2 Morocco-bound portfolios 60 gns
Engraving, coloured, framed 8 gns
Of course, the portfolios were those
Amorous Scenes
she failed to get Dick to burn. She supposes Sam bought the young woman with the flowers to appear respectable.
She writes a note to J. Young who replies that yes, indeed, he both engraved and painted the original of the
Ophelia
he sold to her father, Mr Samuel Battle, and that he has many more engravings in his series of Shakespeare's women if she'd care to visit Little Russell Street.
She's welcomed into the shop by the same young woman in the engraving. Without the flowers, pretty; not disordered, though not calm.
âYes,' says Lucy Dale. âI was the model for all Joseph's paintings of the women in Shakespeare's plays. Well, except for Emilia, of course, but that's a small part. I know the plays so well now, you can imagine! He read them with me or told me everything there is to know about them. The paintings were so popular he made engravings and I coloured them in for him. People are always asking for the engravings. Some even buy the whole series! The paintings are mostly all sold, I'm afraid. He has the sketches for them, though. Perhaps he could paint one or two again from those sketches, if you were interested.'
She pours out her words as though she's not spoken for days.
âI am interested,' Sarah says, drawn to the puzzle of the girl.
âShall I fetch Joseph? He is at home today. He will tell you about the series and what he might be prepared to do. Whether he could reproduce any of the paintings. I wouldn't need to sit again because of the sketches. Besides, I cannot look at all the same. I am much older and I have a child now.'
âOh, I can assure you you are quite recognisable. But please do fetch your husband.'
When, momentarily, Joseph and Lucy stand together, Sarah knows she's seen them before. But Lucy leaves the room and Joseph, in lively mood, soon dazzles Sarah with information about the subjects. Though she read slowly through
Macbeth
in the early days of her marriage to Wintrige and had learned more from Tom, she has never been to the theatre. Joseph suggests a price and she agrees to buy paintings of Cordelia and Desdemona, whose stories, as told by Joseph, move her much.
âI feel certain I've seen you before, Mr Young. You and Mrs Young.'
âIt is not likely, Miss Battle. We rarely go anywhere together.'
Sarah is driven home in a hackney, pleasingly distracted from the horrible events in the coffee house. She suddenly remembers when she saw Mr and Mrs Young: on her return from Philadelphia, when she disembarked at Wapping. The girl with the bag frantically searching every passing face. The tall man, his fair hair tied back, remonstrating with her, pulling her away. Not consoling her.
4
On the anniversary of Tom's death Sarah remains downstairs supervising the waiters, interfering in the kitchen, even standing behind the bar for an hour or two taking orders. To lock herself all day in Eve's nursery, crouch on the floor and sob her sorrow into the floorboards would be inadmissible luxury.
However, later she allows herself to write to Martha.
Battle's Coffee House, Exchange Alley.
26
th
October 1800
My dear Martha,
I am sure your sister Mary will be happy to read this letter to you.
It is a year since my beloved Tom died. I remember the day so clearly, every moment of it. I shall never forget your kindness: I do not know how I would have lived afterwards without you, Martha.
I have a dear child, Eve, now more than three months old. I wish that you could see her.
Oh Martha, if only you lived here: how we could talk and laugh together! Would you and Willie come if I sent money for your passage? Please think seriously about this; I'd do it so gladly.
I hope that you and Willie are both in good health.
In fond remembrance and hope,
Your friend,
Sarah Cranch
She seals this letter and encloses in a cover addressed to R. Wilson, Bookseller and Publisher, Zane Street, Philadelphia, writing separately to Robert:
Dear Robert,
Before Tom died I promised him I'd do what rapid illness prevented him from accomplishing. After his death I was too upset to carry it out. Now, a year later, I ask you to consider what he would have said to you had he lived.
Martha is your lover and the mother of your child. Treat her as you should, not as a servant. Best of all, marry her once you've divorced your wife under the Pennsylvania divorce law of 1785.
In attempting to persuade you, Tom would have admitted that he and I were not married, there being no divorce law available to me in England and my having not yet become an American citizen. You will know that nevertheless in truth, indeed in God's eyes, we were man and wife. Certainly we would have been legally married had we been able.
I trust that you are in good health and will give consideration to this letter as you would have done to Tom's own words.
Sarah Battle (Cranch)
*
When the year ends customers demand a sight of Sarah's child to accompany their Christmas dishes.
âIf we are to obey the King's proclamation and reduce our consumption of bread and abstain from pastry, let alone use economy when feeding our horses, how can we enjoy ourselves and celebrate the birth of Our Lord, Miss Battle?' Thynne asks, his smile a hair crack in a wine glass.
âWe can drink! No proclamation against that,' says Bullock, stouter and breathless as he ages, âand let us admire that babe of yours, Miss Battle, whom we trust will charm us as much as you do!' Thynne and Bullock agree: a wonder!
A semicircle the size of Wintrige's girth has been cut in a table so that he can sit closer to his plate. Sarah finds a time when Wintrige's head has dropped upon the ledge of his stomach in urgent sleep, whirls around the coffee house with Eve in her arms, fast enough to escape comments about resemblance to her mother Anne or even Sam. In her mind Eve can only resemble Tom or her own younger self. When a note arrives from Joseph Young, she is glad to hand Eve to the kindly, doting nurse and deal with his request.
