By ten of the Capitol clock Gideon
Rand had sold his tobacco and deposited the price
in a well-filled wallet. “Eighteen shillings
the hundred,” he said, with grim satisfaction.
“And the casks I sent by Mocket sold as well!
Good leaf, good leaf! Tobacco pays, and learning
don’t. Put that in your pipe and smoke it,
Lewis Rand!”
Father and son came out from the cool,
dark store, upon the unpaved street, and joined Adam
Gaudylock where he lounged beneath a sycamore.
Up and down the street were wooden houses, shops of
British merchants, prosperous taverns, and dwelling-houses
sunk in shady gardens. An arrow-flight away brawled
the river among bright islands. The sky above
the bronze sycamores was very blue, the air crystal,
the sunshine heavenly mild. The street was not
crowded. A Quaker in a broad-brimmed hat went
by, and then a pretty girl, and then a minister talking
broad Scotch, and then a future chief justice who
had been to market and had a green basket upon his
arm. Gideon drew another breath of satisfaction.
“I’ve been thinking this long time of buying
a negro, and now I can do it! Mocket says there’s
a likely man for sale down by the market. Lewis,
you go straight to Mocket now, and tell him I’ll
wait for him there! Are you coming with me, Adam
Gaudylock?”
“Why,” said Gaudylock,
with candour, “I have business presently in
Governor Street, and a man to meet at the Indian Queen.
And I think I’ll go now with Lewis. Somehow,
the woods have spoiled me for seeing men bought and
sold.”
“They’re black men,”
said Rand indifferently. “I’ll see
you, then, at dinner-time, at the Bird in Hand.
I’m going home to-morrow. Lewis, if
you want to, you can look around this morning with
Tom Mocket!” He glanced at his son’s flushing
face, and, being in high good humour, determined to
give the colt a little rein. “Be off, and
spend your dollar! See what sights you can, for
we’ll not be in Richmond again for many a day!
They say there’s a brig in from Barbadoes.”
He put up his wallet, and with a nod
to Gaudylock strode away in the direction of the market,
but presently halted and turned his head. “Lewis!”
“Yes, father.”
“Don’t you be buying any more books!
You hear me?”
He swung away, and his son stood under
the sycamore tree and looked after him with a darkened
face. Gaudylock put a hand upon his shoulder.
“Never mind, Lewis! Before we part I’m
going to talk to Gideon.” He laughed.
“Do you know what the Cherokees call me?
They call me Golden-Tongue. Because, you see,
I can persuade them to ’most anything, always
into the war-path, and sometimes out of it! Gideon
may be obstinate, but he can’t be as obstinate
as an Indian. Now let’s go to Mocket’s.”
The way to Mocket’s lay down
a steep hillside, and along the river-bank, under
a drift of coloured leaves, and by the sound of falling
water. Mocket dwelt in a small house, in a small
green yard with a broken gate. A red creeper
mantled the tiny porch, and lilac bushes, clucked under
by a dozen hens, hedged the grassy yard. As the
hunter and Lewis Rand approached, a little girl, brown
and freckled, barefoot and dressed in linsey, sprang
up from the stone before the gate, and began to run
towards the house. Her foot caught in a trailing
vine, and down she fell. Adam was beside her
at once. “Why, you little partridge!”
he exclaimed, and lifted her to her feet.
“It’s Vinie Mocket,”
said his companion. “Vinie, where’s
your father?”
“I don’t know, thir,”
answered Vinie. “Tom knows. Tom’s
down there, at the big ship. I’ll tell
him.”
She slipped from Gaudylock’s
clasp and pattered off toward the river, where the
brig from Barbadoes showed hull and masts. The
hunter sat down upon the porch step, and drew out
his tobacco pouch. “She’s like a
partridge,” he said.
“She’s just Vinie Mocket,”
answered the boy. “There’s a girl
who stays sometimes at Mrs. Selden’s, on the
Three-Notched Road. She’s not freckled,
and her eyes are big, and she never goes barefoot.
I reckon it’s silk she wears.”
“What’s her name?” asked the hunter,
filling his pipe.
“Jacqueline Jacqueline Churchill.
She lives at Fontenoy.”
“Fontenoy’s a mighty fine place,”
remarked Gaudylock.
“And the Churchills are mighty
fine people. Here’s the partridge
back, with another freckle-face.”
“That’s Tom Mocket,”
said Lewis. “If Vinie’s a partridge,
Tom’s a weasel.”
