MARIE-LOUISE CHRISTOPHE
From: CARIB QUEENS
By: Charles E. Waterman
Boston: Bruce Humphries, Inc., 1935.
Pages 95-158.
Page numbers are from the Waterman book.
95
CHAPTER I
The Hotel de la Couronne
MARIE-LOUISE was born in Cap Francois in the days of its glory. Her
father was a publican and his inn flourished under the high sounding name of
Hotel de la Couronne. It was a noted hostelry in the town and was patronized
by the best people of the city and the country round about. About its court
yard were dwarf palms, mangoes, and other semi-shrubs, and from seats
beneath them one could look at mountains looming up in the east, their domes
courting clouds, fleecy-white or blue-black, according to the season, while
between them and the city were plains -- The Plaine du Nord -- upon which
spread plantations, rich in sugarcane and coffee-trees, owned by planter-emigres
from far off France. The soil of these plantations was rich, and the
richness was transferred to the pockets of the planters. They and their
families came to Cap Francois to empty their pockets and the Hotel de la
Couronne captured a part of the contents.
There were high doings in the wine room when the planters came to town.
The vintage of their homeland warmed even their tropic-boiled blood until it
sometimes sizzled. They sung songs, told stories and played billiards and
the tips they flung to their attendants were lavish. Because of patronage
the Hotel de la Couronne was a public place without reservation; also a
publication place. Everything that could be called news was
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rehearsed within its wine, room, and comments of all kinds made by those
who listened. Not only was there news of The Plaine du Nord, but also from
la belle France.
The French planters liked this possession of the homeland. Their life
here was one of ease, and while they leisured riches flowed in; but their
wives did not share their liking. A white woman aged twice as quickly in
Saint Domingue as in the home country. Their husbands, they said, loved
beauty and youth, so turned away from them when both had fled. Judging from
the stories told in wine rooms, this must have been so; for their polygamous
souls extolled the beauties of negro mistresses, who somehow did not seem to
grow old.
Saint Domingue presented a curious mixture of population at this time.
Not only were there one hundred black slaves to every white person, but
there was a vast number of persons of mixed blood. The display on street
parades was varied and remarkable, and perhaps might be called magnificent.
The carefully housed French women palely white; their white husbands bronzed
by the Caribbean sun; their offspring by black wives yellow in all shades;
and natives ebon black. Such a parade suggested all kinds of stories and
formed a singular historic background. Because of this mixed blood there
were many grades of society. White blood in any degree conferred freedom on
the fortunate possessor, and yet it did not bring happiness. The half-breed
aped the white man and wanted to be white, but that class did not want him
to be. The law guaranteed
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equality, but it was a fiction. There was a line of demarkation between
the two. It was possible in Saint Domingue for a black man to be free. Free
and easy masters permitted such a thing, either as a gift or by purchase, if
the would-be purchaser had the money.
Because of this, Coidovic, the owner of the Hotel de la Couronne, was a
free man.
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CHAPTER II
Marie-Louise
Coidovic lived a life outside his hostelry. He had a wife and daughter,
both of whom he loved. The wife, like himself, had been born a slave; but
the daughter had been born free. Coidovic had picked up quite a little
education, and, because of his surroundings, a varied one. It was irregular,
however, and unsatisfactory to him. He wanted his daughter to have one
obtained in the regular way; so she was sent to schools. He wanted her to
have accomplishments-music and painting -- such as white women possessed, so
he employed teachers in these arts.
Marie-Louise was of a sunny disposition. She inherited this from her
father, perhaps, for he was of easy feeling. He knew the hard knocks of
life, and how hard it was to climb. He was considered successful, but it had
not soured him. He was a fatalist. He could account for his success in no
other way. Other people had tried harder and failed; so he was ready to hold
out a helping hand to those who tried to rise; but the mother would have
liked to see her daughter put on the dignity her position warranted.
Marie-Louise was sunny. As a child she played with all the children who
came her way, black or white with the shades between; played in the palm
shaded streets and the Place d'Armes of Cap Francois; or with the naked
black urchins in the clay-baked alleys or compounds. Station made little
difference to her.
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As she grew older and more domestic, she was quiet. She listened to the
stories told by old femmes of all colors in the streets of Cap Francois, and
to those of the French women who tarried in the waiting salon of the
Couronne. Strange stories they all told. There was the old woman slave who
scrubbed the floors of the hotel. She had been born in Africa, and the wild
life she recited and yet longed for awakened a kind of awe in Marie-Louise.
Her unknown ancestors must have shared that kind of life only three
generations before her. Then Adele the free woman, who brought stories of
duplicity and fraud from the plantations of the Plaine du Nord along with
her vegetables and fruit. Then the French women of the waiting salons. They
were so unhappy they did not care who heard their stories. It was possible
for a white man to love a negro, but a white woman could not love even a
negro saint. Then she heard of far-off France that these white women were
always longing for; and of the richness there with which even the French
furnished houses of Saint Domingue could not vie. Marie-Louise gained an
education not to be had in the public schools, and had an historical
knowledge not to be found in text books. Her mother denounced this knowledge
as out of the regular course; but her father sympathized with it, it was so
like his own. He had not thought of it as valuable in his own case, but when
he heard it from his daughter's lips -- his daughter who was educated -- it
aroused a new interest and value.
"You are a wonder," he told Marie-Louise.
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"You should be a queen; you know so much about the people and have such
an interest in them."
Coidovic could not conceive of any possibility that could make her a
queen. When he made the declaration before his wife, she flung up her head
"She's too common and undignified," she said. "Nothing of that sort could
happen to her."
Nevertheless, Marie-Louise grew up into the same sunny-faced woman she
had been as a child. She was loved by all the people of Cap Francois and the
plantations outside.
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CHAPTER III
The Boy from St. Kitts
One day during Marie-Louise's girlhood, there came a new possession into
the Coidovic household -- a boy slave about twelve years old. He had been
bought from a French naval officer in the fleet of M. le Comte d'Estaing,
which had put into the harbor of Cap Francois.
This boy had been born on the Island of St. Kitts. He had endured the
same life as all slaves -- six years of naked freedom and then work. At
seven he had been apprenticed to a mason kept on his master's estate. Five
years he worked at this, and after efforts showed he learned the trade well.
It was hard work, however, and at the age of twelve, he ran away -- or to be
more exact -- he changed masters, for the French sailing master who received
him on board his ship claimed him as a slave. He had never had a name until
on board this ship, when the sailors dubbed him Christophe because of the
island he came from, and the name followed him through life.
The ship on which he took passage put into the harbor of Cap Francois. As
she entered the harbor it was discovered to be in the midst of a French
naval fleet of twenty-four ships, under the command of M. le Comte
d'Estaing. This fleet was bound for Savannah on the American mainland to aid
the Americans who were fighting to free themselves from their British
overlords. The admiral
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had been recruiting fifteen hundred soldiers with which to assist the
Americans colonies, with twenty-two hundred more from Guadeloupe a n d
Martinique. The fleet reached its destination, stayed a month during a rainy
season and then returned to the island homes of the soldiers. The young
officer had no further use for a servant, so he sold Christophe to Coidovic.
Christophe was of rather a surly disposition, but no one could withstand
Marie-Louise’s sunny smile; so they became close childhood friends and
sweetheart as the years passed.
He had a fund of new tales for her to listen to and meditate on. Most of
her old stories had to do with the island she lived on and France, the
country the white planters came from. Now she learned there was a land to
the west of Saint Domingue -- a great nation -- and they were fighting for
independence from England. She listened to his description of the soldiers
he marched with the negro troops from the West Indies, the regulars from
France and the hard-featured farmers from the American colonies; but mostly
she liked to listen to the stories of a Saint Domingue mulatto, Chavannes,
who had become Christophe's chum.
Chavannes had been greatly impressed with what the Americans were
fighting for freedom. Why could not freedom be had in Saint Domingue? This
greatly impressed Marie-Louise. She was free -- but why could not Christophe,
her best friend, also be free?
Christophe was stable boy about the hotel, and the light-hearted,
half-drunken planters
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tossed him many a gold piece as a tip when he brought their horses to the
block. That put an idea into the head of Marie-Louise.
"Keep them," she said, "and I will make father sell you your liberty.
Then you will get what Chavannes is talking about."
The idea took root in Christophe's brain.
The work of stable boy was not strenuous, so Christophe had many hours of
leisure. These he passed, for the most part, in Marie-Louise’s company. She
read to him, mostly books of history, to which he listened eagerly. She was
reading about the English colonies one day, when he interrupted her as a
sudden thought took possession of him. He was from an English colony. All
English people had at least two names. He had been named Christophe by a
French captain, but he was going to have an English given name to go with
it. Henry was the name he picked out.
