資料彙整   /  概念  /  [美]十七世紀:1. 重要文獻 The Seventeenth Century: Major Texts
資源型式: 自行填入
提供者:
            

Major Works

 
 Thomas Shepard: Preface to Peter Bulkeley's Sermons (1651)

 John Winthrop

 Anne Bradstreet

 Samuel Sewall

 Charles Downey, Los Angeles Times Syndicate

 
 
 Thomas Shepard: Preface to Peter Bulkeley's Sermons (1651)
  The blessed God hath evermore delighted to reveal and communicate himself by way of Covenant. He might have done good to man before his fall, as also since his fall, without binding himself in the bond of Covenant; Noah, Abraham, and David, Jews, Ge ntiles, might have had the blessings intended, without any promise of Covenant. But the Lord's heart is so full of love (especially to His own) that it cannot be contained so long within the bounds of secrecy--viz. from God's eternal purpose to the actual accomplishment of good things intended--but it must aforehand overflow and break out into the many streams of a blessed Covenant. The Lord can never get near enough to His people, and thinks He can never get them near enough unto Himself, and therefore unites and binds and fastens them close to Himself, and Himself unto them, by the bonds of a Covenant. And therefore when we b reak our Covenant, and it will not hols us, He takes a faster bond and makes a sure and everlasting Covenant, according to Grace, not according to Works [that is, salvation depends on God's election of us, not our good deeds]; and that shall hold His peop le firm unto Himself, and hold Himself close and fast unto them, that He may never depart from us.

Oh! the depth of God's grace herein: that when sinful man deservres never to have the least good word from Him, that He should open His whole heart and p urpose to him in a Covenant; that when he deserves nothing else but separation from God, and to be driven up and down the world as a vagabond, or as dried leaves fallen from our God, that yet the Almighty God cannot be content with it, but must make Himself to us, and us to Himself, more sure and near than ever before! And is not this Covenant then (Christian reader) worth thy looking into and searching after? Surely never was there a time wherein the Lord calles to His people to more serious searching into the nature of the Covenant than in these days. . . .

TOP

 
 John Winthrop
 

[October 21, 1636] One Mrs Hutchinson [Anne Hutchinson, 1591-1643, a dissenter in the Massachusetts Bay Colony], a member of the church of Boston, a woman of ready wit and bold spirit, brought over with her two dangerous errors: 1. That the person o f the Holy Spirit dwells in [in fact, is in personal unity with] a justified person [one of God\rquote s Elect]. 2. That no sanctification can help to evidence to us our justification. . . .

[October 25, 1636] The other ministers in the bay, hearing of these things, came to Boston at the time of the general court, and entered in private with them, to the end they might know the certainty of these things; that if need were, they might wr ite the church in Boston about them, to prevent (if it were possible) the dangers, which seemed hereby to hang over that and the rest of the churches. . . .

[November 1, 1637] The court . . . sent for Mrs. Hutchinson and charged her with divers matters, as her keeping two public lectures every week in her house. . . and for reproaching most of the ministers. . . for not preaching a covenant of free grace. . . . [She claimed to the court that God had revealed to her that she would come into New England and be persecuted, and God would ruin the Puritans there for that reason]. So the court proceeded and banished her. . . .

[March 22, 1638] . . .After she was excommunicated, her spirits, which seemed before to be somewhat dejected, revived again, and she glorified in her sufferings, saying, that it was the greatest happiness next to Christ, that ever befell her. . . .

[Roger Williams, another significant banished and excommunicated dissenter, helped Hutchinson settle near Providence, R.I., Williams' colony, outside Massachusetts Bay Colony.]

TOP

 
 Anne Bradstreet
 

"In Memory of my Dear Grandchild Anne Bradstreet Who Deceased June 20, 1669, Being Three Years and Seven Months Old"

[Three of Bradstreet's grandchildren died as infants, Anne being the second]

With troubled heart and trembling hand I write,

The heavens have changed my sorrow to delight.

How oft with disappointment have I met,

When on fading things my hopes have set.

Experience might 'fore this have made me wise,

To value things according to their price.

Was ever stable joy yet found below?

Or perfect bliss without a mixture of woe?

I knew she was but as a withering flower,

That's here today, perhaps gone in an hour;

Like as a bubble, or the brittle glass,

Or like a shadow turning as it was.

