Authors: Alex Haley
as the flax was hackled and scutched, and the peasant women toiled over
great steaming kettles boiling the spun thread to purify it. They went
to the annual Ballybay Fair together, and reveled in the fun of it, the
tinkers and fiddlers, and the increasingly drunken peasants dancing
increasingly drunken gigs. They giggled at the man with the shillelagh
and long tailcoat who earned his living by challenging stalwarts to "step
on his coat" and fight with him. They watched the races, dazzled by the
bright colors of the silks the jockeys wore, and cheered the winners
until their throats were sore, and, at the subsequent auction, pretended
to bid for horses they could not afford.
When they grew older, and Jamie's father took a mistress, Sarah Black,
who lived in Carrickmacross, it was Sean who taught Jamie about girls,
and the great mysteries of sex, and it was Sean who first introduced
Jamie to the wonders of beer and poteen, for the boy could not understand
his father's faithlessness to the memory of his dead mother.
In all things they were as brothers, but although their ages were
similar, it was Sean who led and Jamie who followed. They bridged, with
the easy bond of youth, the many chasms that their different positions
in society created for them, and they nurtured each other in spite of
these differences, and drew strength from them. Once Jamie had Maureen
crop his hair short, in the peasant-boy manner, the more to identify with
his sunshine friend. When he went home, his father whipped him,
8 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
and forbade him to leave the house until his hair had grown out, and Jamie
kept his hair long after that.
So Jamie grew up with an appreciation of the life and hardships of the
mass of the people. His other world of his father's ambition, and of
class and privilege, bored Jamie, and made him long to be back with his
peasant friends. Yet he could not avoid that other life.
Much of Ballybay was owned by the Leslie family, impoverished minor
English aristocracy, who, lacking funds, were happy to accept the sometime
friendship and occasional loans of James Jackson, whom otherwise they
regarded as a man of 'trade and not of their social quality. For a while
they were prepared to consider the possibility of an acquaintance between
James Jackson's children and their own, and invited Jamie and Washington
to spend an afternoon with their own children. Dressed in their best and
sworn to good behavior by Jugs, they were driven by old Quinn, the
hostler, in a fine gig with handsome horses.
Jamie and Washington took a stiffly formal tea with the Leslie boy and
girl, attended by their governess, whose manners were as starched as her
dress and high collar. Afterward, they were taken outside to play in the
formal gardens of the small castle. They strolled politely through the
grounds until they came to a fence that bordered a cow pasture. Young Ja-
mie, the devil in him, dared the Leslie girl to run through the pasture
with him. She accepted.
The governess, furious, raced after them, calling on her charge to watch
her step, but it was too late. The girl slipped on a cow pat and fell to
the ground. When Jamie went to help her up, he slipped too, in the same
pat. The girl began to cry, and the governess berated Jamie for what he
had done. He was suitably contrite at first, but the sight of the primped
girl covered in cow dung was too much for him, and he started to laugh.
This infuriated the victim.
"Go away, you bloody Irish ass!" she cried. The governess boxed her ears
for her language but not her sentiments, dragged her away, and told Jamie
he was a horrid little boy, who was never to come near them again.
Old Quinn drove the boys home, his nose wrinkling at the
BLOODLINES 9
smell of cow manure coming from the seat behind him, but his eyes
twinkling with delight at the cheek of his young master. Washington was
in awe of his slightly older brother, and Jamie could not wait to tell
Sean.
That afternoon caused something of a change in Jamie's relationship with
old Quinn. Previously, the stable master had regarded him as a bit of a
nuisance, a bothersome boy who had to be taught to ride, and whose
presence in the stables distracted Quinn from his true passion, and
disturbed his precious Thoroughbred mares. Following the incident at the
Leslies', Quinn, who detested everything British except racing stock,
took more time with Jamie, and found in him a natural talent for riding.
He encouraged Jamie's interest in horses, and astonished the boy with the
breadth of his knowledge. He could recount the bloodline of every horse
in his stable, their ages, sires, and dams, back through several
generations. He instructed the boy in their care and management, he
advised him of the potential of any new colt, and by the time Jamie was
a young man, he had acquired much of Quinn's knowledge, as well as his
passion. All the animals were divided into separate stables, the racing
horses in one, the riding horses in another, and the workhorses in a
third, because, Quinn insisted, the bloodlines could not be mixed.
Jamie's father, James, was often away, on business in Belfast or Dublin,
but sometimes Jamie was allowed to accompany him to races in which a
Jackson horse was entered. Then his father was a different man to him.
Free of the burden of being a parent, free to indulge his love of the
track, James Jackson was attentive to his son, and taught him something
of the ownership of racehorses, and the special skills that racing re-
quired. If his horse won, which his favorite, Crazy Jane, often did, James
was expansive and bought his son gifts. If their horse was not placed,
father and son traveled home in mutual, depressed silence.
Occasionally, his father would entertain, and the breakfast for the hunt
club would be held at the mansion. These social events were used by James
to extend and develop his social and business connections with the ruling
class, with the Leslies and especially Dacre Hamilton.
