Complete Works of Howard Pyle
Page 498
“The result of the examination may be favorable, so young and good and beautiful as she is,” said Mistress Putnam.
“They lap their tongues in the blood of lambs, and say it is sweet as honey,” replied her husband, shaking his head. “No, they will show no mercy; but we must try to match them.”
“Yes, and with as little hazard and cost to you, my noble friend, as possible,” said Master Raymond. “Let me act, and take all the risk. They cannot get hold of my property; and I would just as lief live in New York or Philadelphia or England as among this brood of crazy vipers.”
“That is wise counsel, Joseph,” said his wife.
“Oh, I suppose it is,” he answered emphatically. “But I hate wise counsel.”
“Still, my good friend, you must admit that, as Dulcibel betrothed herself to me only two days ago, I am the one to take the greatest risk in this matter.”
“Indeed!” said Mistress Putnam. “I knew it would be so; and I told Joseph it would be, only yesterday.”
“I give you joy of such a mistress!” cried Master Putnam, grasping his friend’s hand. “Yes, I grant now your right of precedence in this danger, and I will follow your lead — yes, to the death!”
“I hold you to that,” said Master Raymond. “Remember you are pledged to follow my lead. Now, whatever I do, do not wonder, much less express any wonder. For this is war, and I have a right to meet craft with craft, and guile with guile. Depend upon it, I will save her, or perish with her.”
CHAPTER XV.
The Arrest of Dulcibel and Antipas.
The arrest of Dulcibel had been entirely unexpected to herself and the Buckleys. Dulcibel indeed had wondered, when walking through the village in the morning, that several persons she knew had seemed to avoid meeting her. But she was too full of happiness in her recent betrothal to take umbrage or alarm at such an unimportant circumstance. A few months now, and Salem, she hoped, would see her no more forever. She knew, for Master Raymond had told her, that there were plenty of places in the world where life was reasonably gay and sunny and hopeful; not like this dull valley of the shadow of death in which she was now living. Raymond’s plan was to get married; sell her property, which might take a few months, more or less; and then sail for England, to introduce his charming wife to a large circle of relatives.
Dulcibel had been reading a book that Raymond had brought to her — a volume of Shakespeare’s plays — a prohibited book among the Puritan fathers, and which would have been made the text for one of Master Parris’s most denunciatory sermons if he had known that it was in the village. Having finished “Macbeth” she laid the book down upon the table and began playing with her canary, holding it to her cheek, putting its bill to her lips, and otherwise fondling it. While she was thus engaged, she began to have the uncomfortable feeling which sensitive persons often have when some one is watching them; and turning involuntarily to the window which looked out on a garden at the side of the house, she saw in the dim light that dark faces, with curious eyes, seemed nearly to fill up the lower half of the casement. In great surprise, and with a sudden tremor, she rose quickly from the seat; and, as she did so, the weird faces and glistening eyes disappeared, and two constables, attended by a crowd of the villagers, entered the room. One of these walked at once to her side, and seizing her by the arm said, “I arrest you, Dulcibel Burton, by the authority of Magistrate Hathorne. Come along with me.”
“What does all this mean, friend Herrick?” said Goodman Buckley, coming into the room.
“It means,” said the constable, “that this young woman is no better than the other witches, who have been joining hand with Satan against the peace and dignity of this province.” Then, turning to Dame Buckley, “Get her a shawl and bonnet, goodwife; if you do not wish her to go out unprotected in the night’s cold.”
“A witch — what nonsense!” said Dame Buckley.
“Nonsense, is it?” said the other constable. “What is this?” taking up the book from the table. “A book of plays! profane and wicked stage plays, in Salem village! You had better hold your peace, goodwife; or you may go to prison yourself for harboring such licentious devices of Satan in your house.”
Goodwife Buckley started and grew pale. A book of wicked stage-plays under her roof! She could make no reply, but went off without speaking to pack up a bundle of the accused maiden’s clothing.
