The Lessons of Salem
The Lessons of Salem
The Lessons of Salem
ACTIVITY 3.9
continued
My Notes
Article
The Lessons
of Salem
by Laura Shapiro
WORD
CONNECTIONS
Convert uses the Latin
word vertere meaning to
turn. Introvert, versus,
subvert, version all come
from this word.
&
GRAMMAR
USAGE
Chunk
1
They came for Martha Carrier at the end of May. There was plenty of
evidence against her: Allen Toothaker testified that several of his cattle
had suffered strange deaths soon after he and Carrier had an argument,
and little Phoebe Chandler said that shortly before being stricken with
terrible pains, she had heard Carriers voice telling her she was going to be
poisoned. Even Carriers children spoke against her: they confessed that
they, too, were witches and that it was their mother who had converted
them to evil. (Their statements were not introduced in court, however
perhaps because two of her sons had to be tied up until they bled from
their mouth before they would confess. A small daughter spoke more
freely; she told officials that her mother was a black cat.) Most damning
of all was the evidence offered by half a dozen adolescent girls, who
accused Carrier of tormenting them and who fell into writhing fits as she
stood before the magistrate. They shrieked that they had seen the Devil
whispering into Carriers ear. You see you look upon them and they fall
down, said the magistrate. It is a shameful thing that you should mind
these folks that are out of their wits, answered Carrier. I am wronged.
On Aug. 19, 1692, she was hanged on Gallows Hill in Salem Mass., for
the crime of witchcraft.
Last week marked the 300th anniversary of Carriers death,
an execution carried out during the most notorious summer in
Massachusetts history. Between June and September of 1692, 14 women
and 5 men were hanged in Salem as witches, and 1 man was tortured to
death. Scores more were named as witches and imprisoned. What will
be the issue of these troubles, God only knows, wrote Thomas Brattle, a
merchant in nearby Boston who was horrified by the events. I am afraid
that ages will not wear off that reproach and those stains which these
things will leave behind upon our land.
He was right: even now the Salem witch trials haunt the imaginations
of hundreds of thousands of Americans, tourists and history buffs alike,
ACTIVITY 3.9
continued
My Notes
who visit Salem for a glimpse of our Puritan past at its most chilling.
This year Salem is getting more attention than ever: the city is sponsoring
an array of programs commemorating the Tercentenary, including
dramatizations of the trials and symposiums of the legal and medical
aspects of identifying witches in the 17th century. With the participation
of such organizations as Amnesty International, the Tercentenary
has placed a special emphasis on human rights and the role of the
individual conscience in times of terror. In 1692, those who confessed
to witchcraft were spared; only those who insisted on their innocence
were hanged. Earlier this month a memorial to the victims was unveiled
and on that occasion the first annual Salem Award, created to honor a
significant contribution to social justice, was presented to Gregory Allen
Williams of Inglewood, Calif. In the midst of the Los Angeles riots last
spring, Williams, who is black, risked his life to save an Asian-American
attacked by a mob.
At the heart of the Tercentenary is the awareness that the witch trials
represent more than just a creepy moment in history: they stand for
the terrible victory of prejudice over reason, and fear over courage a
contest that has been replayed with different actors, again and again since
1692. Modern witch hunts include the roundup of Japanese-Americans
during World War II, the pursuit of Communists in the 50s and,
according to an increasing number of critics, some of todays outbreaks of
community hysteria over purported sex abuse in preschools. Experts say
that although most child-abuse allegations are valid, the preschool cases
are the flimsiest, resting as they do on a mixture of parental terror and
childrens confusion. Just as in Salem, the evidence in these cases tends to
spring from hindsight, fueled by suspicion and revulsion. Whatever the
truth may be, it has little chance to surface under such conditions.
Like all witch hunts, the troubles of 1692 began in a community that Chunk
2
felt torn and besieged. Salem Village, now the town of Danvers, was about
eight miles from the seat of local power in Salem Town. A contentious
place, chafing to pull free of Salem Town and its taxes, Salem Village had
suffered bitter disputes over its first three ministers before settling on a
fourth, the Rev. Samuel Parris. During the winter of 169192, a few girls,
mostly teenagers, started gathering in Parriss kitchen. There they listened
to stories, perhaps voodoo tales, told by his Western Indian slave Tituba;
they also tried to discern their future husbands by fortunetelling
dropping an egg white into a glass and seeing what shape it took. For
girls raised in Puritanism, which demanded lifelong discipline and
self-control, these sessions with Tituba represented a rare and risky bit of
indulgence in pure fancy. Too risky, perhaps. Suddenly one after another
of the girls was seized with fits. Their families were bewildered: the girls
raved and fell into convulsions; one of them ran around on all fours and
barked. Dr. William Griggs was called in and made his diagnosis: the evil
hand was upon them.
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continued
My Notes
WORD
CONNECTIONS
Symptom uses the Greek
prefix syn- meaning
together. Many English
words rely on this prefix,
including sympathy,
symbol, symphony.
All along, there were townspeople who had misgivings about what
was happening. Several came to the defense of some of the accused
citizens, and others testified that they had heard an afflicted girl saying
she had made at least one accusation for sport. But the machinery
seemed unstoppable. If a prisoner was released or a jury decided to acquit
someone, the girls went into such shrieking torments that the court
quickly reversed itself.
ACTIVITY 3.9
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My Notes
Chunk
Despite the fact that young girls made the accusations, it was the
adults who lodged formal charges against their neighbors and provided
most of the testimony. Historians have long believed that local feuds
and property disputes were behind many of the accusations, and
in Salem Possessed (1974), Paul Boyer and Stephen Nissenbaum
uncovered patterns of social and civic antagonism that made the
community fertile ground for a witch hunt. . . .
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