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But some of them would fain return to England。

You must not take them。  Upon that condition

Your bond is cancelled。



KEMPTHORN。

             Ah; the wind has shifted!

I pray you; do you speak officially?



BUTTER。

I always speak officially。  To prove it;

Here is the bond。



Rising and giving a paper。



KEMPTHORN。

          And here's my hand upon it;

And look you; when I say I'll do a thing

The thing is done。  Am I now free to go?



BUTTER。

What say?



KEMPTHORN。

     I say; confound the tedious man

With his strange speaking…trumpet!  Can I go?



BUTTER。

You're free to go; by order of the Court。

Your servant; sir。

                             'Exit。



KEMPTHORN (shouting from the window)。

              Swallow; ahoy!  Hallo!

If ever a man was happy to leave Boston;

That man is Simon Kempthorn of the Swallow!



Re…enter BUTTER。



BUTTER。

Pray; did you call?



KEMPTHORN。

      Call!  Yes; I hailed the Swallow。



BUTTER。

That's not my name。  My name is Edward Butter。

You need not speak so loud。



KEMPTHORN (shaking hands)。

                  Good…by!  Good…by!



BUTTER。

Your servant; sir。



KEMPTHORN。

        And yours a thousand times!

                           'Exeunt。





SCENE III。  GOVERNOR ENDICOTT'S private room。  An open window。 



ENDICOTT seated in an arm…chair。  BELLINGHAM standing near。



ENDICOTT。

O lost; O loved! wilt thou return no more?

O loved and lost; and loved the more when lost!

How many men are dragged into their graves

By their rebellious children!  I now feel

The agony of a father's breaking heart

In David's cry; 〃O Absalom; my son!〃



BELLINGHAM。

Can you not turn your thoughts a little while

To public matters?  There are papers here

That need attention。



ENDICOTT。

                 Trouble me no more!

My business now is with another world;

Ah; Richard Bellingham!  I greatly fear

That in my righteous zeal I have been led

To doing many things which; left undone;

My mind would now be easier。  Did I dream it;

Or has some person told me; that John Norton

Is dead?



BELLINGHAM。

  You have not dreamed it。  He is dead;

And gone to his reward。  It was no dream。



ENDICOTT。

Then it was very sudden; for I saw him

Standing where you now stand; not long ago。



BELLINGHAM。

By his own fireside; in the afternoon;

A faintness and a giddiness came o'er him;

And; leaning on the chimney…piece; he cried;  

〃The hand of God is on me!〃 and fell dead。



ENDICOTT。

And did not some one say; or have I dreamed it;

That Humphrey Atherton is dead?



BELLINGHAM。

                               Alas!

He too is gone; and by a death as sudden。

Returning home one evening; at the place

Where usually the Quakers have been scourged;

His horse took fright; and threw him to the ground;

So that his brains were dashed about the street。



ENDICOTT。

I am not superstitions; Bellingham;

And yet I tremble lest it may have been

A judgment on him。



BELLINGHAM。

                 So the people think。

They say his horse saw standing in the way

The ghost of William Leddra; and was frightened。

And furthermore; brave Richard Davenport;

The captain of the Castle; in the storm

Has been struck dead by lightning。



ENDICOTT。

                       Speak no more。

For as I listen to your voice it seems

As if the Seven Thunders uttered their voices;

And the dead bodies lay about the streets

Of the disconsolate city!  Bellingham;

I did not put those wretched men to death。

I did but guard the passage with the sword

Pointed towards them; and they rushed upon it!

Yet now I would that I had taken no part

In all that bloody work。



BELLINGHAM。

                         The guilt of it

Be on their heads; not ours。



ENDICOTT。

                       Are all set free?



BELLINGHAM。

All are at large。



ENDICOTT。

        And none have been sent back

To England to malign us with the King?



BELLINGHAM。

The ship that brought them sails this very hour;

But carries no one back。



A distant cannon。



ENDICOTT。

                     What is that gun?



BELLINGHAM。

Her parting signal。  Through the window there;

Look; you can see her sails; above the roofs;

Dropping below the Castle; outward bound。



ENDICOTT。

O white; white; white!  Would that my soul had wings

As spotless as those shining sails to fly with!

Now lay this cushion straight。  I thank you。  Hark!

I thought I heard the hall door open and shut!

I thought I beard the footsteps of my boy!



BELLINGHAM。

It was the wind。  There's no one in the passage。



ENDICOTT。

O Absalom; my son!  I feel the world

Sinking beneath me; sinking; sinking; sinking!

Death knocks!  I go to meet him!  Welcome; Death!



