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Santa's Blog | Visit Santa's Forum | Sign Santa's Guestbook | Santa's Village Shops | Santa's Kitchen | Holiday Kid ZoneThe First Harvest Home In Plymouth
W. De Loss Loves, Jr.
When, after many vexing days upon the deep,
the pilgrims first sighted the New World, they were filled with praise and
thanksgiving. Going ashore they fell upon their knees and blessed the God
of Heaven. And after that, whenever they were delivered from accidents or
despair, they gave God "solemne thanks and praise." Such were the Pilgrims
and such their habit day by day. The first winter in the New World was marked
by great suffering and want. Hunger and illness thinned the little colony,
and caused many graves to be made on the near-by hillside
The spring of 1621 opened. The seed was sown in
the fields. The colonists cared for it without ceasing, and watched its
growth with anxiety; for well they knew that their lives depended upon a
full harvest.
The days of spring and summer flew by, and the
autumn came. Never in Holland or England had the Pilgrims seen the like of
the treasures bounteous Nature now spread before them. The woodlands were
arrayed in gorgeous colors, brown, crimson, and gold, and swarmed with game
of all kinds, that had been concealed during the summer. The little
farm-plots had been blessed by the sunshine and showers, and now plentiful
crops stood ready for the gathering. The Pilgrims, rejoicing, reaped the
fruit of their labors, and housed it carefully for the winter. Then, filled
with the spirit of thanksgiving, they held the first harvest-home in New
England.
For one whole week they rested from work,
feasted, exercised their arms, and enjoyed various recreations. Many
Indians visited the colony, amongst these their greatest king, Massasoit,
with ninety of his braves. The Pilgrims entertained them for three days.
And the Indians went out into the woods and killed fine deer, which they
brought to the colony and presented to the governor and the captain and
others. So all made merry together. And
bountiful was the feast. Oysters, fish and wild turkey, Indian maize and
barley bread, geese and ducks, venison and other savory meats, decked the
board. Kettles, skillets, and spits were overworked, while knives and
spoons, kindly assisted by fingers, made merry music on pewter plates. Wild
grapes, "very sweete and strong," added zest to the feast. As to the
vegetables, why, the good governor describes them thus: --
Thus a royal feast it was the Pilgrims spread that first golden autumn
at Plymouth, a feast worthy of their Indian guests.
All slumbering discontents they smothered with common rejoicings. When
the holiday was over, they were surely better, braver men because they had
turned aside to rest awhile and be thankful together. So the exiles of
Leyden claimed the harvests of New England. This
festival was the bursting into life of a new conception of man's dependence
on God's gifts in Nature. It was the promise of autumnal Thanksgivings to
come.
AFTER prayer and fasting and a
farewell feast, the Pilgrim Fathers left the City of Leyden, and sought the
new and unknownland. "So they lefte yt goodly & pleasante citie,"
writes their historian Bradford, "which had been ther resting place near 12
years, but they knew they were pilgrimes & looked not much on those things,
but lift up their eyes to ye Heavens their dearest cuntrie, and
quieted their spirits."
"All sorts of grain which our own land doth yield,
Was hither brought, and sown in every field;
As wheat and rye, barley, oats, beans, and pease
Here all thrive and they profit from them raise;
All sorts of roots and herbs in gardens grow, --
Parsnips, carrots, turnips, or what you'll sow,
Onions, melons, cucumbers, radishes,
Skirets, beets, coleworts and fair cabbages."
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