CHRIST CHURCH CHIMES
Calm and peaceful was the Sabbath
morning in Rumford, where the stillness was broken
only by lowing cattle and singing birds, but in Boston
Robert heard the rattling of drums,-a prolonged
roll, as if the drummers found special pleasure in
disturbing the slumbers of the people. It was
the reveille arousing the troops. Mr. Brandon
said the officers of the king’s regiments seemed
to take delight in having extra drills on Sunday for
the purpose of annoying the people. A few of
the officers, he said, were gentlemen, but others were
vile, and not to be admitted into decent society.
The drums ceased and there was a period
of quiet; then suddenly the air was melodious with
the music of bells. Berinthia saw the wonder on
Robert’s face.
“It is Christ Church chimes,” she said.
He heard “Old Hundred,” sweet and enchanting.
“If you would like, we will go to Christ Church
this morning.”
Robert replied he would gladly go with her.
“The sexton is a Son of Liberty,
Robert Newman; you saw him the other night at the
Green Dragon; his brother plays the organ,” said
Tom.
The sexton welcomed them and gave
them seats. Robert gazed in wonder at the fluted
columns, the high arched ceiling, the pillars supporting
the galleries, the great windows, the recess behind
the pulpit, the painting of the Last Supper.
He read the words, “This is none other than
the House of God; this is the Gate of Heaven.”
The bells ceased their pealing, but
suddenly delightful music filled the church.
“That is John Newman at the organ,” Berinthia
whispered.
It began soft and faint, as if far
away-a flute, then a clarinet, a trumpet,
growing louder, nearer, deeper, heavier, the loud notes
rolling like far-off thunder, then dying into melody
as sweet as the song of a bird. Never had Robert
heard any music so delightful. Looking towards
the loft, he saw the gilded pipes of the instrument.
Upon the railing around it were figures of angels with
trumpets.
“They were captured from a French
ship in 1746 by Captain Grushea of the Queen of Hungary
privateer,” Tom whispered. “They were
designed for a Romish church in Canada, but the captain
brought them to Boston and presented them to the wardens
of this church.”
Berinthia said the Bible and prayer-book
were given by King George II. at the request of Governor
Belcher. She found the places in the prayer-book
for him. He thought the prayers very beautiful,
but could not quite see the need of getting up and
sitting down so often. He never had taken part
in meeting before, but when all the others read felt
he too must let his voice be heard, otherwise the people
would think he did not know how to read. He was
startled at the sound of his own voice, but soon got
over it, and rather liked the idea of the people taking
some part in the service instead of having it all done
by the minister. It was very delightful when the
choir came in with the organ, in contrast to the singing
in Rumford meetinghouse where the deacon lined the
Psalms, two lines at a time, and set the tune with
his pitch-pipe.
When the service was over and the
people were going out, the organ began to play.
The sexton took them upstairs to see his brother John
handle it. Robert was surprised to see him using
his feet as well as his hands, fingering two sets
of keys, pushing in and pulling out what Tom said
were “stops.” When through with the
piece, the organist explained the mechanism of the
instrument, playing softly and then making the windows
rattle.
An hour at noon, and then the meetinghouse
bells were tolling for the afternoon service.
“We will go to our own meeting;
I want you to hear Reverend Doctor Cooper," said
Berinthia. The meetinghouse was in Brattle Street,
close by the barracks. The soldiers were lounging
around the building staring at the people, laughing,
smoking their pipes, and making rude remarks.
When meeting was over the soldiers gathered around
the door and leered at the girls. Robert clenched
his fist and felt his blood grow hot. A lieutenant
started to walk beside Berinthia.
“My cousin will not need your
escort, sir,” said Robert touching his elbow.
The officer grew red in the face and
disappeared in the barracks.
On Monday morning Robert bade his
friends good-by. Peter Augustus had something
for him at the Green Dragon: a basket filled with
fruit-melocotoons, pears, and plums-and
a neatly written note.
“Will Mr. Walden kindly take
a basket of fruit to his sister, Miss Rachel, from
Ruth Newville.”