“See here!” continued the constable, opening the book, “All about witches, as I thought! He-cat and three other witches!
‘Round about the cauldron go:
In the poisoned entrails throw.’
It is horrible!”
“Put the accursed book in the fire, Master Taunton,” said Herrick.
There was a small fire burning on the hearth, for the evening was a little cool, and the other constable threw the book amidst the live coals; but was surprised to see that it did not flame up rapidly.
“That is witchcraft, if there ever was witchcraft!” said Jethro Sands, who was at the front of the crowd. “See, it will not burn. The Devil looks out for his own.”
“Yes, we shall have to stay here all night, if we wait for that book to burn up,” said Master Herrick. “Now if it had been a Bible, or a Psalm-book, it would have been consumed by this time.”
“My father told me,” said one of the crowd, “that they were once six weeks trying to burn up some witch’s book in Holland, and then had to tear each leaf separately before they could burn it.”
“Where is the yellow bird — her familiar — that she was sending on some witch’s errand when we were watching at the window?” said another of the crowd.
“Oh, it’s not likely you will find the yellow bird,” replied Herrick. “It is halfway down to hell by this time.”
“No, there it is!” cried Jethro Sands, pointing to a ledge over the door, where the canary-bird had flown in its fright.
“Kill it! kill the familiar! Kill the devil’s imp!” came in various voices, the angry tones being not without an inflection of fear.
Several pulled out their rapiers. Jethro was the quickest. He made a desperate lunge at the little creature, and impaled it on the point of his weapon.
Dulcibel shook off the hold of the constable and sprang forward. “Oh, my pretty Cherry,” she cried, taking the dead bird from the point of the rapier. “You wretch! to harm an innocent little creature like that!” and she smoothed the feathers of the bird and kissed its little head.
“Take it from her! kill the witch!” cried some rude women in the outer circles of the crowd.
“Yes, mistress, this is more than good Christian people can be expected to endure,” said constable Herrick, sternly, snatching the bird from her and tossing it into the fire. “Let us see if the imp will burn any quicker than the book.”
“Ah, she forgot to charm it,” said the other constable, as the little feathers blazed up in a blue flame.
“Yes, but note the color,” said Jethro. “No Christian bird ever blazed in that color.”
“Neither they ever did!” echoed another, and they looked into each other’s faces and shook their heads solemnly.
At this moment Antipas Newton was led to the door of the room, in the custody of another officer. The old man seemed to be taking the whole proceeding very quietly and patiently, as the Quakers always did. But the moment he saw Dulcibel weeping, with Herrick’s grasp upon her arm, his whole demeanor changed.
“What devil’s mischief is this?” cried the demented man; and springing like an enraged lion upon Master Herrick, he dashed him against the opposite wall, tore his constable’s staff from his hands and laying the staff around him wildly and ferociously cleared the room of everybody save Dulcibel and himself in less time than I have taken to tell it.
Jethro stepped forward with his drawn rapier to cover the retreat of the constables; but shouting, “the sword of the Lord and of Gideon!” the deranged man, with the stout oaken staff, dashed the rapier from Jethro’s hand, and administered to
him a sounding whack over the head, which made the blood come. Then he picked up the rapier and throwing the staff behind him, laughed wildly as he saw the crowd, constable and all, tumbling out of the door of the next room into the front garden of the house as if Satan himself in very deed, were after them.
“I will teach them how they abuse my pretty little Dulcibel,” said the now thoroughly demented man, laughing grimly. “Come on, ye imps of Satan, and I will toast you at the end of my fork,” he cried, flourishing Jethro’s rapier, whose red point, crimson with the blood of the canary-bird, seemed to act upon the mind of the old man as a spark of fire upon tow.
“Antipas,” said Dulcibel, coming forward and gazing sadly into the eyes of her faithful follower, “is it not written, ‘Put up thy sword; for he that takes the sword shall perish by the sword’? Give me the weapon!”
