By his great Author man was sent below,
Some things to learn, great pains to undergo,
To fit him for what further he’s
to know.
This end obtained, without regarding time,
He calls the soul home to its native clime,
To happiness and knowledge more sublime.
ALLAN RAMSAY
The period of time which has elapsed
since the occurring of the events detailed in the
preceding chapters, enables us to give a tolerably
full account of the destiny of the actors, who, for
the space of a few months, have flitted across our
stage.
James Armstrong lived in the enjoyment
of pretty good health some two years after his recovery.
The melancholy with which nature had tinged his disposition
was, indeed, never quite eradicated, but probably
those two years were the sweetest and sunniest of his
life. Those whom he most loved were prosperous
and happy, and the reflection of their happiness shone
upon his daily walk. At the end of that time he
fell asleep, and in the confidence of a lively faith
and the comfort of a holy hope, was gathered to his
fathers. Immediately upon the restoration of
his reason he had divided his estate with his brother,
or rather with his nephew, for the Solitary refused
to have anything to do with wealth. It would
be to him, he said, a burden. He was not a pack-horse,
to carry loads, though they were made of gold.
With whatever eyes, however, the possession
of property might be viewed by George Armstrong, his
son, who, within a few months afterwards, was united
to Anne Bernard, with even the approbation of her
brother, considered the addition thereby made to his
income as no disagreeable circumstance. Mr. and
Mrs. Pownal, the benefactors of his youth, were present,
and the former had the satisfaction of dancing at
the wedding. No marriage could be more fortunate.
A similarity of taste and feeling and the harmonies
of virtue had originally attracted and attached each
to the other. Anne had loved Armstrong because
she recognized in him her own truthfulness and nobility
of spirit, and he her, for her grace and beauty, and
that inexpressible charm of sweetness of temper and
gaiety of spirit, that, like the sun, diffuses light
and animation around. Their career has been like
a summer-day. A numerous family of children has
sprung from the union, who promise to perpetuate the
virtues of their parents. And it is to be hoped,
and we believe it to be a fact which the passage of
so many years may be considered to have tolerably
settled, that the fatal blood-taint of insanity, which
had seemed hereditary on the side of one of the parents,
has disappeared.
As for the Solitary, who survived
his brother many years, he could never be weaned from
the mode of life he had adopted. As long as James
Armstrong lived, they were frequently together, few
days passing without one seeking the other, as if
both were striving to make up for their long separation,
but yet George Armstrong preferred the rude simplicity
of his hut, and his hard couch, to the elegant chamber
and yielding bed, nor could he be persuaded to stop
more than a night or two at any one time, either at
the house of his brother or of his son. The efforts
made to change this feeling were soon found to be
unavailing, and his commanding temper, as usual, had
its way. After the death of his brother, his
visits to the village became less frequent, and he
was seldom to be met with, except at the house of
his son. It was a strange sight to see him, with
two or three grand-children on his knees, and playing,
perhaps, with one of the little ones, amusing itself
with hiding behind the flowing majesty of his long
beard. A great part of his time was passed among
the Indians living on the banks of the Severn, to
the amelioration of whose condition and Christianization
he devoted himself to the last. And some insist
that he never quite gave up the expectation of the
Millennium during his life, for early fishermen, passing
his hut before sunrise, are said to have reported
that they had seen the Solitary more than once, waiting
for the rising sun, and heard his bursts of passionate
expectation. An occurrence, too, at his death,
which happened at the house of his son, justifies this
opinion when sitting up suddenly in his
bed, he stretched out his arms, and exclaiming with
a wild energy, “Lord, Thou art faithful and true,
for I behold Thy coming,” he fell back upon
the pillow and expired. From respect to the memory
of his father, his son bought the island where the
Solitary lived so many years, and having planted it
with trees, declares it shall never pass out of the
family during his own life, and so long as it can
be protected by his will.
Judge Bernard, his wife, the doctor,
and the Pownals are gone, and the three former repose
with their friends in the romantic burial ground,
to which we once before conducted our readers; the
two latter in the cemetery of the thronged city, undisturbed
by the sounding tread of the multitudes who daily
pass their graves.
William Bernard, about the time of
the marriage of his sister, made a formal offer of
his hand to Faith, but without success. He was
refused gently, but so decidedly, that no room was
left for hope. But if the enamored young man
lost his mistress, he was satisfied there was no rival
in the case, and moreover that probably there never
would be. So selfish is the human heart, that
this reflection mitigated the bitterness of his disappointment.
Convinced that the prospect of altering her determination
was hopeless, and unable to remain in her presence,
he made a voyage to Europe, where he remained five
years, and on his return, entered into political life.
