The very announcement of the text seemed to bring out upon the listening faces of the audience a sympathetic gleam. Hard, weather-beaten countenances showed it, as when a sunbeam passes over points of rocks.
What was to come of such a text was plain to be seen. The yoke of bondage from which Puritan New England had escaped across the waters of a stormy sea, the liberty in Christ which they had won in this new untrodden land, made theirs by prayers and toils and tears and sacrifice, for which they had just fought through a tedious and bloody war — there was enough in all these remembrances to evoke a strain of heartfelt eloquence which would awaken a response in every heart.
Then the doctor began his investigations of Christmas; and here his sermon bristled with quotations in good Greek and Latin, which he could not deny himself the pleasure of quoting in the original as well as in the translation. But the triumphant point in his argument was founded on a passage in Clemens Alexandrinus, who, writing at the close of the second century, speaks of the date of Christ’s birth as an unimportant and unsettled point. “There are some,” says the Father, “who over-curiously assign not only the year but the day of our Saviour’s birth, which they say was the 25th of Pachon, or the 20th of May.”
The doctor had exulted in the finding of this passage as one that findeth much spoil, and he proceeded to make the most of it in showing that the modern keeping of Christmas was so far unknown in the earliest ages of the church that even the day was a matter of uncertainty. Now it is true that his audience, more than half of them, did not know who Clement was. Even the judges, men of culture and learning, and the teacher at the Academy, professionally familiar with Greek, had only the vaguest recollection of a Christian Father who had lived some time in the primitive ages; the rest of the congregation, men and women, only knew that their minister was a learned man and were triumphant at this new proof of it.
The doctor used his point so as to make it skillfully exciting to the strong, practical, matter-of-fact element which underlies New England life. “If it had been important for us to keep Christmas,” he said, “certainly the date would not have been left in uncertainty. We find no traces in the New Testament of any such observance; we never read of Christmas as kept by the apostles and their followers; and it appears that it was some centuries after Christ before such an observance was heard of at all.” In fact the doctor said that the keeping of the 25th of December as Christmas did not obtain till after the fourth century, and then it was appointed to take the place of an old heathen festival, the “natalis solis invicti;” and here the doctor rained down names and authorities and quotations establishing conflicting suppositions till the wilderness of learning grew so wild that only the Academy teacher seemed able to follow it through. He indeed sat up and nodded intelligently from point to point, feeling that the eyes of scholars might be upon him, and that it was well never to be caught napping in matters like these.
The last point of the Doctor’s sermon consisted in historical statements and quotations concerning the various abuses to which the celebration of the Christmas festival had given rise, from the days of Augustine and Chrysostom down to those of the Charleses and Jameses of England, in all of which he had free course and was glorified; since under that head there are many things more true than edifying that might be recounted.
He alluded to the persecutions which had forced upon our fathers the alternative of conforming to burdensome and unspiritual rites and ceremonies or of flying from their native land and all they held dear; he quoted from St. Paul the passage about false brethren who came in privily to spy out our liberty that we have in Christ Jesus, that they might bring us again into bondage—”to whom” (and here the doctor grew emphatic and thumped the pulpit cushion) “we gave place by subjection not for an hour.”
The sermon ended with a stirring appeal to walk in the good old ways, to resist all those, however fair their pretenses, who sought to remove the old landmarks and repeal the just laws and rules that had come down from the fathers. It was evident from the enkindled faces in every pew that the doctor carried his audience fully with him, and when in the closing petition he prayed to the Lord that “our judges might be as at the first, and our counsellors as at the beginning,” everybody felt sure that he was thinking of the next election, and Tim Hawkins with difficulty restrained himself from giving a poke of the elbow to a neighbor in the next pew suspected of Democratic proclivities.
As to Dolly, who as a babe of grace was duly brought to church every Sunday, her meditations were of a very confused order. Since the gift of her red dress and red shoes, and the well remembered delightful scene at the church on Christmas Eve, Christmas had been an interesting and beautiful mystery to her mind; a sort of illuminated mist, now appearing and now disappearing.
