The accused were held with their arms extended and hands open, lest by the least motion of their fingers they might inflict torments on their victims, who sometimes affected to be struck dumb, and at others to be knocked down by the mere glance of an eye.
Continuing Salem Witchcraft Trials,
our selection from History of the United States by Richard Hildreth published in 1877. The selection is presented in six easy 5 minute installments. For works benefiting from the latest research see the “More information” section at the bottom of these pages.
Previously in Salem Witchcraft Trials.
Time: 1692
Place: Salem, Massachusetts
Parris took a very active part in discovering the witches; so did Noyes, minister of Salem, described as “a learned, a charitable, and a good man.” A town committee was soon formed for the detection of the witches. Two of the magistrates, resident at Salem, entered with great zeal into the matter. The accusations, confined at first to Tituba and two other friendless women, one crazed, the other bedrid, presently included two female members of Parris’ church, in which, as in so many other churches, there had been some sharp dissensions. The next Sunday after this accusation Parris preached from the verse, “Have I not chosen you twelve, and one is a devil?” At the announcement of this text the sister of one of the accused women rose and left the meeting-house. She, too, was accused immediately after, and the same fate soon overtook all who showed the least disposition to resist the prevailing delusion.
The matter had now assumed so much importance that the Deputy-governor — for the provisional government was still in operation — proceeded to Salem village, with five other magistrates, and held a court in the meeting-house. A great crowd was present. Parris acted at once as clerk and accuser, producing the witnesses, and taking down the testimony. The accused were held with their arms extended and hands open, lest by the least motion of their fingers they might inflict torments on their victims, who sometimes affected to be struck dumb, and at others to be knocked down by the mere glance of an eye. They were haunted, they said, by the spectres of the accused, who tendered them a book, and solicited them to subscribe a league with the devil; and when they refused, would bite, pinch, scratch, choke, burn, twist, prick, pull, and otherwise torment them. At the mere sight of the accused brought into court, “the afflicted” would seem to be seized with a fit of these torments, from which, however, they experienced instant relief when the accused were compelled to touch them — infallible proof to the minds of the gaping assembly that these apparent sufferings were real and the accusations true. The theory was that the touch conveyed back into the witch the malignant humors shot forth from her eyes; and learned references were even made to Descartes, of whose new philosophy some rumors had reached New England, in support of this theory.
In the examinations at Salem village meeting-house some very extraordinary scenes occurred. “Look there!” cried one of the afflicted; “there is Goody Procter on the beam!” This Goody Procter’s husband, notwithstanding the accusation against her, still took her side, and had attended her to the court; in consequence of which act of fidelity some of “the afflicted” began now to cry out that he too was a wizard. At the exclamation above cited, “many, if not all, the bewitched had grievous fits.”
Question by the Court: “Ann Putnam, who hurts you?”
Answer: “Goodman Procter, and his wife, too.”
Then some of the afflicted cry out, “There is Procter going to take up Mrs. Pope’s feet!” and “immediately her feet are taken up.”
Question by the Court: “What do you say, Goodman Procter, to these things?”
Answer: “I know not: I am innocent.”
Abigail Williams, another of the afflicted, cries out, “There is Goodman Procter going to Mrs. Pope!” and “immediately said Pope falls into a fit.”
A magistrate to Procter: “You see the devil will deceive you; the children,” so all the afflicted were called, “could see what you were going to do before the woman was hurt. I would advise you to repentance, for you see the devil is bringing you out.”
Abigail Williams cries out again, “There is Goodman Procter going to hurt Goody Bibber!” and “immediately Goody Bibber falls into a fit.” Abigail Williams and Ann Putnam both “made offer to strike at Elizabeth Procter; but when Abigail’s hand came near, it opened, whereas it was made up into a fist before, and came down exceedingly lightly as it drew near to said Procter, and at length, with open and extended fingers, touched Procter’s hood very lightly; and immediately Abigail cries out, ‘My fingers, my fingers, my fingers burn!’ and Ann Putnam takes on most grievously of her head, and sinks down.”
Such was the evidence upon which people were believed to be witches, and committed to prison to be tried for their lives! Yet, let us not hurry too much to triumph over the past. In these days of animal magnetism, have we not ourselves seen imposture as gross, and even in respectable quarters a headlong credulity just as precipitate? We must consider also that the judgments of our ancestors were disturbed, not only by wonder, but by fear.
Encouraged by the ready belief of the magistrates and the public, “the afflicted” went on enlarging the circle of their accusations, which presently seemed to derive fresh corroboration from the confessions of some of the accused. Tituba had been flogged into a confession; others yielded to a pressure more stringent than blows. Weak women, astonished at the charges and contortions of their accusers, assured that they were witches beyond all doubt, and urged to confess as the only possible chance for their lives, were easily prevailed upon to repeat any tales put into their mouths: their journeys through the air on broomsticks to attend witch sacraments — a sort of travesty on the Christian ordinance — at which the devil appeared in the shape of a “small black man”; their signing the devil’s book, renouncing their former baptism, and being baptized anew by the devil, who “dipped” them in “Wenham Pond,” after the Anabaptist fashion.
Called upon to tell who were present at these sacraments, the confessing witches wound up with new accusations; and by the time Phipps arrived in the colony, near a hundred persons were already in prison. The mischief was not limited to Salem. An idea had been taken up that the bewitched could explain the causes of sickness; and one of them, carried to Andover for that purpose, had accused many persons of witchcraft, and thrown the whole village into the greatest commotion. Some persons also had been accused in Boston and other towns.
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