Primrose Henry put on her camlet cloak
and took several skeins of yarn to one of the old
ladies in the almshouses, to knit some stockings for
some other poor. Afterward she sauntered round
with a guilty feeling. She often ran in to see
Phil and Andrew, and the one clerk always stared at
the radiant vision. She hesitated on the broad
sill, then she opened the door. There was a sort
of counting room first, and that was vacant now.
Andrew was in the apartment beyond.
There was her promise to Rachel. Oh, what must
she do!
“Philemon has gone,” and
Andrew glanced up with tender gravity as he espied
Primrose.
“Yes. I saw him. How is Aunt Lois,
and Faith?”
“Very well.” There
was a different smile, now, a sense of amusement, and
a peculiar light in the eyes like relief.
“What is it?” Her heart-beat almost strangled
her.
“Rachel was in this morning.
And you cannot guess she is to be married
presently.”
“Married! And she cared
so much for you,” cried Primrose in consternation.
Andrew colored and moved his head with a slow negative.
“No, it could not have been.
Andrew I wonder what kind of a wife you
would like?” turning her eyes away.
He could have reached out his hand
and answered her with a clasp. But there was
another who loved her very much, who was young and
gay and full of ardent hopes. That would be better
for the child.
“I shall not marry for years
to come.” His voice was very tranquil.
“There is my mother, and now we are so much to
each other.”
“And she ought to be
a Friend. You would like a Friend best, Andrew?
And no flighty young thing.”
Was she thinking of anything?
Oh, she was too young and sweet. It would be
putting a butterfly in a cage.
“That would be better, certainly.
When two people elect to spend their lives together,
it is best that they should have similar tastes and
desires.”
“But a sweet and pretty one,
Andrew. One like Miss Whiting, who is intelligent
and noble and reads a great many things and has a lovely
garden of flowers. I want you to be very, very
happy, Andrew.”
“Thank you, little one.
Let me wish the same for you. A gallant young
lover with ambition, who can take his place in society
and who will enjoy with you the youthful pleasures
that are so much to you, and then grow older with
you and come to ripe middle life and serene old age.
I think I could put my finger on someone ”
Primrose’s sweet face was scarlet,
and her eyes suddenly fluttered down with tremulous
lids.
“Thou hast been a dear little
sister,” going back to the Quaker speech.
“Thy happiness will be much to me; thy pain,
if any happened to thee, would be my pain. Thy
prosperity will always be my prayer, for I think thou
wert born for sunniness and clear sailing and joy,
with someone bright and young like thyself.”
“A little sister,” she
repeated softly. If it was that and only that,
her conscience would be clear.
“Yes. Didst thou ever doubt it?”
He raised his serene brown eyes and
smiled. He was not one to carry all his soul
in his eyes.
“Nay, and I never shall.”
She pressed her lips to his forehead, which was as
fair as any girl’s. How long it had been
since he kissed her! He might trust himself again
on her wedding day.
“And now tell me about Rachel.
We have queer talk of loves and such.”
“He is a young man, a neighbor,
the eldest of several sons. And Rachel hath a
nice dower. I hope all will go well.”
She was infinitely sorry for Rachel at that moment.
“You will come soon and see
us. I send love to Aunt Lois,” and Primrose
turned.
“Fare thee well. Blessings attend thee,
little one.”
He sat there a long while, thinking
how her mother had given up many worldly things for
the man she loved. Primrose would do it, too,
he said stoutly to himself, if she had loved.
It was best this way. The sunshine did not rise
up from the brown earth, but shone down out of the
radiant blue sky.
Primrose Henry went home with a light
heart. And that evening Allin Wharton had his
answer.
Madam Wetherill shook her head, but
said smilingly, “If you take the young woman
you must take the old one, too. I will never give
up Primrose.”
The girl’s soft arms were around
her neck and the sweet young voice, with a rapture
of emotion, cried, “Oh, madam, am I indeed so
dear to you?”
The world goes on and the stories
of life are repeated, but to each one comes that supreme
taste of personal joy and rapture that is alone for
itself; that is new, no matter how many times it may
have been lived over.
There was a long, delightful engagement
of the young people, who waited for Allin to take
his degree, and his father felt justly proud of his
standing. There was all the reckless happiness
of two young people in that wonderful joyousness of
youth when one apes sorrows for the sake of being
comforted, indulges in dainty disagreements so that
they can repent with fascinating sweetness, and are
inconsequent, unreasonable, entrancing, and delightful,
and gayety of any kind seems good, so that it goes
hand and hand with love. Primrose danced and laughed
through her April years, and then came May with bloom
and more steadiness, and then peerless, magnificent
June.
“I am but a sad trifler, after
all,” she would say to Madam Wetherill.
“Shall I ever be like my dear mother or have
any of the sober Henry blood in me?”
“Nay,” was the answer.
“We never find fault with the rose because it
does not bear an ear of corn or a stalk of grain.
And yet so great a thing as an oak tree is content
to bear a small acorn.”
And while they were being married
and rejoicing in Phil’s sturdy little boy and
dainty, golden-haired baby girl called Primrose, old
Philadelphia was making rapid strides. Indeed,
in Washington’s language, the United Colonies
had now “the opportunity to become a respectable
nation,” and it came back to the city where it
had first uttered its lusty young cry and protest.