Sometimes when her father in his sermon pronounced the word “Christmas” in emphatic tones, she fixed her great blue eyes seriously upon him and wondered what he could be saying; but when Greek and Latin quotations began to rain thick and fast she turned to Spring, who as a good, well-trained minister’s dog was allowed to go to meeting with his betters, and whose serious and edified air was a pattern to Dolly and the boys.
When she was cold — a very common experience in those windy pews — she nestled close to Spring and put her arms around his neck, and sometimes dropped asleep on his back. Those sanctuary naps were a generally accorded privilege to the babes of the church, who could not be expected to digest the strong meat of the elders.
Dolly had one comfort of which nothing could deprive her: she had been allowed to wear her new red dress and red shoes. It is true the dress was covered up under a dark, stout little woolen coat, and the red shoes quenched in the shade of a pair of socks designed to protect her feet from freezing; but at intervals Dolly pulled open her little coat and looked at the red dress, and felt warmer for it, and thought whether there was any such day as Christmas or not it was a nice thing for little girls to have aunties and grandmas who believed in it, and sent them pretty things in consequence.
When the audience broke up and the doctor came down from the pulpit he was congratulated on his sermon as a master-piece. Indeed, he had the success that a man has always when he proves to an audience that they are in the right in their previous opinions. The general opinion, from Colonel Davenport and Sheriff Dennie down to Tim Hawkins and the farmers of the vicinity, was that the doctor’s sermon ought to be printed by subscription, and the suggestion was left to be talked over in various circles for the ensuing week.
CHAPTER VIII. MR. COAN ANSWERS THE DOCTOR.
THE doctor’s sermon had the usual effect of controversial sermons — it convinced everybody that was convinced before and strengthened those who before were strong. Everybody was talking of it. The farmers as they drove their oxen stepped with a vigorous air, like men that were not going to be brought under any yoke of bondage. Old ladies in their tea-drinkings talked about the danger of making a righteousness of forms and rites and ceremonies, and seemed of opinion that the proceedings at the Episcopal church, however attractive, were only an insidious putting forth of one paw of the Scarlet Beast of Rome, and that if not vigorously opposed the whole quadruped, tooth and claw, would yet be upon their backs.
But it must not be supposed that this side of the question had all the talk to itself. The Rev. Simeon Coan was a youth of bright parts, vigorous combativeness and considerable fluency of speech, and he immediately prepared a sermon on his side of the question, by which, in the opinion of the Lewises, the Danforths, the Copleys and all the rest of his audience, he proved beyond a doubt that Christmas ought to be kept, and that the 25th of December was the proper time for keeping it. He brought also quotations from Greek and Latin thick as stars in the skies; and as to the quotations of the doctor he ignored them altogether, and talked about something else.
The doctor had been heard to observe with a subdued triumph that he really would like to see how “Coan” would “get round” that passage in Clement, but he cou
ld not have that pleasure, because “Coan” did not get anywhere near it, but struck off as far as possible from it into a region of quotations on his own side; and as his audience were not particularly fitted to adjudicate nice points in chronology, and as quotations from the Church Fathers on all sides of almost any subject under the sun are plentiful as black-berries in August, Mr. Coan succeeded in making his side to the full as irrefragable in the eyes of his hearers as the doctor’s in those of his.
But besides this he reinforced himself by proclaiming with vigor the authority of the Church. “The Church has ordained,” “The Church in her wisdom has directed,” “The Church commands,” and “The Church hath appointed,” were phrases often on his tongue, and the sound rolled smoothly above the heads of good old families who had long felt the want of some definite form of authority to support their religious preferences in face of the general Congregationalism of the land.
