George & Rue

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by George Elliott Clarke


  Rue pictured Chaud and Boyd as squid-like, inky, jetting Atlantic cold and darkness. When Chaud asked him to speak before the jury weighed his guilt, Rue said, with distinct gusto, “Nope.”

  Chaud had the last word: “George and Rufus Hamilton apparently hadn’t worked for some time, but nevertheless had apparel and lots of feasting and alcohol—immediately after the crime. Silver is deceased due to the hammering of his skull. These two lusty Negroes cannibalized poor Burgundy. The verb is not too strong. One followed the other like a dog.

  “Gentlemen of the jury, we have now reached the last scene of the last act of the tragic drama which was unfurled before you during the last four days; and this last scene is the rendering of the verdict—the true statement—by the jury, whose august solemnity will give the appropriate weight to the truth.”

  George glanced at the jury nervously. Their faces were all scrunched up. In the prisoner’s box, Rue sucked his teeth and eyed the grimly praying, cockamamie, foolhardy George.

  VII

  AFTER THE JURORS reported, Chaud prepared to pass sentence. He began gently, professional. “George Hamilton, have you anything to say why sentence should not be passed upon you according to law?”

  “I am a converted and convicted Christian, sir.”

  “Rufus Hamilton, do you have anything to say?”

  “Nothing, sir.”

  Chaud glared at the obstinate man. “Nothing?”

  Rufus stared back. “Nope.”

  Chaud harrumphed and launched into his lethal sermon. “It is a satisfaction to know that the poorest man, whether he belongs to the Caucasian race or not, may expect an able defence, which you lads have received. You are not of our race. That is no fault of yours. Whether it be a misfortune, it may be a matter of opinion. Your people were not brought here at your own instance or desire. Your ancestors were forced from their native homes, brought here to this land, no doubt against their own will. You are not to blame; you may be pitied for your colour and your race, but you and we have this satisfaction, that the Coloured man, the Negro, has precisely the same rights in a British, a Canadian, court to Justice that the purest white man could have.

  “Indeed, I am glad that my people, the Canadian people, have that self-restraint which is characteristic, I think, of our people, and they refrained from doing violence to you, leaving you in the hands of the law in the regular administration of the law. That is a great object lesson to other people, south of the border, by whom you people are less humanely treated. You differ from most of us in blood, in race, but no man can say that you have not had a fair trial.

  “Now, I must carry out my duty as prescribed by that impartial law that smiles upon all British subjects. After your fair trials, your juries have spoke, and so must I.

  “Your deed constitutes a sickening chapter in New Brunswick history. You were without money, which is unfortunate; you were without mercy, which is unforgiveable.

  “George, you say you have been converted. Good. Now, you will meet your Maker. I hereby sentence you, George Hamilton, and you, Rufus Hamilton, to be hanged on July 27, 1949, between midnight and noon, by the neck, until dead. May God have mercy on your souls.”

  George wept and shouted, “Praise Jesus!”

  Chaud retorted, “Your brother may have trapped you into this final downfall, but you were already imbrued in crime. You carried the hammer—the very instrument of this homicide—so you could help your brother rob and murder an innocent man. And it was you who took the slain man’s money, divided it callously, and then helped to wash away and burn up evidence. If Rufus is the physical killer, you, George Hamilton, are guilty of making murder possible.”

  George fell to his knees. Rufus smirked.

  Pandemonium rocked the court. Creaky old men leapt to their feet and cheered; one excited young blonde woman yelled, “We’ll kill them in their very souls.” Savage applause, whoops, cheers, with Chaud slamming his gavel ineffectively down and down.

  Detective Stark, standing behind the weeping, crestfallen George and the nonchalant Rufus, leaned over and whispered, “The gallows’ll gut your necks, boys. You’ll twitch, jig, piss, shit, sigh, and wheeze, and that’s it.”

  Rue turned to Stark and said, smiling, “I’m ready to die. Are you?”

  VIII

  The Casket—Fredericton, N.B.

  Friday, May 20, 1949, 4 p.m. edition

  George Hamilton and Rufus Hamilton, Brothers, Were Given Death Penalty for Killing Taxi-Driver Nacre Burgundy of This City—George Made Statement

  FREDERICTON—First to be tried for the diabolically calculated and most brutally executed murder in the history of this provincial capital, the dapper Rufus Hamilton was found guilty following a four-day trial, as was George, despite the fact the comical, local colored man took the stand for the Crown and blamed his younger brother for striking the death-blow, at the close of a three-day hearing.

