 
       
      the pictures. The countryman refused, and
 the informer did the act himself, and was
 hooted by the boys all the way home. The
 first thing he did was to snatch up a gun, and
 threaten the boys, to which they replied by
 snowballing his house. He fired from a
 window and killed a boy—an innocent little
 fellow, who had never dreamed of being a
 martyr so early, if at all, and who was
declared not to have been concerned in throwing
 the snowballs—no harm if he had. Boys
 would be no boys if they were too timid or
 proper- behaved to snowball a fellow who
destroyed their pictures, and then took up a
 gun when they told him their minds about it.
 But here was a martyr already; and so
 stands this young fellow in history. He was
 the first person slain in the American
revolution, which instituted a new order of
government and a new method of social existence
in the world. Not all Boston only, but a great
 number of citizens from the country attended
 his funeral. All were aware of something
 portentous in the solemnity of the funeral of
that boy; and not a few said to each other
 that another great act in the world's history
 had opened over his grave. Snowballs
immediately became significant, as every incident
 becomes typical in times of strong popular
 excitement. Eleven days after the death of
 the first victim the first great riot occurred,
 and it began with snowballing a sentinel.
 The more soldiers gathered, or were
 marched to the spot, the more snowballs
 were thrown, till, their patience being
exhausted, they fired, in consequence of some
 unknown person having uttered the word
 "fire!" Three persons were killed, several
 were wounded; and the revolution was begun.
It is a marked feature of that time that
 the soldiers went about with bludgeons,
when not allowed to carry other arms,
threatening and using overbearing language to
 every citizen who looked them in the face.
 We shall find a parallel to this, as well as
 to other incidents, when we glance over the
 events of the present summer.
Next came the curious affair of the tea.
 It was hoped in England, and by the royalists
 in America, that tea would be admitted when
 other articles were not, because it was sent
 by the East India Company; but tea was
 taxed without the consent of the colonists,
 like other articles; and it was therefore
forbidden, after a public meeting of the
citizens, to be landed. The merchants to whom
 it was consigned refused to say that they
 would not receive it; but, alarmed by sundry
tokens that this was to be the occasion of
 conflict, they proposed to advise their British
 correspondents to take back the tea. This
 was not enough. The tea should not even
 pass the custom-house, it was decided; and
 twenty-five men were set to watch over it
 to prevent its being touched by friend or
 foe. A public meeting was held, which
 disowned the governor's order to disperse,
 and at which it was avowed that they must
 fight for their rights and liberties, or lose
 them. Summonses were sent through the
 state for the citizens of outlying places to come
 into Boston, and witness the existing state of
things, and see what should be done. There
 would have been a battle about the tea, if a
 company of unknown men had not ventured
 upon a curious proceeding to render it
unnecessary. The watch consisted, as we have
 said, of twenty-five men. Double that number
 retired from the meeting, turned their coats,
 and some say otherwise disguised themselves,
 quietly went on board in the dusk, and
 emptied out all the tea into the dock. This
 was the true declaration of war against Great
 Britain by her North American colonies. This
 was the act by which some fifty gentlemen of
Boston put their necks in peril, and committed
 themselves and their families to the dire
 chances of a great revolution. Tender wives
 and discreet children in fifty houses forbore
 to ask, that late autumn night, where the
 head of the house had been. One such wife
 there was, who, thinking her husband's shoes
 might be damp, took them up, when he had
 put on his slippers, to dry them, and found
in them a quantity of tea. She concealed her
 consternation, emptied and wiped them
carefully, shook the rest of his clothes, and asked
 no questions till the King of England ceased
 to have power in the United States.
A great and memorable revolution was
 that, ushered in by these incidents.
Incidents more solemn and more striking seem
 now, in this summer of eighteen hundred and
 fifty-four, to indicate that a change not less
 weighty is at hand. Massachusetts is now a
 sovereign State, and Boston is a metropolis.
 The inhabitants have now been trained in
 political action for eighty years; and that
action has made them so proud of their
 nationality, such devout worshippers of their
 Federal Union, that any great and general
 commotion, political or social, must proceed
 from some prodigious cause, and involve vast
 consequences. What has just been, and is
 still, happening at Boston, does indeed deserve
the most earnest attention of all who are
 interested in human welfare and social
wisdom.
After Massachusetts became a sovereign
 State, her people abolished negro slavery—
chiefly, it may be observed, through the
sensible, persevering, and most virtuous efforts
 of a negro woman, called Mum Bet, to obtain
 her own freedom. She got it; and that of all her
race followed. Many years after, Massachusetts
made a law like that of England,
 whereby every slave that touches her soil
 becomes free. Other of the New England
 States made a similar law; and the inhabitants
fondly believed that they had done with
 negro slavery for ever. But, alas! they were
 in federal union with slave States, which have
found means, through the apathy or timidity,
 or worse, of the free States, to control the
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