âOch! No need to be fiery! I have a copy for you. Please look it over: you'll soon see how to improve on it. And talk to Martha. Between the two of you you'll cook up an excellent book. And make us all a lot of money, eh?'
*
Tom says: âI watched your face, dearest Sarah. I'm learning to fathom. You hid your thoughts well, but I read them all the same. You really don't want to write this book, do you?
âIt's true, Robert is a milk-sop republican. No revolutionary. He's not even a fully ripe democrat. Disappointing, isn't it? But without him we would have had a hard beginning and we're still dependent upon him.'
âHe wants to silence me with his
New American Cookery
.'
âYou may be right.'
âWhat he says about women, the way he speaks of marriage tells me he was not happy in his own, you know.'
âEventually we'll find out. But let's have our own plan: let's write a pamphlet together about the education of women.'
âI should love to do that! And written by a man as well as a woman, readers will take it more seriously.'
âYes, I'm afraid that's so. And it'll make us little money. Isn't it time for another demand from that damned man? We've paid three lots, but it's been a while since the last.'
They decide Sarah will placate Robert by reading his book and talking to Martha and then they'll suggest something else. A book of essays.
Rights and Virtues in the New World
by Thomas and Sarah Cranch, perhaps.
âMartha,' Sarah calls, running down to the basement where Robert has his primitive kitchen, with its earth floor, washtub, small open range, hanging pots and kettles. In the middle is a large table and surprisingly, along the wall near the range, a sofa, somewhat stained.
âRobert wants us to write a book, you and me! About cooking.' Martha stares at her for a moment, then bursts into loud laughter. Sarah joins in.
âMr Wilson, he full o' funny idea!' Martha says eventually.
âTo tell the truth, I'm not keen to write this book, though I'd like to know your recipes.'
âMrs Cranch, Sarah, it cannot be. I don't know to write.'
âOh, that wouldn't matter. I'd do the writing, you and I together would decide what to put in it and you'd provide all the recipes. I'm sure that's his idea.'
âDo he think I have all day? To write a book? When I cook his dinner?'
âQuite right. We both have other things to do. Still, I said I'd talk to you. And I told him I'd look at a book he wants us to use as a model. Would you have a look at it, too?' She held out
American Cookery
, put it on the table.
âI don't know to read, Sarah, Mrs Cranch!'
âOh.'
âMy sister, she know. Her master learned her. She like to read. She always tellin' me how she like to read.'
âMartha, would you take the book to your sister? Ask her to read some of it to you. Then I can tell Robert honestly that we've both looked at it and we've both decided we don't want to write his cookery book. Your sister can keep the book if she likes. And I'll teach you to read. Isn't that a good idea?'
âOh, listen to that! It strike two!' Martha pulls on a straw bonnet and light shawl. âI go to my sister now. Come back later, make supper tonight.'
She rushes off and shortly after, Sarah sees she's not taken the book and runs out after her. Catches sight of her at the end of the street, begins to run, but it's too hot. Then suddenly she wants to see where Martha's family live. She'll follow, not try to catch up, hand over
American Cookery
when Martha arrives.
She's never known such heat. Unlike any London summer, it's a powerful heat that doesn't vary for months once it's begun. Masts sprout beyond the brow of Market Street, yet there's no sensation of sea breeze. The market is small compared to Covent Garden, and as Martha is tall Sarah can keep her in view, though she has to concentrate hard when Martha takes a winding path between stalls, wanting to look, trying not to stop. Buckets of cabbages, tomatoes, onions, squashes like gargoyles, meat dangling, dripping, baskets of bread, a man sawing a sheep's carcase on a bench. Insects skirr incessantly. Dogs run everywhere, pigs forage noisily among the rotting fruit and abandoned boxes that surge out of gutters.
Martha turns down a side street, another, weaving away from brick buildings. Pavements narrow, stop. Streets lose their cobbles, houses shrink. Bushes clump on scrubland. Sarah spots brown birds she now knows to be American sparrows, flitting among the vegetation, pumping their tails, singing their sweet, trilling song.
Martha opens a gate into a yard of hens scratching drily before a low wooden house. Out of which burst children, barefoot, clad in little for the heat. A boy about ten flings his arms round her waist and she hugs him to her.
Sarah's position along the street is exposed. She cannot slink away, nor will she, for the embrace has moved her. She has to know.
âMartha!'
âMrs Cranch, Sarah, what you doin' here?'
âYou left this behind.' Sarah waves the book.
âYou come all the way, Sarah, Mrs Cranch,' her arm still hugging the boy to her side. âThis is Willie. My boy. Shoo children!' she says to the others. âThey my brother's.'
Sarah holds out her hand. âPleased to meet you, Willie.' The boy shakes it, watches her solemnly. âHere's the book, Martha. Now I must go back.'
âWillie, take it to Mary. My sister in the house,' she explains to Sarah. âTell her I comin' directly.' She walks through the gate with Sarah out into the street.
âA beautiful boy, Martha.'
Martha beams. âHe bring me joy. But Sarah, Mrs Cranch, you not tell Mr Wilson you see him. Not tell him you come here. Please. Swear by Almighty God!'
âOh Martha I swear. Of course I won't say anything. You can trust me.'
âNobody know about Willie âcept Mr Wilson. No white people. He pay me, you see. Nobody know. He very angry if he think you know.'
âMartha, I promise. Goodbye now.'
He is indeed a beautiful child. Half-caste, his smile like Martha's, his eyes a piercing blue.
*
It's July 4
th
. Robert, Tom and Sarah buy tickets for the celebration at Gray's Tavern over the Schuylkill.
âAfter the processions, there'll be nothing here but bonfires on street corners, rum-swilling and disorder. I want you to see something better, eh? We have pleasure gardens, too. They're not all confined to London,' Robert says.
