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"Paper Doll Books" by Elizabeth Shippen Green |
Although the bride and groom left the house soon after the reception they did not leave Philadelphia fast enough to miss the next morning's headline story on the front page of the 'Philadelphia Press:' 'Trio of Artist Friends Broken by Cupid.' The headline and following article ruined the occasion for Elizabeth, and whoever leaked the details of what was meant to be a very private occasion was obviously no friend of the Red Rose Girls. The press reported, wrongly, that 'Smith Green and Oakley spent their last two hours 'closeted' together with a shattered Violet Oakley pleading with Elizabeth to keep their compact, holding out hope till the very last that she would change her mind and stay, and then breaking down completely. As Elizabeth and Huger sailed for Europe, Elizabeth wrote, 'I think the only redress is to sue for libel when we get back...'
She also wrote them:
'I must say and I want to pour out my heart to you, you lovely dear people to work and slave for me to give me such a beautiful happy wedding day when I had troubled and feared that it would be the saddest day almost for me. I may be married and I'm very happy on the married side of the situation but I'll never be any less to you - not any different in the real me toward you and Jessie and Violet and Mrs. Oakley. I'm just not that kind. I don't know about what the future has in store, but it has not in store any change or forgetting in me, only addition - not division. I'll be double but not half...'
To be continued
(Excerpts from "The Red Rose Girls: Art and Love on Philadelphia's Main Line" by Alice A. Carter.)