"But the French people have Henris," interrupted Marie-Louise.
"Yes; but did you not tell me they spelled the name differently?"
inquired Christophe.
"Yes, with an i instead of a y," admitted the girl.
"Then mine shall be spelled with a y," declared Christophe.
"Then if that be your desire, it shall be Henry, and I will be the first
to so address you," and she held out her hand.
Henry grasped it and looked into her clear eyes for a moment, then drew
her into his arms and kissed her.
"You are a darling," he whispered.
The cycle of childhood friendship ceased at that moment and the commune
of lovers began.
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Very shortly Christophe was taken from the stable and put into the
billiard room to keep the score of the planters. It was a better place. The
tips were more numerous and larger. The stenchy overalls of the stable boy
were exchanged for a white starched coat and shirt.
"You look much nicer," commented Marie-Louise.
"Thank you," returned Christophe. "I feel nicer; and I am grateful to you
for the advancement, for I suppose it was your influence that obtained it
for me."
"Father ought to be willing to do something for his daughter," was the
only comment of Marie-Louise.
The change was an education to Christophe, and the roll of teacher
changed from Marie-Louise to the first. The planters talked over their
billiards and their wine, and the longer they played and the more they drank
the more they talked. They said things not intended for slave ears. The wine
loosened their tongues and blurred their intellects.
Christophe listened with amazement and then coolly digested what they
said; and within the short tropic twilight told what had been said, with his
disgusted reflections to Marie-Louise. It was as new to her as to Christophe.
First it amazed her as it had her lover. Then she cogitated upon it. Then it
was that Christophe became teacher.
What he had heard the planters say was that Saint Domingue was a powder
barrel and liable to blow up at any time. There were, they said, twenty
thousand planters with five hundred thousand black slaves, and
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between them were twenty-four thousand people neither white or black, and
the three classes were opposed to each other. If the slaves ever found out
the power of numbers, it would be death to the whites; also, if the jealousy
of the mulattoes increased to the boiling point, so they could join the
blacks, the boiling would become fiercer. But they were so jealous that they
would not unite.
Marie-Louise listened and thought as she listened to Christophe.
"There may be a revolution," she mused. "A black kingdom may take the
place of the white one. Chavannes' dream may come true."
"It will mean bloodshed," interposed Christophe.
"Oh, I hope not!" exclaimed the gentle Marie-Louise.
Another thing the planters talked about, and that was the homeland of
France. They were having a revolution across the sea. The king had been
beheaded and a new order set up. The people had torn down the Bastille and
declared all men were brothers. If the idea should ever cross the ocean to
this province, then all would be doomed.
France was rather of a misty far-away land to Christophe and
Marie-Louise, a wonderful land when they thought of the fine furniture which
adorned the houses of the French planters, and the flowing dresses which
robed their wives and daughters.
But the people -- the common people -- who had driven out the king, must
be kind, even if savage, to be willing to clasp hands with all men as
brothers.
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One night as the twilight deepened and the two sat under the pepper tree
in Cordova’s court-yard, Christophe took a bag from his pocket and emptied
the contents into Marie-Louise's lap. The heap was composed of shining
golden francs.
"There's what your father paid for me, with enough additional for annual
interest. Do you think he would sell me my freedom?"
Marie-Louise gathered the golden heap into her hand, put it back into the
bag and returned it to Christophe.
"Keep it until I tell you to see father," she said.
The next day at nightfall, the two met under the pepper tree, she said
"You can see father now."
The next night at their meeting, Christophe said
"I have earned my first money as a free man today, because of you, I
suspect -- and your father would not take any interest. Said my work ought
to be interest enough, also, I suppose because of your influence. I don't
know how I can thank you or repay you; but if a life of devotion will lessen
my debt, I will gladly give it. I am poor, but I may be richer; and when I
am, I am coming to claim you!"
"Don't wait for riches!" exclaimed Marie-Louise. "Time is flying; war is
threatening; and we are sure only of the present!"
"You are a prize, Marie-Louise !" throbbed Christophe. "I hope I deserve
you!" and in the closing twilight their lips touched in a betrothal kiss.
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CHAPTER IV
The Effects of the Brotherhood of Man
The revolutionary fire from France caught in the multiplied tinder of
Saint Domingue. Everybody wanted change, even the white planters; but the
mulattoes thought their day had come when the National Assembly of Paris
granted the right of election to all freemen irrespective of color. That set
fire to the white fuel of the island and the smoke from that fire floated
about the billiard room of the Couronne. A white man had been dragged from
his house and beheaded for agreeing with the yellow men; and a
seventy-year-old affranchi had been tied to the tail of a horse and dragged
through the streets as an example. Mobs of whites burned the plantation
buildings of the yellows as a rebuke for insolence and riches. It was whites
against France, yellows against white and blacks against both.
Oge, the mulatto, had been to France in the interest of the yellows and
he had had his bones broken on a rack in the public square, together with
those of Chavannes, the friend of Christophe.
That was too much for the blacks and they started an insurrection.
Christophe kissed his wife and started for the mountains to join it.
The insurrection was not a success and they saw the head of their leader
paraded on the point of a pike through the streets of Cap Francois as a
warning.
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As a result, Toussaint and his runaway slaves crossed over the boundary
to the Spanish end of the island from whence they fought the French end. But
Toussaint could not be a Spaniard. His sympathies lay with France who had
declared all men free. So he again led French forces and became
governor-general of Saint Domingue and reunited all the warring factions so
the French flag floated over the whole island; but it had taken seven years
of savage war to do this.
Christophe, who had been his lieutenant, had arisen to the rank and
dignity of a general of France. Under the government of Toussaint, he was
made commandant of Cap Francois and surrounding country. He built a
magnificent mansion in the city and furnished it with the most exquisite
furniture that could be bought in Paris; then he inducted Marie-Louise into
it as mistress. She walked through the rooms in awe.
"Oh, Henry!" was all she could say.
"This is for the queen your father said you should be," he replied. "Your
taste and reading and teaching is reflected here. Without it I could not
have produced it. You deserve all I can give. Enter and share my joy."
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CHAPTER V
A Visit from Royalty
General Christophe and his wife did enjoy the magnificence of their home,
he with a rather haughty dignity, she with a simple dignified joy. Cap
Francois was at their feet. The slave, stable boy and hotel marker was
governor and the daughter of the inn shared his glory.
The isle of Saint Domingue, after her seven years of war, was at peace
and sharing a prosperity never before enjoyed. There was no slavery on the
island. The dream of Francois Toussaint for universal freedom seemed coming
true. No wonder his people called him L'Ouverture.
Over in France, however, the nation was suffering a reaction. Human
nature was getting the better of Napoleon, the savior. He had been third
consul, first consul, consul alone. Now he had taken upon himself the title
of emperor and was making good that title. The justified right of freedom
and franchise which had been bestowed upon all in the Caribbean isles was
being doubted. The new emperor was sorry it had ever been given. He wished
the island for a principality for his sister Pauline and her impecunious
husband, LeClerc. In fact he meant to grant it to her whether or no. But
there were difficulties. The riches of the planters had come through slavery
and the slaves had been freed. Somehow the edict must be revoked. Ah, the
revocation was the trouble!
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There was L'Ouverture! -- he had risked his life to gain freedom for the
island. Freedom had been his dream and he would not see it overturned
without a greater struggle than had been made to gain it. The people loved
their freedom and would fight to the last man to retain it! They loved
Toussaint, their great general, and would follow wherever he led. That was
Napoleon's great wish and effort to get rid of Toussaint.
The murmurs from Paris had reached Saint Domingue. General Christophe
heard them. It worried him somewhat. He did not doubt but what victory would
rest with the island forces; but he had had enough of war. He was enjoying
life with Marie-Louise and wished to continue it; but he was not unmindful
of what the future might hold. Of this fear, however, he said not a word to
Marie-Louise. She must have her day of pleasure unsullied by fear. He had no
doubt but what she would be equal to any emergency; but he wished her to be
free from fear as long as possible.
One morning a rumor came to the commandant's house. Outside the bay was a
war fleet -- twenty-two sail with the tricolor at the prow of each headed
for the harbor. Such an armament could mean but one thing. That nation had
come to claim her lost province, by force of arms if necessary. He must make
ready to meet them -- force against force, if that were the ultimatum. He
went to his own room -- his and Marie-Louise’s and sent for her. When she
came in it needed no second glance to tell her trouble brewed. She flew to
his arms
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"Henry, what is it?"
