The harbor, the fleet of warships at anchor, the distant ocean, the distant woodlands, made a beautiful panorama.
“When I see such beauty,” said Miss Newville, “I want to be an artist or a poet to give expression to my feelings. See the purple and gold on the Milton Hills, the light on the water, the russet and crimson of the forests! How beautiful!” she cried, with a rich bloom upon her cheek as she gazed upon the landscape. The tap of a drum and the tramping of a regiment along the street attracted her attention. “I am weary of seeing scarlet uniforms,” she said.
“Will you not make an exception of those who call upon Miss Newville?” Berinthia asked.
“No. I do not even care to see General Gage or Earl Percy in their gold-laced coats. They are delightful gentlemen, and frequent visitors in our home. I find much pleasure in listening to Earl Percy’s description of things in London; but I should be better pleased were he to visit us as a citizen, laying aside his military trappings, the emblems of arbitrary power.”
LORD PERCY
The sun was sinking behind the western hills. As the last beams faded from the gilded vane of Christ Church, they heard the beating of drums and the shrill piping of boatswain’s whistles on the decks of the warships. A cannon flashed on the bastion of the Castle, and the boom of the gun rolled far away as the Cross of St. George descended from flagstaff and topmast to be furled for the night.
“It is the sunset gun; the signal for taking down the flags,” said Berinthia.
“I often watch from my chamber window for the flashing of the cannon,” Miss Newville remarked.