[Footnote 28: Isaac Coffin obtained an appointment in his majesty"s navy in 1773. Upon the outbreak of the war he proffered his resignation, not being willing to fight against his countrymen, but being a.s.sured he would not be sent to North America remained in the service of the king, rising by merit to the position of rear-admiral.
He retained through life a deep affection for his countrymen, and endowed a school on the island of Nantucket.
His younger brother John, from the outset, sided with the king. He joined the British forces, became captain of a company of loyalists, served under Colonel Tarleton in South Carolina, becoming major, colonel, and after the war a major-general. He received a grant of several thousand acres of land in Nova Scotia. Though maintaining allegiance to the king, he had great respect and admiration for those who espoused the patriotic cause.]
"Do you have garden tea-parties in Rumford?" Miss Flucker asked.
"No, not garden parties, but the ladies get together in a parlor, sip their tea, take pinches of snuff from each other"s boxes, talk about the number of cheeses they have made, how much salt they put into the curd, how much yarn they have spun, how many yards of linen they have woven."
"Such a party must be very enjoyable," said Miss Quincy.
"Yes, I think they like to find out what everybody else is doing, and how they do it. Their tongues wag lively when they get to talking about what has happened and what they expect will happen; who was cried the Sunday before, and who probably will be the next Sunday."
The ladies smiled at Robert"s vivacious conversation.
"Does the town clerk cry the proposed marriages?" Miss Shrimpton asked.
"Yes. The moment the minister finishes the benediction Sunday afternoon, Squire Fellows breaks in, shouting that marriage is intended between Hezekiah and Mehitable. Of course there are blushes on Mehitable"s face, while Hezekiah looks kinder sheepish."
Again the ladies laughed.
"Do all the ladies take snuff?"
Miss Flucker asked the question.
"Nearly all the old ladies carry their snuff-boxes in their pockets or work-bags. There"s one lady, however, who does not--Aunt Hipsy Jenkins. Perhaps I ought to say she is well along in years, and that the town clerk never has cried her. She carries her nose as she pleases. She says if the Lord had intended it for a dust-hole, he would have put it on the other end up."
A merry peal of laughter rang through the garden--so joyful that several ladies and gentlemen joined the group, to hear what the young man from the country was saying.
"Her name," said Robert, by way of explanation, "is Hepsibah, but everybody calls her Hipsy."
"Evidently," said Isaac Coffin, "she is a lady who is up to snuff."
Again the company laughed.
"You may be sure she never minces things, but speaks her mind, whether anybody likes it or not," Robert replied.
"Are the gentlemen invited to the tea-parties?" John Coffin asked.
"Not to the afternoon parties, neither are the young ladies; the old ladies like to be by themselves while sipping their tea. Perhaps they think it would not be dignified on the part of the gentlemen to devote the afternoons to gossip," Robert replied.
"Do not the young ladies meet?" Miss Shrimpton asked.
"Not as do our mothers, but they have their own good times,--their quilting parties. In the country every girl as soon as she can sew begins to make patchwork. When they get enough for a quilt, they invite their acquaintances to the quilting, and spend the afternoon in talking about--well, I can"t exactly say what they do talk about.
Perhaps you ladies can tell better than I."
The ladies smiled at his pleasant way of indicating what was uppermost in the thoughts of young maidens on such delightful occasions.
"Do not the gentlemen partic.i.p.ate in some way?" Miss Quincy inquired.
"Oh yes; we join them in the evening, after they are through with the quilting, and try to make things lively. We play blindman"s-buff, hide the handkerchief, roast beef behind your back, come Philander, stage-coach, and other games, and have a jolly time. The ladies serve us with bread and b.u.t.ter, doughnuts, cookies, tarts, gingerbread, and tea. We guess riddles and tell ghost stories."
"How delightful!" Miss Newville exclaimed.
"A little later than this we have huskings in the barns, seated around a heap of corn. Husking over, we eat pudding, baked beans, mince, apple, and pumpkin pie, and top off with pop-corn, apples, and cider.
After supper the girls clear away the dishes; then we push the table into one corner of the kitchen, Julius Caesar mounts it with his fiddle, and we dance jigs and quicksteps. The girl who first found a red ear while husking, and was kissed before she could throw it into the basket, is privileged to lead the dance."
"How I should enjoy it," said Miss Shrimpton.
"Finding the red ear?" queried Isaac Coffin.
"Oh no,--you know I didn"t mean that; but having such a jolly time with n.o.body saying it isn"t proper," Miss Shrimpton replied with a blush mantling her cheek.
"Ruth, daughter,"--it was Mrs. Newville calling her to meet other guests, and Miss Newville turned regretfully away, for it was a pleasure to talk with Mr. Walden, and she hoped he would drop a word which would enable her to make sure it was he who had befriended her.
Robert, with Berinthia and the ladies whose acquaintance he had made, sauntered along the garden walks. The midsummer flowers were gone, but those of autumn were in bloom,--marigolds, asters, and sunflowers.
Picturesque the scene: ladies in paduasoys, taffetas, and brocades, gentlemen in purple, russet, and crimson coats, white satin waistcoats, buff breeches, and silk stockings. Officers of the king"s regiments in scarlet with silver-starred epaulets, clergymen in suits of black, lawyers and doctors in white wigs, loitering along the paths, gathered in groups beneath the trees, young ladies serving them with syllabubs. From the vine-clad arbor the music of the orchestra floated upon the air.
Robert saw a gentleman and lady shaking hands with Mr. and Mrs.
Newville.
"That is John Adams, one of the smartest lawyers in town," said Berinthia. "That is his wife Abigail; she is the daughter of Reverend Mr. Smith, the minister of Braintree. She knows Latin and Greek, and is one of the nicest women in town. She writes beautiful letters, and knows--oh, so much! I"ll introduce you to them. I know you will be charmed with her."
Mr. Adams courteously greeted Robert, and very gracious was the recognition by Mrs. Adams. She asked him if he had ever been in Boston before; who was the minister in Rumford; if he had many books to read.
So pleasant and agreeable was her conversation, she seemed to Robert to be an old friend.
Robert was pleased to meet Doctor Warren, and received a cordial greeting.
"And are you acquainted?" Miss Newville inquired wonderingly.
"I am happy to claim Mr. Walden as my friend. I have long known his father," the doctor replied.
[Ill.u.s.tration: ABIGAIL SMITH ADAMS]
Robert was pleased, also, to meet Mr. Knox, the bookseller, who was polite and affable to all, particularly to Miss Flucker.
When Berinthia and Robert were by themselves she informed him that Mr.
Knox was attentive to Miss Flucker; that her parents opposed the match, Mr. Knox being a Whig and her father a Tory. Berinthia was sure that the more her father opposed the bookseller, the better Miss Lucy liked him.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Mr. Hanc.o.c.k"s House.]
Mr. John Hanc.o.c.k, though living but a short distance from Mr.
Newville, came in his coach with driver and footmen in blue livery. He bowed politely to Mr. and Mrs. Newville, took a pinch of snuff from Mr. Newville"s gold box, and graciously greeted Miss Dorothy Quincy.
Berinthia whispered to Robert that they were engaged to be married.[29]
[Footnote 29: The Dorothy Quincy who married John Hanc.o.c.k is not to be confounded with the Dorothy Q. of Holmes"s poem:--
"Grandmother"s mother, her age I guess, Thirteen summers, or something less."]
"If Miss Newville and Miss Brandon will excuse us, Mr. Walden and myself will take a turn through the grounds," said Doctor Warren, locking arms with Robert.