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
Mercy Lewis, 17
I scan around the tavern
and could pinch myself
that we girls should sit here
nearly daily now,
but as the witches pinch us first
and so many folk
be ripe to believe,
I try to accept my seat.
Across the street
some whose family
stand in the confession box
or those who never did like
the selection of Reverend Parris
as village minister,
they eye us girls
with tar and gravel
as though we ought
be the ones chained
to the jailer's wagon.
Abigail rattles her mouth,
the excited babe showing
off how she has learned to speak.
“I saw the specter of Reverend Burroughs,
one who was pastor before
in Salem Village, leading
a group of witches outside
the parsonage last night.”
How names she my old master?
How knows she what a true wizard he was?
Margaret laughs. “You cannot know
'twas Minister Burroughs.”
“Reverend told me it was so,”
Abigail nearly shouts. “He said
that Reverend Burroughs was acting
the Grand Conjurer, the leader of the witches.”
“What matters what your uncle says?”
Ann thrusts Abigail into the back of the bench.
“I am the one to say!”
A grand hush ripples across the tavern,
and all the folk stare on us.
Even Ann quiets then.
She nods at me. “Come, Mercy,
we best be heading home.
All of you best go home and pray.”
Mercy Lewis, 17
“I just sit there and stitch
while Abigail screams and runs
about the room till they carry her out,
and it is always like this with her,”
Margaret says, and narrows
her eyes in a sneer.
“Why does she not listen to me?”
Ann shakes her head.
Under our table at Ingersoll's
Wilson snuggles beside me
without so much as a yap.
Margaret's feet stack one upon the other
in a tangle. Her skirt sticks under her rump
in a ball like she's a little beggar girl.
How can one so uncouth be betrothed?
“What are you looking at?”
Margaret asks me.
“Nothing,” I say.
“Pay attention,” Margaret says.
Her voice slaps my hand.
“We've a problem with Abigail.”
Ann says, “Something must be done.
Nothing foul must be among us.”
My feet go cold like I've slipped
into winter's pond without boots.
Why did Ann not discuss this with me?
Margaret flicks her hair behind her shoulder.
“Ignore her. Act as she does not exist.”
She knocks over a mug of ale.
I turn from the smell.
“But Abigail knows not what she does,”
Elizabeth says as she mops the table
with her apron.
The threat in Ann's stare
could frighten a wolf.
“Elizabeth, you are
wrong
!”
Elizabeth shrinks back.
Ann then softens her tone.
“I fear if we teach not Abigail
a lesson, she shall place
her hand upon Satan's book
as Ruth Warren hath done.”
Ann stands up, makes herself
the height the rest of us are
when seated. She declares,
“Abigail is as one laid to grave.
Speak to her no more.”
Not another word to be said.
Incantation of the Girls
Sour voices on the wind
name us liars, say we sin.
Listen not
to girls but men.
For the witches we do name
pass their days in public shame
or come from families
Putnams blame.
So if we girls shall keep our place
we'll see some witches none can trace,
folk we've never
seen of face.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
Abigail's sightings mismatch
ours like sleeves cut
from different fabric.
Margaret, Mercy, Elizabeth and me
call new witches into court,
the first of whom we have never seen,
Bridget Bishop of Salem Town,
the woman they say bewitches
children to death.
We also name Giles Corey
and his gruesome acts,
the old man who,
before any of us we were born to see it,
beat his servant to his last breath.
But Abigail sees neither
Goody Bishop nor Goodman Corey.
She can no longer sit beside us
on the testimonial bench.
The villagers see her not.
She be as a ghost to them.
For I have made her invisible.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
“I know her to be Deliverance Hobbs.”
I point my finger at the old witch
in the dark green cloak
who none of the other girls
know by face.
I only know the witch
called to question
because Mother pointed her out to me
before she sat me down upon my bench.
We rattle and roll upon
the floor, but our sounds do not echo
through the room. I must thrust
five pins through my hand
beneath my skirt before
the courtroom screams, “Witch!”
Deliverance Hobbs confesses
with her hands tied upon the stand.
She unpeels her skin
during Judge Hathorne's examination
and admits that witch blood
courses her veins.
“What do we do now?” I ask Mercy.
“When a witch confesses,
we stop our fuss,” she says
as Mercy's wails bury their sound
and her body falls motionless
as a dead cat.
The courtroom hisses
as they drag away Deliverance Hobbs.
Mercy tugs my arm and says,
“Good that she confessed.
One less voice weakened
our screaming.
There was power in five.”
Mercy Lewis, 17
“Ann,” Abigail hollers,
but Ann has iron in her ears.
She will not even turn toward Abigail.
