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Motley, John Lothrop, 1814-1877 [1849], Merry-mount: a romance of the Massachusetts colony, volume 1 (James Munroe and Company, Boston & Cambridge) [word count] [eaf285v1].
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Front matter Covers, Edges and Spine

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Preliminaries

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JAMES MUNROE AND COMPANY HAVE RECENTLY PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING WORKS.

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1.

THE ARTIST'S MARRIED LIFE.

THE ARTIST'S MARRIED LIFE; being that of Albert
Dürer
Translated from the German of Leopold Schefer, by Mrs.
J. R. Stodart. First American, from the London Edition.
16mo.

2.

BEAUTIES OF SACRED LITERATURE.

BEAUTIES OF SACRED LITERATURE. Illustrated by Eight
Steel Engravings. Edited by Thomas Wyatt, A. M., Author of
“The Sacred Tableaux,” etc. etc.



“Scatter diligently in susceptible minds
The germs of the Good and the Beautiful!
They will develop there to trees, bud, bloom,
And bear the golden fruit of Paradise.”

3.

MERRY-MOUNT.

MERRY-MOUNT; A Romance of the Massachusetts Colony.
Two volumes, 12mo. pp. 250 each.

4.

VERSES OF A LIFE-TIME.

VERSES OF A LIFE-TIME. By Caroline Gilman, Author of
Recollections of a Southern Matron, Love's Progress, Oracles
from the Poets, Juvenile Poems, &c. 16mo. pp. 272. Price 83 cts.

5.

TAPPAN'S POEMS.

THE SUNDAY SCHOOL, and other Poems. By William B.
Tappan
. 16mo. pp. 252. Price 75 cents.

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6.

A MANUAL OF THE BOTANY OF THE NORTHERN
UNITED STATES,

From New England to Wisconsin, and south to Ohio and Pennsylvania
inclusive, (the Mosses and Liverworts by W. S. Sullivant)
arranged according to the Natural System; with an Introduction
containing a reduction of the Genera to the Linnæan artificial classes
and orders, Outlines of the Elements of Botany, a Glossary, etc.
By Asa Gray, M. D., Professor of Natural History in Harvard
University. 12mo, pp. 784, price $1,88.

7.

SYSTEM OF THE WORLD.

THOUGHTS ON IMPORTANT POINTS RELATING TO
THE SYSTEM OF THE WORLD. By J. P. Nichol, LL. D.
First American Edition, Revised and Enlarged. 12mo, 15 plates.

“It is rich in eloquence, and most eminently successful in its scientific
illustrations.”

London Atlas.

“This is a remarkable work, not more for the depth and extent than
for the accuracy of its speculations.”

Edinburgh Courant.

8.

THE SOLAR SYSTEM.

CONTEMPLATION OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM. By J. P.
Nichol, LL. D., Professor of Practical Astronomy in the University
of Glasgow. Third edition, with fifteen beautiful Plates.
12mo, English edition.

“Its excellencies are of the highest kind, and the most seemingly abstruse
points are made perfectly clear to an attentive examination.”


Spectator.

“It is written throughout with the utmost enthusiasm, frequent beauty
of expression, and a fervent spirit of devotion. The plates far surpass
those of any other popular work with which we are acquainted.”

Dumfries Courier.

9.

STELLAR UNIVERSE.

THE STELLAR UNIVERSE: Views of its Arrangements, Motions,
and Evolutions. By J. P. Nichol, LL. D., &c. One volume,
16mo, English edition, with 5 Plates. pp. 258. Price $1,25.

*** This work is intended as the first of a popular series on astronomical
subjects.

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10.

ESSAYS. BY RALPH WALDO EMERSON.

First and Second Series. Fourth edition, Revised. 16mo, pp. 320.
Price 75 cents each.

11.

EMERSON'S POEMS.

Poems, by R. W. Emerson. 4th ed. 16mo, pp. 252. Price 87 cents.

12.

WARE'S WORKS.

THE WORKS OF HENRY WARE, Jr. D. D., Containing his
Miscellaneous Writings and Discourses, Edited by Rev. Chandler
Robbins
. In four volumes, new edition, 12mo. 2 portraits.

13.

LIFE OF WARE.

MEMOIR OF THE LIFE OF HENRY WARE, Jr., by his
Brother, John Ware, M. D. New edition, 2 vols. 12mo., with
portraits. Price $1,50.

14.

LIVERMORE'S COMMENTARIES.

THE FOUR GOSPELS; with a Commentary by Rev. Abiel Abbot
Livermore
. Two vols. 12mo. pp. 318. New Edition. Price
75 cents each.

THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES, with Notes and a Map. 12mo.
Price 75 cents each.

15.

HISTORY OF FRAMINGHAM.

A History of Framingham, Massachusetts, including the Plantation,
from 1640 to the Present Time, with an Appendix, containing a
notice of Sudbury and its First Proprietors; also, a Register of
the Inhabitants of Framingham before 1800, with Genealogical
Sketches. By Rev. William Barry. One volume, 8vo, pp. 460.
Price $1,50.

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16.

MARTINEAU'S DISCOURSES.

ENDEAVORS AFTER THE CHRISTIAN LIFE. By Rev.
James Martineau. Second Series. 12mo, pp. 292. Price 83 cts.

17.

BURNAP'S LECTURES.

LECTURES on the DOCTRINES OF CHRISTIANITY in Controversy
between Unitarians and other Denominations of Christians.
By Rev. George W. Burnap. New Edition, 12mo. pp. 376.

18.

AN ELEMENTARY COURSE of NATURAL HISTORY.

Being an Introduction to Zoology; intended for the College and the
Parlor. ELEMENTS OF ORNITHOLOGY. By Prof. Charles
Brooks
. One volume, 12mo, pp. 324, 400 cuts. Price $1,25.

19.

RICHTER'S BEST HOURS, &c.

REMINISCENCES OF THE BEST HOURS OF LIFE FOR
THE HOUR OF DEATH, etc. By Jean Paul Friederich
Richter
. 32mo, gilt edge, pp. 94. Price 37 cents.

20.

THE SILENT PASTOR.

THE SILENT PASTOR; or Consolations for the Sick. By Rev.
Dr. Sadler. New Edition, with Additions. Edited by Rev. J. F.
W.Ware. 18mo. pp. 192. Price 37 cents.

21.

ANDERSEN'S STORIES.

THE DREAM OF LITTLE TUK, AND OTHER TALES. By
Hans Christian Andersen. Translated by Charles Boner. One
volume, 18mo. pp. 176. Price 37 cents.

22.

THE TRUE STORY OF MY LIFE.

A Sketch by Hans Christian Andersen. Translated by Mary
Howitt
. One volume, 16mo, pp. 306. Price 50 cents.

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Preliminaries

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Title Page MERRY-MOUNT; A ROMANCE
OF
THE MASSACHUSETTS COLONY.

“O, if we could but see the shape of our dear mother England, as poets are wont
to give a personal form to what they please, how would she appear, think ye, but in
a mourning weed, with ashes upon her head, and tears abundantly flowing from her
eyes, to behold so many of her children exposed at once, and thrust from things of
direst necessity * * * * * * * * and to avoid insufferable grievances at home, enforced
by heaps to forsake their native country.”

Milton.
BOSTON AND CAMBRIDGE:
JAMES MUNROE AND COMPANY.
M DCCC XLIX.

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Acknowledgment

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Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1848,
By James Munroe and Company,
in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts.

BOSTON:
THURSTON, TORRY, AND COMPANY,
31 Devonshire Street.

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PREFACE.

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This Romance was written some years ago, and was afterwards
thrown aside, as on the whole not likely to interest the general reader.
The subject was first suggested to me by a friend (far more capable
of doing justice to it than myself), who had however entirely abandoned
the ground. As, upon second thoughts, however, the epoch still seems
to me to possess certain attractions, I submit, with great diffidence, the
following pages to the public.

The crepuscular period which immediately preceded the rise of the
Massachusetts Colony, possesses more of the elements of romance than
any subsequent epoch. After the arrival of Winthrop with the charter,
the history of the province is as clear as day-light; but during the few previous
years there are several characters flitting like phantoms through the
chronicles of the time, about whose life and personal adventures, either
at home or in the wilderness, but little is known. They differ entirely
from the group of personages who succeeded them. Their appearance
is in striking, wilful contrast to the general aspect of the place and the
age. For the purposes of history, perhaps it is of no great consequence
that the strict account of their lives has not been written, but the singularity
of their appearance gives them a certain romantic interest. It

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was the brief presence of these pale and misty apparitions, vanishing
in the cold, clear dawn of Massachusetts history, which first attracted
me to the epoch. The charm of the subject lay in a wild improbability,
which seemed to surround it, but which disappeared upon an
examination of contemporary record.

The gentle reader is assured, and the ferocious critic is warned, that
the personages and scenes, which may appear to be out of keeping, are
strictly true in their coloring and spirit. An elephant hunt, for example,
would hardly be more unexpected in Massachusetts than a hawking
scene; a Hetman of Cossacks as likely a personage to meet with as a
Knight of the Sepulchre — and yet both the character and the adventure
are literal verities.

