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LADY WENTWORTH OF THE HALL
ON one of those pleasant long evenings, when the group of friends that
Longfellow represents in his "Tales of the Wayside Inn" had gathered in the
twilight about the cheery open fire of the house at Sudbury to tell each other
tales of long ago, we hear best the story of Martha Hilton. We seem to catch the
poet's voice as he says after the legend from the Baltic has been alluringly
related by the Musician:
" These tales you tell are, one and all,
Of the Old World,
Flowers gathered from a crumbling wall,
Dead leaves that rustle as they fall;
Let me present you in their stead
Something of our New England earth;
A tale which, though of no great worth,
Has still this merit, that it yields
A certain
freshness of the fields,
A sweetness as
of home-made bread." |
And then, as the others leaned back to listen, there followed the
beautiful ballad which celebrates the fashion in which Martha Hilton, a kitchen
maid, became Lady Wentworth of the Hall."
The old Wentworth
mansion, where, as a beautiful girl, Martha came, served, and conquered all who
knew her, and even once received as her guest the Father of his Country, is
still in an admirably preserved state, and the Wayside Inn, rechristened the Red
Horse Tavern, still entertains glad
guests.
This inn was built
about 1686 and for almost a century and a half from 1714 it was kept as a public
house by generation after generation of Hawes, the last of the name at the inn
being Lyman Howe, who served guests of the house from 1831 to about 1860, and
was the good friend and comrade of the brilliant group of men Longfellow has
poetically immortalised in the "Tales." The modern successor of Staver's Inn, or
the "Earl of Halifax," in the doorway of which Longfellow's worthy dame once
said, "as plain as day:"
"Oh, Martha
Hilton! Fie! how dare you go
About the town
half dressed and looking so!" |
is also standing, and has recently been decorated by a memorial
tablet.
In Portsmouth Martha
Hilton is well remembered, thanks to Longfellow and tradition, as a slender girl
who, barefooted, ragged, with neglected hair, bore from the well
"A pail of
water dripping through the street,
And bathing as
she went her naked feet." |
Nor do the worthy people of Portsmouth fail to recall the other actor
in this memorable drama, upon which the Earl of Halifax once benignly smiled:
"A portly
person, with three-cornered hat,
A crimson
velvet coat, head high in air,
Gold-headed
cane and nicely powdered hair,
And diamond
buckles sparkling at his knees,
Dignified,
stately, florid, much at ease.
For this was
Governor Wentworth, driving down
To Little
Harbour, just beyond the town,
Where his
Great House stood, looking out to sea,
A goodly
place, where it was good to be." |
There are even those who can perfectly recollect when the house was
very venerable in appearance, and when in its rooms were to be seen the old
spinet, the Strafford portrait, and many other things delightful to the
antiquary. Longfellow's description of this ancient domicile is particularly
beautiful:
" It was a
pleasant mansion, an abode
Near and yet
hidden from the great highroad,
Sequestered
among trees, a noble pile,
Baronial and
Colonial in its style;
Gables and
dormer windows everywhere –
Pandalan
pipes, on which all winds that blew
Made mournful
music the whole winter through.
Within,
unwonted splendours met the eye,
Panels, and
floors of oak, and tapestry;
Carved
chimneypieces, where, on brazen dogs,
Revelled and
roared the Christmas fire of logs.
Doors opening
into darkness unawares,
Mysterious
passages and flights of stairs;
And on the
walls, in heavy-gilded frames,
The ancestral
Wentworths, with old Scripture names.
Such was the
mansion where the great man dwelt." |
The place thus prettily pictured is at the mouth of Sagamore Creek,
not more than two miles from the town of Portsmouth. The exterior of the mansion
as it looks to-day does not of itself live up to one's preconceived idea of
colonial magnificence. A rambling collection of buildings, seemingly the result
of various "L" expansions, form an inharmonious whole which would have made
Ruskin quite mad. The site is, however, charming, for the place commands a view
up and down Little Harbour, though concealed by an eminence from the road. The
house is said to have originally contained as many as fifty-two rooms. If so, it
has shrunk in recent years. But there is still plenty of elbow space, and the
cellar is even to-day large enough to accommodate a fair-sized troop of
soldiery.
GOVERNOR WENTWORTH HOUSE, PORTSMOUTH, N. H.
As one enters, one
notices first the rack in which were wont to be deposited the muskets of the
governor's guard. And it requires only a little imagination to picture the big
rooms as they were in the old days, with the portrait of Strafford dictating to
his secretary just before his execution, the rare Copley, the green
damask-covered furniture, and the sedan-chair, all exhaling an atmosphere of
old-time splendour and luxury. Something of impressiveness, has recently been
introduced into the interior by the artistic arrangement of old furniture which
the house's present owner, Mr. Templeton Coolidge, has brought about. But the
exterior is "spick-span" in modern yellow and white paint!
Yet it was in this
very house that Martha for seven years served her future lord. There, busy with
mop and pail –
"A maid of all
work, whether coarse or fine,
A servant who
made service seem divine!" |
she
grew from childhood into the lovely woman whom Governor Wentworth wooed and won.
In the March of 1760
it was that the host at Little Harbour exclaimed abruptly to the good rector of
St. John's, who had been dining sumptuously at the manor-house:
"This is my
birthday; it shall likewise be my wedding-day, and you shall marry me!" No
wonder the listening guests were greatly mystified, as Martha and the portly
governor were joined "across the walnuts and the wine" by the Reverend Arthur
Brown, of the Established Church. And now, of course, Martha had her chariot,
from which she could look down as disdainfully as did the Earl of Halifax on the
humble folk who needs must walk. The sudden elevation seems, indeed, to have
gone to my lady's head. For tradition says that very shortly after her marriage
Martha dropped her ring and summoned one of her late kitchen colleagues to
rescue it from the floor. But the colleague had quickly become shortsighted, and
Martha, dismissing her. hastily, picked up the circlet herself.
Before the Reverend
Arthur Brown was gathered to his fathers, he had another opportunity to marry
the fascinating Martha to another Wentworth, a man of real soldierly
distinction. Her second husband was redcoated Michael, of England, who had been
in the battle of Culloden.
This Colonel Michael
Wentworth was the "great buck" of his day, and was wont to fiddle at Stoodley's
far into the morning for sheer love of fiddling and revelry. Stoodley's has now
fallen indeed! It is the brick building marked "custom-house," and it stands at
the corner of Daniel and Penhallow Streets.
To this Lord and
Lady Wentworth it was that washington, in 1789,
came as a
guest, "rowed by white-jacketed sailors straight to their vine-hung, hospitable
door." At this time there was a younger Martha in the house, one who had grown
up to play the spinet by the long, low windows, and who later joined her fate to
that of still another wentworth, with whom she passed to France.
A few years later,
in 1795, the "great buck" of his time took to a bankrupt's grave in New York,
forgetting, so the story goes, the eternal canon fixed against selfslaughter.
But for all we tell
as a legend this story of Martha Hilton, and for all her "capture" of the
governor has come down to us almost as a myth, it is less than fifty years ago
that the daughter of the man who fiddled at Stoodley's and of the girl who went
barefooted and ragged through the streets of Portsmouth, passed in her turn to
the Great Beyond. Verily, we in America have, after all, only a short historical
perspective.