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
Carrying the wool to town,
I feel as my feet are logs,
large to lift, and I can't manage
their weight. My eyelids flutter
and I must be dreaming him,
Isaac, or maybe he be there,
for someone do catch me
before my head hits the road.
“Margaret, ye be whiter
than a soul and feel as a bag
of bones in my hands,” Isaac says
as he lifts me up. He carries me
into my uncle's ordinary
and spoons soup into my mouth.
“When last didst thou eat?”
“I can't rightly say.” My tears
fall heavy as I cling to his arm.
I push away the spoon.
“No, thou must eat,” Isaac says,
his voice soft as a rabbit's back.
But then it cracks with thunder:
“'Tis them girls and their witches
been starving you. 'Tis that Mercy Lewis.”
Isaac stands liken he might put a fist
into something.
“Don't leave me,” I say. “Please, I beg thee.”
I put myself to knees before him.
“Take me back.”
He holds up my chin.
“Farrars do not hang folk.
We do not call our Christian neighbors
witch. Dost thou understand?”
I wrap my arms around his legs.
“Yes, Margaret Farrar sees not.”
Isaac sits me down.
“A Farrar woman sees not.
She speaks not.
She must be a good Christian woman.”
He dunks bread into my porringer
and feeds me. “She must be hearty
and strong to raise me sons.”
I nod my head.
“Pray well and the Lord
shall forgive ye and we shall
be wed as planned.”
I move to wrap my arms
round Isaac, but he holds up
his hand. “We do not show
our affection in public.”
“Yes, sir,” I say.
Isaac's eyes wander to the daughter
of the traveling merchant
in the smart blue frock
across the room,
but I just clasp my hands
and bow my head
and pray.
October 1692
Holiday ends.
Time to unpack
your bags and launder
your clothes.
Some stay on the road,
refuse to reenter
home and resume
regular life,
the sunrise-to-sunset
day of cooking,
spinning, tending, studyâ
pierced with the dagger of silence.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
A stranger beats on our door,
a man the height and hat size
of my father, his arms heavy
with a young boy.
“Sorry to bother ye, sir,
but they say you have the sight
here, and I thought someone
might tell of who hurts my son.”
The man's arms buckle,
and he nearly drops his son.
“Set the boy down, good sir.
Take rest. The Devil will out.
Ann can tell ye who afflicts
your son,” Father says.
He beckons me with a curled finger.
I close my eyes and raise
my hands above the boy.
His skin looks as though
he were dusted in chalk.
“'Tis Goody Cary beats the boy
till he cannot breathe,” I tell them.
“Goody Cary is a tried witch,”
Father says.
The man scratches his scalp.
“'Tis not Goody Obinson
that afflicts him? The old woman
half blind and all insane?”
No one breathes; for one moment
Father, the visitor and I
just stare at one another.
I let go my held breath and ask,
“Be she crazed and white-haired?”
“Yes, that be her,” the man says,
almost smiling. He smooths
his hand across his son's forehead.
The boy coughs and sits up,
color pouring into him
as he drinks the water
Father provides.
“He is coming healed!”
The boy's father falls to his knees.
“Praise the Lord!”
We pray for an hour,
no words except prayers
between us.
“Not all believe we must fight
the Devil, but I see proof today.”
The man tips his hat.
“My own Reverend, Increase Mather,
says to me, âDo you not think
there is a God in Boston,
that you should go to the Devil in Salem
for advice?'”
The man shakes my father's hand.
“No devil I know cures a child.”
He and his son leave our home.
They leave no scent of their boots on our floor,
but the words that Reverend Mather spokeâ
those cling to every fabric in the room.
Margaret Walcott, 17
“We've been called to Gloucester
for our spectral vision,” Ann says.
She crosses to stand aside me
as I poke at the crumbled logs
so the fire stays lit. When I say nothing,
she asks me, “What be the matter?”
“I can't go,” I say, and feel
the scorn spread across Ann's face.
“You preached about remaining
strong and united!” She kicks the embers.
Ann's boot catches flame.
I stomp it out and she squeals
like I severed her foot.
“Make not such a fuss,” I say.
I take her hands. “Isaac⦔ I begin,
but Ann boils a broth of anger.
I burn my hands
trying to touch her.
“You will not understand.
But I can't go with you.
I can't ever again. I be done.”
Ann screams, a wail what rattles
the chair. I step back from her.
Her father bounds into the room.
“What be about?”
Ann collapses in a faint,
and Uncle Thomas looks to me.
I shrug. “I can't see the Invisible World.
I know not who torments her.”
Ann kicks. She catches me
under the chin, and my jaw
clenches together.
Ann recovers from her spell
and says, “Margaret cannot
see or speak anymore.
I will go with Abigail Williams
to Gloucester to name the witches.”
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
Mercy winds up the path.
She squints her eyes.
In her arms she lugs a heavy bag.
I want to rush to meet her.
I wish to cling to her skirt,
and fall to my knees,
but I remain at the door.
The light behind her halos her
like an angel.