In May of 1787, in the old State House, assembled
the delegates who were to frame a Constitution that
would stand the wear and tear of time. Their
four months’ work has come down to us written
in letters of imperishable glory, that were not to
be too large for the Thirteen Colonies, and large
enough for any multiple the nation might come to use
in the course of its existence.
For the tardy treaty of peace had
been signed, and though there were much discussion
and various opinions, such as children of one family
often have, it was all settled. And the next Fourth
of July had a grand procession, for the times, and
a ship of state was dragged proudly through the streets
on a float, with some pretty boys for midshipmen;
the great judges in their official robes, soldiers,
and civilians, and, side by side, walked Andrew Henry
and Philemon Henry, brothers indeed in all the wide
and varied interests that go to make up brotherhood
and not a little human love. The bells of Christ
Church, that had once been taken down and hidden from
vandal hands, were rehung, and rung at intervals all
day long, while flags floated and bonfires blazed at
night, and a grand supper was eaten by the dignitaries
at Bush Hill.
While other and larger matters were
being discussed, a President nominated, elected, and
inaugurated, Philadelphia, like a prudent householder,
was attending to her own affairs. When Washington
passed through the city on his way to New York to
receive the grandest compliment of the nation, she
again paid him all honor in his reception.
The beautiful city with its greenery
and quiet, of which William Penn had dreamed, and
in many of whose footsteps the renowned Franklin had
followed, had gone through curious changes, and was
putting on new aspects with every year. But “Fairemount,”
with its homes that were to be handed down in story
a hundred years later; Stenton, with its grand aspects;
Lansdowne, with its woods and waters; the Logan House,
the Shippens’, and old Mount Pleasant, and so
on stretching up the banks of the Schuylkill were
to be left beautiful and tranquil and free from the
thought of business invasion. For Old Philadelphia
is like a dream, and there will always linger about
it the youthful tenderness of William Penn’s
plan and his life story.
And then, to the chagrin of New York,
came the transference of the Capital to Philadelphia.
She had perked up and brightened up, stretched out
her wharves, filled up her low places, cleared her
streets of rubbish, and built rows of houses, had
her library and her university, and it seemed as if
she had been getting ready for this accession within
her borders, the “Republican Court,” as
it was to be called.
A plain enough house, on High Street,
it was, with a few fine old trees about, where many
famous decisions were shaped by wisdom that seems
wonderful to us now. When Congress was in session
there were many gayeties, dinners, private balls,
suppers, and dances for the young people, and then,
to its ruler, the retirement of Mount Vernon.
With it all a sort of serene steadiness
and refinement that never allowed pleasures to degenerate
into a maddening whirl. A thrift and prudence,
too, that had become a solid, underlying strand in
the character of the city.
The bell still rang out on market
mornings and mistresses were not above visiting the
long, clean spaces, though there was much fault-finding
about the dearness of things, and Mrs. Adams complained
of the loneliness of Bush Hill, though she was afterward
to be comforted by being the first lady of the land
at Washington, the final Capital.
Primrose Wharton was a pretty young
wife and the mother of a golden-haired little girl
when she next saw “Lady Washington,” as
she was often called. She had settled into a
gracious, but still piquant, matron, and she and Allin
enjoyed the theater and still dearly loved a dance.
Madam Wetherill was yet a handsome and stately dame,
and “foolish over the little one,” she
said.
There were many memories of the dismal
winter of Valley Forge renewed when Mrs. Washington
met some of the brave soldiers. And among them
all there was no finer nor more attractive figure
than that of Andrew Henry, now arrived at its full
manliness. The Quaker costume became him as no
other would, though the Continental attire was distinctive
and well calculated to show off a man. Fair and
fresh and strong, yet with well-bred gentleness and
a cultivated mind, he was often singled out at the
receptions, and more than one admiring girl would have
gladly enacted Bessy Wardour’s romance.
Was there any story in the eyes that
gave a glimpse of the great heart back of them? tender,
sweet, brave eyes? Sometimes Primrose Wharton
thought so, and all her pulses stood still in awesome
silence. She was very happy. She and Allin
had had an April fling and had settled into May bloom,
but could anything have been different better?
Not for her, but for him. A little sister!
Is she that?
He was very happy, now, in a larger
house, with a study and book shelves, his mother a
tender and tranquil woman, Faith a contented housekeeper
with a servant, and hardly knowing which to adore the
most, Polly Henry’s merry madcap household,
or Primrose Wharton’s sunny-haired daughter.
The only thing Philemon Henry would
undo are those years that he was hardly answerable
for.
“Of course it was not your fault,”
Polly declares in her impetuous, fond, and justifying
way. “I think it really braver, for it requires
more courage to own that a man has been wrong, than
to go along in a straight path already made for him.
And I fell in love with you as a redcoat, I really
did, and fought with myself in the nights when I was
alone. For, of course, I couldn’t have told
Prim; she would have crossed me quite out of her books.
And I wouldn’t have dared hint such a thing
to anybody. Now, truly, was I not a silly girl?”
A fond kiss is her answer.
If the war made enemies it also made
brothers, informed with larger wisdom.
A hundred and more years ago!
Yet there are storied places that will never die out
and the old bell of freedom has clanged many a peal,
and the State House had many a Pilgrim. Truly
there are numberless worthies in the great beyond,
who have left behind imperishable memories even in
a city that has grown anew more than once, and added
beauty to beauty.