The Church, that mysterious and awful power that had come down from distant ages, had survived the dissolution of monarchies and was to-day the same as of old! The thought was poetical and exciting, and gave impulse to the fervor inspired by a liturgy and forms of worship allowed even by adversaries to be noble and beautiful; and their minister’s confident assertion that the Church commanded, approved and backed up all that they were doing was immensely supporting to the little band. The newly-acquired members, born and brought up in Congregational discipline, felt all the delight of a new sense of liberty. It had not always been possible to go to any other than the dominant church, and there was a fresh emotion of pleasure in being able to do as they pleased in the matter; so they readily accepted Mr. Coan’s High Church claims and doctrines. Instead of standing on the defensive and apologizing for their existence he boldly struck out for the rock of apostolic succession, declared their church the true Apostolic Church, the only real church in the place, although he admitted with an affable charity that doubtless good Christian people among the various sects who departed from this true foundation might at last be saved through the uncovenanted mercies of God.
Imagine the scorn which this doctrine inspired in Puritan people, who had been born in the faith that New England was the vine which God’s right hand had planted — who had looked on her church as the Church of God, cast out indeed into the wilderness, but bearing with her “the adoption, and the glory, and the covenants, the giving of the law, and the service of God, and the promises.” That faith was woven into the very existence of the New England race. They cast great roots about it as the oaks of the forest grasped and grew out of the eternal rocks of their hard and barren shores. So, when Mr. Simeon Coan, in a white surplice, amid suspicious chantings and bowings and genuflections, announced a doctrine which disfranchised them of the heavenly Jerusalem, and made them aliens from the commonwealth of Israel and strangers to the covenant of promise, there was a grim sense of humor mingled with the indignation which swelled their bosoms.
“Uncovenanted marcies!” said stout Tim Hawkins. “Thet’s what they call ‘em, do they? Wal, ef thet’s what Parson Cushing and all the ministers of our association has got to live and die by — why, it’s good enough for me. I don’t want no better; I don’t care which kind they be. I scorn to argue with such folks.”
In fact they felt as if they had seen a chip sparrow flying in the face of an eagle in his rock-bound eyrie.
But the doctor’s sermon had the effect to draw the lines as to keeping Christmas up to the tightest brace. The academy teacher took occasion on Monday to remark to his scholars how he had never thought of such a thing as suspending school for Christmas holidays, and those of the pupils who, belonging to Episcopal families, had gone on Christmas Day to church were informed that marks for absence and non-performance of lessons would stand against them, no matter what excuses they might bring from parents. As to Christmas holidays — the giving up to amusement a week, from Christmas to New Year’s — he spoke of it as a popish enormity not to be mentioned or even thought of in God-fearing New England, which abhorred a holiday as much as nature abhors a vacuum. Those parents whose children had been drawn in to attend these seductive festivities were anxiously admonished by their elders in homilies from the text, “Surely, in vain the net is spread in the sight of any bird.”
For example, witness one scene. It is Sunday evening, and the bright snapping fire lights up the great kitchen chimney where the widow Jones is sitting by the stand with her great Bible before her. A thin, weary, kindly old face is hers, with as many lines in it as Denner’s celebrated picture of the old woman. Everything about her, to her angular figure and her thin bony hands, bore witness to the unsparing work that had been laid upon every hour and moment of her life. Even now the thin hands that rested on the Bible twitched at times mechanically as if even in the blessed rest of Sunday evening she felt the touch of the omnipresent knitting needles.
On the settle beside the fire, half stretched out, lounges Hiel, her youngest born son and the prop of her old age; for all others have gone hither and thither seeking their future in the world. Hiel has been comforting her heart by the heartiest praises of the minister’s sermon that day.
“I tell you what, Mother, them ‘Piscopals got pitched into lively, now; the Doctor pursued ’em ‘even unto Shur,’ as the Scriptur’ says.”
“Yis; and, Hiel, I hope you won’t be seen goin’ to the ‘Piscopal meetings no more. I felt reely consarned, after I heard the sarmon, to think of your bein’ in to that air ‘lumination.”
“Oh laws, Mother, I jest hed to go to see to things. Things hez to be seen to; there was the Doctor’s boys right up in the front slips, and little Dolly there rolled up like a rabbit down there under them spruces. I had to take her home. I expect it’s what waked up the Doctor so, what I said to him.”
“Wal, Hiel, mebbe it was all fer the best; but I hope you’ll let it alone now. And I heard you was a settin’ up with Nabby Higgins the other evening; was you?”
