This time of year, with
troubles piled high and emotions bubbling to a steam, write what is in your
heart. It will be best. With that in mind, Happy Holidays, and a fictional
tribute to First Church of Christ, Lancaster.
"Sleep in Peace/The Bulfinch Mice"
Far below the bell tower in
the old town church, the Bulfinch Mice slept, swirled in a heap beneath the
stairwell, heads and tails a tangle. Every hour, throughout the night and day, the
Paul Revere bell rang out in the sky above Lancaster. When they were resting
lightly, the bell's bonging vibration awoke them, like an alarm clock. Each
time, Papa Mouse took an inventory: “Thayer?” Here. “Wintle?” Here.
“Bart?” Here. “Otto?” Here. “Ivan?” Here. “Little Nattie?” Here, Papa.
Once certain that everyone
was safely in the crowded nest, Papa would relax. If it was not time to get up,
everyone drifted back to sleep.
During the day, the Bulfinch
mice slept or played quietly, since people were often inside the church. They
preferred to explore during the evening. “Quiet by day, busy by night,” Papa
Mouse said often. “That’s my motto.” Mama Mouse hugged them each, and told them,
“Don’t get into trouble.”
In spring and summer, when
the air warmed the building around them, the Bulfinch mice roamed the hallways,
always hiding, quietly watching the people in the church and listening very
especially hard. The Bulfinch mice kept the memories, so listening was
important. The tiny family would watch and listen until the long cold winter returned,
and then they would snuggle tight in the nest, and share what they’d heard and
seen. Next, Mama and Papa would repeat the old stories, memories passed down
through the generations of church mice, so that history lived on.
They had lived in First
Church for as long as forever—since mice can’t remember very far back. They
have short lives and uncommonly short memories, giving them good reason to retell
their history each night.
Mice had always lived in
Lancaster, running along the Nashua and scurrying through the fields. It was
only in recent centuries that they had moved below the church steeple. By now,
they had many stories, for they had witnessed the town's history, as well as
happenings in the church, silently watching and listening, and remembering. If
you are a mouse—a memory mouse, that is—you must keep your eyes and ears open,
and notice what is important. When do the people congregate? Where are the
cookies stored? Who runs the fastest? And, of course, where are the hidey
holes? The smartest mice knew all the answers, which helped them live the
longest. Among mice, the Bulfinch memory keepers were smart, which was why they
were expected to hand down the town stories.
Uncles and aunties, momma
and poppa mice, and many, many cousins lived in the town, and visited the great
church on special occasions to share good times and bad with each other. But
only the Bulfinch Mice lived there. They were direct descendants of the pioneers—the
great Thayer Mouse family. That illustrious family had ten or twenty baby mice,
each of whom had long since had ten or twenty or even thirty more babies, who grew
up and had more children, who had more children, who had even more children
over the many, many, many, many years the Fifth Meeting House had stood on the
Town Green. Most of them left the church to live in the Thayer mansions or the
Town Hall, and in many of the old houses in town.
But the Bulfinch family
stayed put, ready to do their job.
“Wake up, mousekins!” Thayer
mouse’s loud squeal alerted the babies, and their heads popped up. Mama and
Papa Mouse sprang up, looking around sharply, and sniffing the air.
“What is it, Thayer? Why did
you yell like that? I don’t see anything,” said Papa Mouse.
“It’s time,” said Thayer. “Time
to celebrate.”
Thayer was most interested
in history. He loved all of the special days when people and children crowded
the sanctuary, talking and singing. He kept track of each notable occasion, so
that the mice could witness them. “It’s history in the making,” he pronounced,
very authoritatively. “We must bear witness.”
“But what is today?” the others asked, all at once.
"Is it time to
eat?" asked Otto, who mainly thought about food.
“It’s Christmas Eve,” said
Thayer. “People will sing carols and hug one another more closely than usual.
And they’ll leave plenty of cough drops and cookie crumbs in the pews when they
leave.” They knew the children always came to church with their pockets
stuffed.
“Oh, goody,” said Little
Nattie. “Let the party begin!”
“Not just yet,” Mama Mouse
warned. “There are some things we have to talk about first.” The young mice crowded
in front of her to listen.
“Can anyone tell me what
Christmas is all about?” She nodded to Thayer softly, and said, “Not yet, son;
let’s see if someone else knows the answer.”
The little mice looked at
each other with questioning faces. “If it’s about food, I’ll be there,” said
Otto, wiggling his sensitive nose. “I need to eat.”
“That’s part of it, Otto,”
said Mama Mouse. “What else?”
“I think it’s about music!”
Bart shouted. “Loud organ music and people singing. Fa-la-la-la,” he sang.
“Well, that’s part of it,
too, Bart,” Mama Mouse said, “but what else?”