"We are in trouble," he answered; "but be brave, my queen!"
She snuggled in his arms, looking up in his face, and as she did not
speak, he continued
"Could you leave this beautiful place and live in a thatched but?"
"Would you be with me?" she countered. "If you would be there, the place
would make no difference. But why do you ask such a question? What has
happened?"
"Twenty-two war ships lie off this harbor! Their coming can mean but one
thing! I have not many troops at my disposal, and it would be some days
before I could get reinforcements; therefore we shall have to prepare for
the worst!"
"And have you got to stay and fight those horrid Frenchmen? Why can't we
both fly?"
"I can't give up without a fight?"
"I will stay with you -- fight with you!"
"No, my dear, you must fly, if necessary, with the babies, and I will
come to you. Do s you realize that if I fight this fleet, I shall be no
longer a general of France, but a rebel?"
Marie-Louise fingered his coat and was silent a moment, then looked at
the floor, but only for a moment did her eyes rest there, then they met
those of her husband and her arms went round his neck.
"That makes no difference with me. You are mine; and I can love a rebel
as well as I have loved a slave and a general!"
The tall, gaunt, stern-featured general bowed his head until his lips met
hers.
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"I knew you would be brave and true. We'll prepare for the worst. Gather
the things you value most, and be ready to fly at any moment.
The fleet sailed into the harbor, and when anchored, sent an aide to the
commandant. He announced the fleet was that of LeClerc, the newly appointed
governor-general of Saint Domingue, and he wished the city put in readiness
for his landing with some twenty-two thousand soldiers.
"You say LeClerc has been appointed governor-general? Your government
must know that François Toussaint is governor -- general of the island, and
was appointed for life. Why a new governor-general?"
"Oh, the government simply wished to relieve Toussaint of the cares and
responsibilities of office and place them on the shoulders of a younger man,
so he can enjoy life. We come on a peaceful errand."
"If you come on a peaceful errand, why the need of twenty-two thousand
soldiers? Are there not soldiers enough on this island for legitimate use?
This demand should have been made of Toussaint. I am under him and until I
hear from him, I cannot grant permission to land."
The aide was entertained and dined in a most sumptuous manner from plates
of gold, which doubtless impressed him. He returned and reported the result
of his interview to LeClerc.
LeClerc was impressed by the report of his aide; also chagrined at the
reply. The result was, the aide paid another visit to the Cap Francois
commandant, in which his demands
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were reiterated with the added insult, that refusal would be considered
an act of rebellion.
Christophe replied that his position had not changed since the first
interview and that he should repel an endeavor to land with all his
resources, and if he was forced to evacuate, he should burn the city.
After the aide had returned to the flag ship, Christophe called
Marie-Louise. He told her the result of the interview, and informed her also
that he had a mule train and guard ready to convey her with two servants and
such supplies as he could gather, to a refuge he had provided in the
mountains.
Marie-Louise who had seen her husband go off to battle before, knew that
nothing she could say would change his mind or should change it so she
simply clung to him in a moment's embrace, and was led by him to her saddle
horse, helped upon his back, bowed down for a good bye kiss and the little
train took up its journey.
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CHAPTER VI
The Rebel
Marie-Louise and her little retinue wended their way across the Plaine du
Nord and up into the mountains. At the end of the second day they arrived at
a deserted hamlet where an army had been mobilized. On the outskirts of this
was a but a little larger and better than the others, and in this she took
up her quarters, her servants and guards taking others in the vicinity. In
this she waited for what she hardly knew and dreaded what she waited for.
The days were long and the sleepless nights longer. At the end of the
fifth day appeared the object of her wait and watch the army of her husband.
At the head of it he rode, still in his uniform of a French general, and
behind him straggled a jaded, discouraged mob of men. Leaving the pitching
of the camp to a subaltern, Christopher hastened to his wife. She met him
with outstretched arms and tears streaming down her cheeks -- tears both of
joy and sorrow. After resting in his arms a few moments and enjoying the
luxury of both grief and joy, she held him from her and studied the face
turned down to her.
It was gaunt and stern and yet about the corners of the eyes and mouth
lurked a smile at the pleasure of reunion.
"So all is lost?" she questioned continuing her study.
"Yes," slowly answered her husband; and,
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with a quizzical expression, countered, "You see an outlaw before you!"
"You are my husband, outlaw or soldier, and my love for him is the same
!"
"I knew it would be, Marie, so you see there was joy as well as sorrow in
coming to the mountains!"
"But will not the French pursue you here?"
"No," he answered. "These mountains cannot be entered except through
defiles and every defile can hide an ambush. A thousand men in ambush can
outmatch LeClerc's entire army."
"And the city! Did you burn that?"
"I had to. I hated to -- your birth place the place where I found you.
But I could not allow it to be a welcome for the Princess Pauline."
"And our home, Henry?"
"That is gone. That was the first one fired. I applied the torch. I had
to set the example. It caused a pang, but you were not there you or the
babies. What is the use of preserving a nest when the birds have flown.
Perhaps I can build you another sometime."
"Here is our home," exclaimed Marie-Louise, leading him inside. "We can
be as happy here as in a mansion if the French don't come. What's going to
be done now? Does it mean LeClerc has reconquered the island?"
"He has entered the ruined city of Cap Francois; but I do not believe he
can reconquer the island. I am waiting to have a conference with Toussaint
and Dessalines."
So Christophe and Marie-Louise waited for news and a conference.
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At the end of the second evening, while Christophe and Marie-Louise were
sitting at their door, Christophe suddenly sat at attention. Marie-Louise
observing him, also listened. Ah, there was the far off throb of drums. Away
to the west over the plains came the first ones; then those nearer took up
the throbs. The beats were in the African code and they were of alarm, with
the implied command to be ready for an emergency. Then the drums of the
rebel army camped round about them took up the alarm. Yes, the nation
understood and was ready to act.
But it was slow waiting. The days passed uneventful, only on some nights
the drums beat, letting this army in the mountains know they were still
watching and ready to warn them.
Then came Dessalines, the tall, gaunt, ugly faced French general, with
mule trains loaded with guns. There was an ugly grin at the corners of his
mouth, however.
"I have been ordered to disarm the people," he said; "so I have gathered
in these guns, and I am storing them in the mountains under your nose. They
may come in handy," and the grin deepened.
"But the people and Toussaint?" queried Christophe.
"The people wait and Toussaint loves France. France declared for the
brotherhood of man! France freed the slaves of Saint Domingue; and Toussaint
still believes in France; so everybody is marking time in the island."
So Dessalines departed and the rebel army in the mountains waited.
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Days passed and again Dessalines appeared. This time he displayed no grin
on his features, but the fierceness of the tiger, which his soldiers called
him; also his enemies, the French. He came to the cabin of Christophe
"Do you want a guest, and can you welcome another rebel?"
Christophe and Marie chorused "yes" to each question; and they followed
the answer with questions of their own
"What has happened down on the plains?"
"Everything has happened," answered Dessalines. "LeClerc has kidnapped
Toussaint, and he is on his way to France, a captive. They ambushed and
tried to kidnap me, and would but for the warning of a dear friend. Then
they called out the cavalry to hunt and chase me. That's why I'm here. I,
like yourself, am no longer a general of France, but a rebel, a bandit, an
outlaw."
"Welcome, bandit," chorused Christophe and Marie.
"I have answered your questions, now I have some to ask myself. What are
we going to do? Are we going to sit down and let Napoleon and his
representative here have the island without farther ado, or are we going to
fight? I believe we can beat LeClerc. He has more soldiers than we have and
they are better armed; but we know the country better. We can ambush a
regiment here and there so there will soon be a parity of troops, and as
time and ambushes go on our troops will outnumber his and we can conquer. We
still have the guns for our soldiers here in the mountains," and the cunning
grin visited
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his face for a brief moment. "We shall have to desolate the island so it
can feed no enemy. We did that once for France, it can be no worse for
ourselves."
Christophe mused.
Marie-Louise sighed.
"I am sorry to have the island desolated," she said.
"But you would rather see it desolated than see it conquered, would you
not?" added Dessalines.
"Oh, yes," assented Marie-Louise.
"Then let us summon the army this very night."
As the twilight deepened the drum corps of the several regiments
assembled on the hard-beaten parade ground. The snares began with a long
roll
"Venier?" they seemed to say in the patois of the country,
"Venir-r-r-r-r-r-r" (come) !
Then a rattle of tenor drums-"A faire du bruit," in the vernacular of the
isle-a call for "diablerie."
This was puntuated to divide the time and harmony and rhythm by the big
bass drums, "bourdonner ! dondon-er (come)"!
