Mary Beth Norton

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Mary Beth Norton

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Mary Beth Norton If I can't think of what comes next (or first), I do something completely different: go for a walk, a swim, a bike ride, or play a guitar. Anything to…moreIf I can't think of what comes next (or first), I do something completely different: go for a walk, a swim, a bike ride, or play a guitar. Anything to get my mind off of my problem. Then after a while a solution usually comes to me.(less)
Mary Beth Norton write! write! write! then revise! revise! revise!
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“The accused and the magistrate next engaged in a dialogue about what constituted witchcraft. If she had not signed the book, had she dealt with “familiar Spirits”? If not, how could her apparition hurt the afflicted? Hathorne observed that “you seem to act witchcraft before us, by the motion of your body.” When Bishop responded, “I know not what a Witch is,” Hathorne pounced. “How do you know then that you are not a witch?”
Mary Beth Norton, In the Devil's Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692

“The autumn hit-and-run raids and the colonists’ attempts to retaliate ended with the early onset of especially heavy snowfalls that year. Over the next few months, the Massachusetts government dispatched to Maine companies of “country soldiers” to augment the inadequate regional militia forces. The troops, however, proved a mixed blessing to local residents and stimulated great controversy, especially in Black Point. There taxpayers later complained bitterly that they had not asked for the soldiers and had derived little benefit from their presence, yet they had nevertheless been required to pay the soldiers’ expenses. Even more galling, they explained, was the fact that the local commander, Joshua Scottow, who had moved to Maine from Boston a few years earlier, had used the men for his own personal gain, employing them to pave his yard, move his barn, and build a palisade for his property.”
Mary Beth Norton, In the Devil's Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692

“Cruell mordrous Rogs in the first Indian war”; it was, he emphasized, “very straing that a govnor shoold bee soe Carless of his majestys subjects & Intrest.”
Mary Beth Norton, In the Devil's Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692

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