“It’s an old story,” said
Wintle, who loved to tell tales. “And the story is about a Mama and a Papa, and
a Baby born outside, with the sheep and the goats around them, and the stars
bright in the sky.”
“Very good, Wintle,” Mama
Mouse said. “You’re all doing a very good job of remembering. But what else is
Christmas about?”
“I know!” said Ivan and
Nattie, shouting at once.
“Ivan?” said Mama. “What can
you tell us?”
“Christmas is about everyone
being happy that the baby is born, and everyone being good to each other, and
safe. The mice didn’t need to fear the cat the night the baby was born. And the
dogs didn’t bark at the sheep. Everyone stayed friends.”
“And everything was
peaceful,” said Nattie. “The stars shone above the baby’s crib, and the moon flooded
the land around them. And bird creatures who flew—angels they were called—sang
for the baby and his family.”
“Oh, you children are just
wonderful at remembering,” Mama said. “Would you like to watch the Christmas
Eve service today?”
They yelled their
approval—hoorays and cheers that rang through the room until Mama hushed them.
“It’s not time yet,” she said. “You must still be quiet.”
So they waited through the long,
quiet afternoon, now and then dreaming of doughnut bits and cookies, and hoping
the children would leave plenty of crumbs behind. In their sleep, their little
noses wiggled with anticipation. When the clock rang three times, and then once
more, the children stretched and gathered together. They were going to the
Children’s Christmas Eve service in the First Church. Everyone had to look neat
and clean.
After the bell tolled four
times, children in warm coats and bright, snug caps came up the front steps and
into the church with their parents. If they were too loud, their parents
shushed them, and if they ran in the aisles, their parents managed to grab them
by the elbow and sit them down in a pew, warning looks on their faces.
The Bulfinch mice were quite
excited to see the crowd gather—it wasn’t often there was a service just for
children, and they were glad to be part of it. They watched as the families
sang Christmas carols, loudly and partly off-key. Bart, who loved music, sang
right along—his voice a squeal, but in tune. Upstairs, near where the mice were
hiding, the organist played along with the children and their parents. They
sang “It Came Upon a Midnight Clear,” and Papa Mouse said, “Remember,
mousekins. This was written by a minister of this church. His name was Pastor
Sears, and the mice back then loved him for his kindness.”
“Yes, Papa, we will,” they
whispered, almost all at the same time, smiling happily at the beautiful song.
Later, the mice listened as
the pastor told the children the legend of the first Christmas. “Remember this
story,” Mama Mouse said. “It’s part of their history here.” “Yes, Mama, we
will,” they whispered, nodding their heads and twitching their ears.
The children sang other
hymns—“Angels we Have Heard on High,” “Joy to the World” and “It Came Upon a
Midnight Clear.” They even sang “Frosty the Snowman,” which the mice children
had never heard, but liked very much. And as the service ended, everyone,
including Bart, sang “Silent Night,” the Bulfinch Mouse family’s favorite hymn.
“It reminds me of snow, and happiness,” said Bart. “It reminds me of
snowflakes,” said Nattie. “It reminds me of starry nights,” said Ivan. “And
dinner!” shouted Otto, always thinking about food.
“It reminds me of families,”
said Wintle.
“And what do you think of
when you hear ‘Silent Night,’ Thayer?” asked Mama Mouse.
“I think about how much we
love each other, Mama,” Thayer said. “And about how much all the animals and
children loved the baby born on Christmas. And it makes me happy inside.”
Mama smiled, and Papa patted
Thayer on the ears. They were proud of their little family.
“It’s time for us to go
downstairs, children,” he said. “With any luck, there’ll be some food left in
the pews. But we must hurry. There’ll be another service later on.”
They scuttled through the
church, squeaking softly when they did find a few crumbs left by a hurried
child. Ivan collected his favorite, sugar cookie pieces, and Nattie waved a
sparkly hair bow in her tail, so happy to have found a treasure.
Later, the children heard
the hymns once more as people gathered for the late service—a large crowd this
time, singing and holding candles in the dark as the voices of “Silent Night”
filled the room. Mama and Papa hurried the children back to the nest, to rest
before they, too, nibbled on a Christmas meal.
Outside First Church, snow
fell, softly fell, to the tree tops, and the roof tops, and then covered the Town
Green. Far below the snow-draped bell tower and the snow-covered eaves, out of
sight and out of hearing, the Bulfinch mice stirred as the Paul Revere bell
pealed—12 times for midnight—and the people left the church, wishing each other
a “Merry Christmas.”
“Merry Christmas to you,
children,” said Mama Mouse, kissing each of their little heads.
“And sleep in peace,” said Papa.
With a loud yawn, he curled around them and drifted off to sleep.
The stories were saved for
another telling.
Ann Connery Frantz
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