Patty Rutter had fallen asleep with
her bonnet on, and had been lying there, fast asleep,
nobody knew just how long; for, somehow it
happened so there was nobody in particular
to awaken her; that is to say, no one had seemed to
care though she slept on all day and all night, without
ever waking up at all.
But then, there never had been another
life quite like Patty Rutter’s life. In
the first place, it had a curious reason for beginning
at all; and nearly everything about it had been as
unlike your life and mine as possible.
In her very baby days, before she
walked or talked, she had been sent away to live with
strangers, and no real, warm kiss of true love had
ever fallen on her little lips.
It all came about in this way:
Mrs. Sarah Rutter, a lady living in Philadelphia exactly
what relation she bore to Patty it is a little difficult
to determine decided to send the little
one to live with a certain Mrs. Adams, at Quincy,
in Massachusetts, and she particularly desired that
the child should go dressed in a style fitting an
inhabitant of the proud city of Philadelphia.
Now, at that time Philadelphia was
very much elated because of several things that had
happened to her; but the biggest pride of all was,
that once upon a time the Continental Congress had
met there, and and most wonderful thing had
made a Nation!
Well, to be sure, that was
something to be proud of; though Patty didn’t
understand, a bit more than you do, what it meant.
However, the glory of it all was talked about so much
that she couldn’t help knowing that, when this
nation, with its fifty-six Fathers, and thirteen Mothers,
was born one day in July, 1776, at Philadelphia, all
the city rang with a sweet jangle, and called to all
the people, through the tongue of its Liberty bell,
to come up and greet the newcomer with a great shout
of welcome.
But that had been long ago, before
Mrs. Sarah Rutter was grown up, or Patty Rutter began
to be dressed for her trip to Quincy.
As I wrote, Mrs. Rutter wished that
Patty should go attired in a manner to do honor to
the city of Philadelphia; therefore she was not permitted
to depart in her baby clothes, but her little figure
was arrayed in a long, prim gown of soft drab silk,
while a kerchief of purest mull was crossed upon her
breast; and, depending from her waist, like the fashion
of to-day, were pincushion and watch. Upon her
youthful head was a bonnet, crowned and trimmed in
true Quaker fashion; and her infantile feet were securely
tied within shapely slippers of kid. Thus equipped,
Miss Patty was sent forth upon her journey.
Ah! that journey began a long time
ago fifty-eight, yes, fifty-nine years
have gone by, and Patty Rutter is quite an aged little
lady now, as she lies asleep, with her bonnet on.
“It is time,” says somebody, “to
close.”
No one seems to take notice that Patty
Rutter does not get up and depart with the rest of
the visitors, that she only stirs her eyelids and
turns her head on the silken “quilt” where
she is lying.
The little woman who keeps house in
the Hall locks it up and goes away, and there is little
Patty Rutter shut in for the night. As the key
turns in the old-time lock, the Lady Rutter winks hard
and sits up.
“Well, I’ve been patient,
anyhow, and Mrs. Samuel Adams herself couldn’t
wish me to do more,” she said, with a comforting
yawn and a delightful stretch, and then she began
to stare in blank bewilderment.
“I should like to know
what this all means,” she whispered, “and
where I am. I’ve heard enough to-day
to turn my head. How very queer folks are, and
they talk such jargon now-a-days. Centennial and
Corliss Engine; Woman’s Pavilion and Memorial
Hall; Main Building and the Trois Frères;
Hydraulic Annex, railroads and what-nots.
“I never heard of such
things. I don’t think it is proper to speak
of them, or the Adamses would have told me. No
more intelligent folks in the land than the Adamses,
and I guess they know what belongs to good
society and polite conversation. I declare I blushed
so in my sleep that I was quite ashamed. I’ll
get up and look about now. I’m sure this
isn’t any one of the houses where we visit, or
folks wouldn’t talk so.”
Patty Rutter straightened her bonnet
on her head, smoothed down her robe of silken drab,
adjusted her kerchief, looked at her watch to learn
how long she had been sleeping, and found, to her surprise,
that it had run down. Right over her head hung
two watches.
“Why, how thoughtful folks are
in this house,” she exclaimed in a timid voice,
reaching up and taking one of the two time-pieces in
her hand. “Why, here’s a name; let
me see.”
Reading slowly, she announced that
the watch belonged to “Wil-liam Wil-liams worn
when he signed the Declaration of Independence.”
“Ah!” she cried, with pathetic tone, “this
watch is run down too, at four minutes after
five. I remember! This William Williams
was one of the fifty-six Fathers. I guess I must
be in Lebanon he lived there and his folks
would have his watch of course. Here’s another,”
taking down a watch and reading, “Colonel John
Trumbull. Run down, too! and at twenty-three
minutes after six. He was the son of Brother
Jonathan, Governor of one of the Mothers, when the
Nation was born. Yes, yes, I must be in Lebanon.
