![]()
![]()
www.common-place.org · vol. 1 · no. 3 · April 2001
|
|
Three Poems Introduction | I | II | III Testimony: He or His Apparition
About noon, at Salem, Giles Corey was press'd to death for standing Mute. -- Samuel Sewall, Diary, September 19, 1692 The girls' testimony is gravel scattered on the grass.
Ann Putnam: Giles Corey or his Apperance has most Inside the meetinghouse each afflicted girl repeats the next.
Mercy Lewis: I veryly beleve in my heart that Giles Cory
The copier flattens the page, hammers down identical
Sarah Bibber: I have ben most greviously affleted by giles
But the man won't speak to defend or plead. He sits still and
Mary Warren: At the time of his examination I saw: s'd
The morning of his execution: the meetinghouse floods with
Nobody can see the lesson: nothing can drive the voice Discuss this article in the Republic of Letters |
![]()
Copyright © 2001 Common-place The Interactive Journal of Early American
Life, Inc., all rights reserved