I
The Prison-Door
A throng of bearded men,
in sad-colored garments and gray, steeple-crowned hats, intermixed
with women, some wearing hoods, and others bareheaded, was
assembled in front of a wooden edifice, the door of which was
heavily timbered with oak, and studded with iron spikes.
The founders of a new colony, whatever Utopia of
human virtue and happiness they might originally project, have
invariably recognized it among their earliest practical necessities
to allot a portion of the virgin soil as a cemetery, and another
portion as the site of a prison. In accordance with this rule, it
may safely be assumed that the forefathers of Boston had built the
first prison-house, somewhere in the vicinity of Cornhill, almost
as seasonably as they marked out the first burial-ground, on Isaac
Johnson’s lot,1 and round about his
grave, which subsequently became the nucleus of all the congregated
sepulchres in the old church-yard of King’s Chapel. Certain it is,
that, some fifteen or twenty years after the settlement of the
town,2 the wooden jail was
already marked with weather-stains and other indications of age,
which gave a yet darker aspect to its beetle-browed and gloomy
front. The rust on the ponderous iron-work of its oaken door looked
more antique than any thing else in the new world. Like all that
pertains to crime, it seemed never to have known a youthful era.
Before this ugly edifice, and between it and the wheel-track of the
street, was a grass-plot, much overgrown with burdock, pig-weed,
apple-peru, and such unsightly vegetation, which evidently found
something congenial in the soil that had so early borne the black
flower of civilized society, a prison. But, on one side of the
portal, and rooted almost at the threshold, was a wild rose-bush,
covered, in this month of June, with its delicate gems, which might
be imagined to offer their fragrance and fragile beauty to the
prisoner as he went in, and to the condemned criminal as he came
forth to his doom, in token that the deep heart of Nature could
pity and be kind to him.
This rose-bush, by a strange chance, has been
kept alive in history; but whether it had merely survived out of
the stern old wilderness, so long after the fall of the gigantic
pines and oaks that originally overshadowed it,—or whether, as
there is fair authority for believing, it had sprung up under the
footsteps of the sainted Ann Hutchinson, as she entered the
prison-door,—we shall not take upon us to determine.3 Finding it so
directly on the threshold of our narrative, which is now about to
issue from that inauspicious portal, we could hardly do otherwise
than pluck one of its flowers and present it to the reader. It may
serve, let us hope, to symbolize some sweet moral blossom, that may
be found along the track, or relieve the darkening close of a tale
of human frailty and sorrow.