The roll and rattle of the drums were echoed all over the French part of
the island to the Caribbean Sea.
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CHAPTER VII
The Dream
Because the drums had beaten, a host gathered. The host was armed with
the guns that had once belonged to them, and commissioned to go forth and
destroy -- destroy every building and every Frenchman or his family to be
found within the confines of the Caribbean Sea.
That they did with a will -- every lordly mansion, every macerating mill
and every marauding band of French soldiers paid the penalty of that order.
For two years the orgy of destruction went on, and then yellow fever
finished the job.
Dessalines, the black general, like an avenging demon, superintended the
work of destruction. He was everywhere, and when the French evacuated, a
worshipful people made him emperor. As a warrior he was superb; but as an
emperor, trying to rebuild a desolated country, he was not a success. His
enthusiastic, admiring and marauding soldiers became his enemies when forced
to repair the damage they had done. They hated him -- hated him so badly
that they assassinated him.
Then it was that Christophe, his lieutenant, became his successor. He did
not fly so high as Dessalines.
He was content to be a king -- King Henry the First of Haiti.
He was as stern a man as Dessalines -- tall, raw boned, ugly featured. He
profited by the mistakes of Dessalines. The work of his predecessor had to
be continued, and King Henry realized that it was only a
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question of time when his subjects would hate him as badly as they had
Jean Jacques and would murder him as they had their first monarch; but the
grip of authority and power was on him and if he fell by the hand of the
assassin he would have a gloriour reign.
He would be king and Marie-Louise -- gentle Marie-Louise --should be
queen, not only of his heart but of Haiti. He would build her a palace -- he
had already selected the site in Milot, and a name, Sans Souci --the equal
of which for magnificence should not be found in the New World. She should
have servants to minister to her every want -- she who had been his
inspiration and his teacher under the pepper tree in her father's court yard
-- and the Prince Royal and his two daughters, they should be princesses in
every sense of the word.
So he began his reign, and where Emperor Jean Jacques had been stern and
hard for the good of the people of Haiti, his successor was stern and hard
for the good of King Henry.
All around the new king, as he built his palace, he saw frowns. His
subjects were enemies; and in the Caribbean Sea about his shores were French
and English ships, ready to pounce upon him should opportunity offer; so he
turned to the unfinished fortress of Dessalines, La Ferriere, the greatest
fortress in the new world, to command the sea which harbored his foreign
enemies; and, which, he realized, would stand as a monument to him -- his
strength or his weakness, no matter which it should be -- until it mouldered
by the hand of time.
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CHAPTER VIII
The Humor of Being King
The new country was in the throes of birth. It was only a stretch of
country, and the people living therein were children. They could not help
themselves and were under the delusion that a country grew as the
plantations round about. They had no relations with the other countries and
wanted none. Only their king and a few of his kind saw the advantage of such
relations -- saw the advantage of an exchange of products. But Haiti had no
means of making such an exchange -- no medium of exchange either at home or
abroad. Christophe wrinkled his brow over this situation and pondered deep
and long as to how such a medium could be created. At last a broad grin
illumined his features, accompanied by an audible laugh, something rarely
seen or heard, for King Henry had no sense of humor. Yet something humorous
had penetrated the seriousness of his mind.
One of the natural productions of Haiti were gourds; and they were a
valuable one. Six hundred thousand people used the shells of this fruit,
scraped of its seeds and pulp and dried, for drinking vessels. Without them
they would not know what to do; and with a scarcity, what would they not
give for one. This was the idea that had amused the king.
One morning when the green gourds
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had ripened, he issued orders to his soldiers to go out and gather them
wherever found. They performed their bidding and turned into the treasury no
less than two hundred and twenty-seven thousand gourds and calabashes. They
came in many high-piled carts.
Soon the coffee crop was ripe; but the thirsty people had no containers
for their favorite, mellow, brown beverage. They cursed the king for his
piracy and carried their cursing to him personally. They were angry and they
evidently wanted to stir a like passion in him; but the king was good
humored. He smiled -- something none of his subjects had ever seen him do
before. He would return their favorite drinking vessels in exchange for
coffee berries. Each gourd was appraised at twenty sous, payable in coffee.
The coffee Christophe sold in foreign countries for gold, and thus formed
a stable currency.
That Christophe was vain has always been admitted. He caused many
monuments to be erected to perpetuate his memory; but he has one unseen
monument -- one he could not have anticipated. It is the gourd money, for no
matter what the circulating medium has been made of, the standard to this
day is called a gourde.
Since that day, whenever a person receives a gourde, he or she smiles,
both for the anticipation of what it will buy, and the remembrance that its
creation made an unsmiling king to laugh.
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CHAPTER IX
The Cathedral
Christophe loved pomp and ceremony. Being declared king was not enough.
He must be crowned -- but in what manner? Naturally it was a religious
ceremony. That might not have been necessary in Henry's estimation. He never
for a moment believed his elevation was by divine right. His mind ran in the
rut of his pattern, the atheistic Napoleon, who believed God was on the side
of the biggest army. Christophe's experience had changed that slogan to "God
is on the side of him who possesses most strategem."
The church had always been against Christophe. That organization always
had sided with instituted power, never with revolutions; so the king did not
love it. Nevertheless its ceremonies were impressive and conducted with
pomp. All instituted governments recognized the church, and it was ready to
assist with its ceremonies and pomp; so the king turned toward it, even if
there was a covert sneer on his lips.
With Marie-Louise it was different. There was a romance about the church.
The story of Mary was the story of all women -- to love, to bear, to suffer.
Her plaster image looked down in combined reflection of all three. Then the
music -- its harmony, its muted passion, or its swelling halleluiahs. They
appealed to all women -- they appealed to Marie. She had been brought up to
believe in the church; and, notwithstanding all the cruelty and
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suffering it had condoned in twelve years warfare, she still believed in
it.
When her husband scoffed at it -- its lack of humanity and of foresight
-- she simply placed her hand on his arm and said
"I'm afraid we don't understand."
That touch of Marie-Louise always softened Christophe, and he answered
"Well, my dear; we'll have the church. You may have the sentiment and I
will have the pomp. We will have a state chaplain to praise or condole for a
salary; and we will have a cathedral, the like of which has never been built
on this side of the Atlantic.
"You may have a many-stopped organ, and I will have a military band. The
king of France shall not monopolize them all. He commandeered the hautboy
from Germany; the bassoon and flute from Hungary; the horn from Hanover; the
clarinet from Nuremburg; and the drums and cymbals from Turkey; and he tried
them all together for the first time in Saint Domingue to help subdue us. I
hate France, but I like her bands, for her reeds and pipes and drums are
captives, not natives."
So the king set about building a cathedral at Cap Haitian to be crowned
in. It was to be a magnificent building -- the most magnificent the island
had yet seen. A crowd of workmen cleared away the burned beam-ends and
smoke-blacked piles of stone on one side of the Place d' Armes -- the
municipal center of the town. All the architectural skill of Europe was
called upon to furnish designs, and all the skilled masons, carpenters and
plasterers on the island were conscripted to do the work. In two months it
stood completed –
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the nave two hundred and fifty feet on each side and the transept eighty
feet in height. In the choir at the far end was an elegant altar and an
organ, and in the tower, a chime of bells. When completed, he led
Marie-Louise through it.
"There is your music to stir or lull," he said, pointing to the organ,
and as he showed her the niches in the wall, within which were plaster
images, he continued, "There are your saints! They are all yours except one,
which is mine -- mine alone. That is Mary. The king spells his name with a y
because it is English and he came from an English isle; and my Mary spells
her's with a final ie because she came from a French isle. The Mary in the
niche is my Marie.
"You did not know that the artist I employed, whom you thought rather
insolent, because he eyed you so closely, was doing it by my orders, so the
Mary in the niche should be my Marie? She shall stand there through all time
and be worshiped as the mother of Haiti. Do you see the soft bronze coloring
of the face? The artist had to do that over three times before he could
catch the gleam and the color you give me when I come to you. I would have
no other. I have been working for your immortality, and I was sure that
would give it as nothing else would."
So the church stood as a state church, presided over by a French priest,
Corneilla Brelle, both scorned by the king; nevertheless in the subdued
light from the stained windows, the king came often to kneel at the feet of
Marie of Haiti.
But the church was not always a pleasure
126
to Queen Marie or her husband; for once, when the king was away
suppressing a rebellion, by the irony of fate, a band of mulatto women in
Cap Haitian held a special service in the church to the delicate compliment
of the virgin mother, to pray for his defeat.