As the classics are growing unfashionable, Morton may perhaps appear
more of a pedant than he would have done two centuries ago.
The reader may very probably object to his quotations from Horace.
If so, the quarrel must be not with me, but with Morton, who is hardly
able to write a page of his autobiography without a classical allusion or
extract.

With regard to another point, it can hardly be necessary to disclaim
any improper motive in describing the scenes in which the Liturgy
and Church of England are degraded by their profane supporters. The
spirit of the scenes is historical, and it is to the accidental presence
and the mad follies of such ribalds, who affected to belong to the English
church only to show their ill-will to the Puritans, that much of the
subsequent hostility manifested by the fathers of Massachusetts to the
honored church, for which, upon leaving England, they expressly proclaimed
their affection, may perhaps be traeed.

So far as I know, the epoch has not been illustrated by writers of
fiction, with a single exception. I am aware, that in one of the volumes
of Mr. Hawthorne's “Tales,” is a story called the “Maypole of

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Merry-Mount.” Although familiar with most of those masterpieces of exquisite
delineation and subtle fancy, I was so fortunate as never to have
read that particular story before writing these volumes, and I took care
not to read it afterwards, feeling sure, if I did so, that my own pictures
would be still more unsatisfactory to me. With this exception, the
ground has not I believe been occupied.

Every man will of course decide for himself where the line between
history and romance should be drawn. As I have concluded not to use
my materials for an article in the Massachusetts Historical Collections,
I do not hold myself at present strictly accountable for all my authorities,
in all particulars.

As for my sources, beyond those accessible to every reader, I do not
care at present to indicate them. How certain portions of Sir Christopher
Gardiner's correspondence were discovered in the cellar of an old
house at Squantum — how certain documents, relating to the Gorges
family, were found wrapped about the Third Volume of Winthrop's
Journal, when it was discovered in the steeple of the Old South — how
some workmen, in digging for the foundation of a new house in Blaxton's
six-acre lot, recently discovered an iron box, which to their disappointment
was found to contain not doubloons, but documents relating to
the private affairs of one William Blaxton, clerk of Shawmut — how
these remarkable papers were all which escaped the destruction which
befell his house and library, and all his effects, in Philip's war — how
they at last came into my possession; — all this, and much more “of
worthy memory,” I might have stated, as the excellent Grumio has it,
which, however, must for certain reasons “perish in oblivion, and the
curious public return uninstructed to its grave.”

Another word — for like the bellows-mender of Athens, an author
sometimes likes to explain his roaring. The timorous reader may fear,
from the epoch, to find this an Indian story. The fear would be natural,

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for it must be admitted that in fiction there is “no more dangerous
wild-fowl” than your Indian, not even “your lion.” But it is not an
Indian story. The savages are left in the back-ground, although it
would have been difficult and impolite to turn them altogether out of
their country at that early period.

I will only observe, in conclusion, that if the epoch sometimes seems
dreary, and the story dull, the dulness is intentional, and must be imputed
entirely to the didactic nature of the subject. As somebody says
in the Spectator, “Whenever I am dull, the reader may be sure I have
a design in it.”

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CONTENTS.

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PAGE.


CHAPTER I.
MASSACHUSETTS BAY 1

CHAPTER II.
THE LORD OF MERRY-MOUNT 10

CHAPTER III.
THE KNIGHT OF THE SEPULCHRE 17

CHAPTER IV.
THE LUDLOWS AT NAUMKEAK 31

CHAPTER V.
THE MISRULE OF MERRY-MOUNT 40

CHAPTER VI.
THE BAFFLED KNIGHT 63

CHAPTER VII.
BIOGRAPHICAL AND HISTORICAL 70

CHAPTER VIII.
THE SOLITARY OF SHAWMUT 77

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CHAPTER IX.
SYMPATHY AND ANTIPATHY 92

CHAPTER X.
THE MISHAWUM GIANT RECEIVES COMPANY 107

CHAPTER XI.
THE BATTLE OF MISHAWUM 115

CHAPTER XII.
TWILIGHT MYSTERIES 144

CHAPTER XIII.
THE MAY-DAY REVELS AT MERRY-MOUNT 161

CHAPTER XIV.
CONTINUATION OF THE MAY-DAY REVELS 175

CHAPTER XV.
MORE MYSTERY 187

CHAPTER XVI.
THE MINOTAUR 195

CHAPTER XVII.
THE CAPTURE 211

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Motley, John Lothrop, 1814-1877 [1849], Merry-mount: a romance of the Massachusetts colony, volume 1 (James Munroe and Company, Boston & Cambridge) [word count] [eaf285v1].
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