The weasel, sandy-haired and freckled,
came up the path with long steps. “Hi,
Lewis! Father’s gone toward the market looking
for your father. That’s a brig from the
Indies down there, and the captain’s our cousin ain’t
he, Vinie? I know who you are, sir. You’re
Adam Gaudylock, the great hunter!”
“So I am, so I am!” quoth
Adam. “Look here, little partridge, at what
I’ve got in my pouch!”
The partridge busied herself with
the beaded thing, and the two boys talked aside.
“I’ve till dinner time to do what I like
in,” said Lewis Rand. “Have you got
to work?”
“Not unless I want to,”
Young Mocket answered blissfully. “Father,
he don’t care! Besides” he
swelled with pride “I don’t
work now at the wharf. I’m at Chancellor
Wythe’s.”
“Chancellor Wythe’s! What are you
doing there?”
“Helping him. Maybe, by and by, I’ll
be a lawyer, too.”
“Heugh!” said the other. “Do
you mean you’re reading law?”
“No-o, not just exactly.
But I let people in and I hear what they
talk about. I like it better than the wharf,
anyhow. I’ll go with you and show you things.
Is Mr. Gaudylock coming?”
“No,” replied Adam.
“I’ll finish my pipe, and take a look at
the ship down there, and then I’ll meet a friend
at the Indian Queen. Be off with you both!
Vinie will stay and talk to me.”
“Yeth, thir,” said Vinie,
her brown arm deep in the beaded pouch.
The two lads left behind the scarlet-clad
porch, the hunter and Vinie, the little green yard
and the broken gate. “Where first? demanded
Tom.
“Where is the best place in Richmond to buy
books?”
Young Mocket considered. “There’s
a shop near the bridge. What do you want with
books?”
“I want to read them. We’ll go to
the bridge first.”
Tom hung back. “Don’t
you want to see the brig from Barbadoes? She’s
a beauty. There’s a schooner from Baltimore,
too, at the Rock Landing. You won’t?
Then let’s go over to Widewilt’s Island.
Well, they whipped a man this morning and he’s
in the pillory now, down by the market. Let’s
go look at him. Pshaw! what’s the
use of books! Don’t you want to see the
Guard turn out at noon, and hear the trumpet blow?
Well, come on to the bridge! Nancy, the apple-woman,
is there too.”
The shop near the bridge to which
they resorted was dark and low, but learning was spread
upon its counter, and a benevolent dragon of knowledge
in horn spectacles ran over the wares for Lewis Rand.
“De Jure Marítimo, six shillings eightpence,
my lad. Burnet’s History and Demosthenes’
Orations, two crowns, Mr. Gibbon’s Decline and
Fall of the Roman Empire, a great book and dear!
Common Sense and that’s Tom Paine’s,
and you may have it for two pistareens.”
The boy shook his head. “I want a law-book.”
The genie put forth The Principles of Equity, and
named the price.
“’Tis too dear.”
A gentleman lounging against the counter
closed the book into which he had been dipping, and
drew nearer to the would-be purchaser.
“Equity is an expensive commodity,
my lad,” he said kindly. “How much
law have you read?”
“I have read The Law of Virginia,”
answered the boy. “I borrowed it. I
worked a week for Mr. Douglas, and read The Law of
Nations rest-hours. Mrs. Selden, on the Three-Notched
Road, gave me The Federalist. Are you a lawyer,
sir?”
The gentleman laughed, and the genie
behind the counter laughed. Young Mocket plucked
Lewis Rand by the sleeve, but the latter was intent
upon the personage before him and did not heed.
“Yes,” said the gentleman,
“I am a lawyer. Are you going to be one?”
“I am,” said the boy.
“Will you tell me what books I ought to buy?
I have two dollars.”
The other looked at him with keen
light eyes. “That amount will not buy you
many books,” he said. “You should
enter some lawyer’s office where you may have
access to his library. You spoke of the Three-Notched
Road. Are you from Albemarle?”
“Yes, sir. I am Gideon Rand’s son.”
“Indeed! Gideon Rand! Then Mary Wayne
was your mother?”
“Yes, sir.”
“I remember,” said the
gentleman, “when she married your father.
She was a beautiful woman. I heard of her death
while I was in Paris.”
The boy’s regard, at first solely
for the books, had been for some moments transferred
to the gentleman who, it seemed, was a lawyer, and
had known his people, and had been to Paris. He
saw a tall man, of a spare and sinewy frame, with
red hair, lightly powdered, and keen blue eyes.