Fate played another trick in this church of Marie-Louise. Brelle, the
priest, although state chaplain, was a traitor to King Henry, and the latter
knew it. Once his majesty intercepted two letters for the priest, and found
he had informed the authorities of the republic at Port au Prince how many
soldiers he had under him and how many guns.
The king kept an executioner among his officials, as well as a chaplain.
The chaplain was more especially for the queen; but the executioner was
entirely for himself. He had kept him pretty busy severing the heads from
the bodies of those who would betray him, so busy that this monstrosity,
Gaffie, boasted he could sever the noblest head from the greatest noble
without soiling the collar immediately below where the blade touched flesh.
Gaffe performed this piece of post mortem surgery on the chaplain. Mar
e-Louise rarely interfered with acts of state; but this execution stirred
her devotion to the church. She shuddered
"Do not get another priest" she said. "The blood of one is enough on our
hands."'
"My dear," replied the king, "your wish shall be my law; but priest or no
priest, there always will be one worshipper at the shrine of Marie. It will
be his majesty the king."
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CHAPTER X
The Palace
On a bright June Sunday in 1811, a golden crown was placed on the head of
General Christophe and a golden scepter put into his hand. His jacket was
peacock blue, his vest satin, and on his feet were patent leather pumps,
above which were silk stockings. Christophe knelt and a priest declared him
King Henry of Haiti. Beside him knelt Marie-Louise in jewels and silks,
crowned queen of Haiti.
From that day Henry was busy on a palace, San Souci, on a mountain in the
little town of Milot. He built it commanding the Plaine du Nord and the
harbor and the ocean beyond. An army of workmen and artisens from all parts
of the world had been gathered to build the finest mansion in the New World.
Finally it was completed, and he led the queen to it. Four stories it
rose over the terrace, built of brick covered with yellow stucco and
surmounted by a roof of red tile. Into the building he led her into the
stately hall,. with a grand stairway flanked with stone sentry boxes at
intervals. The hall opened onto an exceptional large terrace. Through this
he led the queen, showed her the audience chamber, the banquet hall, and up
stairs to the private rooms of the king and queen, the Prince Royal and the
two princesses. Then out through the gardens and grounds, where every flower
and fruit that the queen had ever expressed a desire for
128
were planted. To the chapel, the arsenal, the barracks, where was
quartered the special black regiment of guards -- The Royal Dahomeys, the
king called them -- the stable where was housed every specimen of equine
flesh which the establishment would demand; then back to the palace rooms
with the floors paved with marble and the walls panelled with polished hard
wood, hung with mirrors, tapestries and paintings, and the library, the
walls lined with richly bound books. There he bowed
"To my queen," he said.
Marie-Louise was in tears, but she smiled through them bravely
"It's very beautiful and magnificent," she said, "but I am afraid all
this luxury will bring trouble.
"I am afraid, when, in the years to come, I look back on happiness, it
will be under the pepper tree in my father's court yard, or even the
thatched but in the mountains."
But her husband only clasped her arm a little tighter and replied.
"Put away your fears, dear. Enjoy the present as it goes. That is what
you said under the pepper tree. Now we have a palace we must have a court to
match it!"
King Henry did create a court -- four princes, eight dukes, twenty-two
counts, thirty-seven barons and forty chevaliers.
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CHAPTER XI
Vaudeville
King Henry set his government going in grim seriousness. He was in
earnest, even to the play part. On Thursday of each week the king held court
-- in the morning to the commoners and in the evening to the nobility.
In the morning he heard the complaints of planters, laborers or soldiers,
and issued judgments generally just, but many times severe to one party or
the other. He was unafraid and risked all consequences; but somehow his
course was not popular.
At evening came the court. They wanted to come, for they enjoyed the
farce. A prescribed uniform was insisted upon. The station about the king
and queen, who sat upon a raised dias, was prescribed -- the princes and
dukes at the footstool, the lesser nobility in the folding chairs beyond.
They made profound obeisance to the king and queen and all the ceremonies
were exact and dignified.
This court etiquette was pleasing to Henry, and not unpleasing to
Marie-Louise; and yet there was something ridiculous about it. Some of the
dukes whose ancestors had been savages in Africa two generations before were
awkward in deportment. The queen, who was naturally graceful, could but
observe it; yet she would say nothing about it to her husband -- nothing to
mar his pleasure. Besides she felt she had been somewhat
130
responsible. Had she not read him long descriptions of ceremonies of the
French court in the old days under the pepper tree? That was where he had
got his ideas. His schoolmistress gave them to him. She could not go back on
her teaching. She did not want to if it gave Henry pleasure.
The foreign residents smiled. During the days when the nobility cared for
their plantations, their court dress was discarded, and they went about in a
very primitive fashion. The names of their estates had designations, which
added to the ridiculousness of the court.
In the evening came music and dancing -- always a dance for a finale,
whether in savage Africa, effete Europe, on in a rising state of the New
World. Henry hated France, but his dances came from that country. The
exuberance of the French people expressed itself in dances, and the
exuberance of the Haitian people expressed itself in the same form. They
took the dances the soldiers brought with them when they came to conquer.
They had not conquered, but the dances they brought were captives --
captives for the pleasure of the Haitian court.
Henry wanted dignity in all the things he did or permitted to be done in
his island kingdom -- dignity and pomp. The new dance, the waltz, which the
Frenchmen had brought over, was too frivolous to suit the king, and he would
have none of it. The quadrille and the stately minuet were his favorites and
what he permitted. Royalty had danced them. Royal courts had enjoyed them.
The slow tempo of the three-four time
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entranced them as it had its inventor, the elder Lully in his far away
Poitou home. Its graceful movements had inveigled Louis XIV and he had
danced it with his voluptuous mistress away back in 1653 -- Minuet de la
Cour.
So the king and the nobility danced and dreamed. The queen smiled. The
foreign dwellers laughed, and to their laughter added parodic badinage:
"Know ye the land where the orange and lime
Mingle and grow; and its acidulous sweets
Are absorbed by the people in titles sublime
As observed when amorous Marmalade Duke meets
Her grace, Lemonade."
Once it is said the king found the Duke of Lemonade asleep in a wrinkled
uniform, and it put him in such a high temper that he shook him much as a
dog would a badger; and for a second offence he was put to work on the
citadel.
So Monsiur le Duc and Madame la Comtesse of Haiti met and danced in the
palace of San Souci, -- the palace whose name would have one believe was
without care; but it was a misnomer.
Yes, the world at large laughed at King Henry's peasant nobility, but
there came a time when they did not laugh, for his kingdom waxed rich, and
Louis XVIII. of France was willing to recognize everything for an alliance
or contributory kingdom. He sent two envoys to the island to make terms if
possible, but Christophe, remembering the
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treatment his subjects had received at the hands of France, executed one
and sent the other home with a jug full of small seed and a message that it
would take twice as many men as there were seeds in the jug to subjugate
Haiti.
And Napoleon, when he returned from Elba and wanted soldiers, was ready
to swallow king and nobility for help from Haiti; but Christophe,
rememberering the windrows of Haitian bodies that had been thrown from
LeClerc's war ships and washed up on the beach, would have none of him.
The smile left Marie-Louise's face when she heard of these negotiations.
She put her hand on her husband's shoulder:
"You are always right," she said; "but I am sick of the savagery of War."
133
CHAPTER XII
The Washing Place
Every kingdom, or any form of government, for that matter, has its
special meeting place -- its special loafing place -- although work may be
connected with it. Haiti had one, or rather a great many such places.
This particular place, as all other similar places, was on the river bank
near Milot, where a shallow little stream in its descent from the mountains,
falls over its rock-bottom in tiny cascades. Here the women of the region,
clad largely in nudity, came to wash soiled clothing. It was a natural
laundry. This is not a fanciful term. All evidence points to this purpose by
the creative power. Not only was the water there, with protruding rocks to
serve as wash boards, but the soap. All around the place, with intersticing
patches of sunlight, grew trees -- soapberry trees-laden with nuts. In the
pulpy covering of these nuts is a mixture of stearine and palmitine, with an
alkaline substance which makes natural soap; so the preponderance of
evidence all points to its ordained purpose -- a natural laundry.
To this day, women gather here in great numbers to wash; and when tired,
throw themselves on the ground to dry their clothing, eat a lunch of
plantains and gossip. Indeed gossip forms quite a part of the program; and
this gossip is carried home or into the market place for distribution. From
the distribution agency Marie-Louise gained a
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knowledge of what her subjects were talking about.
It was the Code Henry. Napoleon wrote his code and it has outlasted his
wars. He tried the sword and found the pen mightier; and the brain mightier
than brawn. Henry profited by his example. He also tried the sword and now
attempted the pen; but his subjects liked the sword best. There was
something exhilarating in war, but work –bah -- that was simply tiresome.