10 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
Hamilton was the major English presence in the county of Monaghan, and
served as sheriff. He was a strict Protestant, with no sympathy for
Catholics. He took pleasure in rigidly enforcing all the penal laws
against the peasants, whom he regarded as illiterate idolaters. These
laws, instituted after the British victory at the Battle of the Boyne,
were used to keep the defeated Catholics out of money, land, and power.
The laws encouraged religious conversion and informing on neighbors-and
even families, for only a Protestant in a Catholic family could inherit
the land.
James expected his children to attend these functions, which they did
unwillingly, for Dacre Hamilton was not loved by any of them. He had once
briefly imprisoned their brother and sister, John and Eleanor, for some
youthful high jinks. John had defended a hedge-school teacher against an
irate landlord, and Eleanor had announced in public that she thought the
religious persecution of the Catholics was obscene. Dacre Hamilton also
protested to James Jackson, and warned him to exercise greater control
over his children's opinions and actions. James had taken a riding crop
to John, and locked Eieanor in her room for three days. It was this that
persuaded John to emigrate to America and Eleanor to move to Dublin. The
other Jackson children were wary of Hamilton, and while they enjoyed the
sport of the hunt, they disliked the overweening sycophancy to England
of the hunters. Encouraged by Sean, Jamie began to believe that most of
the club would rather be in pursuit of Irish peasants than foxes or
hares.
Nothing was more indicative of the social gap that existed between Jamie
and Sean than the manner of their formal education. A tutor was engaged
for Jamie: Jimmy Hanna, an impoverished young man of good leaming, from
Dublin, who had recently graduated from Trinity College and was looking
to make his way in an unfair world. The classroom was the music room of
the Jackson house, and they would sit together in isolate splendor, the
teacher and his only student, and Jamie was introduced to the classical
world of Latin and Greek, of mathematics and history. As he got to know
his student better, and trusted him more, Jimmy introduced him to the
glories of Irish literature. Jamie loved the beautiful words, and the
BLOODLINES 11
worlds they evoked of rain-washed fields and white-walled cottages, of
lowering skies and breaking sunlight. Of heroes and rainbows.
With poetry as a foundation, Jimmy gently led his student to Ireland's
present troubles, gave him a clear appreciation of the battle that lay
ahead to rid their country of foreign rule, and taught him that freedom
was the most precious word in any language.
Sean's school was behind a hedge. The British authorities were fearful
of education for the peasants. History, presented in the wrong light,
could lead to sedition, and many of the hedge-school teachers were deeply
involved in the liberation movements. The teachers taught where they
could, in ditches and behind hedgerows, with some lucky few having access
to a shed or shack. They were paid in kind, with peat for their fires,
or food for their stomachs-small stabs of bacon, or some potatoes, a bag
of meal, a pound of butter or a few eggs. Textbooks were few, and those
the teachers did have they had usually copied themselves, from printed
books they could not afford to buy. Often a young man of the village
would be posted as lookout, for many landlords kicked teachers off their
properties, and burned their precious books, or charged them with
sedition.
Sean's classes lasted only two or three hours, and he could go at all
only when Maureen had something to give the teacher, but Jamie studied
morning and afternoon. His older sister Sara was a frequent visitor to
his classroom, for she was smitten by the tutor.
Jimmy Hanna had come to them through a family connection. The Irish
Protestants were few in number, and even fewer owed their first
allegiance to Ireland rather than England. Jimmy's brother Hugh was a
friend of their sister Martha, who was completing her studies in Dublin.
Both brothers were handsome, educated men, dedicated to the Irish cause,
and both sisters, Martha and Sara, were headstrong and willful. Lacking
parental affection and guidance, they longed for love, and followed the
example of their older sister, the firebrand Eleanor, by challenging
their father and all he stood for, if only to try.to make him appreciate
them more, or at least play some active role in their lives. Their
patriotism was genuine,
12 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
and deeply felt, and they saw in their own lives the greater cause. Like
Ireland, they were unloved by him who governed them and had dominion over
them, so they identified with the larger community, and dedicated
themselves to its well-being, for at core they were deeply lonely. When
a handsome young man who shared her convictions rode into Ballybay and
into her life, and encouraged her to have faith in herself, Sara fell
hopelessly in love. She would sit for hours in the classroom watching him
teach, learning from him herself, and about him.
It worked to Jamie's advantage, for sometimes, on a dreary, drizzly
afternoon or a pretty spring day, Jimmy, anxious to be alone with Sara,
would curtail the lessons, and Sara's eyes would sparkle. She would send
Jamie off to old Quinn in the stables, or to Jugs for some food, or to
play with his croppy friend Sean. Then she would sit with Jimmy and hold
hands with him, or sometimes they would kiss, and the warmth and
reassurance of his presence, the strong beliefs that they shared, and the
generosity of his nature persuaded Sara that she was loved.
When she found out that Sarah Black had become more than a friend to her
father, although less than a wife, Sara was bitterly hurt. She could not
understand why her father would not marry the woman, and bring her to his
house so she could fulfill some of the functions of mother-or older woman
friend at least. In her distress, she turned to Jimmy for comfort, and,
lacking any moral conviction or example, she surrendered herself to him.
They took their pleasure secretly, covertly, in places where they thought
they would not be discovered, but they were not discreet enough. Jamie,
returning to the house one day because Sean was sick, saw them coupling