Giles Corey, Yeoman eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 65 pages of information about Giles Corey, Yeoman.

Giles Corey, Yeoman eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 65 pages of information about Giles Corey, Yeoman.

Hathorne. Goody Corey, fix your eyes upon the floor, and look not at these poor children whom you so afflict.

Martha. May the Lord open the eyes of the magistrates and ministers, and give them sight to discover the guilty!

Parris. Why do you not confess that you are a witch?

Martha (with sudden fervor).  I am no witch.  There is no such thing as a witch.  Oh, ye worshipful magistrates, ye ministers and good people of Salem Village, I pray ye hear me speak for a moment’s space.  Listen not to this testimony of distracted children, this raving of a poor lovesick, jealous maid, who should be treated softly, but not let to do this mischief.  Ye, being in your fair wits and well acquaint with your own knowledge, must know, as I know, that there be no witches.  Wherefore would God let Satan after such wise into a company of His elect?  Hath He not guard over His own precinct?  Can He not keep it from the power of the Adversary as well as we from the savages?  Why keep ye the scouts out in the fields if the Lord God hath so forsaken us?  Call in the scouts!  If we believe in witches, we believe not only great wickedness, but great folly of the Lord God.  Think ye in good faith that I verily stand here with a black cat on my shoulder and a yellow bird on my head?  Why do ye not see them as well as these maids?  I would that ye might if they be there.  Black cat, yellow bird, if ye be upon my shoulder and my head, as these maids say, I command ye to appear to these magistrates!  Otherwise, if I have signed the book, as these maids say, I swear unto ye that I will cross out my name, and will serve none but the God Almighty.  Most worshipful magistrates, see ye the black cat?  See ye any yellow bird?  Why are ye not afflicted as well as these maids, when I turn my eyes upon ye?  I pray you to consider that.  I am no saint; I wot well that I have but poorly done the will of the Lord who made me, but I am a gospel woman and keep to the faith according to my poor measure.  Can I be a gospel woman and a witch too?  I have never that I know of done aught of harm whether to man or beast.  I have spared not myself nor minded mine own infirmities in tasks for them that belonged to me, nor for any neighbor that had need.  I say not this to set myself up, but to prove to you that I can be no witch, and my daughter can be no witch.  Have I not watched nights without number with the sick?  Have I not washed and dressed new-born babes?  Have I not helped to make the dead ready for burial, and sat by them until the cock crew?  Have I ever held back when there was need of me?  But I say not this to set myself up.  Have I not been in the meeting-house every Lord’s day?  Have I ever stayed away from the sacrament?  Have I not gone in sober apparel, nor wasted my husband’s substance?  Have I not been diligent in my household, and spun and wove great store of linen?  Are not my floors scoured, my brasses bright, and my cheese-room well filled?  Look at me!  Can I be a witch?

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Giles Corey, Yeoman from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.