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by Edward Cline


  Patrick Henry, however, had more to say. His colleagues nearest him noticed that his face had grown red, and that his blue-gray eyes were set in a murderous fury whose object they did not envy. Henry rose, and those eyes fastened on Speaker Robinson. That man otherwise would have fallen back on the rationale that since Henry had already spoken, he could be denied recognition. But he knew by the ferocious set of Henry’s features that this man would not be silenced. In the hiatus, no one else had risen, and he was bound to allow this man to speak.

  Henry had removed his hat and handed it again to Colonel Munford. He took a step away from his seat. “The honorable gentleman there,” he said, pointing boldly to Peyton Randolph, “spoke now, not of the rightness or wrongness of the resolve in question, but of ominous consequences should this House adopt it. I own that I am perplexed by his attention to what the Crown can and may do, and by his neglect to speak to the propriety of the resolve and the impropriety of this Stamp Act. Should he have examined for us the basis of his fears? Yes. But he did not. Perhaps he concluded that they were too terrible to articulate. So I shall examine them, for I believe that he and I share one well-founded fear: The power of the Crown to punish us, to scatter us, to despoil us, for the temerity of asserting in no ambiguous terms our liberty! I fear that power no less than he. But I say that such a fear, of such a power, can move a man to one of two courses. He can make a compact with that power, one of mutual accommodation, so that he may live the balance of his years in the shadow of that power, ever-trembling in soul-dulling funk lest that power rob him once again.

  “Or — he can rise up, and to that power say ‘No!,’ to that power proclaim: ‘Liberty cannot, and will not, ever accommodate tyranny! I am wise to that Faustian bargain, and will not barter piecemeal or in whole my liberty!’”

  Henry folded his arms and surveyed the rows of stony-faced members across the floor. “Why are you gentlemen so fearful of that word?” he demanded. “Why have not one of you dared pronounce it? Is it because you believe that if it is not spoken, or its fact or action in any form not acknowledged, it will not be what it is? Well, I will speak it for you and for all this colony to hear!” His arms dropped, but the left rose again, and he shouted, stabbing the air with a fist, “Tyranny! Tyranny! Tyranny!” The arm dropped again. “There! The horror is named!” He suddenly strode to the clerk’s table, seized the bound pages of the Stamp Act that lay next to the golden mace, and violently thrust it back down, causing John Randolph and his clerks to wince, and loose papers to blow to the floor. “Tyranny! There is its guise, sirs! What a Janus-faced object it is, smirking at you on one side of its mask, shedding tears for you on the other! What a contemptible set of men who authored it, but whom you wish to accommodate! What a disgraceful proposition! And what a travesty you ask us to condone! ’Tis a mere pound of flesh we propose to remove from you, they tell you in gentle, proper language, and we promise that you will not bleed. Hah!” barked Henry with scorn. “You will recall how the Bard proved the folly and fallacy of that kind of compact! Are not accommodation and compromise another but greater form of it? He proved it in a comedy, sirs! You propose to prove it in a tragedy, and if you succeed in penning finis to your opus, you may rue the day you put your names on its title page!”

  Henry wandered back in the direction of his seat, though his contemptuous glance did not leave the men on the opposition benches. “You gentlemen, you have amassed vast, stately libraries from which you seem to be reluctant to cull or retain much wisdom. Know that I, too, have books, and that they are loose and dog-eared from my having read them, and I have profited from that habit.” His voice now rose to a pitch that seemed to shatter the air. “History is rife with instances of ambitious, grasping tyranny! Like many of you, I, too, have read that in the past, the tyrants Tarquin and Julius Caesar each had his Brutus, Catline had his Cicero and Cato, and, closer to our time, Charles had his Cromwell! George the Third may —”

  The opposition benches exploded in outrage. Burgesses shot up at the sound of the king’s name, released now from their dumb silence, and found their argument. They cried to the Speaker, “Treason!” “Treason!” “Enough! He speaks treason!” “Expel that man!” “Silence that traitor!” “Stay his tongue!” “Treason!”