âWhat a patriot you are, Robert!'
âIt won't be long before you are, Tom. The both of you. Och, I can see it coming.'
They walk over the floating ferry bridge draped with flowers and flags of the thirteen states, towards banks on which great trees rise up and dip down into the river. Watch a scow take across a horse and its rider. Skimming swallows. Stroll through the grounds newly landscaped in the Romantic style. Hear a woodpecker's rapid drill and melancholy hooting at the edge of the woods.
âMourning doves,' Robert tells them.
From the top of a steep hill they look into a deep shaded valley through which an unseen force pours between rocks. In the distance, partly concealed by trees stands a series of three high-arched Chinese bridges painted with quaint figures. They come across a âfederal temple' and a bathing house disguised as an antique hermitage, grottoes, bowers, arbours, a Chinese summer house.
âBeats Vauxhall,' Tom says. âPerhaps not for originality, but the grounds even without the artifice are infinitely more lovely than any land along the Thames in the city.'
They take lunch. One half of the tavern is a large greenhouse grand with trees and plants, their flowers unlit lamps. Visitors gaze down from a gallery.
Robert says: âI shall go and make the arrangements for our Tammany feast. Tom, it's the first time a foreigner has addressed the Sons of St Tammany, you know.'
âMust I wear Indian dress?'
âOch no, though most of the Order will. White Indians. It's a strange sight. Maybe you should consider a few feathers.'
âAnd my neckerchief?'
âTom, the members gather for the purpose of patriotic friendship. They won't give a damn about your neckerchief. In fact there's a move to supplant Tammany with Columbus, though don't say I said so!'
âI'd love to live among hills and trees,' Sarah says when Robert has gone. They are sitting at a table in a corner. The tavern is arranged for small and private meetings as well as large and public ones.
âYou might find it hard, dearest Sarah. You can't ever have encountered silence in Change Alley.'
âThat's true. And I know this is not real country either. It's like walking into a painting.'
âExactly. The Gray brothers paid an English gardener to design it.'
âNot the river, though, and those huge trees we saw growing along the banks.'
âNo, you're right. Tom Paine says that the ordered beauty of the natural world confirms the existence of God.'
âMmm. But what about earthquakes? Natural disorder? I thought you were an atheist, Tom?'
âSometimes I think I agree with the deists, that God is a first cause, nothing more. We admire his works, but he cares for us as little as a captain cares for the mice on his ship.'
âThat's wise.'
Listening, talking to Tom like this. It's what she's always wanted all her life, she realises in sudden delight.
Tom says: âTell Robert you're a deist next time he reprimands you for not attending church!'
âI'd rather say nothing to him.'
âNo. I can understand that. You know, I remember a girl I met who ran away from her poor, wretched life in Norfolk. She made it clear that rural life is hard, not beautiful.'
âHow did you meet her? When was it?'
âOh it was years ago. I found her in the street.'
âFound her! Was she pretty? Did you want to marry her?'
âShe was remarkably pretty. But certainly not! You are the only woman I've ever wanted to marry.'
âShe told you all about herself?'
âI wanted to know why she was begging so I questioned her. She was barely articulate. Came from a huge family that scratched the land. The father beat them, all of them: mother, boys, girls. I took her back to my rooms, gave her food, introduced her to someone who needed a scullery maid. Of course she offered herself to me, but I couldn't. How could I?'
âWhat happened to her? Did you find out?'
âShe worked for the man I knew and later died in childbirth. Her story is common. Her picture of life in the country, halting, fragmentary though it was, showed me it's not to be wished for.'
âI know little about your life, Tom. We've talked so much that I think I know you. Yet perhaps I don't at all.' She feels a sudden terror. Intimation of aloneness.
âNo, no! You know everything about me! What is there to say about my past? Nothing. Of course there were a few women to whom I took a passing fancy. Or they to me. I picked flowers which withered. Nothing more.'
âHow can you have been so heartless?'
âIt wasn't heartless at all, for there was no love, no heart involved. I paid when it was a transaction. I fathered no children, never made false promises.'
âIf only I'd known you back then!'
âYes! But I was skulking in Soho, grimy with printing ink and you were getting ever redder in Change Alley.'
He lays both his hands on hers. âThis is the place for us, Sarah. Remember how you once said you couldn't breathe in Battle's? Here, in America, the air is good: we have the freedom to love, to grow. Our life is here, in this new land. Now and in the future. And listen, my dearest. There's a painter in Philadelphia called Birch. In fact he's English, arrived not long before we did, but he's already making a name for himself. A portrait painter and miniaturist. I want him to paint a miniature of you to keep in my pocket always.'
Robert rejoins them and they move with the crowd to the federal temple, on the steps of which thirteen girls and youths dressed as shepherdesses and shepherds sing an ode to Liberty. A band strikes up from within and as dusk falls, fireworks explode, illuminating the waterfall and river. Then comes supper: the three take plates of poached salmon and egg sauce to a stone bench and table within sight of the Schuylkill. All about, people toast the day of deliverance.
*
In September Sarah is expecting again. She and Tom, in their increasing closeness, begin to write the pamphlet on women's education, but Sarah feels tired, her concentration thins and while Tom works on other pamphlets (there are only two more years to go till the election, till the new century indeed), she looks through
American Cookery
, searching for clues about Amelia Simmons, a woman with neither education nor position who nevertheless published a book. A woman who finds it necessary in the second edition, which followed fast upon the first, to apologise for âegregious blunders' and âvery erroneous' recipes in the first, to blame her âtranscriber', to remind her readers of the disadvantages of being an orphan. In London, she thinks, the book would never have been published. Here, a woman can dare and succeed.