More fool then I to look on what was lent

As if mine own, when thus impermanent.

Farewell dear child, thou ne'er shall come to me,

But yet a while, and I shall go to thee;

Mean time my throbbing heart's cheered up with this:

Thou with my Savior art in endless bliss

TOP

   
 Samuel Sewall
 

Diary

Monday, April 29, 1695. The morning is very warm and Sunshiny; in the Afternoon there is Thunder and Lightening, and about 2 p.m. a very extraordinary Storm of Hail, so that the ground was made white with it, as with the blossoms when fallen; 'twas as big as pistoll and Musquet Bullets; It broke of the Glass of the new House about 480 Quarells [squares] of the Front; of Mr. Sergeant's about as much. . . . Many Hail-Stones broke throw the Glass and flew to the middle of the Room, or farther: People afterward Gazed upon the House to see its Ruins. I got Mr. Mather [the Reverend Cotton Mather, Sewall's pastor, who was visiting for dinner at the time] to pray with us after this awfull Providence; He told God He had broken the brittle part of our house, and prayd that we might be ready for the time when our Clay-Tabernacles [our bodies] should be broken. . . .

TOP

   
 Charles Downey, Los Angeles Times Syndicate
  "The First Thanksgiving"

--by Charles Downey, Los Angeles Times Syndicate

[The first Thanksgiving was not held in November, and the meal probably included no Turkey. If you wanted to recreate the first Thanksgiving. . .] . . . To be true to the occasion, you would hold the feast in late September or early October. Then, you would eat and make merry for at least three days. . . . You would not call the holiday Thanksgiving but a "harvest home" festival. To really drive home the point, call yourself a "Saint," not a Puritan, dress up in some colorful clothes, put on a feathered cap. . . . Then, dig into a second helping of eel. . . .

The harvest home festival started in the Middle Ages and was held when a good crop was brought in. . . . Whenever it was held, the occasion was marked by food and merry-making. To the first English settlers to America, the word "thanksgiving" did not denote a holiday but a day spent in church praying. The myth of the black-and-white garbed Puritan arose because most people of the time were pictured in black--their Sunday finery--when they had their portraits painted. Black was a very expensive dye in the 1620s and quickly faded to purple, making the garb the most expensive. The easiest dyes, all takeb from vegetables, were red, yellow, and green. The first English settlers actually were a colorful lot who wore multi-hued capes, velvet vests with brass buttons, lace and quilted caps and soft boots [of suede]. . . . Inventories from the period show that church leaders even wore green and red underwear. . . .

. . . Our Puritan forefathers from England actually were essentially lusty Elizabethans who valued wit and humor and knew how to have fun. A weekly duty for every housewife was the making of beer. Hard cider and a liquor that tasted like brandy were also available. The "Saints" drank alcohol because they considered drinking water to be bad for their health. . . [The "Saints" ate few turkeys, but lots of eels.] Cranberries aren't mentioned in the records at Plimouth until 1650. Probably because it required too much sugar to make the bitter berries tasty. Turkeys became associated with Thanksgiving when Abraham Lincoln made the holiday a national one in 1863. The real treat for the English at the first Thanksgiving was venison. Local Indians, who outnumbered the English 90 to 50, contributed 5 deer to the feast. In England, deer belonged exclusively to royalty and it was against the law for a commoner to eat deer meat. The feast was rounded out by fowl like goose and duck, rabbit, fish, shellfish like clams, and lobster. The tables were also graced with sou ps, meat pies, skillet-fried bread made of corn, dried fruit, and all kinds of wild berries. Researchers claim the English settlers were not too fond of vegetables, but they did eat a lot of squash and pumpkin.

The celebration included singing, dancing, shooting matches among the English with their heavy, clumbsy muskets, and with the Indians, who showed their marksmanship with arrows. One of the popular games of the day, stool ball, was probably the ancestor of today's cricket and perhaps baseball. One player threw the ball while another used a three-legged stool to hit the ball and run to the equivalent of 17th Century bases. They played tug o' war, and saber tossin' . . .--a log, often the size of a small telephone pole, would be thrown as far as possible. . . .

TOP

Copyright ©2009 國科會人文學中心 All Rights Reserved.