  Speaker Robinson was also on his feet, shaking his cane at Henry. “Treason, sir! Treason! I warn you, sir! Treason!”

  Henry, determined to finish his sentence, shouted about the tumult, “— may George the Third profit by their example!”

  “Treason!” insisted more of the older members. “Sedition!” “Treason!” “Speaker, silence that man!”

  Henry stood defiantly, facing his gesturing accusers, then raised a hand and whipped it through the air in a diagonal swath that seemed to sweep them all way. “If this be treason, then make the most of it!” he shouted. He stood for a moment more, then turned and strode back to his seat. But, he did not sit, for he was not finished.

  John Randolph was shouting now, “Order in the House! Order in the House!” He hammered his gavel repeatedly until its wood handle stung his hand. His clerks bent to retrieve the papers blown to the floor. The Chief Clerk, angry that his position had not allowed him to join in the hue and cry of treason, shook the gavel at the excited throng behind the railing. “You people, there! Be quiet, or the House will order this chamber cleared of strangers!” He struck the gavel twice more.

  Jack Frake had risen from his seat in silent, uncontrollable agreement with Henry. Etáin’s eyes were moist with approval. John Ramshaw stared at Henry with joyous wonder, and John Proudlocks with happy amazement. Reece Vishonn and Ralph Cullis exchanged looks of worried bafflement, undecided about whether their sense of danger came from Henry or from the men who talked and expostulated around them.

  Thomas Jefferson rubbed the sides of his face with his hands, his eyes aglow with exaltation. “Oh, what eloquence! What heights men can climb!” he said to himself. “He speaks as Homer spoke!”

  In a collective excitement, the standing crowd had pressed forward even closer so as not to miss a single word or action in this drama. Alphonse Croisset had taken out a little notebook and pencil, and, amid the jostling and hubbub, managed to scribble down in halting English the words and events he was witnessing through the shifting cracks of the noisy wall of bodies that imprisoned him.

  When the House was quiet again, Speaker Robinson rose gravely from his chair and pointed his cane at Henry. “This man has spoken treason, sirs,” he declared with regret and spent anger, “and I am sorry to observe that no one here was loyal enough to His Majesty to stop him before he had gone so far.”

  Hugh remarked to Edgar Cullis, “They are not afraid to pronounce that word!”

  Cullis, though, stared back at him with wide, frightened eyes; he was shaken by the violence of the event.

  As the Speaker slowly settled back into his chair, Hugh said to his colleague, “I will defend him.” He rose and waited for the Speaker to recognize him.

  Robinson glanced up from some horrible reverie of his own, and nodded to the waiting figure without recognition or care.

  Hugh spoke. His words did not come easily now, for he exerted an effort that was alien to him, and with difficulty said each word as though he were renouncing his life and his right to it. “If the last speaker has affronted the Speaker or this House, I am certain he is ready to ask pardon. I have no doubt that he would prove his loyalty to His Majesty at the expense of the last drop of his blood. What he said now must be attributed to the interest of his country’s dying liberty, which is foremost in his heart, and in the heat of passion may have led him to say more than he intended. If he has said anything wrong, I am sure he would beg the pardon of the House and the Speaker.”

  “Who speaks now, s’il vous plait?” queried Croisset, who could not see into the chamber. No one answered him, for no one heard his question. But the voice he heard reciting an apology sounded like the one that had provoked the protests. Croisset wrote rapidl
y in his notebook.

  Hugh observed the mollified looks on the faces of the older burgesses, and sat down again.

  “Sham piety!” muttered George Wythe.

  John Robinson turned to look at Henry, who had not resumed his seat. Henry returned the glance with narrowed, waiting, unrepentant eyes. The Speaker averted those eyes, and stared at the floor before him. He was afraid of this man. He felt the expectant eyes of Peyton Randolph, Richard Bland, and all the older members on his person and position. He was now afraid of them. He could not force himself to require Henry to beg his pardon. There was something about the man that caused him to be both afraid of it, and afraid to betray it. And this man’s opposition to the defeated loan office proposal seemed somehow connected with the necessity of forgiving him. Robinson thought: Who am I to cast a stone at this man? With an imperceptible shake of his head, he said, in a curious manner of atonement, “The apology is accepted, and the matter is to be dropped.” He glanced again at Henry, to whom he felt transparent. Henry nodded once, and with a slight bow of his head, turned and resumed his seat. Robinson looked up and said to the Chief Clerk, “Mr. Randolph, you will read this last resolution and conduct a vote.”