  Evidence brought out by newly named Deputy Attorney General and trial Crown Prosecutor Alphaeus Boyd disclosed that after slugging Burgundy with an iron hammer and robbing him at the foot of Poplar Hill, the negroes left the taxi-operator’s body under a tree for some time before stuffing it into the trunk of the car and throwing the keys away. Later, after dropping his brother off in Barker’s Point, George Hamilton drove to Saint John and back with Burgundy’s body in the trunk, before ditching it off the Wilsey Road, not far from the Saint John River.

  When asked if he thought his brother George was “trying to pin this murder on you,” Rufus replied, with chilly gravity, “Under the circumstances, one could arrive at that opinion.”

  When asked if he was “trying to pin Burgundy’s death on George,” Rufus declared, “I’m definitely not.”

  Before sentencing, George Hamilton said, “I want the citizens of Fredericton to know that I have nobody to blame but George Hamilton himself for letting my brother Rufus come home and lead me into this. I have been converted and have been reading the Bible in the Gaol.” His Lordship replied, “You engineered the scheme that resulted in Burgundy’s death. Counsel has done all he could be expected to do on your behalf. You state you have converted; now, make your peace with your Maker.”

  When asked by His Lordship to offer a statement of his own, Rufus Hamilton replied, in a low but clear voice, “I have nothing to say.”

  Unable to obtain a seat in the courtroom, a feisty, local colored lady, Mrs. Mossy Roach, not only demonstrated her resourcefulness but brought a smile from men in the corridors when she left the building and returned about 15 minutes later with a chair of her own, which she planted firmly at the main entrance to the court and remained there throughout the morning.

  In the accompanying photo, Rufus is obscured, his face—a ghost—utterly shrouded in black, save for a slight pale profile rising out of the ink. He appears in a vertical rectangle, cropped to suggest the frame of a coffin. In contrast, George appears affable, smiling, with a handkerchief peeping from his coat pocket. He has long arms and hands. His rectangular photo is also cropped to suggest a stand-up coffin.

  IX

  MAY 29, 1949. Georgie put pencil to foolscap and wrote longingly to the Governor General of Canada, Harold Rupert Leofric George Alexander, or Viscount Alexander of Tunis, or His Excellency, the Administrator of the Government of Canada, to beg for his life. His tone: a supplicant’s saccharine mixed with a suicide’s cyanide. “So Sir that why I am humbling my self to You and Bagging you for my wife sake and two children Sake and for the good that in me and the new life I found in our Lord and in the name of Jesus Christ I Bag you sir to Spear my life.”

  Unfortunately for George, Mr. Harold Alexander—once the British army’s youngest major-general, one who helped defeat Erwin Rommel’s Afrika Corps, and the cool engineer of two celebrated troop evacuations during the Anti-Fascist War—loved fishing in Manitoba and hunting in Quebec: a kind of Group of Seven outdoorsman, he was not the type to expend mercy on a snivelling killer.

  In his letter,
George swore to be “a good Canadain and preach the Word of God to others” because he was “a christian at heart” who’d given up “smoking and Reading filthy books.” He was “praying night and day so that you will see the truth in my Latter to you Sir” because “I am no murder or had no intention in my heart for it my brother kill silver with out me noing about it, and I no if I had not drop the hammer my Brother would of hit him with the beer bottal he had but I had comited a sin a mixed up in a crime witch in breaking the English Laws of Canada and I sin against God.”

  Georgie was “constantly Reading my Bible … the book that brought peace and joy to my Sole.” George asked Alexander of Tunis to “pordon my wrighting Pleas Sir and my Spelling” and to let him have a second “Chanch.” He “amitted” that he did call the taxi, though he’d “never hit a man in my Life so when it came time to that I was supposed to hit him, I could not do it.” He clarified that “I am not guilty of hitting any Body in my LIfe, and I never planed with my Brother to kill any body …” but “I did planed Sir to go out and get some money and hit a man that is the truth.”

  Georgie pleaded for his dream future and that of his children: “I am a good man at Heart I never wanted to hurt any body in my Life, Sir my two children and my wife I am setting here thinking what my children is got to face if get Hang people will tell them your father was a murder and was hang I am not no murder sir but I was found guilty, but I ask you sir please think about what will happen to my children, this is something I did not want to happen to them, I wanted to give them thing I never had and bring them up wright and give them a Schooling, and learnt them wright from wrong and build them a house, for my wife and children, but my Brother Rudy lead me into a trap and spoild all that.” George pleaded with His Excellency, “the Wright Honarble Govner General,” to save his life. He signed off as “your Truely Slave George Albert Hamilton I thank you sir with all my Heart and Soul.”

