[Happy New Year! This year Eric3000, Certified Archivist, presents a long-lost manuscript recently discovered in the church archives of Our Lady of Perpetual Deregulation. Enjoy!]
The Schuyler Sisters’ Holiday Letter 1773
Dearest friends and neighbours,
I embrace this opportunity to
enquire as to your health and happiness and, if it should amuse you,
communicate a few sentiments to you as well as inform you of some of the events
of the past year. This year ‘tis I, Peggy Schuyler, who shall endeavour to
write on behalf of the Schuyler Sisters and I pray you do not protest this
imposition or take offense at my musings.
First, I should be obliged to you
for humouring me as I recount the events that granted me the liberty of a free
afternoon to place quill to vellum. My sisters, Angelica and Elizabeth, have
gone downtown in search of a “mind at work.” Yes, that is apparently a thing
that people do now. They have been embarking on these expeditions for well-nigh
a fortnight. I expect they think it sounds better than “flirting with sailors,”
but we all know what they are up to. I had actually gone after them this
morning and they were all astonishment when they saw me. They asked how it was
that I should be there. I told them that I had taken the 405 to the 101 to
Laurel Canyon and then taken Sunset to Vermont. They stared in disbelief and
then said, “Dear sister, you were a fool not to have taken San Vicente.” I had to
explain that I was making a small joke. I reminded them about the pantomime
troupe that performs skits on Saturday nights in what will become Rockefeller
Centre. They do a skit called “The Californians,” which pokes fun at the
Spanish for constantly complaining about all the donkey traffic when traveling
about the pueblo of Los Angeles. As usual, nobody knew what I was talking
about.
Anyway, I expressed that their imprudent
excursions were causing a perturbation of my spirits, to which Angelica hastily
responded, “You are free to go.” So I was like, “whatever.” I told them,
“Sisters, if you wish to see me gone, I shall avail myself of the opportunity
to write a holiday letter.” They graciously informed me that Michealmas was
long past. I said that they knew full well I was referring to the holidays that
occur at the end of the calendar year, such as Christmas, Chanukah, New Year’s,
and Saint Wiggin’s Day. They said anything that would get me to leave them in
peace would be to their satisfaction and that I could write the letter and then
they would sign their names to it when they returned home. Oy, with those
two.
Before I took my leave, Elizabeth
reminded me of the need to procure stamps. I told her stamps had not yet been
invented. She asked why there was a Stamp Act if there were no stamps. I tried
to explain that it had to do with taxes and she said, “Oh, yes, just like when
the king put the tax on tea, causing the revolt in Boston.” I told her that was
a common misperception but that parliament had actually refunded an import tax
on British tea in order to make it competitive with smuggled Dutch tea and that
was a vexation to the smugglers. So the Boston Tea Party was really in response
to reducing taxes, not raising them. I supposed she would find that amusing,
but instead she told me, “Peggy, you ruin everything.”
Speaking of which, can you
believe George III is still the king? What a nincompoop. He is no better than a
common mountebank. An acquaintance actually said to me once, “Well, he had to
have done something right if he became king.” I told the person that King
George inherited that title and it had nothing to do with his accomplishments.
The only thing he knows how to do is colonize a country, slap his name on it,
and then run it into the ground. Everything seems to have the royal warrant on
it: King George steaks, the Province of Georgia, which is actually not all bad,
and, of course, King George University, which is an utter sham! The lessons are
just sales pitches to get you to buy a timeshare in the territory of Florida,
whatever that means.
Well, other than the constant duels,
life has been pretty good. I confess to being a little weary of everyone
breaking into song all the time, though. ‘Tis like a def poetry slam every time
one walks down the street. Rhymes be the hottest commodity at the moment and
‘tis making fortunes and ruining lives. People have invested their entire life
savings in a word and when the rhymes run out, they have been known to jump off
a building. Fortunately, our tallest buildings are two stories high and our
streets are paved with only the highest quality horse manure, which breaks the
fall. But I still wonder when this madness will end. The other day, there was
panic and chaos when it appeared that there were no more rhymes for the word
“sir.” Experts said it would be worse than the tulip mania of the 1630s or the
South Sea bubble of 1720. But then, out of nowhere, Mr. Burr, whose name
coincidentally rhymes with “sir,” realized that the word “bursar” would work.
We held a parade in his honour.
And Mr. Burr is not the only
politician to be speculating in rhymes. I am not at present able to think of
another more agreeable than Mr. Hamilton, who has mad rhyming skills and a face
straight out of a ten pound promissory note. Elizabeth formed a particular
attachment to him and it is now commonly believed they have an understanding.
Correction: in the time it took to write that sentence, they became engaged and
were wed. Events are full of expediency here. Angelica gave the toast at the
wedding and sang a song about how she was secretly in love with our sister’s
new husband and that she had actually let her have him. Then she asked, “Oh,
did I just sing that out loud?” You can imagine my vexation. I have not the
least doubt as to our lack of wanting for all the silliness of a Mozart
operetta.
Our compliments to you and yours,
&c., &c.,
Your devoted and faithful
friends,
Angelica and Elizabeth Schuyler (and peggy)