That was all. What a surprise
it would be to Rachel! Why was Miss Newville
sending it? She never had met Rachel; knew nothing
of her, except what little he had said, yet the gift!
The sun was going down the following
evening when he reached the turn of the road bringing
him in sight of home. He was yet half a mile
away, but Rachel was standing in the doorway waving
her apron. She could not wait for Jenny to trot
home, but came down the road bareheaded, climbed into
the wagon, put her arms around his neck, and gave
him a hug and a kiss. There was a look of wonder
on her face when he uncovered the basket of fruit
and told her who had sent it,-a beautiful
girl, one of Berinthia’s friends, whom he had
rescued from the king’s soldiers. There
were tears in Rachel’s eyes when he put the
beads around her neck.
“Oh, Rob! how good you are!”
It was all she could say.
November came, and Berinthia Brandon
was sitting in her chamber. From its eastern
window she looked across the burial ground with its
rows of headstones. The leafless trees were swaying
in the breeze. She was thinking of what Samuel
Adams had said to her, that life is worth living just
in proportion to the service we can render to others.
What had she ever done for anybody? Not much.
A feeling of sadness came over her. The afternoon
sun was lengthening the shadows of the headstones
across the grass-grown mounds. The first snow
of approaching winter was lying white and pure above
the sleeping forms of those who had finished their
earthly work. Beyond the burial ground she beheld
the harbor. The tide had been at its flood, and
was sweeping towards the sea. A ship was sailing
down the roadstead to begin its adventurous voyage
to a distant land.
“Why can I not do something
for somebody instead of idling my time away?”
she said to herself, recalling what Mr. Adams had said-that
it was the duty of every woman to forego personal
comfort and pleasure for the promotion of the public
good; that everybody should leave off using tea to
let the king, the ministry, and the people of England
know that the men and women of the Colonies could stand
resolutely and unflinchingly for a great principle.
With her father, mother, and Tom she had quit drinking
tea; why should she not persuade others to banish
it from their tables? A thought came to her, and
she opened her writing-desk, a gift from her father,
beautifully inlaid with ivory, which he had obtained
in a foreign country. She dipped her pen into
the ink, reflected a moment, and then wrote her thought:
“We, the daughters of patriots, who have
stood and do now stand for the public interest, with
pleasure engage with them in denying ourselves the
drinking of foreign tea, in hope to frustrate a plan
that tends to deprive the community of its rights."
In her enthusiasm she walked the floor,
thinking of those whom she would ask to sign it.
She would not subject herself to ridicule by calling
upon those who sided with the king, but upon those
who she knew were ready to make sacrifices for justice
and right.
“I am glad you have written
it, daughter,” Mr. Brandon said when she informed
him of what she had done and was intending to do; “I
see no reason, wife, why you should not do what you
can in the same way among the women, to let people
on the other side of the sea understand the Colonies
are in earnest. Already there has been a great
falling off in trade between the Colonies and England,
and if we can stop this tea trade it will not be long
before the merchants will be swarming around Parliament
demanding something to be done. We must arouse
public sentiment on this question, and you, daughter,
are just the girl to begin it.”
Mr. Brandon reached out his hand and
took Berinthia’s and gave it a squeeze to let
her know he had faith in her.
“I will do what I can to persuade
others,” she said, returning the pressure.
Through the night Berinthia was thinking
over what she had started to accomplish, and what
arguments she should use to influence those whom she
would ask to sign the agreement. The great idea,
with a moral principle behind it, took possession
of her mind and drove sleep from her eyes and aroused
the energies of the soul. Why undertake the arduous
task alone? Why not ask Doctor Cooper to preach
about it? If she could but get the ministers
enlisted, they could awaken public sentiment.
“Ah! I have it. Week
after next is Thanksgiving, and I will get them to
preach sermons that will stir up the people,”
she said to herself.
Thanksgiving Day came. Very eloquent
were the words spoken for Justice, Right, and Liberty
by Reverend Doctor Cooper, Reverend Doctor Eliot,
Reverend Doctor Checkley, and nearly all the other
ministers, excepting Reverend Mr. Coner, rector of
King’s Chapel, and Reverend Mather Byles of
Christ Church, whose sympathies were with the king.