A curious expression passed over Hiel’s droll handsome face, and he drew his knife from his pocket and began reflectively to shave a bit of shingle.
“Wal, yis, Mother; the fact is, I did stay with Nabby Christmas evening, as they call it. Nabby and me’s allers ben good friends, you know. You know, Mother, you think lots of Nabby’s mother, Mis’ Higgins, and it ain’t her fault nor Nabby’s ef she hez to leave our meetin’. It’s old Zeph that makes ‘em.”
“O yis. I ha’n’t nothin’ agin Mis’ Higgins. Polly Higgins is a good woman as is goin’. I don’t want no better; but as to Nabby, why, she’s light and triflin’, and she’s goin’ right into all these ‘ere vanities; and I don’t want no son of mine to get drawn away arter her. You know how ’twas in old times, it was the Moabitish women that allers made mischief.”
“Oh land o’ Goshen, Mother, jes as ef it would do any harm for me to set up with Nabby in the minister’s own kitchen. Ef she don’t pisen the minister’s boys and Dolly she won’t pisen me; besides, I wanted to see what was in that air bundle Mis’ Cushing’s folks sent to her from Boston. Of course I knew you’d be a wantin’ to know.”
“Wal, did you see?” said the widow, snapping at once at the bait so artfully thrown.
“I rather reckon I did. Dolly she got a red frock and red shoes, and she was so tickled nothing would do but she must bring her red frock and red shoes right out to show to Nabby. They think all the world of each other, Nabby and Dolly do.”
“Was the dress made up?” said the widow.
“Oh, yis; all made up, ready to put right on.”
“Red, did you say?”
“Yes, red as a robin, with little black sprigs in’t, and her shoes red morocco. I tell you she put ’em on and squeaked round in ’em lively! Then there was six silk pocket-handkerchers for the Doctor, all hemmed, and his name marked in the corner; and there was a nice book for each o’ them boys, and a bonnet-ribbin for Miss Cushing.”
“What color was it?” said the widow.
“Wal, I don’t
know — sort o’ sky-blue scarlet,” said Hiel, tired of particulars. “I never know what women call their ribbins.” “Wal, reely now, it’s a good thing for folks to have rich relations,” soliloquized the widow. “I don’t grudge Mis’ Cushing her prosperity — not a grain.”
“Yis, and the doctor’s folks was glad enough to get them things, if they was Christmas presents. The Christmas didn’t pisen ‘em, any way; Mis’ Cushing’s folks up to Boston’s ‘Piscopals, but she thinks they’re pretty nice folks, if they be ‘Piscopals.”
“Now, Hiel,” said the widow, “Nabby Higgins is a nice girl — a girl that’s got faculty, and got ambition, and she’s handsome. I expect she’s prudent and laid by something out of her wages” — and here the widow paused and gazed reflectively at the sparks on the chimney-back.
“Wal, Mother, the upshot on’t is that if I and Nabby should want to make a team together there wouldn’t be no call for wailin’ and gnashin’ of teeth. There might wuss things happen; but jes now Nabby and I’s good friends — that’s all.”
And with this settlement the widow Jones, like many another mother, was forced to rest contented, sure that her son, in his own good time, would — do just as he pleased.
CHAPTER IX. ELECTION DAY IN POGANUC.
THE month of March had dawned over the slippery, snow-clad hills of Poganuc. The custom that enumerates this as among the spring months was in that region the most bitter irony. Other winter months were simple winter — cold, sharp and hard enough — but March was winter with a practical application, driven in by winds that pierced through joints and marrow. Not an icicle of all the stalactites which adorned the fronts of houses had so much as thought of thawing; the snow banks still lay in white billows above the tops of the fences; the roads, through which the ox-sleds of the farmers crunched and squeaked their way, were cut deep down through heavy drifts, and there was still the best prospect in the world for future snow-storms; but yet it was called “spring.” And the voting day had come; and Zeph Higgins, full of the energy of a sovereign and voter, was up at four o’clock in the morning, bestirring himself with a tempestuous clatter to rouse his household and be by daylight on the way to town to exercise his rights.
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