Rises; and sinks back dead; his head failing aside upon his 

shoulder。



BELLINGHAM。

O ghastly sight!  Like one who has been hanged!

Endicott!  Endicott!  He makes no answer!



Raises Endicott's head。



He breathes no more!  How bright this signet…ring

Glitters upon his hand; where he has worn it

Through such long years of trouble; as if Death

Had given him this memento of affection;

And whispered in his ear; 〃Remember me!〃

How placid and how quiet is his face;

Now that the struggle and the strife are ended

Only the acrid spirit of the times

Corroded this true steel。  Oh; rest in peace;

Courageous heart!  Forever rest in peace!







GILES COREY OF THE SALEM FARMS



DRAMATIS PERSONAE。



GILES COREY             Farmer。

JOHN HATHORNE           Magistrate。

COTTON MATHER           Minister of the Gospel。

JONATHAN WALCOT         A youth。

RICHARD GARDNER         Sea…Captain。

JOHN GLOYD              Corey's hired man。

MARTHA                  Wife of Giles Corey。

TITUBA                  An Indian woman。

MARY WALCOT             One of the Afflicted。





The Scene is in Salem in the year 1692。



PROLOGUE。



Delusions of the days that once have been;

Witchcraft and wonders of the world unseen;

Phantoms of air; and necromantic arts

That crushed the weak and awed the stoutest hearts;

These are our theme to…night; and vaguely here;

Through the dim mists that crowd the atmosphere;

We draw the outlines of weird figures cast

In shadow on the background of the Past;



Who would believe that in the quiet town

Of Salem; and; amid the woods that crown

The neighboring hillsides; and the sunny farms

That fold it safe in their paternal arms;

Who would believe that in those peaceful streets;

Where the great elms shut out the summer heats;

Where quiet reigns; and breathes through brain and breast

The benediction of unbroken rest;

Who would believe such deeds could find a place

As these whose tragic history we retrace?



'T was but a village then; the goodman ploughed

His ample acres under sun or cloud;

The goodwife at her doorstep sat and spun;

And gossiped with her neighbors in the sun;

The only men of dignity and state

Were then the Minister and the Magistrate;

Who ruled their little realm with iron rod;

Less in the love than in the fear of God;

And who believed devoutly in the Powers

Of Darkness; working in this world of ours;

In spells of Witchcraft; incantations dread;

And shrouded apparitions of the dead。



Upon this simple folk 〃with fire and flame;〃

Saith the old chronicle; 〃the Devil came;

Scattering his firebrands and his poisonous darts;

To set on fire of Hell all tongues and hearts!

And 't is no wonder; for; with all his host;

There most he rages where he hateth most;

And is most hated; so on us he brings

All these stupendous and portentous things!〃



Something of this our scene to…night will show;

And ye who listen to the Tale of Woe;

Be not too swift in casting the first stone;

Nor think New England bears the guilt alone;

This sudden burst of wickedness and crime

Was but the common madness of the time;

When in all lands; that lie within the sound

Of Sabbath bells; a Witch was burned or drowned。





ACT I。





SCENE I。  The woods near Salem Village。  Enter TITUBA; with a 

basket of herbs。



TITUBA。

Here's monk's…hood; that breeds fever in the blood;

And deadly nightshade; that makes men see ghosts;

And henbane; that will shake them with convulsions;

And meadow…saffron and black hellebore;

That rack the nerves; and puff the skin with dropsy;

And bitter…sweet; and briony; and eye…bright;

That cause eruptions; nosebleed; rheumatisms;

I know them; and the places where they hide

In field and meadow; and I know their secrets;

And gather them because they give me power 

Over all men and women。  Armed with these;

I; Tituba; an Indian and a slave;

Am stronger than the captain with his sword;

Am richer than the merchant with his money;

Am wiser than the scholar with his books;

Mightier than Ministers and Magistrates;

With all the fear and reverence that attend them!

For I can fill their bones with aches and pains;

Can make them cough with asthma; shake with palsy;

Can make their daughters see and talk with ghosts;

Or fall into delirium and convulsions;

I have the Evil Eye; the Evil Hand;

A touch from me and they are weak with pain;

A look from me; and they consume and die。

The death of cattle and the blight of corn;

The shipwreck; the tornado; and the fire;

These are my doings; and they know it not。

Thus I work vengeance on mine enemies

Who; while they call me slave; are slaves to me!



Exit TITUBA。  Enter MATHER; booted and spurred; with a

riding…whip in his hand。



MATHER。

Methinks that I have come by paths unknown

Into the land and atmosphere of Witches;

For; meditating as I journeyed on;

Lo! I have lost my way!  If I remember

Rightly; it is Scribonius the learned

That tells the story of a man

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