Lewis Rand’s cheek grew red, and his eyes at
once shy and eager. He stammered when he spoke.
“Are you from Albemarle, sir?”
The other smiled, a bright and gracious
smile, irradiating his ruddy, freckled face.
“I am,” he said.
“From from Monticello?”
“From Monticello.”
The speaker, who loved his home with passion, never
uttered its name without a softening of the voice.
“From Monticello,” he said again.
“There are books enough there, my lad. Some
day you shall ride over from the Three-Notched Road,
and I will show you them.”
“I will come,” said Lewis
Rand. The colour deepened in his face and a moisture
troubled his vision. The shop, the littered counter,
the guardian of the books, and President Washington’s
Secretary of State wavered like the sunbeam at the
door.
Jefferson ran his hand over the row
of books. “Mr. Smith, give the lad old
Coke, yes, and Locke on Government, and put them to
my account. Where do you go to school?”
The boy swallowed hard, straightened
his shoulders, and looked his questioner in the face.
“Nowhere, sir not now. My father
hates learning, and I work in the fields. I am
very much obliged to you for the books, and
had I best buy Blackstone with the two dollars?”
The other smiled. “No,
no, not Blackstone. Blackstone’s frippery.
You’ve got old Coke. Buy for yourself some
book that shall mean much to you all your life. Mr.
Smith, give him Plutarch’s Lives Ossian,
too. He’s rich enough to buy Ossian. As
for law-books, my lad, if you will come to Monticello,
I will lend you what you need. I like your spirit.”
He looked at his watch. “I have to dine
at the Eagle with the Governor and Mr. Randolph.
When do you return to Albemarle?”
“To-morrow, sir.”
“Then I may overtake you on
the road. Once I did your father a good turn,
and I shall be glad to have a word with him now.
He must not keep the son of Mary Wayne in the fields.
Some day I will ride down the Three-Notched Road,
and examine you on old Coke. Don’t spare
study; if you will be a lawyer, become a good one,
not a smatterer. Good-day to you!”
He left the shop. The bookseller
gazed after him, then nodded and smiled at the boy.
“You look transfigured, my lad! Well, he’s
a great man, and he’ll be a greater one yet.
He’s for the people, and one day the people
will be for him! I’ll tie up your books and
if you can make a friend of Mr. Jefferson, you do
it!”
Lewis Rand came out into the sunlight
with “old Coke” and Locke, Plutarch and
Ossian, under his arm, and in his soul I know not what
ardour of hero-worship, what surging resolve and aspiration.
Young Mocket, at his elbow, regarded him with something
like awe. “That was Mr. Jefferson,”
he said. “He knows General Washington and
Marquis Lafayette and Doctor Franklin. He’s
just home from Paris, and they have made him Secretary
of State whatever that is. He wrote
the Declaration of Independence. He’s a
rich man he’s a lawyer, too.
He lives at a place named Monticello.”
“I know,” said Lewis Rand,
“I’ve been to Monticello. When I am
a man I am going to have a house like it, with a terrace
and white pillars and a library. But I shall
have a flower garden like the one at Fontenoy.”
“Ho! your house! Is Fontenoy where Ludwell
Cary lives?”
“No; he lives at Greenwood.
The Churchills live at Fontenoy. Now we’ll
go see the Guard turn out. Is that the apple-woman
yonder? I’ve a half-a-bit left.”
An hour later, having bought the apples,
and seen the pillared Capitol, and respectfully considered
the outside of Chancellor Wythe’s law office,
and having parted until the afternoon with Tom Mocket,
who professed an engagement on the Barbadoes brig,
young Lewis Rand betook himself to the Bird in Hand.
There in the bare, not over clean chamber which had
been assigned to the party from Albemarle, he deposited
his precious parcel first in the depths of an ancient
pair of saddle-bags, then, thinking better of it,
underneath the straw mattress of a small bed.
It was probable, he knew, that even there his father
might discover the treasure. What would follow
discovery he knew full Well. The beating he could
take; what he wouldn’t stand would be, say, Gideon’s
flinging the books into the fire. “He shan’t,
he shan’t,” said the boy’s hot heart.
“If he does, I’ll I’ll ”
Through the window came Gaudylock’s
voice from the porch of the Bird in Hand. “You
Stay-at-homes you don’t know what’s
in the wilderness! There’s good and there’s
bad, and there’s much beside. It’s
like the sea it’s uncharted.”