  William Ferguson was instructed to read the fifth resolve for the last time. He adjusted his spectacles and obliged. As he read, Peyton Randolph’s mouth pursed in grim bitterness. Wythe and Bland, daggers in their eyes, both regarded the Speaker with a disappointment that verged on disdain; it would have been a small triumph to hear Henry himself stammer an apology. Robinson would not look in their direction. Their assessment of him did not change even when he was called on to voice his vote, and he said “Nay.”

  Hopes for the defeat of the resolve were crushed when four older members shocked the “conservatives” and voted “Aye,” then were raised when four younger members voted “Nay.” Among the latter was Edgar Cullis, whose mind still reeled wildly from Randolph’s dire warning and Henry’s fiery vehemence.

  * * *

  The fifth resolve was adopted by the House by a margin of one vote, twenty to nineteen. Patrick Henry leaned back in his seat, his eyes closed in relief. Peyton Randolph’s features twisted in anger. Members on both sides of the House realized now whose vote could have caused a tie, whose vote would have been against not only the fifth resolve but all its companions: Edmund Pendleton’s.

  That man had left Williamsburg in high dudgeon over the defeat of the loan office scheme. With his vote on the transcendent fifth resolve, Robinson could have exercised his capacity and privilege as Speaker and voted again to break the tie.

  Pendleton’s conspicuous absence yesterday and today festered in the minds of the House’s leaders, particularly Peyton Randolph’s. Pendleton could have made a difference these last two days, he thought. His clear, orderly mind and calm but effective manner of speaking could have persuaded some of the younger members to oppose all the resolutions, and not just the fifth. And then this session could have ended on a far more amicable and satisfactory note.

  Randolph glanced at Robinson. The Speaker looked beaten, ashamed, and troubled. The Attorney-General thought: My old friend has not long to occupy that chair; he is losing his hold on the House, and this day has cost him.

  Robinson ordered an adjournment until the next morning. Again, the older members led the way out of the chamber, brushing hurriedly through the knot of spectators to reach the lobby doors. Peyton Randolph was one of the last of them to leave, following Wythe and Robinson. He was still incensed over the outcome. His world seemed to be falling apart, too; the resolves could have been negatived, but for the stubborn, spleenish obstinacy of one man — Pendleton! And then, he was defeated by a man half his age, a man whose license to practice law he should have opposed. Moreover, he was bested and confounded by that too-learned English youth from one of the most insignificant counties. All in all, a thoroughly humiliating day.

  A tall, familiar figure stepped out of his way as he approached the lobby doors. It was a distant cousin, Thomas Jefferson, who regarded him with an odd species of sympathy that contrasted with the flushed contentment on his face. Here was another know-it-all boy, thought Randolph, his head filled with bookish learning and airy ideals. No doubt he enjoyed seeing a kinsman pelted with classical allusions and grand oratory. Pent-up anger got the best of Randolph, and he blurted into that young man’s face, wanting to erase the innocence from it, “By God, I would have given five hundred guineas for a single vote!”

  But Jefferson merely blinked in astonishment and took a step back. The Attorney-General snorted once, then shouldered his way past the equally astonished Alphonse Croisset, his huge frame almost knocking the Frenchman over, and stepping on the shoe of John Tyler, a friend of Henry’s from Hanover.

  Chapter 11: The Wound

  “Thank you, sir…for the gesture. I was not prepared to make it myself, not even at the price of expulsion.” Patrick Henry paused. “Forgive me the policy, but I never beg pardon for speaking what is on my mind.”

  Hugh Kenrick shook his head. “It was a necessary gesture, sir, to save the resolves.”