Destruction was a kind of insanity; but rebuilding was simple drudgery. It
was an indignity to ask a soldier to work.
So the men talked about the code in their thatched huts and the women
echoed what they said at the washing place.
By the Code Henry, every adult man or woman was obliged to work. The
hours were fixed. The day began with the dawn -- that is work began at that
time. It continued until eight o'clock. Then they had an hour off for
breakfast, to be taken on the spot. The king did not intend his subjects
should get into the cool of huts, for fear the propensity to sleep would get
the better of them. From nine to twelve it was work, and then there were two
hours off for siesta. A Tropic day could not be endured without a siesta,
and Henry did not try to overturn natural law. Then it was work again until
the tropic night quickly drew its curtains.
The men rebelled. Masters in the old times, when they were slaves, were
more lenient. Ah, this was slavery the worst slavery they had endured, and
the women at the washing place echoed the declaration
"This is slavery!"
135
This was what Marie-Louise heard; and it troubled her.
Haiti had always been. a powder barrel! It was now! In the past, when
somebody touched a match to the composition it went off! If somebody touched
a match to it now, it would go off! Marie-Louise dreaded the effect of the
explosion! Not for herself, did she dread it, but for the king! He was a
hated man, and no one could know what revenge the mob would take.
Another thing the women at the washing place rebelled against. A washing
place suggests a place of cleanliness; yet it was this cleanliness that the
women at the washing place denounced. The king insisted on clothing in the
place of the African semi-nudity. To supply this clothing he had erected a
mill to convert the cotton grown on the island into cloth.
But the women rebelled. The wearing of clothes were unnecessary,
especially among children. Children had worn no clothing in Africa, where
most of them came from. The children of Haiti had worn no clothing, why
should they now? Why should adults burden themselves with clothing? It might
be all right for the nobility on parade, but not for general use.
So the women at the washing place struck! They made speeches! they
gesticulated! Marie-Louise learned about it.
136
CHAPTER XIII
The Queen's Family
When Christophe was simply a general, living in the house at Cap
Francois, three children were born to the queen. A boy, Victor, the Prince
Royal, and two daughters, the princesses Amethiste and Athenaire, very much
like herself.
The prince was high-strung and lazy. His father undertook his bringing
up, giving him access to all departments of the government, and explaining
what he saw there. Then he imported tutors from England to add to the
patchwork education he had received and imparted to his son. King Henry
believed in education and wanted his country to be a land of educated men
and women; so he built school houses throughout the length and breadth of
his kingdom, and imported teachers.
The daughters were intrusted to the queen-mother during their earlier
years. She had been instructed as became her class in the schools of her
home city; but there came a time when she felt her education was not
sufficient for the rising princesses. Baron Vestey, of the king's cabinet,
and near to him, had lived in America before his advancement, advised that
female teachers be imported from that country to instruct the young
princesses. Two staid spinster females were imported as general teaching
factotums, and two younger, more vivacious women, to instruct in music,
dancing and painting.
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The two elder women had the approval of the king. They were dignity
personified; but the younger ones puzzled him. The painting teacher he liked
fairly well. She was artistic in person and dress, dainty even, but somewhat
reserved; but on the other hand, Mademoiselle Ducette, the music and dancing
teacher, was a young witch and coquette. She was something unusual as a
singer and performer on the piano, the recent successor of the spinet and
harpsichord. Both her instrumental and vocal performances were enjoyed by
the king and the entire court. His majesty would listen to her pure tones
and trills as she would warble through the Scotch and Irish melodies of the
day, -- "My Highland Mary," "Robin Adair," "The Girl I Left Behind Me,"
"Sally in Our Alley," "Annie Laurie," "Lucy Flittin'," and with a most
flirtatious toss of the head she took the runs of "Coming Through the Rye."
Then she would sober down, though still with animation, and sing "The
Campbells Are Coming," for the king. Then he would wonder how she came by
such music? Outside of drum beats, music had not entered into his life much,
and yet in the leisure of an evening he enjoyed it. It was a frivolity, he
admitted, something for women and not warriors, and yet he discovered he had
always loved music of the simple and natural kind he had known. He had
always admired the soft cooing of the ring doves -- in fact he had admired
them so much he had named one of his chateaux after it, La Ramier -so he
gave her the same name. One could not help admiring her -- her sweet voice
and her grace in the dance.
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Others beside the king admired her. There was a young lieutenant of the
king's guards, Thibault. He fell violently in love with her. It was hard
telling just what her feelings were toward him. He was tall and graceful and
of a tropic brown. Together in the dance they made a wonderful pair, that
onlookers followed with their eyes.
La Rainier, as she was generally called, had plenty of admirers beside
Thibault; and she distributed her favors quite impartially, much to the
anguish of that young officer.
These teachers remained at Sans Souci several years, before it was
thought the young princesses had imbibed and assimilated what they could
teach. Then they returned to their native land.
Thibault laid seige to La Rainier's heart, when she was about to depart.
"La Rainier," he said, "you are not going to leave me here disconsolate?"
She parried his appeal.
"You have been gorgeous," he continued. "I don't see how I am going to
get along without you."
"Ah, that's the tropic sun," she answered. "It puts passion into every
one. It has into me. You would not know me back in America. I shall be a
very demure young woman there."
"Then I want to come and see you. Can IT' "Without the tropic sun you
would cool there."
"But may I not come and see what effect it would have on me?"
"I don't know," replied the dove, warily.
"Why can't I?' he urged.
139
"Well, you would not be at home in America," she added. "They are a
different people there. There's no king's court where I live."
"Then why go at all? Why not stay here? We can have apartments at Sans
Souci, and be permanent members of the king's court. Perhaps he would
advance me."
Whatever went through the pretty head of La Rainier can only be guessed;
but she looked out over the Plaine du Nord to the blue domes beyond, a
far-away expression in her eyes. Then she came back to earth again; but the
bewitching curves around her lips had straightened a bit as she answered
with mock Biblical gravity
"Almost thou persuadest me: but white women grow old with a few years in
the tropics. When I am old you will cease to care for me. Then I shall wish
I had stayed at home. No, Thibault, you had better marry one of your own
kind in your own land."
Thibault was silent a moment. "Is that final?" he said sadly. "Will you
not reconsider what you have said when you arrive in America? Perhaps you
will miss the tropic passion in your cold country, and long for the Saint
Dominguen sun. If you do, will you not write me, that I may go to you; or
else come to me direct?"
La Rainier dreamed once more, looked at the plain, the mountains and over
the blue Caribbean Sea
"If I change my mind, I will write," she answered.
La Rainier and her fellow teachers sailed for their native land and
Thibault waited and waited for a letter that never came.
140
He never married, and was killed in a revolt against his master.
"A white woman," he once said sadly, "is like a will-o-the-wisp. You see
her a moment and then she vanishes. She is gone; but the brightness of her
always flashes before your eyes."
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CHAPTER XIV
The Blacksmith's Pouch
Dessalines, in his darkest hour, threatened by revolutions within his
island realm and attacks by foreign naval squadrons without, pondered on how
he was to meet the two. Somehow he did not worry so much about the first as
the second. He was The Tiger to his men and they were afraid of his feline
ferocity. He must conquer all domestic outbreaks for a two-fold reason.
First because a revolution was a revolution and must be overthrown; and
secondly because the war ships prowling about the coast were awaiting just
such an outbreak to get in their conquering work. Dessalines felt he had the
material to oppose the first but not the second; so he started on a citadel
to fill in the lack; but he never finished it. A revolution finished him.
La Ferriere, "The Blacksmith's Pouch," as it was called, thus became an
inheritance of King Henry's. For some time it lay unfinished as his
predecessor had left it; but after a while, Henry discovered that Dessalines'
fears were well grounded; and he had bequeathed them to his successor as
well as the unfinished fortress and the need of such a fortress; so he
recommenced the work.
All day long hordes of workmen toiled on the citadel; derricks creaked,
and foot by foot its walls were reared; but it was a gigantic undertaking.
The mountain peak
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upon which it was built, rises three thousand feet above the ocean it was
to dominate, and the walls of the structure itself added one hundred and
thirty feet to its height.
A mulatto engineer, named Henri Besse, planned the structure, with
massive walls from twenty to thirty feet thick. It was not only to be a
fortress, but a refuge in time of need. It was made to garrison ten thousand
soldiers, should there be need of them, with provision chambers and an
enormous cistern, where every drop of water that fell on the citadel could
be saved. There were powder magazines and treasure chambers.