He has since filled many eminent stations with credit
to himself and advantage to the country, and only
delicacy restrains us from naming the high position
he now occupies, of course under a different name from
that we have chosen to give him. But he has never
found another being to fill the void in his affections,
and remains unmarried, the most graceful and attractive
of old bachelors.
And what shall we say of Faith, the
pure, the high souled the devoted Faith? As long
as her father lived, he continued to be the object
of her incessant solicitude. She watched him
with a tenderness like that of a mother hovering about
her sick infant, devoting her whole life to his service,
and when he died, the tears she shed were not those
of complaining grief, but of a sad thankfulness.
Sad was she that no more in this world should she
behold him whom she had ever treasured in her inner
heart; thankful that with unclouded reason and resigned
trust, he had returned to the Source whence he came.
Soon after his death, she joined her uncle in his
labors among the Indians, abandoning her home and
devoting the whole of her large income to the promotion
of their interests. There was much in her character
that resembled that of George Armstrong, and notwithstanding
the disparity of years, caused each to find an attractive
counterpart in the other. There was the same
enthusiasm, trespassing from constitutional tendencies,
upon the very verge of reason; the same contempt of
the world and its allurements; the same reaching forward
toward the invisible. Her surpassing beauty,
her accomplishments and great wealth, brought many
suitors to her feet, but she had a heart for none.
She turned a deaf ear to their pleadings, and “in
maiden meditation fancy free,” pursued her course
like the pale moon through heaven. Perhaps the
awful shock which she received on the terrible day
when the appearance of her uncle saved her life, working
on a temperament so exalted, may have contributed
to confirm and strengthen what was at first only a
tendency, and so decided the character of her life.
She died as such gifted beings are wont to do, young,
breathing out her delicate soul with a smile, upon
the bosom of her faithful friend, Anne Armstrong.
A purer spirit, and one better fitted to join the bright
array of the blessed, never left the earth, and to
those who knew her, it looked dark and desolate when
she departed.
We have thus disposed of the principal
personages in our drama. It remains to speak
of some of those who have borne an inferior part in
the scenes.
Esther left, with Quadaquina, for
the Western tribes about the time when the boy attained
the age of sixteen years, and historical accuracy
compels us to admit, that, since their departure, we
have lost all traces of them. One would suppose
she would have remained with her powerful protectors,
but it may be she feared the demoralization around
her, to which, in spite of the efforts of the benevolent
to the contrary, so many of her fated race fell victims,
and preferred to expose Quadaquina to the perils of
savage life, rather than to the tender mercies of
civilization. We strongly suspect, that her wild
creed was never fairly weeded out of her heart.
Primus remained to the end the same
cheery, roguish fellow we have seen him, and when
he died was buried, as became a revolutionary celebrity,
with military honors, which so affected Felix, that,
when his turn came knowing that he was
entitled to no such distinction, and, yet loth to
pass away unnoticed he begged Doctor Elmer
to write him a “first-rate epithet.”
The doctor redeemed his promise, by prefacing a panegyric,
in English.
The doctor, on being asked its meaning,
one day, by an inquisitive negro, who had, for some
time, been rolling the whites of his eyes at the inscription,
in a vain attempt to understand it, replied, it meant
that Felix was an intelligent and brave fellow, who
lived like a wise man, and died like a hero, whereat,
his auditor expressed great satisfaction, considering
both the Latin and the sentiment a compliment to “colored
pussons,” generally.
Gladding emigrated to the West, where
his stout arm and keen axe did himself and the State
good service. After making a fabulous number of
“claims,” and as many “trades,”
he found himself, at middle age, the master of a thousand
acres of cleared land, with a proper proportion of
timber; his log-cabin converted into a brick house,
and sons and daughters around him.
We had almost forgotten to speak of
the fate of Constable Basset. The good people
of Hillsdale soon found out that his talents did not
lie in the line he had adopted, and, at the next election,
chose another in his place. Thereupon, not discouraged,
he turned his hand, with national facility, to something
else following, successively, the business
of a small grocer, of a tavern keeper, and of an auctioneer.
Somehow or other, however, ill luck still followed
him; and, finally, he took to distributing the village
newspaper, and sticking up handbills. This gave
him a taste for politics, and having acquired, in
his employment as auctioneer, a certain fluency of
speech, he cultivated it to that degree in
town meetings and on other public occasions that,
in the end, there was not a man in the whole county
who could talk longer and say less. His fellow-citizens
observing this congressional qualification, and not
knowing what else he was fit for, have just elected
him to Congress, partly because of this accomplishment,
and, partly, on account of his patriotic dislike of
“furriners,” a sentiment which happens
now to be popular. Both his friends and enemies
agree that he is destined to make a figure there;
and Mr. Thomas Armstrong in compensation,
perhaps, for a youthful trick has promised
the Member of Congress a new hat and full suit of
black broadcloth, to enable him to appear in proper
style on Pennsylvania Avenue.