“Now
Christmas is come,
Let
us beat up the drum,
And call our neighbors together;
And
when they appear,
Let
us make them good cheer,
As will keep out the wind
and the weather.”
This is what the old song says; but
it is not the way the people of the new colonies celebrated
Christmas. Indeed, they thought it wrong to observe
it at all, because their forefathers had
come away from England almost on purpose to get rid
of the forms and ceremonies which hindered their worship
in the church over there.
The Parlins, however, saw no harm
in celebrating the day of our Saviour’s birth,
and Mrs. Parlin, who was an Episcopalian, always instructed
Love and the boys to trim the house with evergreens,
and put cedar crosses in the windows.
Willy was glad whenever his grandfather
Cheever happened to be visiting them at “Christmas-tide,”
for then he was sure of a present. Mr. Cheever
was an Englishman of the old school, and prayed for
King George. He wore what were called “small
clothes,” that is, short breeches,
which came only to the knee, and were fastened there
with a buckle, silk stockings, and a fine
ruffled shirt. His hair was braided into a long
queue behind, which served Willy for a pair of reins,
when he went riding on the dear old gentleman’s
back.
I am not sure that Mr. Parlin was
always glad to see grandpa Cheever, for they differed
entirely in politics, and that was a worse thing then
than it is now, if you can believe it. Mr. Parlin
loved George Washington, and grandpa said he was “only
an upstart.” Grandpa loved King George,
and Mr. Parlin said he was “only a crazy man.”
But Willy adored his grandfather,
especially at holiday times; for besides presents,
they were sure to have games in the big dining-room,
such as blindfold, or “Wood-man blind,”
bob-apple, and snap-dragon.
Then they always had a log brought
in with great ceremony, called the Yule log, the largest
one that could be found in the shed; and when Seth
and Stephen came staggering in with it, grandpa Cheever,
and Mrs. Parlin, and Love, and Willy all struck up,
“Come, bring
with a noise,
My merry,
merry boys,
The Christmas log to the firing,
While my
good dame, she
Bids ye
all be free,
And drink to your hearts’
desiring.”
The “good dame,” I suppose,
was Mrs. Parlin; and she gave them to drink, it is
true, but nothing stronger than metheglin, or egg nog,
or flip. It seems to me I can almost see her
standing by the table, pouring it out with a gracious
smile. She was a handsome, queenly-looking woman,
they say, though rather too large round the waist
you might think.
Her father was a famous singer, as
well as herself; and for my part I should have enjoyed
hearing some of their old songs, while the wind went
whistling round the house:
“Without the door let
Sorrow lie,
And if for cold it hap to
die,
We’ll bury it in a Christmas
pie,
And
evermore be merry.”
Or this one:
“Rejoice, our Saviour,
he was born
On Christmas day in the morning.”
But these were family affairs, these
Christmas meetings. No one else in Perseverance
had anything to do with them, not even Caleb or Lydia.
But the little boys in those days
did not live without amusements, you may be sure.
Perhaps their choicest and most bewitching sport was
training. There had been one great war, the
war of the Revolution, and as people were
looking for another, which actually came
in 1812, it was thought safe for men to
be drilled in the practice of marching and carrying
fire-arms.
In Perseverance, and many other towns,
companies were formed, such as the Light Infantry,
or “String Bean Company,” the Artillery,
and the “Troop.” These met pretty
often, and marched about the streets to the sound
of martial music.
Of course the little boys could not
see and hear of all this without a swelling of the
heart and a prancing of the feet; for they were rather
different from boys of these days! Hard indeed,
thought they, if they couldn’t form a company
too! As for music, what was to hinder them from
pounding it out of tin pans and pewter porringers?
There is music in everything, if you can only get
it out. Chickens’ wind-pipes, when well
dried, are very melodious, and so are whistles made
of willow; and if you are fond of variety, there are
always bones to be had, and dinner-horns, and jews-harps.
Full of zeal for their country, the
little boys on both sides of the river met together
and formed quite a large company. They had two
trials to begin with; firstly, they could not think
of a name fine enough for themselves; and secondly,
they could not get any sort of uniform to wear.
Their mothers could not see the necessity of their
having new suits just to play in; and it seemed for
some time as if the little patriots would have to
march forever in their old every-day clothes.
“But they’ll give us some
new ones by and by, boys,” said Willy. “My
mother laughed last night, when I asked again, and
that’s a certain sure sign.”
“O, I thought we’d given that up,”
said Fred Chase.
“Look here, boys,” exclaimed
Willy; “I’ve thought of a name; it’s
the ‘Never-Give-Ups.’ All in favor
say ’Ay’!”