It was to be a prison, also; and deep dungeons were built within it.
It was a strenuous three hours climb up the mountain, which the natives
called Le Bonnet a 1'Eveque, "The Bishop's Cap," to the fortress, and
thousands of men and women toiled up the steep ascent with loads of
material; with the three hundred and sixty-five cannon (one for each day of
the year) ranged in batteries in the corridors; and the hundreds of casks of
powder with which to charge them; together with the tons of fifty-six,
thirty- and twelve pound balls to be hurled with the explosive.
Not only were there hirelings, but soldiers of the regular army compelled
to assist, and military prisoners.
Once it was said a set of young men formed a literary club at Cap
Haitian, Le Petit Vers. This sounded innocent enough, but it was discovered
that there was a
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mocking pun on the word, and that the club was a political one. It seems
the king had a special variety of coffee tree in his garden, the berries of
which were reserved especially for his table, much to the indignation of the
populace. These berries were known to the Cap Haitian people as Les Petits
Verts. When this was brought to the attention of the king, the young poets
had to mount the fortress walls and work.
The workmen grumbled, but they worked. They had to. The king watched over
them. He was impatient and the job was long.
When he walked down the mountain, he brooded. He was worried.
Marie-Louise watched him, tried to learn the special cause of his worry; but
his tongue was silent. He only pressed the hand she laid on his arm a little
tighter.
She was worried -- not only at the unknown cause that stirred her
husband, but his physical health. He was breaking under the strain.
One night she discovered he was absent from his bed. On talking to him
she could get no satisfactory answer. She watched' him. She followed him. He
went straight to the citadel, and there began to lay stones on the
unfinished wall. She appeared to him and spoke:
"Oh, Henry; what are you doing?" "Ah, Marie, what are you here for? I
thought you were sleeping! You must go back!"
"Why should I go back? and you have not told me why you are here!"
"Oh, Marie-Louise ! So much to do and
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such a little time to do it in. You know I learned the mason's trade in
my St. Christopher days, and it comes in handy now. I'm not tired and I
can't sleep; so I work. I only oversee during the day. But you must go
back."
"Will you go with me?" she continued.
"Not now," he replied.
"Then I stay until you go."
He kissed her, prepared a seat for her where she could lean against the
wall, and wrapped his discarded coat about her to shield her from the cold
that even a tropic night can produce.
He worked and she watched. The procession of stars marched and a flush of
dawn lit up the eastern sky. The king paused and came near to where his wife
reclined.
"Come dear," he said. "We will return now. It was good to have you here,
but you must not come again."
They walked down the uneven, rockstrewn mountain side in the yet
darkness, his arm about her to lead and shield her from the roughness.
* * *
That day, the queen overheard talk in the court yard. Habitues of the
palace had discovered the additions to the fortress walls made during the
night. At first they were superstitious. It was some occult power they
thought first -- some voodoo spirit hovering around, and they were, awed.
There were some among the group who
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remembered that the king had learned the mason's trade on his boyhood
island and boldly asserted it was he who was making the nightly additions.
This assertion was met with a variety of exclamations. Some did not
believe it. Some were inclined to give credence to the suggestion.
The originator then boldly announced he was going to find out about the
personality of the builder.
"I'm going to the citadel tonight; and if it is the king, I shall throw
him over the parapet --the tyrant. When he strikes the rocks at the base of
the wall, there will be no king."
There was silence in the group for a moment. Then someone suggested that
such a feat was problematical on account of the great strength of the king.
"Perhaps it will not be the king who alights on the rocks at the bottom
of the fortress wall."
This rather nonplused the speaker for a moment, then he added
"I shall take him by surprise and give him no chance for resistance."
There was more talk and more uncertainty about the sentiments of the men.
Finally the temper of the first speaker was aroused, and he informed them
angrily
"You are a set of cowards! There is not one of you that dares to
accompany me and help rid the island of a tyrant!"
This assertion of cowardice and challenge to disapprove it, had it
affect. The group felt their spirit of bravery was
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assaulted, and reluctantly announced their willingness to accompany the
first speaker.
"There," he exclaimed; "numbers can decide who will land on the rocks at
the base of the wall. It will be a good night's job. It will show your
patriotism to rid the island of the tyrant king."
Marie-Louise listened with bated breath and a feeling of faintness. Her
king must not go to the fortress tonight -- must not go any future night.
When he arrived at Sans Souci, she told him what she had heard and
implored him to stay at the palace this night.
He held her in his arms a moment and kissed her:
"My queen has warned me," he said; "and there will be no question as to
whose bones will be broken at the foot of the wall. And you must not go with
me. I must not have you to protect against the mob as well as myself."
But when the darkness descended and the king took his departure,
Marie-Louise followed. She was dressed in filmy white, but she covered it
with a black mantle.
All was silent when the king arrived at the courtyard and began work.
Marie-Louise crept as near to where he was working as she could without
discovery, then crouched to the parapet wall to strain her eyes toward the
faint outline of the king.
The night was long; but just as she thought her alarm had been needless,
she discovered motion in the darkness; and by extra straining of her eyes
could dimly perceive many bodies creeping along the
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ground of the court. They were the conspirators. What she was going to do
she scarcely knew, but she was going to do something.
The king was busy. The very fact that assassins were coming seemed to add
a nervous energy to his strength. But the night had passed and nobody came.
Then he muttered
"Cowards!"
At that word a dozen indistinct forms arose from the darkness and made a
rush toward the giant king.
He was taken by surprise, but was quickly on the defensive. At that
moment a white apparition appeared, with a scream.
The conspirators suddenly passed and then ignobly fled.
The king paused as suddenly as his enemies had done; looked at the
apparition a moment and then approached.
Marie-Louise, when the enemy had fled stood rooted to the spot; and now
the danger was over, she trembled.
The king reached her, caught her in his arms, kissed her, and then
laughed loudly:
"My brave queen! My savior," he said. Then he laughed again.
"They took you for a voodoo spirit."
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CHAPTER XV
The Phantom Treasure
The kingdom of Christophe waxed rich with enforced industry. The king's
private chest bulged with coin -- European and American. He spent it
prodigally -- the palace, the citadel, a dozen palaces, with chateaux
scarcely inferior to Sans Souci, all connected with paved roadways, but
there was a gigantic remainder. What he did with it was a puzzle to his
subjects.
It was known that always below the lowest dungeon in the citadel, there
were vaults intended for the national treasure, and a treasure was actually
deposited therein amounting to thirty million dollars. It was well known
that the king greatly desired to buy the Spanish portion of the island, and
that a part of the national treasure had been accumulated for that purpose.
The people laughed when they knew about this treasure. If Henry could
amass and save this vast sum for the state, how much could he subtract from
these receipts for himself? It was believed be had amassed as much for
himself as he had for the state. For this reason he was watched that the
hiding place of this treasure might be discovered. Such a discovery meant
robbery. All this fortune belonged to the state, they argued, and they were
citizens of the state; so the logical conclusion could be no other than that
a part of it belonged to the searchers, unless it be the forty thousand
dollars that annually went into the king' pockets as salary.
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It had been known for some time previous to Queen Marie's discovery, that
the king spent his nights at La Ferriere and laid additions to the wall. It
was a non-understandable proceeding to them. Because there was so much to do
and life was so short was not a satisfactory explanation to this sun-wilted
people. There must be some other reason than just a desire to push the work;
and they could think of no other incentive than to construct hiding places
for his treasure; so they daily torn down a portion of the wall erected by
him during the night in the early morning to see if there were any cavities
within which the treasure could be secreted.
The king had gathered a treasure -- a vast one. He was no miser. He cared
little for money as money. He wanted to spend it; but he had objects of
solicitude, and these were the queen and his daughters. The Prince Royal,
who was fat and lazy, should be able to take care of himself; but he was
chivalrous to that degree that the feminine portion of his household should
be provided for. The queen he loved. He owed everything he had attained to
her. She must be protected and provided for. He had enemies all about him,
so he must invest a fortune for her if she should be left alone with spies
all about her.
How to dispose of it troubled him. He knew he was watched --his every
movement -- and he distrusted almost every one around him. There was one of
his barons, however, that he trusted. He had been a fellow-general in the
army of Dessalines, and was now commandant of the citadel.
One night after the short hours had began,
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the king knocked at his door. The baron arose and unbarred the door. He
was startled and affrighted when he saw who his visitor was, but saluted
bravely. The king's visit at such an hour presaged something of importance,
perhaps something dangerous. Traitors, or suspected traitors were thus
summoned. His frightened wife also appeared in the background, with a
lighted candle held high above her head.
