Authors: Stephanie Hemphill
Tags: #Trials (Witchcraft), #Juvenile Nonfiction, #Girls & Women, #Witchcraft, #Juvenile Fiction, #Poetry, #Fantasy & Magic, #General, #United States, #Salem (Mass.), #Historical, #Occult fiction, #People & Places, #Fiction, #Salem (Mass.) - History - Colonial period; ca. 1600-1775, #Novels in verse
Margaret Walcott, 17
Outside the Proctors' gutted tavern
a silver-whiskered man balances himself
on his tangled branch cane and hollers,
“Good folk cannot all be witches.
Think ye.”
A crowd gathers round the yelling
like wasps fly to spilled ale.
“Yea,” most of them agree.
Me and Ann and Mercy would
but duck away, except we stroll
with Uncle and Aunt.
They hold us to eye level.
Uncle says, “How know ye, sir?
Speak ye with the Devil?”
The wasps quiet their clamor.
“These girls be a menace!”
“'Tis true.” One calls from the crowd.
I crumble to see it be Isaac.
He motions for me to follow him
after he speaks.
“These girls be innocent,” Uncle says.
Aunt Ann clasps my hand
meaning to reassure me,
telling me to stay with my family.
I know not whether to move my feet
to Isaac or stay.
Margaret Walcott, 17
“Margaret, be you part of the group?”
Ann looks on me like I be a traitor.
“Yea,” I say. “I have nothing
against your group.”
Ann shakes her head.
“We are not fools, you and I,” she says.
“I beg thee, cousin. Thou art given warning.”
I pick up my skirts and march
from the room. I could smash
all around me to shipwreck.
“Think on this well,”
my cousin's voice rattles
down the hallway.
I will pack and leave this house.
I will go back home and stay
quiet in my house till spring
and I wed Isaac. I'll not be ruled
by some little brat and her servant.
“Margaret, that dress looks smart on thee.”
Aunt Ann waves me into her room.
“Didst thou sleep with peace
or were the witches at thee?”
I nod. “The witches were 'bout.”
“Poor dear,” she says.
“Come and stay with me as I spin.”
She drafts the wool between her hands.
“I am so glad that you are here.
Ann needs a proper influence.
She looks to that Mercy.”
Aunt spits as she says the servant's name.
Aunt quits her drafting.
She sits me at her dressing table
and pulls from a box
a necklace of red jewels
liken I never laid eyes 'pon.
“Let me see how this does look on thee.”
Aunt gasps and my jaw does fall wide.
“You shall wear it on thy wedding day.”
“But 'tis veryâ”
Aunt shakes her finger at me, “I insist.”
“Now come, I shall teach you
how best to treadle the wheel.
When you make a wife
you must know these things.”
She lumbers a bit into the chair
but then her foot
be like one possessed and pumps
fast as a horse at gallop.
“You must keep a constant pressure.”
She releases her foot and the threads
do twist apart.
“Now tell me. What witches?
Who didst thou see last night?
John Willard, did he visit thee?
Our old preacher, Reverend Burroughs?
Or perhaps Charlotte Easty, the other
sister of Rebecca Nurse?”
Aunt looks on me
like I be not only
the light in the room,
but the greatest light
in the house.
Margaret Walcott, 17
“Oh, he bites me!”
Ann cries and rubs her arm.
The court orders John Willard
to stop biting his lips
and keep his mouth wide.
Abigail screams
and all eyes draw to her.
Elizabeth's seizures mount
and her joints double and turn
nearly inside out.
Fingers point at the wizard Willard,
but still he claims, “I am innocent
as the child unborn.”
Susannah Sheldon shrieks,
“The Devil whispers in his ear!”
She takes watchful steps
across the courtroom
and collapses ten feet
in front of John Willard.
Constable John Putnam,
another uncle of mine,
carries her forward,
tips a bit under her weight.
They place John Willard's hand
'pon her forehead. Susannah screams
when he touches her
like she's been branded
by a hot iron,
when instead she should silence.
The good folk rumble,
“Why does not the touch test work?
Is Willard not a wizard?”
I be not sure what to do.
Isaac's eyes spear the other girls.
Ann mouths, “Margaret, please.”
I scream loud enough to curdle milk
and tumble into fit, jerk and twitch
better than them all.
I be lifted by Marshal Herrick
and before I feel my feet
leave the ground, my shaking bones
are brushed by the scaly hand
of Goodman Willard.
He touches me, and as the touch test says,
the wickedness flows back into him.
I stop all my rattling.
Pointed fingers and righteous eyes
hang Willard. Order restores.
Ann and even Mercy flash smiles at me
quickly between their spasms.
'Tis Susannah who Mercy severs
with her eyes.
When asked, Goodman Willard
cannot recite the Lord's Prayer,
but stumbles over it
and adds his own words of the Devil.
He must truly be a wizard.
I did then right,
so why does Isaac turn his back?
Mercy Lewis, 17
We huddle quietly down by the stream,
summer's full heat upon our backs,
only Wilson wise enough to seek shade
under the maple tree.
Ann speaks to Susannah in a voice
gentler than was my mother's:
“In court you have fit and scream,
and then when you are touched
by a witch, you are cured.”
Susannah nods, but she looks
as the dandelion seedling
blown by the wind,
as though the meaning of Ann's words
scatters far from her.
I wait for Ann to repeat herself,
or at the least, to see Susannah
acknowledge that she understands.
But Ann and Susannah just smile
at one another.
Abigail pulls a letter from her pocket,
one she swindled from the Reverend's desk.
