[Lewis Rand by Mary Johnston]@TWC D-Link bookLewis Rand CHAPTER III 3/26
In the columns of the newspapers, above the name of every Roman patriot, each party found voice.
From a lurid background of Moreau's conspiracy and d'Enghien's death, of a moribund English King and Premier, of Hayti aflame, and Tripoli insolent, they thundered, like Cassandra, of home woes.
To the Federalist, reverencing the dead Washington, still looking for leadership to Hamilton, now so near that fatal Field of Honour, unconsciously nourishing love for that mother country from which he had righteously torn himself, the name of Democrat-Republican and all that it implied was a stench in the nostrils.
On the other hand, the lover of Jefferson, the believer in the French Revolution and that rider of the whirlwind whom it had bred, the far-sighted iconoclast, and the poor bawler for simplicity and red breeches, all found the Federalist a mete burnished fly in the country's pot of ointment.
Nowhere might be found a man so sober or so dull as to cry, "A plague o' both your houses!" In the county of Albemarle April was blending with May.
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