The king viewed the affrighted pair and the sardonic grin he sometimes
assumed came to his face. "It's all right, Madame. I simply have a little
job for the baron. I will wait until he dresses." The baron disappeared,
while his lady twisted about in uncertainty whether it was best to retire
and leave the king in darkness or stand unceremoniously before his majesty
bare-footed in her nightdress. The grin on the face of the king increased in
size but he met the situation by rising and closing the door.
The baron soon appeared dressed and together the pair left the house. The
baroness, agitated and trembling, sat on the side of the bed, the candle
guttering on a stand near her -- sat until cocks crew in the morning, before
her husband reappeared. The baron gave a whispered greeting, but she leaped
to her feet and gave a scream.
Her husband had on the king's uniform.
"Hush!" hissed her husband. The king is abroad tonight, and is afraid of
assassins; so he made me change uniforms with him."
"What did he want of you?" inquired his wife.
"The king and I have been burying a treasure
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in the queen's garden. It is for Queen Marie-Louise. She does not know
anything about it, and I am to keep guard over it if he dies and tell her
where it is, when in need of the sum. I have sworn to secrecy on forfeit of
my life. That was what the king wanted."
The baroness was silent a few moments, with eyes looking toward the
floor. Then she remarked
"Well, the king loves the Queen!"
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CHAPTER XVI
A Visit from the Sea
So the state and the court functioned, presided over by the king, stately
and stern, and by the queen, stately and sweet; but outside the populace
grumbled. They looked askance at the royal luxury.
"We might as well have Napoleon and his minions," they chorused.
A little later they muttered:
"The king may go the way of the emperor."
The grumblings increased and reached the ears of the king. It maddened
him, but was not unexpected. His kingdom would go the way of the empire of
Dessalines. The people of the tropics were too enervated to work
strenuously. Existence was too easy and indolence was to be desired more
than riches or pomp.
So the face of the king hardened and the frown that habitually haunted it
hardened into a permanent expression. Rumors of the disaffection reached
foreign powers, so there were war ships continually prowling about the
coast. The king worked harder and harder on La Farriere. If these foreign
ships tried to gain an entrance, he would give them a t9ste of the ancient
Haitian reception of such trespassers.
Nevertheless he worried. Every morning at the breakfast table he would
look at the queen with a troubled expression on his face, and every night at
supper, as he again looked the expression intensified.
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Visiting representatives of foreign nations have to be treated with
courtesy, even if they are known to be looking for weaknesses of defence.
They have to be entertained and impressed with strength even by strategem.
King Henry determined to gain the friendship of England; so he invited
the admiral of her fleet to visit him.
He came. The king showed him the beauties of his palace. He pointed to
the imposing citadel. He invited him to review his troops, when all day long
the royal guards circled around the palace and with each circle appeared in
a different uniform.
The admiral counted the troops as they passed. "Thirty regiments," he
said, "and superb ones. I think your majesty is impregnable," he added with
a peculiar smile, which signified that with such a magnificent army, Haiti
would be safe from England and might claim her as a friend.
The king, for a second time, smiled, a replica of the smile called forth
by his rape of the gourds.
When the admiral concluded his visit, he was intrusted by the king with
an oaken box, steel-bound, for the Bank of England.
In after years it was found this box contained six million gold gourdes
deposited to the credit of Queen Marie-Louise.
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CHAPTER XVII
The Fiery Furnace
King Henry's country prospered, but the hatred of the people increased.
More and more he worked and more and more he caused his people to work. He
had erected monuments to himself -- the palace and citadel -- but he wished
to leave the country to be a monument also -- paved roads, forts, schools
and those things which make a country great; but his people did not
appreciate. They frowned.
"Vive le Roi," they shouted as they marched by him; but when away it was
"A bas le Roi." Echoes of this last shout came to the king's ears and he
moaned. Once to his court doctor he said:
"Toussaint, the Tiger and I. We have dreamed so much and have done so
little!"
And then again, as the echoes of that shout "A bas le Roi," reached his
ears, he cried –
"To be great is to be lonely. To be magnificent is to have men hate you!"
So he worked and worried, and the combined result was that the body
rebelled and was shocked. So he lay in a partial coma and realized his work
was done. He also realized that his people would rejoice in his death, and
hasten to tear down what he had built.
He lingered several days with the end approaching.
One day the court physician said:
"Henry, I am going to send Marie-Louise and the children to you. I shall
remain in the
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hall where you can send for me, if you want me."
They came to him and something of his old self reasserted itself as he
kissed them and bade them goodbye. To Marie-Louise he gave the papers
entitling her to the fortune he had sent to England.
Then he sent them away and asked for his chief ministers. To them he
entrusted the care of his family, and commanded them to take everything they
could carry by the back trail to Cap Haitian and place them in the care of
the British consul.
News of the coming demise of the king reached the populace. They became a
mob in waiting and the drums began to beat.
"Fly!" commanded the king to his ministers; but when they reached the
weeping queen, she refused
"Whatever happens, I will not leave Henry's body to the anger of the mob.
They would mutilate it as they did that of Jean Jacques !"
The murmurs of the populace became louder and beat upon the ears of the
king. He stirred and the doctor entered, but he asked to be alone for a
little while.
Unsteadily he got upon his feet and tremblingly hobbled to a little
cabinet on the wall and took there from a golden ball. It had been specially
cast and had been in the cabinet some years. It had been cast for a special
purpose and its time of use had come! He slipped it into the barrel of a
pistol. There was a report, a fall and a crash.
The doctor entered.
The king was dead.
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With the report of the pistol the mob became strangely quiet. Then it
broke into a shout:
"Le Roi est mort."
They proceeded to loot the palace.
Then came Marie-Louise -- the gentle Marie-Louise. There was a new look
on her face, something the attendants of the palace had never seen there
before. It was the look such as her husband would have worn under like
circumstances. To her servants she commanded
"Give the mob anything it wants to keep them quiet; then wind the king's
body in sheets and follow me."
She led the way by a secret door to the trail to the citadel. It was a
heavy load and the men staggered; and the weight staggered the queen and the
two young girls who followed.
The citadel had not been finished -- was never finished -- and building
material lay about; also a vat of newly slacked lime. Into this the queen
commanded the body of her husband to be thrown.
"The mob shall not have it," she exclaimed.
With an effort this was done; and the body of the king slowly sank into
the corrosive.
There was no time to lose. The roar of the mob could be heard behind
them, so they took a secret trail down the mountain to the British consulate
in Cap Haitian.
* * *
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The queen and two princesses arrived in England in safety; but the mob
wreaked its vengeance on the Prince Royal. There should be no successor of
the blood of Christophe.
NEMESIS
Oh, there is an isle –
A happy isle –
Down in the Caribee;
And the days are long
And life's a song
On this isle in the Carib Sea.
And we sit and dream
In evening's gleam,
Down in the Caribee ;
For the stars shine bright
For dreams by night
On this isle in the Carib Sea.
--Creole Song.
More than a century has passed since Christophe's body was carried to its
place of extinction, and the island of Haiti has sweltered in the fierce
beams of a tropic sun, and her people have dozed in the same beams.
Life is easy in Haiti. The inhabitants simply have to gather what grows,
and, with such a climate, few articles of clothing are needed. The stately
mansions of the planters, which the revolutionary fires destroyed, have
given place, mostly, to thatched huts. Swine, dogs and hens wander in the
neglected fields and along the
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muddy roads; but the people are happy. They talk and laugh and sing. Only
when they look to the hills and the ruins of Christophe's palace and
fortress do they remember the days of their greatness, and even then they do
not mourn its departure.
Yes, Haiti is asleep -- present and past. Dessalines, the Tiger, sleeps
in the unmarked grave where Defilee placed him; and, following the course of
nature, Defilee the uncrowned empress, sleeps; but no one knows where. The
spirit of the calcined Christophe never has left the brush and weed-covered
parade ground of the fortress La Ferriere ; and, among his enemies, were
found three faithful generals, who kept watch over the place night and day
for thirty years. They encased the calcined lime in a structure of stone as
a mausoleum. Toussaint, the humane, died a prisoner in the land of the
brotherhood of man, which he tried to emulate and embellish, and, through
the jealousy of Napoleon, sleeps there; and Marie-Louise, gentle
Marie-Louise, lived thirty years to mourn her king, her husband and her
lover. Outlived her two daughters -- and, after them, dozed her days away in
sunny Italy, dreaming, like all her country's people --dreaming, perhaps, of
the pepper tree in her father's court yard. All that is mortal of her sleeps
in a little cemetery in the rear of the Capuchin's monastery in Pisa, Italy.