Well, it’s a comfort, at least, to know that
I’m in company the Adamses would approve of,
though how I came here is a mystery.”
She hung the watches in place, stepped
out of the glass room, in which she had slept, into
a hall, and with a slight exclamation of delicious
approval, stopped short before a number of chairs,
and clasped her little fingers tightly together.
You must remember that Patty Rutter
was a Friend, a Quaker, perhaps a descendant of William
Penn, but then, in her baby days, having been transplanted
to the rugged soil and outspoken ways of Massachusetts,
she could not keep silence altogether, in view of that
which greeted her vision.
She was in the very midst of old friends.
Chairs in which she had sat in her young days stood
about the grand hall. On the walls hung portraits
of the ancestor kings of the nation born at Philadelphia
in 1776.
In royal robes and with careless grace,
lounged King George III., the nation’s grandfather,
angry no longer at his thirteen daughters who strayed
from home with the Sons of Liberty.
Her feet made haste and her eyes opened
wider, as her swift hands seized relic after relic.
She sat in chairs that Washington had rested in; she
caught up camp-kettles used on every field where warriors
of the Revolution had tarried; she patted softly La
Fayette’s camp bedstead; and wondered at the
taste that had put into the hall two old, time-worn,
battered doors, but soon found out that they had gone
through all the storm of balls that fell upon the Chew
House during the battle of Germantown.
She read the wonderful prayer that
once was prayed in Carpenter’s Hall, and about
which every member of Congress wrote home to his wife.
On a small “stand,” encased
in glass, she came upon a portrait of Washington,
painted during the time he waited for powder at Cambridge.
Patty Rutter had seen it often, with its halo of the
General’s own hair about it. She turned
from it, and beheld (why, yes, surely she had
seen that, but not here; it was, why long ago,
in her baby days in Philadelphia, that Mrs. Rutter
had taken her up into a tower to see it), a bell Liberty
Bell, that rang above the heads of the Fathers when
the Nation was born.
Poor little Patty began to cry.
Where could she be? She reached out her hand,
and climbed the huge beams that encased the bell, and
tried to touch the tongue. She wanted to hear
it ring again, but could not reach it.
“It’s curious, curious,”
she sobbed, wiping her eyes and turning them with
a thrill of delight upon a beloved name that greeted
her vision. It was growing dark, and she might
be wrong. But no, it was the dear name of Adams;
and she saw, in a basket, a little pile of baby raiment.
There were dainty caps and tiny shirts of cambric,
whose linen was like a gossamer web, and whose delicate
lines of hem-stitch were scarcely discernible; there
were small dresses, yellow with the sun color that
time had poured over them, and they hung with pathetic
crease and tender fold over the sides of the basket.
The little woman paused and peered
to read these words, “Baby-clothes, made by
Mrs. John Adams for her son, John Quincy Adams.”
“Little John Quincy!”
she cried, “A baby so long ago!” She took
the little caps in her hands, she pulled out the crumpled
lace that edged them. She said, through the swift-falling
tears:
“Oh, I remember when he was
brought home dead, and how, in the Independence
Hall of the State House at Philadelphia, he lay in
state, that the inhabitants who knew his deeds, and
those of his father, John, and his uncle, Samuel,
might see his face. I love the Adamses every
one,” and she softly pressed the baby-caps that
had been wrought by a mother, ere the country began,
to her small Quaker lips, with real New England fervor
for its very own. Tenderly she laid them down,
to see, while the light was fading, a huge picture
on the wall. She studied it long, trying to discern
the faces, with their savage beauty; the sturdy right-doing
men who stood before them; and then her eyes began
to glisten, and gather light from the picture; her
lips parted, her breath quickened; for Patty Rutter
had gone beyond her life associations in Massachusetts,
back to the times in which her Quaker ancestors had
make treaty with the native Indians.
“It is!” she cried with
a shout; “It is Penn’s treaty!” Patty
gazed at it until she could see no longer. “I’m
glad it is the last thing my eyes will remember,”
she said sorrowfully, when in the gloom she turned
away, went down the hall, and entered her glass chamber.
“Never mind my watch,”
she said softly. “When I waken it will be
daylight, and I need not wind it. It will be so
sweet to lie here through the night in such grand
and goodly company. I only wish Mrs. Samuel Adams
could come and kiss me good night.”
With these words, Patty Rutter laid
herself to rest upon the silken quilt from Gardiner’s
Island; and if you look within the Relic Room, opposite
to Independence Hall, in the old State House at Philadelphia,
in this Centennial summer, you will find her there,
still taking her long nap, fully indorsed by Miss
Adams, and in Independence Hall, across the passage
way, you will see the portraits of more than fifty
of the Fathers of the nation, but the Mothers abide
at home.