Author:  Ron Chernow
Viewed: 67 - Published at: a year ago

James, sixteen, and Alexander, fourteen, were now left alone, largely friendless and penniless. At every step in their rootless, topsy-turvy existence, they had been surrounded by failed, broken, embittered people. Their short lives had been shadowed by a stupefying sequence of bankruptcies, marital separations, deaths, scandals, and disinheritance. Such repeated shocks must have stripped Alexander Hamilton of any sense that life was fair, that he existed in a benign universe, or that he could ever count on help from anyone. That this abominable childhood produced such a strong, productive, self-reliant human being-that this fatherless adolescent could have ended up a founding father of a country he had not yet even seen-seems little short of miraculous.

( Ron Chernow )
[ Alexander Hamilton ]
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