Chapter 21 Bingo

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Chapter 21 BingoBINGO“...after sustaining thegaze of the multitudethrough sevenmiserable years as anecessity, a penance,and something which itwas stern religion toendure...” (203)“They were rough-lookingdesperadoes,with sun-blackened faces..immensity ofbeard..short trousers..confinedabout..waist by belts..claspedwith a..plate ofgold..sustaining..asword...beneath their broad-brimmed hats of palm-leaf,gleamed eyes wh“On this publicholiday, as on allother occasions, forseven years past,Hester was clad in agarment of coarsegray cloth.” (203)“Heremembersthee a littlebabe, mychild.” (205)“Pearl was decked outwith airy gayety...Thedress, so proper was itto little Pearl, seemedan effluence, orinevitable developmentand outwardmanifestation of hercharacter…” (204).“..Indians in their savage fineryof curiously embroidereddeerskin robes, wampum-belts, red and yellow ochre,and feathers, and armed withthe bow and arrow and stone-headed spear stood apart,with countenances of inflexiblegravity...” (208).“...a smile which -across the wide andbustling square, andthrough all the talk andlaughter, and variousthoughts, moods, andinterests of the crowd-conveyed secret andfearful meaning.” (211)“...a small vacant area - asort of magic circle - hadformed itself about her,into which, though thepeople were elbowingone another at a littledistance, none ventured,or felt disposed, tointrude.” (210)“I must bid the stewardmake ready one moreberth than youbargained for...that thisphysician here—Chillingworth, he callshimself—is minded totry my cabin-fare withyou,” (210).The NewEnglandHoliday“They transgressed,withoutfear or scruple,the rules ofbehaviour that were bindingon all others;smoking tobaccounder..beadle’s..nose..quaffing,at theirpleasure,draughts of wine oraqua-vitae from pocket-flasks,which they..tendered tothe gap“He washed his sootyface, and put on hisSabbath-day clothes,and looks as if he wouldgladly be merry, if anykind body would onlyteach him how!” (205)FreeSpace!“They wait to see theprocession pass...For theGovernor and themagistrates are to go by,and the ministers, and allthe great people andgood people, with themusic, and the soldiersmarching before them,”(205).“And will he holdout both his handsto me, as whenthou ledst me tohim from thebrookside?” (205).“Roger Chillingworth,the physician, was seento enter the market-place, in close andfamiliar talk with thecommander of thequestionable vessel.”(209)“...HesterPrynne andlittle Pearl cameinto themarketplace.”(202)“But he will notgreet thee to-day; nor mustthou greethim,” (205).“In the dark of night-timehe calls us to him, andholds thy hand and mine,as when we stood thescaffold yonder... Buthere, in the sunny day,among all the people, heknows us not; nor mustwe know him!” (205)“The picture of humanlife in the marketplace,though its general tintwas the sad graw,brown, or black of theEnglish emigrants, wasyer enlivened by somediversity of hue.” (208)“But, at that instant,she beheld old RogerChillingworth himself,standing in theremotest corner of themarketplace, andsmiling at her...” (211)“They knoweach other well,indeed. Theyhave long dwelttogether.” (210)“And willthe ministerbe there?”(205).“As regarded theshipmaster,however, all waslooked upon aspertaining to thecharacter, as to afish his glisteningscales.” (209)“The dress,soproper..to..Pearl,seemed aneffluence,or inevitabledevelopment..manifestation ofher character,no more to beseparated from her than themany-hued brilliancy from abutterfly’s wing,or the paintedglory from the leaf of a brightfl