the password. We forget all this in the kindly
welcome they give us to-day; for some of them are
still standing and doubly famous, as we all know.
But the gambrel-roofed house, though stately enough
for college dignitaries and scholarly clergymen, was
not one of those old Tory, Episcopal-church-goer’s
strongholds. One of its doors opens directly
upon the green, always called the Common; the other,
facing the south, a few steps from it, over a paved
foot-walk, on the other side of which is the miniature
front yard, bordered with lilacs and syringas.
The honest mansion makes no pretensions. Accessible,
companionable, holding its hand out to all, comfortable,
respectable, and even in its way dignified, but not
imposing, not a house for his Majesty’s Counsellor,
or the Right Reverend successor of Him who had not
where to lay his head, for something like a hundred
and fifty years it has stood in its lot, and seen
the generations of men come and go like the leaves
of the forest. I passed some pleasant hours,
a few years since, in the Registry of Deeds and the
Town Records, looking up the history of the old house.
How those dear friends of mine, the antiquarians,
for whose grave councils I compose my features on the
too rare Thursdays when I am at liberty to meet them,
in whose human herbarium the leaves and blossoms of
past generations are so carefully spread out and pressed
and laid away, would listen to an expansion of the
following brief details into an Historical Memoir!
The estate was the third lot of the eighth “Squadron”
(whatever that might be), and in the year 1707 was
allotted in the distribution of undivided lands to
“Mr. ffox,” the Reverend Jabez Fox of Woburn,
it may be supposed, as it passed from his heirs to
the first Jonathan Hastings; from him to his son,
the long remembered College Steward; from him in the
year 1792 to the Reverend Eliphalet Pearson, Professor
of Hebrew and other Oriental languages in Harvard
College, whose large personality swam into my ken
when I was looking forward to my teens; from him the
progenitors of my unborn self.
I wonder if there are any such beings nowadays as
the great Eliphalet, with his large features and conversational
basso profundo, seemed to me. His very name had
something elephantine about it, and it seemed to me
that the house shook from cellar to garret at his footfall.
Some have pretended that he had Olympian aspirations,
and wanted to sit in the seat of Jove and bear the
academic thunderbolt and the aegis inscribed Christo
et Ecclesiae. It is a common weakness enough
to wish to find one’s self in an empty saddle;
Cotton Mather was miserable all his days, I am afraid,
after that entry in his Diary: “This Day
Dr. Sewall was chosen President, for his Piety.”