Lewis Rand closed the door of the
room, and went out upon the shady porch, where he
found the hunter and a lounging wide-eyed knot of
listeners to tales of Kentucky and the Mississippi.
The dinner-bell rang. Adam fell pointedly silent,
and his audience melted away. The hunter rose
and stretched himself. “There is prime venison
for dinner, and a quince tart and good apple brandy.
Ha! I was always glad I was born in Virginia.
Here is Gideon swinging down the hill Gideon
and his negro!”
The tobacco-roller joined them, and
with a wave of the hand indicated his purchase of
the morning. This was a tall and strong negro,
young, supple, and of a cheerful countenance.
Rand was in high good-humour. “He’s
a runaway, Mocket says, but I’ll cure him of
that! He’s strong as an ox and as limber
as a snake.” Taking the negro’s hand
in his, he bent the fingers back. “Look
at that! easy as a willow! He’ll strip tobacco!
His name is Joab.”
The namesake of a prince in Israel
looked blithely upon his new family. “Yaas,
marster,” he said, with candour. “Dat
is my name dat sho’ is! Jes’ Joab.
An’ I is strong as en ox, don’
know ’bout de snaik. Marster, is you gwine
tek me ’way from Richmond?”
“Albemarle,” said the
tobacco-roller briefly. “To-morrow morning.”
Joab studied the vine above the porch.
“Kin I go tell my olé mammy good-bye?
She’s washin’ yonder in de creek.”
Rand nodded, and the negro swung off
to where, upon the grassy common sloping to Shockoe
Creek, dark washer-women were spreading clothes.
The bell of the Bird in Hand rang again, and the white
men went to dinner.
Following the venison, the tart, and
apple brandy came the short, bright afternoon, passed
by Lewis Rand upon the brig from the Indies with Tom
Mocket and little Vinie and a wrinkled skipper who
talked of cocoanuts and strange birds and red-handkerchiefed
pirates, and spent by Gideon first in business with
the elder Mocket, and then in conversation with Adam
Gaudylock. Lewis, returning at supper-time to
the Bird in Hand, found the hunter altered no whit
from his habitual tawny lightness, but his father
in a mood that he knew, sullen and silent. “Adam’s
been talking to him,” thought the boy.
“And it’s just the same as when Mrs. Selden
talks to him. Let me go not he!”
In the morning, at six of the clock,
the two Rands, the negro Joab, the horses, and the
dogs took the homeward road to Albemarle. Adam
Gaudylock was not returning with them; he had trader’s
business with the merchants in Main Street, hunter’s
business with certain cronies at the Indian Queen,
able scout and man-of-information business in Governor
Street, and business of his own upon the elm-shaded
walk above the river. Over level autumn fields
and up and down the wooded hills, father and son and
the slave travelled briskly toward the west. As
the twilight fell, they came up with three white wagons,
Staunton bound, and convoyed by mountaineers.
That night they camped with these men in an expanse
of scrub and sassafras, but left them at dawn and
went on toward Albemarle. A day of coloured woods,
of infrequent clearings, and of streams to ford, ended
in an evening of cool wind and rosy sky. They
descended a hill, halted, and built their fire in
a grassy space beside a river. Joab tethered
the horses and made the fire, and fried the bacon and
baked the hoecake. As he worked he sang:
“David an’ Cephas,
an’ olé brer Mingo,
Saul an’ Paul, an’ de w’ite
folk sinners
Oh, my chillern, follow de Lawd!”
Supper was eaten in silence.
When it was over, Gideon Rand sat with his back against
a pine and smoked his pipe. His son went down
to the river and stretched his length upon a mossed
and lichened boulder. The deep water below the
stone did not give him back himself as had done the
streamlet five days before. This was a river,
marred with eddies and with drifting wood, and red
with the soil. The evening wind was blowing,
and the sycamore above him cast its bronze leaves into
the flood which sucked them under, or bore them with
it on its way to the larger river and the ultimate
sea. This stream had no babbling voice; its note
was low and grave. Youth and mountain sources
forgotten, it hearkened before the time to ocean voices.
The boy, idle upon the lichened stone, listened too,
to distant utterances, to the sirens singing beyond
the shadowy cape. The earth soothed him; he lay
with half shut eyes, and after the day’s hot
communion with old wrongs, he felt a sudden peace.