“Ay! ay!” piped all the
lads; and it was a vote. Perhaps it was a year
before the Never-Give-Ups got their uniforms; but at
last their mammas saw the subject in a proper light,
and stopped their work long enough to dye some homespun
suits dark blue, and trim them gorgeously with red.
Willy’s regimentals were not
home-made; they were cut down from his father’s
old ones; and he might have been too well pleased with
them, only Fred Chase’s were better yet, being
new, with the first gloss on, just as they had come
from a store in the city of Boston.
Fred was captain of the company.
The boys had felt obliged in the very beginning to
have it so, on account of a beautiful instrument, given
him by his father, called a flageolet. True,
Fred could not play on it at all, and had to give
it up to Willy; but it belonged to him all the same.
“Something’s the matter
with my lungs,” said Fred, coughing; “and
that’s why those little holes plague me so;
it’s too hard work to blow ’em.”
The boys looked at one another with
wise nods and smiles. They did not like Fred
very well; but he was always pushing himself forward:
and when a boy has a great deal of self-esteem, and
a brave suit of clothes right from Boston, how are
you going to help yourselves, pray? So Fred was
captain, and Willy only a fifer.
There was one boy in the ranks who
caused some trouble Jock Winter. Not
that Jock quarrelled, or did anything you could find
fault with; but he was simple-minded and a hunchback,
and some of the boys made fun of him. When Fred
became captain he fairly hooted him out of the company.
“No fair! no fair!” cried Willy, Joshua
Potter, the Lyman twins, and two thirds of the other
boys; but the captain had his way in spite of the
underground muttering.
Saturday afternoon was the time for
training. The Never-Give-Ups met at the old red
store kept by Daddy Wiggins, and paraded down the village
street, and across the bridge, as far sometimes as
the Dug Way, a beautiful spot three or four miles
from home. They were a goodly sight to see, the
bright, healthy boys, straight as the “Quaker
guns” they carried, and marching off with a
firm and manly tread.
Mothers take a secret pride in their
sons, and many loving eyes watched this procession
out of town; but the procession didn’t know it,
for the mothers were very much afraid of flattering
the boys. I think myself it would have done the
little soldiers no harm to be praised once in a while.
Indeed, I wish they might have heard the ladies of
the village talking about them, as they met to drink
tea at Mrs. Parlin’s. She never went out
herself, but often invited company to what they called
little “tea-junketings.”
“Well,” said Mrs. Potter,
the doctor’s wife, “isn’t it enough
to do your eyes good to see such a noble set of boys?”
“Yes, it is,” said Mrs.
Griggs; “and I am not afraid for our country,
if they grow up as good men as they now bid fair to
be.”
Mrs. Chase could not respond to this,
for her boy Fred was a great trial; his father indulged
him too much, and she had had strong fears that he
might take to bad habits. But he was as handsome
as any of the boys, and she spoke up quickly:
“Yes, Mrs. Potter; as you say,
they are a noble-looking set of boys; and don’t
they march well?”
“They waste a great deal of
time; but then they might be doing worse, and I like
to see boys enjoy themselves,” said Mrs. Lyman,
the greatest worker in town.
Her twins, George and Silas, ought
to have heard that, for they thought their mother
did not care to see them do anything but delve.
“Ah, bless their little hearts,
we are all as proud of them as we can be,” said
ruddy, fleshy Mrs. Parlin, brushing back her purple
cap-strings as she poured the tea. “My Willy,
now, is the very apple of my eye, and the little rogue
knows it too.”
Yes, Willy did know it, for his mother
was not afraid to tell him so. The other boys
had love doled out to them like wedding cake, as if
it were too rich and precious for common use; but
Mrs. Parlin’s love was free and plenteous, and
Willy lived on it like daily bread.
Kissing and petting were sure to spoil
boys, so Elder Lovejoy’s wife thought; and she
longed to say so to Mrs. Parlin; but somehow she couldn’t;
for her little Isaac was not half as good as Willy,
though he hadn’t been kissed much since he was
big enough to go to school.
“Willy’s grandpa Cheever
has sent him a splendid present,” said Mrs.
Parlin; “it is a drum. His birthday will
come next Wednesday; but when I saw him marching off
with Freddy’s flageolet under his arm, I really
longed to give him the drum to-day.”
“I dare say you did,”
said Mrs. Lyman, warmly. “We mothers enjoy
our children’s presents more than they enjoy
them themselves.”
Then she and Mrs. Parlin exchanged
a pleasant smile, for they two understood each other
remarkably well.