The old man gazed into her face, at first wonderingly; then, with the instinct of old reverence and obedience, he handed the rapier to her, crossed his muscular arms over his broad breast, bowed his grisly head, and stood submissively before her.
“You can return now safely,” Dulcibel called out to the constables. They came in, at first a little warily. “He is insane; but the spell is over now for the present. But treat him tenderly, I pray you. When he is in one of these fits, he has the strength of ten men.”
The constables could not help being impressed favorably by the maiden’s conduct; and they treated her with a certain respect and tenderness which they had not previously shown, until they had delivered her, and the afterwards entirely humble and peaceful Antipas, to the keeper of Salem prison.
But the crowd said to one another as they sought their houses: “What a powerful witch she must be, to calm down that maniac with one word.” While others replied, “But he is possessed with a devil; and she does it because her power is of the devil.”
They did not remember that this was the very course of reasoning used on a somewhat similar occasion against the Savior himself in Galilee!
CHAPTER XVI.
Dulcibel in Prison.
In the previous cases of alleged witchcraft to which I have alluded, the details given in my manuscript volume were fully corroborated, even almost to the minutest particulars, by official records now in existence. But in what I have related, and am about to relate, relative to Dulcibel Burton, I shall have to rely entirely upon the manuscript volume. Still, as there is nothing there averred more unreasonable and absurd than what is found in the existing official records, I see no reason to doubt the entire truthfulness of the story. In fact, it would be difficult to imagine grosser and more ridiculous accusations than were made by Mistress Ann Putnam against that venerable and truly devout and Christian matron, Rebecca Nurse.
When Dulcibel and Antipas, in the custody of four constables, reached the Salem jail, it was about eleven o’clock at night. The jailor, evidently had expected them; for he threw open the door at once. He was a stout, strong-built man, with not a bad countenance for a jailer; but seemed thoroughly imbued with the prevailing superstition, judging by the harsh manner in which he received the prisoners.
“I’ve got two strong holes for these imps of Satan; bring ’em along!”
The jail was built of logs, and divided inside into a number of small rooms or cells. In each of these cells was a narrow bedstead and a stone jug and slop bucket. Antipas was hustled into one cell, and, after being chained, the door was bolted upon him. Then Dulcibel was taken into another, though rather larger cell, and the jailor said, “Now she will not trouble other people for a while, my masters.”
“Are you not going to put irons on her, Master Foster?” said Herrick.
“Of course I am. But I must get heavier chains than those to hold such a powerful witch as she is. Trust her to me, Master Herrick. She’ll be too heavy to fly about on her broomsticks by the time I have done with her.”
Then they all went out and Dulcibel heard the heavy bolt shoot into its socket, and the voices dying away as the men went down the stairs.
She groped her way to the bed in the darkness, sat down upon it and burst into tears. It was like a change from Paradise into the infernal regions. A few hours before and she had been musing in an ecstasy of joy over her betrothal, and dreaming bright dreams of the future, such perhaps as only a maiden can dream in the rapture of her first love. Now she was sitting in a prison cell, accused of a deadly crime, and her life and good reputation in the most imminent danger. One thing alone buoyed her up — the knowledge that her lover was fully aware of her innocence; and that he and Joseph Putnam would do all that they could do in her behalf. But then the sad thought came, that to aid her in any way might be only to bring upon themselves a similar accusation. And then, with a noble woman’s spirit of self-sacrifice, she thought: “No, let them not be brought into danger. Better, far better, that I should suffer alone, than drag down my friends with me.”
Here she heard the noise of the bolt being withdrawn, and saw the dim light of the jailer’s candle.
As the jailer entered he threw down some heavy irons in the corner of the room. Then, he closed the door behind him, and came up to the unhappy girl. He laid his hand upon her shoulder and said:
“You little witch!”
Something in the tone seemed to strike upon the maiden’s ear as if it were not unfamiliar to her; and she looked up hastily.
“Do you not remember me, little Dulcy? Why I rocked you on my foot in the old Captain’s house in Boston many a day.”
“Is it not uncle Robie?” said the girl. She had not seen him since she was four years old.