He'd like to visit Battle's, he says, to see where the paintings might hang and how they should be framed. She is surprised by this attention to detail, suspects he hopes to persuade her to commission more. And why not? Much of what hangs on the walls should certainly be replaced. The large, embrowned mirror in which men once adjusted their wigs, but now, wigless, preen themselves with remarkable vanity; the notice of rules and orders governing conduct: fines for swearing and excessive arguing, never imposed within her memory; cheap prints of faded landscapes; framed cuts from Laroon's
Habits and Cryes of the City of
London
, grime-grey.
Joseph arrives at a bad time. Someone has laid a bet of five hundred guineas against Wintrige eating the day's supply of turtle soup, a fowl smothered in oysters, an entire leg of mutton with caper sauce, boiled onion and mashed turnip, a salad, a huge bowl of syllabub, dessert of nuts and candied fruits and a three-pound cider cake, washed down with claret and two bottles of brandy. Wintrige has begun on the soup, each spoonful noted by a gleeful circle around his table.
âAnd what if I just fancied turtle soup
myself
, today? Did you think of that, Chaloner, when you laid down your money?' says a man in mock annoyance. âNothing left of it!'
Wintrige is tackling the leg.
âOh! Oh! The fat! Let me die of it!' His frog chin is spotted with capers.
Do frogs have chins?
Joseph's attention is caught.
âYou know I make satires, Miss Battle?'
âI saw some in your shop window, yes.'
âThis scene is perfect. It would sell well and act as advertisement for your coffee house.'
âNo! Please don't think of it, Mr Young. This spectacle is entirely against my wishes. I have tried to prevent it, but have failed. We have plenty of custom.'
They watch as Wintrige, his face purple, abandons his knife, takes the mutton in his hands.
âHow this man holds his audience! Who is he, Miss Battle?'
âJames Wintrige.'
âHe'd have everyone watch each mouthful. Such determination! He seeks fame, adoration, would like nothing better than to appear in a print.'
Sarah is aware of an intelligence in Joseph Young in strength not unlike Tom's, though in nature different, arrogant and wayward. He lacks Tom's intense, mercurial energy; projects instead a tall man's easy confidence.
âI've observed so many in their cups or eating, smoking,' he continues. âEnjoying themselves. I've drawn so many. This man is not like them. Something drives him on. What is his occupation?'
âThis is his occupation.'
âBut what used he to do?'
âHe, he once worked in the Customs Office. Actually, he spied for the government.'
âGood lord! First he shuns attention, living in the shadows and now he seeks it!'
âWe must decide on the best wall for your paintings, Mr Young,' she says, to turn the subject. Nor can she bear to confess who Wintrige really is. âPerhaps, if people like them as much as I'm sure I shall, I might decide to buy others.'
âIt's hard to think that those keen to watch a man stuff himself like this would care a jot for paintings of Shakespeare's women.'
*
Sandwiches are taken off the bill of fare at Battle's when the Brown Bread Act comes in, for who'd eat a sandwich made from coarse crumb in place of a pleasing wheaten loaf? The kitchen maids are put to more onion-slicing and fish-descaling.
After winning the five hundred guineas himself, Wintrige takes to his bed for three days, carried there by his supporters, since his legs, vast though they are, won't hold him. While Sarah is pleased he's out of sight, for the first time in her life she feels a strand of pity for him, though it's tangled with despising. She never loved him, had once admired him, or rather, had fallen under his strange frog-like spell, had quickly learned dislike, disgust. Watching him with Joseph Young, she sees the desperation she's chosen to ignore, the craving for applause.
But how can she be kind to him when she denied the dying Tom as he looked at her with such longing? When she couldn't, wouldn't smile at the man who'd smiled at her always. Tom, whom she loved with her soul. Loves with her soul. She'd put her pain before his need in a moment of selfishness. She will never forgive herself.
Battle's customers, those not siphoning financial information, making deals, reading as many newspapers as they can, are at a loss without the entertaining guzzler.
âDo we know exactly what ails him? Has he been bled?'
âDon't be a fool, Rothesay. Excess, the simple ailment, excess!'
âCan we be sure it isn't something worse? What if it's locked jaw? The poor fellow may never be able to eat again!'
Lyons pipes up. âThey cure locked jaw with electricity now.'
âThis is another of your philosophic fantasies, Lyons.' Bullock pinches his lumpy nose, still trying to press it into a more seemly shape.
âBy no means. I have it on good authority. A small receiver is filled with electrical fluid, discharged through the jaws of the affected person and the jaws fly open instantaneously.'
âAnd is the affected person capable of
closing
his jaws after that or is he forever agape?'
*
Joseph comes again to Battle's and then often. Sarah wonders if he is secretly making sketches of Wintrige and will produce a finished series despite what she said. However, he asks for her and she drinks coffee with him while he describes the painting he's working on for the newly bared walls of the coffee house, the dramatic moment he's trying to portray.
He's amazed to learn from someone that she's married to the monstrous Wintrige. Wonders how it can possibly have come about, surely not from choice, respects her too much to ask. Briefly he's sorry for her, soon prefers impressing her, finds her responsive to his knowledge, tries to overcome the shades of scepticism he detects. She particularly likes to talk about sketching and caricatures, seems to have known an artist once, who she thinks was very skilled. Says she'll show him some of his work one day.
Of course she believes he's married to Lucy, which for the moment he won't correct. Not only is it not true, but Lucy is not living in Little Russell Street.
He'd returned from Wood's to find her and the baby gone. There was a note:
I am going to William Digham. It is better that we do not live together. Lucy
When he awoke thirty-six hours later, dry, hungry, grimy, he was relieved not to see her paleness, her expression of hurt and incomprehension. Her lingering love that so irritated him. Relieved not to hear the baby's bawling. What she wrote was true. He had need of her no longer.