In every household fathers and mothers,
sons and daughters and grandchildren, gathered in
the old home, and had a great deal to say, while partaking
of the roast turkey and plum-pudding, of the sermons
they had heard in the different meetinghouses.
All the ministers preached about the proposal of Parliament
to levy a tax upon tea, and that if it could not be
defeated in any other way it was the patriotic duty
of the people to quit using the herb. They must
deny themselves the luxury, that they might maintain
their freedom. Little did they know that a blue-eyed
girl had called upon Doctor Cooper and read to him
what she had written, an agreement to drink no more
tea; how his soul had been set on fire and he had
gone with her to the houses of other ministers, that
they might look into her eyes and see the flashing
of a resolute spirit in behalf of justice, righteousness,
and liberty.
Although the snow was deep in the
streets, the drifts did not deter Berinthia from calling
upon her friends. Many of the good ladies were
ready to sign an agreement to drink no more tea; others
hesitated. She was warmly welcomed by Mrs. Abigail
Adams, who at once saw how great would be the influence
of the women upon their husbands.
“But what shall we drink instead
of tea?” asked Dorothy Quincy.
“When summer comes, we will
go out into the fields and gather strawberry leaves,
and call them Hyperion, or some other elegant name.
I think it quite as pretty a name as Old Hyson, and
I am not sure that they will not be more healthful,”
Berinthia replied.
Miss Dorothy laughed heartily.
“Yes, and we can, upon a pinch, drink cold water
from the town pump and flavor it with peppermint,”
she said, as she wrote her name.
After leaving Miss Quincy, Berinthia
lifted the knocker of the Newville mansion, not to
ask Ruth to sign the agreement; she could not do that,
for Mr. Newville was a Tory, and the signers were daughters
of patriots.
“How good it is to see you once
more. It is a very long time since I have looked
upon your face,” Ruth exclaimed, embracing her.
“The snow has been so deep and
I have had so much to do, I have not found time to
call till now, and I don’t know as I should be
here to-day only I am spinning street-yarn for a particular
purpose.”
Ruth was at a loss to understand her.
“I am calling on my acquaintances,
and I was not quite sure whether I ought to skip you
or not.”
“Skip me! What have I done
that you should think of dropping me from your acquaintance?”
Berinthia saw a wondering and injured
look in the loving eyes.
“Oh, you haven’t done
anything; it is what the king, Lord North, and Parliament
are doing. They intend to make us pay taxes against
our will, and we girls are signing an agreement not
to drink any more tea, and I am calling on my friends
for that purpose.”
The look of wonder and grief disappeared,
and Ruth’s face brightened once more. She
read the agreement and the list of names.
“I didn’t call, dear Ruth,
to ask you to sign it. I have no right to do
so. It is an agreement to be signed by the daughters
of those who are opposed to being taxed in this way.
Your father, doubtless, may be willing to pay the
tax; my father is not. You may not think as we
do, but that shall not disturb our friendship.
I shall love you just as I have ever since we were
children.”
“How good you are! I appreciate
your kindness. My father and mother stand for
the king, but I have my own opinion. Under the
terms of the agreement, I cannot sign it, but I am
with you in spirit. I can see the course taken
by the king is not right or just, and it will fail.
Nothing can succeed in the end that is not right.”
“Oh, Ruth, how you shame me.
Here I have been fidgeting over the cutting things
some of the girls and their mothers have been saying.
One asked if I expected to bankrupt the East India
Company. Another wanted to know if I was going
to wear trousers and vote in town meeting.”
“So mother’s afternoon
tea-party stands a chance of being the last, for the
present, at least. By the way, do you ever hear
from your cousin, Mr. Walden?”
“No, I have not heard a word
since he left us. I should not be surprised,
however, if he were to drop in upon us any day, for
I have written him that the ship is to be launched
soon. Father intends to make it a grand occasion
when the Berinthia Brandon glides into the water.
I shall have all my friends present, Ruth Newville
chief among them.”
“Count upon me to do whatever
I can to make it a happy day,” said Ruth.