The jailer smiled. “Of course it is,” he replied, “just uncle Robie. The old captain never went to sea that Robie Foster did not go as first mate. And a blessed day it was when I came to be first mate of this jail-ship; though I never thought to see the old captain’s bonnie bird among my boarders.”
“And do you think I really am a witch, uncle Robie?”
“Of course ye are. A witch of the worst kind,” replied Robie, with a chuckle. “Now, when I come in here tomorrow morning nae doobt I will find all your chains off. It is just sae with pretty much all the others. I cannot keep them chained, try my best and prettiest.”
“And Antipas?”
“Oh, he will just be like all the rest of them, doobtless. He is a powerful witch, and half a Quaker, besides.”
“But do you really believe in witches, uncle Robie?”
“What do these deuced Barebones Puritans know about witches, or the devil, or anything else? There is only one true church, Mistress Dulcibel. I have sa mooch respect for the clergy as any man; but I don’t take my sailing orders from a set of sourfaced old pirates.”
Then, leaving her a candle and telling her to keep up a stout heart, the jailer left the cell; and Dulcibel heard the heavy bolt again drawn upon her, with a much lighter heart, than before. Examining the bundle of clothes that Goodwife Buckley had made up, she found that nothing essential to her comfort had been forgotten, and she soon was sleeping as peacefully in her prison cell as if she were in her own pretty little chamber.
CHAPTER XVII.
Dulcibel before the Magistrates.
The next afternoon the meeting-house at Salem village was crowded to its utmost capacity; for Dulcibel Burton and Antipas Newton were to be brought before the worshipful magistrates, John Hathorne and Jonathan Corwin. These worthies were not only magistrates, but persons of great note and influence, being members of the highest legislative and judicial body in the Province of Massachusetts Bay.
Among the audience were Joseph Putnam and Ellis Raymond; the former looking stern and indignant, the latter wearing an apparently cheerful countenance, genial to all that he knew, and they were many; and especially courteous and agreeable to Mistress Ann Putnam, and the “afflicted” maidens. It was evident that Master Raymond was determined to preserve for himself the freedom of the village, if complimentary and pleasant speeches would effect it. It would not do to be arrested or
banished, now that Dulcibel was in prison.
When the constable, Joseph Herrick, brought in Dulcibel, he stated that having made “diligent search for images and such like,” they had found a “yellow bird,” of the kind that witches were known to affect; a wicked book of stage-plays, which seemed to be about witches, especially one called “he-cat”; and a couple of rag dolls with pins stuck into them.
“Have you brought them?” said Squire Hathorne.
“We killed the yellow bird and threw it and the wicked book into the fire.”
“You should not have done that; you should have produced them here.”
“We can get the book yet; for it was lying only partly burned near the back-log. It would not burn, all we could do to it.”
“Of course not. Witches’ books never burn,” said Squire Hathorne.
“Here are the images,” said a constable, producing two little rag-babies, that Dulcibel was making for a neighbor’s children.
The crowd looked breathlessly on as “these diabolical instruments of torture” were placed upon the table before the magistrates.
“Dulcibel Burton, stand up and look upon your accusers,” said Squire Hathorne.
Dulcibel had sunk upon a bench while the above conversation was going on — she felt overpowered by the curious and malignant eyes turned upon her from all parts of the room. Now she rose and faced the audience, glancing around to see one loved face. At last her eyes met his; he was standing erect, even proudly; his arms crossed over his breast, his face composed and firm, his dark eyes glowing and determined. He dared not utter a word, but he spoke to her from the inmost depths of his soul: “Be firm, be courageous, be resolute!”
This was what Raymond meant to say; and this is what Dulcibel, with her sensitive and impassioned nature, understood him to mean. And from that moment a marked change came over her whole appearance. The shrinking, timid girl of a moment before stood up serene but heroic, fearless and undaunted; prepared to assert the truth, and to defy all the malice of her enemies, if need be, to the martyr’s death.