H. B. Stowe
The Salem Witchcraft
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Table of contents
SALEM WITCHCRAFT.
THE PLANCHETTE MYSTERY.
HOW TO WORK PLANCHETTE.
SPIRITUALISM.
BIGOTRY.
Obstinate or blind attachment to a particular creed; unreasonable
zeal or warmth in favor of a party, sect, or opinion; excessive
prejudice. The practice or tenet of a bigot.PREJUDICE.
An opinion or decision of mind, formed without due examination of the
facts or arguments which are necessary to a just and impartial
determination. A previous bent or inclination of mind for or against
any person or thing. Injury or wrong of any kind; as to act to the
prejudice of
another.SUPERSTITION.
Excessive exactness or rigor in religious opinions or practice;
excess or extravagance in religion; the doing of things not required
by God, or abstaining from things not forbidden; or the belief of
what is absurd, or belief without evidence. False religion; false
worship. Rite or practice proceeding from excess of scruples in
religion. Excessive nicety; scrupulous exactness. Belief in the
direct agency of superior powers in certain extraordinary or singular
events, or in omens and prognostics.
SALEM WITCHCRAFT.
The
name of the village of Salem is as familiar to Americans as that of
any provincial town in England or France is to Englishmen and
Frenchmen; yet, when uttered in the hearing of Europeans, it carries
us back two or three centuries, and suggests an image, however faint
and transient, of the life of the Pilgrim Fathers, who gave that
sacred name to the place of their chosen habitation. If we were on
the spot to-day, we should see a modern American seaport, with an
interest of its own, but by no means a romantic one. At present Salem
is suffering its share of the adversity which has fallen upon the
shipping trade, while it is still mourning the loss of some of its
noblest citizens in the late civil war. No community in the Republic
paid its tribute of patriotic sacrifice more generously; and there
were doubtless occasions when its citizens remembered the early days
of glory, when their fathers helped to chase the retreating British,
on the first shedding of blood in the war of Independence. But now
they have enough to think of under the pressure of the hour. Their
trade is paralyzed under the operation of the tariff; their shipping
is rotting in port, except so much of it as is sold to foreigners;
there is much poverty in low places and dread of further commercial
adversity among the chief citizens, but there is the same vigorous
pursuit of intellectual interests and pleasures, throughout the
society of the place, that there always is wherever any number of New
Englanders have made their homes beside the church, the library, and
the school. Whatever other changes may occur from one age or period
to another, the features of natural scenery are, for the most part,
unalterable. Massachusetts Bay is as it was when the Pilgrims cast
their first look over it: its blue waters—as blue as the seas of
Greece—rippling up upon the sheeted snow of the sands in winter, or
beating against rocks glittering in ice; in autumn the pearly waves
flowing in under the thickets of gaudy foliage; and on summer evening
the green surface surrounding the amethyst islands, where white foam
spouts out of the caves and crevices. On land, there are still the
craggy hills, and the jutting promontories of granite, where the
barberry grows as the bramble does with us, and room is found for the
farmstead between the crags, and for the apple-trees and little
slopes of grass, and patches of tillage, where all else looks barren.
The boats are out, or ranged on shore, according to the weather, just
as they were from the beginning, only in larger numbers; and far away
on either hand the coasts and islands, the rocks and hills and rural
dwellings, are as of old, save for the shrinking of the forest, and
the growth of the cities and villages, whose spires and school-houses
are visible here and there.
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Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!
Lesen Sie weiter in der vollständigen Ausgabe!