Abigail stands before Elizabeth,
looks up to her with prayerful eyes.
“What be happening?” Abigail asks.
Elizabeth coils her hands into her sleeves.
She stares through Abigail
as though she were air.
“Margaret, please,” she begs.
Margaret stands
and Abigail blocks her way.
A hard shoulder
into Abigail's nose and cheek,
and Abigail skids to the floor.
Margaret tramples over
Abigail's crumpled body
without even a glance down.
The tears fire across Abigail's cheeks.
She swipes them away.
“Is this punishment for what I see?
For what I tell? For my talk
of Minister Burroughs
and his commune of witches
grazing in our pasture
with their black hoods and red books
and drinking of Satan's blood?”
Abigail now looks on me.
I wish to set her free, but
she kneels down before Ann.
“I am sorry. Pray do tell me
what to say, what to do,
and I promise to do
as you command,” Abigail says.
Ann pats Abigail's head
like she rubs the pup
at her feet, tousles Abigail's hair
and pinches her cheek.
She looks at the rest of us
and then points at Abigail
crouched upon the ground.
“Stay, girl,” she says.
“Do exactly as I say
and I might let you
remain with us.”
And Abigail does.
Mercy Lewis, 17
My vision of the Devil
be that crooked-teeth grin
of the man who took me in,
the one who they say can lift
six-foot muskets with his little finger.
He who holds up his book
to timber little girls with one blow.
His red, hot hands
roamed my arms
and inside my discomforts
like a pinching burn.
I found nowhere to run
and nobody to call for help
when he called himself
Reverend and master
and father of the house
and I be but an orphan
of eight.
“What witches, wizards and specters
have you seen in the Invisible World, Mercy?”
They ask me again today.
And I think perhaps
I can recall one bad dream
I had of a Grand Conjurer
last night.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
Night crawls across the sky,
and a trumpet screams
from the pasture beside the parsonage.
I twirl around, but no one's there.
I say to Father,
“I rub my eyes and appears,
same as Mercy saw last night,
a meeting of witches in the clearing
gathered on their poles,
drinking Devil's blood,
and Reverend Burroughs
stands at the head.
He lectures the witches,
âWe will claim New England.
Begin in Essex County
and overtake Salem Village.
One battle, one witch at a time,
until all the land be ours.'”
My father nods agreement.
“Reverend Burroughs be
the Village pastor before ye were born.
He is a thief and a liar.
Of course, he be a witch.”
Father straightens his hat
and sets off to visit
the magistrates again.
Margaret Walcott, 17
He come in the tavern sweaty
from a day in field and barn.
I wish hard that Isaac will
trot over to me and demand
I fetch him a cider,
but he pretends as though
he sees me not, and grabs a bench
aside his mates William and Ben.
I wave my pinkie at him,
but Isaac must weary of me,
as if I be but a fence he must mend
or a heavy log to haul across the bay.
So I anchor beside Ann.
I whisper, “What of Isaac?”
“We've matters to discuss.”
Ann angers that I even mention Isaac's name.
She looks to raise her hand to me.
And then do my skirts flame.
I must stand to let the heat
out from under me.
“Can we talk of nothing but witches?
Ye all be mad with this,” I say.
Mercy says, “Go on, Margaret,
ye need not remain with us.
Sit with Isaac. Be with thy
betrothed
.”
Her eyes shift like shadows of the night.
I inch over to Isaac timid-footed
and tap his shoulder. He swats my arm
away like I be a pesky gnat.
“Do not attend me
when I be among my mates,”
he says quickly.
I look over at the other girls
staring 'pon us.
I smile all my teeth
like Isaac did proclaim
I be the prettiest fowl in the coop.
I hurry toward the door.
Red splotches before my eyes.
Margaret Walcott, 17
“She be all the time foul,”
Step-Mother says to Father.
I creak open the door,
and the room hums with silence.
“Margaret.” Father guides me
to a chair. “Your uncle Thomas
has asked that you come to aid
in his home. And I did say you would.”
“But I be not a servant.”
The tears I been holding
shower 'pon my face.
“Of course not,” he pats my head.
“We think there may be more power
in having three seers under one roof.
Perhaps the witches will stop
their torment. Now ready yourself.”
I know he be wrong, we will torment
all the more, but I rise to pack my bags.
Father smiles. “Ann's mother
requested that you come.”
The corners of my mouth round up.
My aunt Annâmight she
offer some aid with Isaac,
and Ann's mistreatment of me,
and dread Mercy? My feet tingle.
“Yes, sir,” I say.
I do not bid Step-Mother farewell.
I just kiss Father's cheek
and slide out the door.