Willy received his drum on the fifteenth
of September, his tenth birthday, and was prouder
than General Washington at the surrender of Lord Cornwallis.
No more borrowed flageolets for him. He put
so much soul into the drumsticks that the noise was
perfectly deafening. He called the family to
breakfast, dinner, and supper, to the tune of “Hail
Columbia,” or “Fy! let us a’ to the
wedding!” and nearly distracted Quaker Liddy
by making her roll out her pie-crust to the exact time
of “Yankee Doodle.”
“I don’t see the sense
of such a con-tin-oo-al thumping, you little
dear,” said she.
“That’s ’cause you’re
a Quaker,” cried Willy. “But I tell
you while my name’s Willy Parlin this drum shall
be heard.”
Poor Liddy stopped her ears.
“What you smiling for, mother?”
said Willy. “Are you pleased to think you’ve
got a little boy that can pound music so nice?”
“Not exactly that, my son.
I was wondering whether there is room enough out of
doors for that drum.”
“Why, mother!” exclaimed
the little soldier much chagrined. “Why,
mother!”
Everybody else had complained of the
din; but he thought she, with her fine musical taste,
must be delighted. After this pointed slight he
did not pound so much in the house, and the animals
got more benefit of the noise. Towler enjoyed
it hugely; and the cows might have kept step to the
pasture every morning, and the hens every night to
the roost, if they had had the least ear for music.
Siller Noonin, who believed in witches, began to think
the boy was “possessed.” Love laughed,
and said she did not believe that; but she was afraid
Willy spoke the truth every day when he said so stoutly,
“While my name is Willy Parlin,
this drum shall be heard.”
She wondered if parchment would ever wear out.
He drummed with so much spirit that
it had a strong effect on the little training company.
They had always liked him much better than Fred, and
were glad of an excuse now to make him their captain.
A boy who could fife so well, and drum so well, ought
to be promoted, they thought “All
in favor say Ay!”
Poor Fred was dismayed. He had
always known he was unpopular; still he had not expected
this.
“But how can I be captain?”
replied Willy, ready to shout with delight. “If
I’m captain, who’ll beat my drum?”
“Isaac Lovejoy,” was the quick reply.
That settled it, and Willy said no
more. He was now leader of the company, and Fred
Chase was obliged to walk behind him as first lieutenant.
But the moment Willy was promoted,
and before they began to march, he “took the
stump,” and made a stirring speech in favor of
Jock Winter.
“Now see here, boys,”
said he, leaning on his wooden gun, and looking around
him persuasively. “‘All men are born free
and equal.’ I s’pose you know that?
It’s put down so in the Declaration of Independence!”
“O, yes! Ay! Ay!”
“Well, Jock Winter was born
as free and equal as any of us; he wasn’t born
a hunchback. But see here: wouldn’t
you be a hunchback yourself, s’posing your father
had let you fall down stairs when you was a baby?
I put it to you now wouldn’t you?”
“Ay, ay,” responded the boys.
“Well; and s’pose folks
made fun of you just for that; how would you like
it?”
“Shouldn’t like it at all.”
“But then Jock’s just
about half witted,” put in Fred, faintly.
He knew his power was gone, but he wanted to say something.
“Well, what if he is half-witted?
He thinks more of his country than you do; twice more,
and risk it.”
“That’s so,” cried
Joshua Potter. “Fred says if there’s
another war, he won’t go; he never’ll
stand up for a mark to be shot at, at eleven dollars
a month!”
“O, for shame!” exclaimed the captain.
“Now you hush up,” said
Fred, reddening. “I was only in fun of
course I was! You needn’t say anything,
Will Parlin; a boy that has a Tory drum!”
“It’s a good Whig drum
as ever lived!” returned Willy. “But
come, now, boys; will we have Jock Winter?”
It was a vote; and the Never-Give-Ups
went over the river in a body to invite him.
He lived in a log-house with his grandfather, and a
negro servant known as Joe Whitehead. Old Mr.
Winter was aroused from his afternoon nap by the terrific
beating of the drum, and thought the British were
coming down upon him.
“Joe! Joe!” cried
he. “Get your scythe, Joe, and mow ’em
down as fast as they come!”
When the little boys heard of this,
it amused them greatly. Mistaken for the British
army, indeed! Well, now, that was something worth
while!
A happier soul than little, simple,
round-shouldered Jock you never saw, unless it was
his poor old grandfather. He could keep step with
the best of them; but unfortunately he had no decent
clothes. This was a great drawback, but Mrs.
Parlin and Mrs. Lyman took pity on the boy, and made
him a nice suit.