  They stood with Colonel Munford, George Johnston, and John Fleming in the courtyard of the Capitol. Another burgess, Paul Carrington of Charlotte, had joined them. He was one of the older members who had voted for the first four resolves, opposed the fifth, but changed his vote on the last reading.

  Henry studied Hugh, and in his scrutiny was sincere admiration. “You have my profoundest gratitude, sir,” he said. “I know that you are not by nature an obsequious man. You have my apology for causing you to speak in my defense. But had I apologized in there — had I the strength to screw up the mortifying courage to mouth those words —” he added, nodding to the Capitol behind them, “it might have cost the resolves more votes. Whether my apology was genuine or an exercise in sham piety, more of our party might have seen some value in humility…and deference, and voted governed by their weaknesses.”

  Hugh turned this over in his mind for a moment, then replied, “That may be true, sir. But, to be frank, I did what I did, also because I did not wish to hear you speak an untruth. Nor did I wish to see you punished for refusing to speak one. And I wished to save the resolves.”

  Carrington spoke up. “Had there not been an apology, sirs,” he said to the group, “I truly believe that Mr. Robinson would have been persuaded by that devil Randolph to chuck the resolves and begin expulsion proceedings, in preparation for a trial in an extraordinary session of the General Court.” He turned to Henry with a frown. “Then you and the resolves would have been lost.”

  Colonel Munford patted Hugh’s shoulder. “Then Virginia and every liberty-loving soul in it owe this man their thanks, sirs! He has mine!” All the other men acknowledged the truth of this statement, and doffed their hats to Hugh.

  Hugh gravely inclined his head in acknowledgment.

  The group was one of many that had collected in the courtyard. Some were composed of younger burgesses talking excitedly about the resolves and their role in their adoption. Older members huddled together to express their disgust and fears. The largest, though, was made up of lingering spectators; it was obvious that the focus of their distant fascination was Henry.

  Hugh glanced around the courtyard, hoping to spot Edgar Cullis. His colleague had left the chamber without a word, rushing to follow the older members in their exit. Hugh saw his friends from Caxton standing apart from the other groups near the Capitol gate, waiting for him.

  Henry was saying now, “…My wife is not in her best health, sirs, and my property needs attention. I have been away for too long. I will take my leave for Hanover tonight.”

  His friends were stunned. “But we need you to present the sixth and seventh resolves,” protested Fleming. He added with half-hearted amusement, “None of us has the ‘old guard’ showing their tails!”

  Henry shook his head. “My mind is made up. And think of this: If I stayed to argue those resolves, Mr. Randolph and the others might ta
ke it into their heads to retract the whole lot. You know how vengeful and dangerous a wounded bear or mountain cat can be. The five resolves will stand. You and our friends here may present the last two. Your advocacy will not jeopardize what we have accomplished. So I shall emulate Mr. Lee, and remove my offending presence. But beware of skullduggery.” He turned to Hugh. “You were right, Mr. Kenrick. Our Assembly is a miniature of the Commons, with all the same virtues and faults. I know now from experience how such men can oppose a principle by opposing the man who proposes it, in an unattractive union of fear and spite.”

  “And, of accommodation,” Hugh reminded Henry with a pained smile.

  “The watchword of compromise and cowardice!” scoffed Colonel Munford.

  Henry said to Hugh, “You can assure us that your printer friend, Mr. Barret, will run off the resolves and post them? Now that five of them have been adopted, I feel better about that scheme.”

  Hugh grinned. “He is eager to return to Caxton and take up his compositor’s stick.”

  * * *

  Later that afternoon, with Colonel Munford and the others, Hugh saw Patrick Henry off on his journey back to Hanover, and shook his hand once more. This time it was Henry who reached down from his saddle to grasp Hugh’s hand. “We work well together, Mr. Kenrick,” he said as he clasped and shook. “You have obliged me to reassess somewhat my estimate of England. You are a late product of it. I did not believe that it could still produce men of such courage, dedication, and vitality.”

  “Thank you, sir,” replied Hugh after some hesitation, for he could not imagine what instance of courage he had exhibited for Henry to observe. “I look forward to working with you again, next session.”

 

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