ere only the old trees can hear; andthe strip of sky see it; he talks with thee; sitting on a heap ofmoss! And he kisses my forehead; too; so that the little brook wouldhardly wash it off! But here; in the sunny day; and among all thepeople; he knows us not; nor must we know him! A strange; sad man ishe; with his hand always over his heart!〃 〃Be quiet; Pearl! Thou understandest not these things;〃 said hermother。 〃Think not now of the minister; but look about thee; and seehow cheery is everybody"s face to…day。 The children have e fromtheir schools; and the grown people from their workshops and theirfields; on purpose to be happy。 For; to…day; a new man is beginning torule over them; and so… as has been the custom of mankind ever since anation was first gathered… they make merry and rejoice; as if a goodand golden year were at length to pass over the poor old world!〃 It was as Hester said; in regard to the unwonted jollity thatbrightened the faces of the people。 Into this festal season of theyear… as it already was; and continued to be during the greater partof two centuries… the Puritans pressed whatever mirth and publicjoy they deemed allowable to human infirmity; thereby so fardispelling the customary cloud; that; for the space of a singleholiday; they appeared scarcely more grave than most other munitiesat a period of general affliction。 But we perhaps exaggerate the grey or sable tinge; which undoubtedlycharacterised the mood and manners of the age。 The persons now inthe market…place of Boston had not been born to an inheritance ofPuritanic gloom。 They were native Englishmen; whose fathers hadlived in the sunny richness of the Elizabethan epoch; a time whenthe life of England; viewed as one great mass; would appear to havebeen as stately; magnificent; and joyous; as the world has everwitnessed。 Had they followed their hereditary taste; the New Englandsettlers would have illustrated all events of public importance bybonfires; banquets; pageantries; and processions。 Nor would it havebeen impracticable; in the observance of majestic ceremonies; tobine mirthful recreation with solemnity; and give; as it broidery to the great robe of state; which anation; at such festivals; puts on。 There was some shadow of anattempt of this kind in the mode of celebrating the day on which thepolitical year of the colony menced。 The dim reflection of aremembered splendour; a colourless and manifold diluted repetitionof what they had beheld in proud old London… we will not say at aroyal coronation; but at a Lord Mayor"s show… might be traced in thecustoms which our forefathers instituted; with reference to the annualinstallation of magistrates。 The fathers and founders of themonwealth… the statesman; the priest; and the soldier… deemed ita duty then to assume the outward state and majesty; which; inaccordance with antique style; was looked upon as the proper garb ofpublic or social eminence。 All came forth to move in procession beforethe people"s eye; and thus impart a needed dignity to the simpleframework of a government so newly constructed。 Then; too; the people were countenanced; if not encouraged; inrelaxing the severe and close application to their various modes ofrugged industry; which; at all other times; seemed of the same pieceand material with their religion。 Here; it is true; were none of theappliances which popular merriment would so readily have found inthe England of Elizabeth"s time; or that of James… no rude shows ofa theatrical kind; no minstrel; with his harp and legendary ballad;nor gleeman; with an ape dancing to his music; no juggler; with histricks of mimic witchcraft; no Merry Andrew; to stir up themultitude with jests; perhaps hundreds of years old; but stilleffective; by their appeals to the very broadest sources of mirthfulsympathy。 All such professors of the several branches of jocularitywould have been sternly repressed; not only by the rigid discipline oflaw; but by the general sentiment which gives law its vitality。 Notthe less; however; the great; honest face of the people smiled…grimly; perhaps; but widely too。 Nor were sports wanting; such asthe colonists had witnessed; and shared in; long ago; at the countryfairs and on the village…greens of England; and which it was thoughtwell to keep alive on this new soil; for the sake of the courage andmanliness that were essential in them。 Wrestling…matches; in thedifferent fashions of Cornwall and Devonshire; were seen here andthere about the market…place; in one corner; there was a friendly boutat quarterstaff; and… what attracted most interest of all… on theplatform of the pillory; already so noted in our pages; two masters ofdefence were mencing an exhibition with the buckler and broadsword。But; much to the disappointment of the crowd; this latter business wasbroken off by the interposition of the town beadle; who had no idea ofpermitting the majesty of the law to be violated by such an abuse ofone of its consecrated places。 It may not be too much to affirm; on the whole (the people beingthen in the first stages of joyless deportment; and the offspring ofsires who had known how to be merry; in their day); that they wouldpare favourably; in point of holiday keeping; with theirdescendants; even at so long an interval as ourselves。 Their immediateposterity; the generation next to the early emigrants; wore theblackest shade of Puritanism; and so darkened the national visage withit; that all the subsequent years have not sufficed to clear it up。 Wehave yet to learn again the forgotten art of gaiety。 The picture of human life in the market…place; though its generaltint was the sad grey; brown; or black of the English emigrants; wasyet enlivened by some diversity of hue。 A party of Indians… in theirsavage finery of curiously embroidered deer…skin robes;wampum…belts; red and yellow ochre; and feathers; and armed with thebow and arrow and stone…headed spear… stood apart; with countenancesof inflexible gravity; beyond what even the Puritan aspect couldattain。 Nor; wild as were these painted barbarians; were they thewildest feature of the scene。 This distinction could more justly beclaimed by some mariners…a part of the crew of the vessel from theSpanish Main… who had e ash
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