
-
-Rachel’s little cry of protest was lost in the gasps of the uninformed
-around the tables. A few of the men looked wise and complacent and Emily
-noted that John Eaton wore a smug grin.
-
-Andrew Jackson made a slashing motion with the knife as though he
-flourished a defiant sword.
-
-“Young man, I have no intention of seeking the nomination for the office
-of President of the United States!” he shouted.
-
-“I should say not!” put in Rachel’s small, shaken voice.
-
-Jack’s laughter echoed John Eaton’s grin. “You may not be seeking the
-nomination, sir, but that nomination is certainly out gunning for you!
-All over Kentucky they’re talking of nothing else—Jackson for President,
-in 1824—right under Henry Clay’s nose! They say Clay is looking for a
-ground-hog hole to crawl into dragging his whisky barrel after him. And
-look at this!” He pulled the ragged page of a newspaper from his pocket,
-marched to the head of the table and spread it before his uncle’s eyes.
-“I picked it up in Transylvania, brought it along—thought you might not
-have seen it.”
-
-John Eaton sprang to study the paper. “The _New York Post_!” he
-exclaimed. “We missed that one. Let’s see what they say.”
-
-“What they say,” reported Jack, while the General still glowered at the
-paper, “is that if the country was under martial law Andrew Jackson
-would be the proper choice for president. That not being the case, the
-_Post_ will continue their support of Secretary of the Navy, Smith
-Thompson, for the nomination in 1824.”
-
-“Smith Thompson—about as much chance for him as for me!” snorted one of
-the Donelson clan.
-
-“Crawford will be in the running too,” remarked Ralph Earl. “Not a man
-in the Cabinet who doesn’t believe he would be a better president than
-John Quincy Adams, who is certain he’ll be elected president.”
-
-“Nobody told me—nobody said a word!” mourned Rachel, looking stunned. “I
-knew he’d been elected senator—but president!”
-
-Jack went to her quickly, put his hands on her quivering shoulders.
-“We’ll make you a queen, aunt Rachel. We’ll make you the grandest lady
-in the land!”
-
-“And I’ll have to live in Washington—when I want to stay at home!” she
-protested. “I don’t want to be a queen. Jack, wash yourself and come and
-eat your dinner. Mr. Jackson, do serve the children! Hannah, pass the
-vegetables. All of you, eat your dinner—your Christmas dinner.”
-
-Obediently, Andrew Jackson made wooden motions of slicing at the turkey.
-John Eaton took the knife from his hand.
-
-“Sit and eat, sir. Let me finish this business. He’s bound to be
-nominated, you know,” he addressed the whole group. “It’s a ground
-swell, stirring all over the country. Why, just yesterday the _Nashville
-Clarion_ stated that the General was unquestionably the choice of the
-people, in justice to themselves! Here, Hannah, here’s a fine drumstick
-for some hungry boy. Wait, you haven’t any gravy.”
-
-Andrew Jackson looked down the long table at his wife with a look of
-humble pleading in his eyes that she had never seen there before.
-
-“I was going to tell you tomorrow, my love,” he said meekly. “I had
-warned them all. But that young scoundrel ruined everything.” He glared
-at Jack Donelson who patted his aunt’s cheek unperturbed.
-
-“He’s going to need me, aunt Rachel,” he said gleefully. “I deserve the
-rough edge of his tongue now, he thinks, maybe even his riding crop on
-my breeches. But he knows he’s going to be needing all the help he can
-get, and you too! You’ll need a strong, smart boy around here when all
-the furor starts, and I’m that boy. Just one more statement, sir.” Jack
-looked at his uncle, his chin high and firm. “I have a further
-announcement to make. I came home because I saw your situation and your
-need for assistance. Also I came home to marry Emily Donelson, if so be
-she will have me—with or without the consent of this assembled family, I
-mean to marry Emily.”
-
-“And that,” shouted the General, rapping the table with his glass, “I
-will not countenance!”
-
-Rachel got to her feet, startling them all a little.
-
-“Then I will countenance it,” she said, in a tone few of them had ever
-heard her use before. “When young people are in love, that’s the
-important thing. Maybe you think I don’t know what it is to be in love,
-Mr. Jackson—but unless your memory is very short, you do! There was a
-time when you trampled all the difficulties down with fine scorn—and if
-Jack hasn’t the courage to do as we did, then he’s no nephew of mine!”
-
-“My dear—” began Jackson, uncertainly, “I had no idea you felt this
-way!”
-
-“Well, I do feel that way. And I say it’s fine and beautiful for these
-children who love each other to marry—and I say that nobody is going to
-oppose it.”
-
-Jackson rose, smiling ruefully, and laid a hand on Emily’s cheek. “I
-seem to be outvoted,” he remarked.
-
-“Sorry, sir.” Jack’s grin did not quiver. “You are outvoted. I vote
-against you—and aunt Rachel—and Emily too, I hope? My dear, are you
-standing with me against all these frowning elders?”
-
-She sprang up and ran to stand beside him. “Oh—I am, I am!”
-
-“The matter is now settled.” Jack kissed her gravely while all the
-children screamed their delight and some of the women began to cry,
-then, still jauntily, Jack picked up the glass of wine before his aunt’s
-plate. “A toast to the bride! And to the next President of the United
-States, Andrew Jackson!”
-
-Chairs fell backward as the company got to their feet. The servants all
-shrilled approving cries. The hubbub and chatter drowned out Rachel’s
-admonishing voice, begging everybody to be quiet and eat before
-everything got cold. Somehow the dinner was finished. The General sat in
-silence through the rest of the meal, and aunt Rachel was still too,
-Emily observed, her fingers shaking as she handled her fork and spoon.
-Emily went quickly and kissed her on the cheek.
-
-“You’ll have me beside you always, aunt Rachel,” she whispered.
-“Always!”
-
-“I’ll need you, Emily,” Rachel whispered hoarsely. “I’ll need
-everybody.”
-
-Her eyes looked far and strained as though she saw before her those next
-five stormy years. The year that would see Andrew Jackson defeated for
-the office of president when the election was carried into the Senate of
-the United States by the failure of any of the seven candidates to win a
-majority in the electoral college, defeated by the trades and connivings
-of Henry Clay and by the one vote in the New York delegation of a
-tremulous, undecided man named Van Rensselaer.
-
-And after that the terrible years when the power and strength of Andrew
-Jackson would mount in an invincible tide, when her own name would be
-pilloried and long-buried agonies she had tried to forget dragged from
-their graves and published abroad to discredit her and her man on
-horseback. The years that would be too much for the faithful, failing
-heart of Rachel Jackson.
-
-She would never be a queen in that palace in Washington. But she had no
-wish to be a queen. As the day darkened into dusk and the candles were
-lighted, she stood alone at her window looking out upon her quiet
-garden, sleeping its winter sleep that promised the wakening of beauty
-in the springtime.
-
-It would be a pleasant place to sleep, she was thinking. But at least,
-at long last, she had had her Christmas at the Hermitage.
-
-
-
-
- Footnotes
-
-
-[1]Young Andrew was the master of the Hermitage when eventually that
- tragedy did occur, and Rachel Jackson had lain for eight years under
- the roses of her garden.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Silently corrected a few typos.
-
-—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HER CHRISTMAS AT THE
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