He was at the turn; the brute within him quiet behind
the eternal bars; the savage receding, the man beckoning,
the after man watching from afar. The inner stage
was cleared and set for a new act. He had lowered
the light, he had rested, and he had filled the interval
with forms and determinations beautiful and vague,
vague as the mists, the sounds, the tossed arms of
the Ossian he had dared to open last night, before
his father, by the camp-fire of the mountaineers.
In the twilight of his theatre he rested; a shadowy
figure, full of mysteries, full of possibilities,
a boy in the grasp of the man within him, neither boy
nor man unlovable, nor wholly unadmirable, both seen,
and seeing, “through a glass darkly.”
He turned on his side, and the light
went up sharply. A man riding a beautiful and
spirited horse was coming over the hilltop. Horse
and rider paused a moment upon the crest, standing
clear against the eastern sky. In the crystal
air and the sunset glow they crowned the hill like
a horse and rider nobly done in bronze. A moment
thus, then they began to pick their way down the rocky
road. Lewis Rand looked, and started to his feet.
That horse had been bred in Albemarle, and that horseman
he had met in Richmond. The boy’s heart
beat fast and the colour surged to his cheek.
There was little, since the hour in the bookshop, that
he would not have done or suffered for the approaching
figure. All along the road from Richmond his
imagination had conjured up a score of fantastic instances,
in each of which he had rescued, or died for, or had
in some impossibly romantic and magnificent fashion
been the benefactor of the man who was drawing near
to the river and camp-fire. As superbly generous
as any other youth, he was, at present, in his progress
through life, in the land of shrines. He must
have his idol, must worship and follow after some
visible hero, some older, higher, stronger, more subtle-fine
and far-ahead adventurer. Heretofore, in his
limited world, Adam Gaudylock had seemed nearest the
gates of escape. But Adam, he thought, was of
the woods and the earth, even as his father was, and
as the tobacco was, and as he himself was. His
enormous need was for some one to follow whose feet
were above the fat, red fields and the leafy trails.
All this was present with him as he watched the oncoming
figure. Great men kept their word. Had not
Mr. Jefferson said that he would overtake them? and
there he was! He was coming down to the camp-fire,
he was going to stop and talk to the surly giant, like
Giant Despair, who sat and smoked beside it.
Lewis Rand left the river and the
windy sycamore and hastened across the sere grass.
“Father, father!” he cried. “Do
you know who that is?” In his young voice there
was both warning and appeal. Adam Gaudylock, he
knew, had spoken to his father, but Gideon had given
no sign. Suppose, no matter who spoke,
his father would give, forever, no other sign than
that oft seen and always hated jerk of the head toward
the tobacco-fields?
Gideon Rand took his pipe from his
lips. “It’s Mr. Jefferson,”
he answered laconically. “He’s the
one man in this country to whom I’d listen.”
Jefferson rode up to the group about
the camp-fire, checked his horse, and gave the tobacco-roller
and his son a plain man’s greeting to plain
men. The eagerness of the boy’s face did
not escape him; when he dismounted, flung the reins
of Wildair to his groom, and crossed the bit of turf
to the fire beneath the pines, he knew that he was
pleasing a young heart. He loved youth, and to
the young he was always nobly kind.
“Good-evening, Mr. Rand,”
he said. “You are homeward bound, as I am.
It is good to see Albemarle faces after years of the
French. I had the pleasure of making your son’s
acquaintance yesterday. It is a great thing to
be the father of a son, for so one ceases to be a loose
end and becomes a link in the great chain. Your
son, I think, will do you honour. And, man to
man, you must pay him in the same coin. We on
a lower rung of the ladder must keep our hands from
the ankles of the climbers above us! Make room
for me on that log, my lad! Your father and I
will talk awhile.”
Thus it was that an able lawyer took
up the case of young Lewis Rand. It was the lawyer’s
pleasure to give aid to youth, and to mould the mind
of youth. He had many proteges, to all of whom
he was invariably kind, invariably generous.
The only return he exacted was that of homage.
The yoke was not heavy, for, after all, the homage
was to Ideas, to large, sagacious, and far-reaching
Thought. It was in the year 1790 that he broke
Gideon Rand’s resistance to his son’s devotion
to other gods than those of the Rands. The year
that followed that evening on the Albemarle road found
Lewis Rand reading law in an office in Charlottesville.
A few more years, and he was called to the bar; a
little longer, and his name began to be an oft-spoken
one in his native county, and not unknown throughout
Virginia.