  George’s letter overlooked, however, what Viscount Alexander—who’d just toured the University of New Brunswick and snagged a doctorate—could not: the body of Nacre Pearly Burgundy had spawned a host of bitter citizens clamouring for two black boys to swing from a beige fake tree. (Indeedy, Fredericton was anxious to see “shiftless, murderous niggers” hanged—in tune with the racket of hammers hitting nails, the crescendo of piano keys—hammers—striking chords and the machine-gun of typewriter hammers striking paper.) The greatest ex-general (since the Duke of Wellington) of His Majesty’s forces would bow to New Brunswick public opinion, which could be polled, while reserving respect for God’s opinion, which no one could divine.

  X

  GEORGE began now to keep a journal, erratic Grade Three spelling and all, for his Sally Ann brethren. Still, after a couple of months of steady Bible reading and letter writing, his style had improved. Too, George adored the supreme, democratic equality of majuscule letters. There was an implicit salvation in lending Bible verses and personal talk this gravitas.

  “I DIE AT MIDNIGHT ON JULY THE 27, OF 1949 ON WEDNESDAY MORNING EARLY. WHEN YOU READ THIS I MOST LIKELY WILL BE DEAD, BUT DON’T BE ALARMED AT HEARING FROM A DEAD MAN…

  “I DON’T MIND TALKING ABOUT DYING … I’M REALLY HAPPY.

  “READ YOUR BIBLE AND YOU WILL GET ALONG IN THIS WORLD AND IN THE NEXT WORLD TOO. Eat every Honeyed page of the Good Book …

  “YOU SEE I WOKE UP ONE NIGHT SWEATING ALTHOUGH THE CELL WAS COOL I NEW SOME BODY WAS IN MY CELL AND THAT WAS THE SPIRIT OF GOD HE SPOKE TO ME AND SAID TO ME WHY DON’T YOU BELIVED IN ME IS IT BECAUSE YOU CAN’T SEE ME You BELIEVE THERE IS A KING george vi AND YOU HAVE NOT SEEN HIM, SO NOW WHY DONT YOU BELEIVE IN ME, WELL I COME TO YOU TO NIGHT IN YOUR DREAMS AND HE DID AND HE WAR A LONG WHIT ROBE A THORNY CROWN AND WAS BLEEDING IN HIS BROWN HANDS, SIDE, AND GOLDN FEET AND THEN I KNEW THAT GOD WAS REAL AND MERCYFUL TO SINNERS, NO BODY HAD SEEN ME CLIMB FROM MY BED AND FALL ON MY KNEES AND CRY LIKE A BABY TO GOD, I DONT REMEMBER JUST WHAT I TOLD GOD THAT NIGHT ON MY KNEES BUT I ASKED HIM TO BE MERCIFUL TO ME AN EVIL SINNER, HE SAVED ME THAT NIGHT I KNOW I’VE BELIEVED ON HIS SON JESUS CHRIST EVER SINCE THERE WAS A SMELL LIKE CINNAMON AFTER WORDS …

  “NOW AS I SET HERE IN THE COUNTY YORK JAIL, I AM GOING TO TELL YOU ABOUT HOW CLEAN MR LION THE SHERIFF KEEPS IT, HE ALL SO RUNS THE JAIL, AND LET ME TELL YOU ABOUT THE GOOD FOOD HERE YOU GET STEWS AND BEANS AND SOUPS AND JAM AND CHEESE AND MILK TEA MEATS, AND I DONT CARE IF YOU GO ALL OVER CANADA THIS IS THE BEST JAIL I HAVE BEEN IN FOR CLEANESS, MR LION THE SHERIFF IS THE GREATEST MAN IN THIS WORLD TO LOOK AFTER A PRISONER, AND HE LET ME A RADIO IN MY CELL AND A CLOCK, AND ANY THING THAT MY WIFE (BLONDOLA) BROUGHT ME IN …”

  XI

  ON MAY 30, 1949, the very same day Chaud wrote the Secretary of State advising the judicial murder of the Nova Scotians, Rufus James Hamilton, just twenty-two years old, and “sorry to say” that he had two convictions, dashed off his own sally to the “Guvnor General of Canada.” For his bit, Rue was “sorry to say this but I must: I have served 2 years in Dorchester penitentiary for a crime I was not at all to blame for…. I returned to this city only to marry a girl I realized I loved.” He applauded his “able attorney,” Carl Waley, for his careful “inventory of the events so that people would be convinced I, Rufus Hamilton, am innocent. I, the accused, did not take the life from a human being. I am sorry to say that I haven’t a clue who killed Burgundy.” Rufus was “a Young Man who had planned to get married on the 15 day of June 1949 and live a happy life because I was very much in love with the wonderful girl I was going to marry.”