“Please help me bring this bag inside,”
she says.
I refuse, but watch her
stagger down the path
like an unsteady mare.
She unloads candlesticks
and chocolate pots, chalices
and newly soled shoes from her bag.
I almost wonder if she did not
steal from my uncle the Constable.
“Margaret be done. She sees no more.
She will marry Isaac in the spring,” I say.
Mercy nods at me as if this information
were widespread as the ocean
when I know that only my family
knows of these plans.
“There are papers circulating
against the trials. Know you of
this
?”
Mercy asks me.
I shake my head “No.”
Father smoked his pipe late
into the night last evening.
The smoke floated me to sleep
as his footsteps paced the floor,
but I heard no talk.
Mercy looks at me as though I am
worth very little, like counterfeit coin,
and says, “Reverend Increase Mather
wrote a paper saying that spectral evidence
cannot be used in court and that we afflicted girls
may be deluded and should not be consulted.”
She lies down on the bed, a grayish color
to her face, and pulls the sheet round her neck.
“Constable's wife sent me back after she heard this.
Said we girls cannot be trusted.”
“Mercy.” I move to stroke her head,
but she flinches away. “We can fight this,” I say.
“This is over, Ann. There is no more
Invisible World. And we should rejoice.
We have done enough.” Her voice hollows then.
“Please let me alone. I feel ill.”
I stomp outside without my cloak
and try to shiver off my desire
to break into a storm of yelling
and pounding and hurting
anyone who comes my way.
November 1692
After a fire rages,
the forest path dusts away.
It may be safe to walk,
but where do you go
when all directions wear
the same black ashen despair?
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
Father closes the meetinghouse door,
the room empty and full of shadows.
The boarded windows clatter.
Father ushers me to the first pew,
then paces before me, his hands
clasped behind his back.
He grasps a pamphlet.
“Ann, a man who perpetuates
a lie is a fool, but a man who perpetuates
a child's lie is an idiot. There are manyӉ
he shakes the paperâ“who now say
to consult you afflicted girls
is to consult the ruling devils.”
Father grabs me by the wrist.
“You make me not a fool, child?
You are truly bewitched, are you not?
I ask ye alone, in the house of the Lord,
see you witches?”
I tremble. I stare forward, mute.
He shakes me. “All these months
of writhing and screaming and ye stay silent now?
Has a witch removed your tongue?”
I try to nod, but cannot make the motion.
Father slaps my face.
The sting forces out tears
like when a cup overflows,
but still I do not move or speak.
Unsure whether to stroke my head
or whip me, he picks me up
and lays me down on the bench.
“Well, ye certainly are possessed
if ye are not bewitched.”
Father throws down the pamphlet.
He says to the rafters,
“Reverend Increase Mather and his
Cases of Conscience Concerning Evil Spirits
Personating Menâ
he gathers forces against us
who fight the Devil for you in Salem, Lord.
He comes at us well-armed and well-manned.”
Mercy Lewis, 17
“She will mind the children
and hang the wash.
She will jar the food for winter.”
The volume of her voice increases
like a drunken soldier's
as she wobbles near the door.
“Out of that bed, girl,”
the Missus orders me.
I feel withered like the air
has been sucked from my body,
but I dress with haste
and begin scrubbing and chasing
the whining children. I pen up
the child old enough to crawl
by turning the benches
round the table on their sides.
Ann Jr. pinches my waist
and I screech, then smile.
Perhaps Ann will help me
clean the basin of dishes.
She picks up a teacup
and dries the porcelain.
“Thank you, Ann,” I say.
Ann leans over as if
to kiss my cheek, and whispers,
“If you are not with us,
you are against us.”
She yanks out a lock of my hair.
I scream and Ann smashes
the teacup to the ground.
The baby and the toddler howl.
“Mother!” Ann yells and produces
tears the size of coins.
“Mercy, what have you done?”
Missus slaps me sound
across the face, a whack
that echoes through the house.
Ann says to her mother,
“But Mercy did not mean
to break the cup. It was the witches.”
Her mother strokes Ann's head,
does not look at me and shuttles
Ann into the parlor to lie down
beside her.
Ann turns back to me
with the Devil's smile.
Mercy Lewis, 17
“Mercy.” The trembling voice
taps my shoulder while I trudge
through snow and ice
to gather stove wood.
Elizabeth stoops to help me.
“I can see no more devils and death,
speak no more lies.
I can no longer be a seer.”
“You never did wish to be a seer,”
I say, and stack my arms full
as a logger's boy.
“What shall I do?”
Elizabeth's words test my hearing
against the harsh wind.
I would rather swallow
my advice than utter it,
but I say,
“Return to your life before.”
Elizabeth nods as we set down the wood.
I feed the fire as she says,
“Remember that day
we tore off our stockings
and walked in the stream?”
Elizabeth giggles.
“And, did skip meeting.”
“I will always remember it.
'Twas a glorious beautiful day.
An aqua sky, high sun
and a sweet steady breeze.”
I smile. “And a lovely friend.”
I hold her hand tight
until she feels strong.