Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases, 1648-1706 Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases, 1648-1706

Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases, 1648-1706

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Descripción editorial

The earliest account of the remarkable happenings at Salem, in the spring of 1692, which were to bring to a climax and then to conclusion the quest of witches in New England, was that which here follows. The Rev. Deodat Lawson was singularly qualified to write it.


He had himself, only a little earlier (1684-1688), served as pastor to Salem Village, the rural community in which these happenings took their rise; and, though dissensions in the parish prevented his longer stay, he seems to have been no party to these dissensions and must meanwhile have learned to know the scene and all the actors of that later drama which he here depicts. He was, too, a man of education, travel, social experience. Born in England, the son of a scholarly Puritan minister, and doubtless educated there, he first appears in New England in 1676, and at the time of his call to Salem Village was making his home in Boston. Thither he returned in 1688: Samuel Sewall, who on May 13 had him in at Sunday dinner, notes in his diary that he “came to Town to dwell last week,” and often mentions him thereafter. How at th outbreak of the witchpanic he came to revisit the Village and t chronicle the doings there, he himself a dozen years later thus told his English friends: 1


It pleased God in the Year of our Lord 1692 to visit the People at a place called Salem Village in New-England, with a very Sore and Grievous Affliction, in which they had reason to believe, that the Soveraign and Holy God was pleased to permit Satan and his Instruments, to Affright and Afflict those poor Mortals in such an Astonishing and Unusual manner.

GÉNERO
Historia
PUBLICADO
1989
23 de abril
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
215
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Library of Alexandria
TAMAÑO
806,7
KB

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