  Rue could not fake “humbling,” so he was brazen: “My Honor, the people of this City do not believe that I took a man’s life—all for a couple hundred dollars.” Such allegations were “lying evidence.” Suspicion ought to be directed on Plumsy Peters, “a plain liar” who’d claimed to be “a Friend of Mine,” but what a friend! “My Life Depends on You, Sir: On Rejecting False Evidence Presented Against Me in the Court.”

  XII

  A BSALOM Tombs, a man who tore apart houses for a living, was the carpenter appointed by Sheriff Lion to construct the spindly wooden instrument to kill George and Rufus. The splendid gallows grew spidery, then elephantine, inside the prison’s barn. Tombs had to saw and hammer together a contraption—a dextrous machine—that would snap two necks elegantly. His work did not end until—like a tailor—he measured both Rue and Georgie for their separate box-suits of plywood (dead men’s overcoats), which he also had to knock out. This latter task was simpler and cheaper than the first: that had been architecture; the second duty was just a hatchet job.

  Mr. Arthur Ellis, the Dominion Executioner, based in Montreal, now had to mastermind a double hanging. Always snazzy, he sported a jaunty bowler hat and a Scottish wool suit in winter and a Brazilian linen suit in summer, and aptly white gloves. When on the job, Ellis secreted a pistol in the waistband of his pants. He liked big cigars, lemonade, beer (never when working), and Dixieland jazz. He’d retire in a few years—after officiating at more than six hundred “danglings” in Canada, the United States, Great Britain, the West Indies, and Palestine—to the Okanagan Valley, in pastoral British Columbia, where he’d become a first-rate cultivator of peaches.

  XIII

  WANING July light infiltrated maple leaves and one-foot-thick back-wall cement to sift through barred windows and spill shadowy across two telegrams confirming that Mr. George Albert Hamilton and Mr. Rufus James Hamilton must hang early the morrow. His Excellency must let Dominion Law take its local, provincial course. Sorry. Quite.

  The quality of that light was yellowish and hellish, but it was still light, and the brothers prayed it would last forever. But the afternoon’s shadows reminded George and Rue of the spectres of the previously hanged. These wraiths seemed to dangle from the ceiling pipes and to smile back from the reflections of themselves displayed in the water in their toilets. They were shades of spooks looking at spooks of shades, amid siftings of light like the dust of blossoms.

  Outside, the green grass glittered; an
ts moved quickly. They seemed huge and fast to Rue’s eyes. He sat and scribbled his one and only poem, “Three Killers”:

  Three white men

  are coming to kill us.

  Their ties are upside-down nooses.

  Their faces hammer breath.

  Three Kings of Killers—

  Absalom, Chaud, Ellis—

  will coolly kill us.

  We’ll don a new black skin of flies.

  (The gallows swallows you whole: You wallow inside its hole.)

  —Rufus “Jesse” James Hamilton

  George was most content. He had his Xn resignation. He heard the lush, velvety voices of singers amid wheatfields and tasted the sweet, pure wellsprings of the Bible. He figured his soul was polished pristine. He dreamt a Heaven with feasts of Syrian apples and Israelite quinces, almond-flavoured peaches, jasmine of Aleppo, cucumbers, lemons, sultana citrons, apricots and cottage cheese, pumpkins and pomegranates, white roses and rose-flavoured pastries, rum-laced pound cakes, iced nougats, lime sherbet, tarts, oil of lavender, caviar, grappa, champagne, red wine, eggs, roast turkey, venison stew, rhubarb pie, sausage, clams, lobster, any soup he could imagine, Montreal smoked meat…. Death would thin out his body, but Heaven’d fill his belly eternally.

  Unlike George, Rue was coming to his death with an empty heart and empty hands. He wanted to believe he was beset by a demon that’d created a preposterous lie about him. (He thought heresy might displace hearsay.) Once the almost—Duke Ellington of Three Mile Plains, Rue’d now perform a danse macabre. He’d practise the art of being dead, his head splashed against hard air. After hanging, personally he wished he’d just be cut down, not dissected, disgraced, but flung into the closest marsh.

 

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