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PAGE 3

A Still Christmas
by [?]

Mistress Vane smiled at her daughter’s vehemence. She knew more about these jovial monarchs and their courts than Annis did, and it may even be that his most blessed majesty’s approval carried less weight to her experienced mind. But in these dark and chilly days a little enthusiasm was helpful in keeping one’s heart warm, and she was far too wise a mother to disparage it. “Truly they made a brave show then upon Christmas-day,” she admitted, “for the lord mayor and his corporation, a goodly company of gentlemen, rode in procession to the church of St. Thomas Acon, and thence to dine together with many pleasant ceremonies. And stoups of wine and huge venison pasties were despatched to the Temple for the stay and comfort of the mock-court, who made merry all day long. And the streets were crowded, far into the night, with maskers and revellers; and even the poor might for once forget their poverty, and were welcome to the brawn and plum-broth of their richer neighbors.”

“And now we have nothing of all this!” cried Cicely, with passionate regret. “Nothing to look at and nothing to hear save the cracked bell of a dingy herald, who does not even ride a hobby-horse like the merry heralds of old. In truth, Master Prynne hath made good his own words when he holds that Christmas should be rather a day of mourning than one of rejoicing.”

“Not so thought my godfather, kind Master Breton,” said Annis, thoughtfully. “For he hath written that it is the duty of Christians to rejoice for the remembrance of Christ and for the maintenance of good-fellowship. ‘I hold it,’ he hath said, ‘a memory of the Heaven’s love and the world’s peace, the mirth of the honest and the meeting of the friendly.'”

Cicely’s eyes danced with glee. “That were well remembered,” she said, mockingly; “if, now, you can but tell us in turn what your godfather’s nephew, Captain Rupert Breton, hath thought upon the matter.”

Annis flushed scarlet, and the quick tears welled into her eyes as she turned them reproachfully upon her sister. It was not easy for her to think of her absent lover and maintain the cheerful frame of mind she deemed appropriate to the season. The shores of France seemed very far away that night, and the long months that had elapsed since the defeat at Worcester stretched backward like a lifetime, as she recalled his last hurried farewell. He had ridden hard and risked much for those few words, and patiently and bravely she had waited ever since, hoping, praying, turning her face steadily to the brighter side, and keeping ever in mind the happy hour which should reunite them to each other. Now, in silence, she bound together the last green boughs and put all in order for the night. Old Catherine had long since gone off, yawning and blinking, to bed, and Cicely, half-asleep, nodded over the dying fire. Only her mother watched her, with eyes of loving scrutiny, and Annis smiled brightly as she kissed the careworn face. “I shall not cry myself to sleep to-night,” she said, resolutely. “This is a time for gladness; for the star of Bethlehem is shining in the sky, and the birth of the Lord is at hand.”

* * * * *

Bright glowed the Christmas-logs on the capacious hearth till every pointed leaf and scarlet holly-berry shone in the generous firelight.

“Whosoever against holly doth cry,
In a rope shall be hung full high.”

For, when the oak and ash trees babbled to the wind, and betrayed the Saviour’s hiding-place, the holly, the ivy, and the pine kept the secret hidden in their silent hearts; and for this good deed they stand green and living under winter’s icy breath, while their companions shiver naked in the blast. Not till the risen sun has danced on Easter morn shall the oak adorn a Christian household and prove itself forgiven. The Christmas-pie–the Christ-cradle, as the Saxons used to call it–had been baked in its oblong dish in memory of the manger at Bethlehem, with the star of the Magi cut deeply in the swelling crust. The Yule-dough, cunningly moulded into the likeness of a little babe, had been carefully laid by as a sovereign protector from the evils of fire, floods, carnage, and–so say some ancient writers–from the bite of rabid dogs. Annis Vane, decked out in the bravest array her altered fortunes would permit, knelt by the blazing hearth. Her ruff was of the finest lace, and a row of milk-white pearls clasped her slender throat. She shaded her face from the fire, and piled up shining cones of bright-brown nuts that seemed to tempt the flames.