Chapter 21 Bingo
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Chapter 21 Bingo
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“...after sustaining the
gaze of the multitude
through seven
miserable years as a
necessity, a penance,
and something which it
was stern religion to
endure...” (203)
“They were rough-looking
desperadoes,with sun-
blackened faces..immensity of
beard..short trousers..confined
about..waist by belts..clasped
with a..plate of
gold..sustaining..a
sword...beneath their broad-
brimmed hats of palm-leaf,
gleamed eyes wh
“On this public
holiday, as on all
other occasions, for
seven years past,
Hester was clad in a
garment of coarse
gray cloth.” (203)
“He
remembers
thee a little
babe, my
child.” (205)
“Pearl was decked out
with airy gayety...The
dress, so proper was it
to little Pearl, seemed
an effluence, or
inevitable development
and outward
manifestation of her
character…” (204).
“..Indians in their savage finery
of curiously embroidered
deerskin robes, wampum-
belts, red and yellow ochre,
and feathers, and armed with
the bow and arrow and stone-
headed spear stood apart,
with countenances of inflexible
gravity...” (208).
“...a smile which -
across the wide and
bustling square, and
through all the talk and
laughter, and various
thoughts, moods, and
interests of the crowd-
conveyed secret and
fearful meaning.” (211)
“...a small vacant area - a
sort of magic circle - had
formed itself about her,
into which, though the
people were elbowing
one another at a little
distance, none ventured,
or felt disposed, to
intrude.” (210)
“I must bid the steward
make ready one more
berth than you
bargained for...that this
physician here—
Chillingworth, he calls
himself—is minded to
try my cabin-fare with
you,” (210).
The New
England
Holiday
“They transgressed,without
fear or scruple,the rules of
behaviour that were binding
on all others;smoking tobacco
under..beadle’s..
nose..quaffing,at their
pleasure,draughts of wine or
aqua-vitae from pocket-
flasks,which they..tendered to
the gap
“He washed his sooty
face, and put on his
Sabbath-day clothes,
and looks as if he would
gladly be merry, if any
kind body would only
teach him how!” (205)
Free
Space!
“They wait to see the
procession pass...For the
Governor and the
magistrates are to go by,
and the ministers, and all
the great people and
good people, with the
music, and the soldiers
marching before them,”
(205).
“And will he hold
out both his hands
to me, as when
thou ledst me to
him from the
brookside?” (205).
“Roger Chillingworth,
the physician, was seen
to enter the market-
place, in close and
familiar talk with the
commander of the
questionable vessel.”
(209)
“...Hester
Prynne and
little Pearl came
into the
marketplace.”
(202)
“But he will not
greet thee to-
day; nor must
thou greet
him,” (205).
“In the dark of night-time
he calls us to him, and
holds thy hand and mine,
as when we stood the
scaffold yonder... But
here, in the sunny day,
among all the people, he
knows us not; nor must
we know him!” (205)
“The picture of human
life in the marketplace,
though its general tint
was the sad graw,
brown, or black of the
English emigrants, was
yer enlivened by some
diversity of hue.” (208)
“But, at that instant,
she beheld old Roger
Chillingworth himself,
standing in the
remotest corner of the
marketplace, and
smiling at her...” (211)
“They know
each other well,
indeed. They
have long dwelt
together.” (210)
“And will
the minister
be there?”
(205).
“As regarded the
shipmaster,
however, all was
looked upon as
pertaining to the
character, as to a
fish his glistening
scales.” (209)
“The dress,so
proper..to..Pearl,seemed an
effluence,or inevitable
development..manifestation of
her character,no more to be
separated from her than the
many-hued brilliancy from a
butterfly’s wing,or the painted
glory from the leaf of a bright
fl