Sunday, April 26, 2020
The Salem Witchcraft Trials Essays - Salem Witch Trials,
  The Salem Witchcraft Trials    The Salem Witchcraft    Trials    The Salem Witchcraft trials in Massachusetts  during 1692 resulted in nineteen innocent men and women being hanged, one  man pressed to death, and in the deaths of more than seventeen who died  in jail. It all began at the end of 1691 when a few girls in the town began  to experiment with magic by gathering around a crystal ball to try to find  the answer to questions such as "what trade their sweet harts should be  of ". This conjuring took place in the Parris household where a woman  named Tituba, an Indian slave, headed the rituals. Soon after they had  begun to practice these rituals, girls who had been involved, including  the Master Parris' daughter and niece, became sick. They had constant fits,  twitched, cried, made odd noises, and huddled in corners. The family  called in doctors, and they were treated for many illnesses. Nothing  helped. Many weeks later after running out of reasons for their strange  behavior, all of their symptoms seemed to lead to one belief, "The evil  hand is upon them." They were possessed by the Devil.    At first the families of the children could  not find anyone to accuse for being the witch responsible for possessing  the children. Then, late in February of 1692, Parris' neighbor, Mary    Sibley recommended that Parris' slaves, Tituba and John Indian, should  work a spell to try to find the culprits. Even after trying this  solution the girls' condition worsened, and the people responsible still  had not been found. The girls began to see hazy shadows and believed  that these shadows were of the people who had done this to them. After  more and more children became victims of this, the hunting for the witches  who were to blame for the girls' sickness began to get more serious. By  the end of February 1692, not one, but three witches had been named.    These women were Sarah Good, Sarah Osborne, and Tituba, all residents of    Salem Village.    Sarah Good was a poor "socially undesirable"  member of the village of Salem which made her susceptible to accusations  of being a witch and of practicing black magic. She was well known  in the village for her eccentric behavior, and in the past people had suspected  her of being a witch. Her husband, William Good, was a simple laborer and  his inadequate income forced the Goods to accept charity and to beg for  goods from their neighbors. Sometimes they even had to live with their  neighbors, but this never lasted long. Sarah Good's actions and behaviors  would often cause unrest in the hosts and their families, and then the    Good family would be asked to leave. A few of the villagers they stayed  with reported that their livestock would begin to sicken and die after  the Goods were forced to leave. More than fifteen families claimed  that Sarah Good bewitched their livestock while others reported that she  could make objects disappear into thin air. When Good was questioned  about these accusations, her answers were always tight-lipped and aggressive,  further leading the people to believe that she was in fact a witch.    Sarah Osborne was also one of the first  three women accused of putting spells on the girls and possessing them.    Unlike Tituba and Sarah Good, however, she was from a very wealthy household.    Although it is believed sometimes that only poor people were accused of  being witches, in the Salem Witchcraft Trials, this was not true, as in  the case of Osborne. Women and men accused of being witches were either  looked down upon in the community or envied for their land and wealth,  as Sarah Osborne was in Salem.    Tituba, like Good, was very poor.    She worked as a servant in the Parris home and was a Carib Indian born  in Barbados in the West Indies. Reverend Parris brought Tituba to New England  when he was still a merchant, and after this she married John Indian who  also worked as slave for Reverend Parris. Tituba was the person asked to  aid with the girls' illnesses by making a witch's cake to find their culprit  and after this did not work, she was arrested four days later for being  a witch herself.    Each of these three women was examined  by local Salem officials before they were sent off to await trial in a    Boston jail. The girls, who these witches had supposedly inflicted  sickness upon, were also present during these trials to show the court  how much pain the three women had caused. During the trial Sarah    Good kept insisting that she was    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.