This makes her quite naive to the outside world, as Elizabeth was never put in an impoverished position. Early on in the novel, Elizabeth begins her own journey in discovering her caring nature and also the horrors of the outside world. “Please let the sentry swoon, I prayed as his screams soon broke past the bullet upon which he was to bite down. At the very least, I hoped he’d been given rum to ease his pain, but I feared otherwise” (Dray and Kamoie 93). While Elizabeth tends to the wounded soldiers, the horrors shock and surprise her as she prays and hopes for the soldier's pains to be eased. In this moment of exposure for Elizabeth, she begins truly seeing the world for what it is outside of her upper-class circle. The world is not all that bad though, as Elizabeth does meet her one and only husband during this horrific time. While Alexander is quite handsome and kind in her eyes, Elizabeth begins to realize that he might not be all he is cut out to be and the simple naive girl she once was begins to fade to a more logical standpoint. “Am I making a mistake?” he asked. I was so certain of Alexander Hamilton. Ready to run away and elope if he had allowed