I read aloud a passage:
“Dear Sir,
Girls in my parish and I hear tell,
throughout Essex County,
are falling to Affliction.
It spreads like the fever.
We cannot find room in our jail
for all the witches. Please advise,
brave Reverend Parris,
what sound words hast thou for me?
My flock trembles afraid.
What say I before them at Sunday lecture?”
I hand her back the letter.
“I know this came not easily to obtain.
Thank ye, Abigail,” I say to her.
Ann acts as if this be of trifle import,
this gift from a child, as if she forgets
Abigail and she are but one and the same age.
Elizabeth bows her head.
“We should pray for their souls.”
Margaret looks at Susannah.
“What be it like in your Salem Town?”
“Oh, they be against the witches.”
Susannah pulls up some blades of grass.
“Yes, of course,” I say. “But more exactly,
what of the seers, how behave they?”
Susannah shrugs.
Margaret and I lean in toward her
and Margaret asks, “Well, how do thy
Mister and Missus treat ye?”
“The Shaws give me my chores,”
she says with a giggle, and looks to Ann.
“Well then, and sometimes they don't.”
“Do you not torment at home?” I ask.
“No. Not so much as when I am about,”
she says. “Is that not as it should be, Miss Ann?”
“Susannah,” I turn her face to me.
“Margaret and I speak to thee at this moment.
Witches do not pinch only
in the courtroom or public squares.”
When Susannah answers me not,
I stand to leave and then, strangely,
so does Margaret. Elizabeth also
stops her praying and rises to return home.
“Come, Abigail.” I offer her my hand.
I expect Ann to rise and join us.
I wait a solid breath. Finally I take steps
away from the riverbank into shorter grass.
Abigail clings tightly to my hand.
She swerves not. She clutches Reverend's
letter to her side and lets me direct the turns,
speed and style of our walk.
Ann runs up behind us.
“Susannah left for her home.”
I look not on her, nor do I stop my walking.
Margaret snickers.
“I am dreadfully sorry,” Ann says.
“It will not happen again.
Mercy, please. Please tell me
now that thou dost forgive me.”
I swirl to Ann
and spin Abigail with me.
I hug Ann and say in grand tone,
“Of course I forgive thee.
We are friends.”
I hold out Abigail's hand
and place Ann's upon it.
“You also are friends.”
Margaret's mouth unhinges,
and she cannot speak to say
how ill this syrup turns her stomach.
She grabs the arm of Elizabeth
and causes them to take swift leave.
Margaret Walcott, 17
“That Mercy believe she be
both morning and night.”
I kick at the tree root in front
of the Griggs's gate.
Elizabeth stares as Doctor Griggs marches
toward us fast enough dust whirls
in his path. He grabs Elizabeth
by the arm, so she stumbles and nearly falls.
“Where ye been?” He looks like a dog
what some other dog stole his bit of meat.
“We were, ah, um,” Elizabeth stutters.
“Praying,” I say, and clasp her hand.
“At the parsonage.”
“Missus Griggs needs your aid!” Doctor Griggs
hollers, but then smiles kindly at me
and swipes his brow with a hankie.
“Ye girls be missing awful lots lately.”
Where Doctor grabbed Elizabeth
a red welt appears on her skin.
She runs into the house.
“Till morrow!” I call after her,
but I can't rightly be sure she hears my words.
Secret of the Girls
Ipswich, Topsfield, Marblehead,
Reading, Andover, Malden,
Boston, Rumney Marsh, Billerica,
Wenham. We see witches
from everywhere, their names
on the wind, whispered tree to tree.
We see specters all, feel
them choked about our necks,
pricking us, raking us.
We pass hand to hand the name
of the witch. Who heard it first,
none can rightly say,
just as none can rightly know
which way the wind blew in first.
All you know is
you must change sail
to catch it.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
Mother stands like Father.
She ought wear his hat
and ride his mare.
Father lifts Mercy into the carriage
like a coachman.
“For how long will she be gone?”
I ask Margaret,
and she just smiles.
“For how long?”
I demand of Mother,
and she pats my head.
“For how long?” I beg Father.
“As long as she is needed, I suppose,”
he says.
Mercy Lewis, 17
Constable Putnam
is almost too large
for his chair at the table.
Big as a bear
but mild as an old hound,
they call him Giant,
for he has to bend his head
to cross through the doorway.
“Mercy, sit ye near the stove
by the children.”
The Giant's wife
tucks me onto the bench
so I sit many persons away
from her husband.
“The new governor established
a Court of Oyer and Terminer,
likes of which you'll be testifying in.”
Constable's overgrown teeth stick
with food as he chews.
“Pardon, sir,” I say.
“But where will the court
be heldâin the meetinghouse
or Ingersoll's ordinary?
“Not a one,” he says.
“It be held in Salem Town
in the courtroom of the Townhouse.
A jury will hear the trial
and decide if the witches hang.”
Hanging. I cannot carry the spoon
to my mouth. Everything
in my bowl suddenly reeks
of fish scales and rotted meat.
I look at Missus.
“I am not well. Might I
please go and lie down?”
First time she smiles at me,
her words fast and excitable,
“See you a specter?”
“No, my stomach has unrest.”
Her face sags downward.
She purses her lips.
“Fine, then, off you to bed.”
The room where I board is darker
than my old servant's quarters;
and without Wilson's two eyes as tapers
this chamber's black devours me.
Out the window an owl,
the king of the night,
blinks his gray-green eyes.
He cries plaintive hoots,
then spreads his wings
and twists his sorrowful neck,
as though he might dive
from his perch
and bury himself
once and for all
in the underbrush.