By Robert Griffing.
THE NINETEENTH REMOVE
They said, when we went out, that we must
travel to Wachusett this day. But a bitter weary day I had of it, traveling now
three days together, without resting any day between. At last, after many weary
steps, I saw Wachusett hills, but many miles off. Then we came to a great
swamp, through which we traveled, up to the knees in mud and water, which was
heavy going to one tired before. Being almost spent, I thought I should have
sunk down at last, and never got out; but I may say, as in Psalm 94.18,
"When my foot slipped, thy mercy, O Lord, held me up." Going along,
having indeed my life, but little spirit, Philip, who was in the company, came
up and took me by the hand, and said, two weeks more and you shall be mistress
again. I asked him, if he spake true? He answered, "Yes, and quickly you
shall come to your master again; who had been gone from us three weeks."
After many weary steps we came to Wachusett, where he was: and glad I was to
see him. He asked me, when I washed me? I told him not this month. Then he
fetched me some water himself, and bid me wash, and gave me the glass to see
how I looked; and bid his squaw give me something to eat. So she gave me a mess
of beans and meat, and a little ground nut cake. I was wonderfully revived with
this favor showed me: "He made them also to be pitied of all those that
carried them captives" (Psalm 106.46).
My master had three squaws, living
sometimes with one, and sometimes with another one, this old squaw, at whose
wigwam I was, and with whom my master had been those three weeks. Another was
Wattimore [Weetamoo] with whom I had lived and served all this while. A severe
and proud dame she was, bestowing every day in dressing herself neat as much
time as any of the gentry of the land: powdering her hair, and painting her
face, going with necklaces, with jewels in her ears, and bracelets upon her
hands. When she had dressed herself, her work was to make girdles of wampum and
beads. The third squaw was a younger one, by whom he had two papooses. By the
time I was refreshed by the old squaw, with whom my master was, Weetamoo's maid
came to call me home, at which I fell aweeping. Then the old squaw told me, to
encourage me, that if I wanted victuals, I should come to her, and that I
should lie there in her wigwam. Then I went with the maid, and quickly came
again and lodged there. The squaw laid a mat under me, and a good rug over me;
the first time I had any such kindness showed me. I understood that Weetamoo
thought that if she should let me go and serve with the old squaw, she would be
in danger to lose not only my service, but the redemption pay also. And I was
not a little glad to hear this; being by it raised in my hopes, that in God's
due time there would be an end of this sorrowful hour. Then came an Indian, and
asked me to knit him three pair of stockings, for which I had a hat, and a silk
handkerchief. Then another asked me to make her a shift, for which she gave me
an apron.
Then came Tom and Peter, with the second
letter from the council, about the captives. Though they were Indians, I got
them by the hand, and burst out into tears. My heart was so full that I could
not speak to them; but recovering myself, I asked them how my husband did, and
all my friends and acquaintance? They said, "They are all very well but
melancholy." They brought me two biscuits, and a pound of tobacco. The
tobacco I quickly gave away. When it was all gone, one asked me to give him a
pipe of tobacco. I told him it was all gone. Then began he to rant and
threaten. I told him when my husband came I would give him some. Hang him rogue
(says he) I will knock out his brains, if he comes here. And then again, in the
same breath they would say that if there should come an hundred without guns,
they would do them no hurt. So unstable and like madmen they were. So that
fearing the worst, I durst not send to my husband, though there were some
thoughts of his coming to redeem and fetch me, not knowing what might follow. For
there was little more trust to them than to the master they served. When the
letter was come, the Sagamores met to consult about the captives, and called me
to them to inquire how much my husband would give to redeem me. When I came I
sat down among them, as I was wont to do, as their manner is. Then they bade me
stand up, and said they were the General Court. They bid me speak what I
thought he would give. Now knowing that all we had was destroyed by the
Indians, I was in a great strait. I thought if I should speak of but a little
it would be slighted, and hinder the matter; if of a great sum, I knew not
where it would be procured. Yet at a venture I said "Twenty pounds,"
yet desired them to take less. But they would not hear of that, but sent that
message to Boston, that for twenty pounds I should be redeemed. It was a
Praying Indian that wrote their letter for them. There was another Praying
Indian, who told me, that he had a brother, that would not eat horse; his
conscience was so tender and scrupulous (though as large as hell, for the
destruction of poor Christians). Then he said, he read that Scripture to him,
"There was a famine in Samaria, and behold they besieged it, until an
ass's head was sold for four-score pieces of silver, and the fourth part of a
cab of dove's dung for five pieces of silver" (2 Kings 6.25). He expounded
this place to his brother, and showed him that it was lawful to eat that in a
famine which is not at another time. And now, says he, he will eat horse with
any Indian of them all. There was another Praying Indian, who when he had done
all the mischief that he could, betrayed his own father into the English hands,
thereby to purchase his own life. Another Praying Indian was at Sudbury fight,
though, as he deserved, he was afterward hanged for it. There was another
Praying Indian, so wicked and cruel, as to wear a string about his neck, strung
with Christians' fingers. Another Praying Indian, when they went to Sudbury
fight, went with them, and his squaw also with him, with her papoose at her
back. Before they went to that fight they got a company together to pow-wow.
The manner was as followeth: there was one that kneeled upon a deerskin, with
the company round him in a ring who kneeled, and striking upon the ground with
their hands, and with sticks, and muttering or humming with their mouths.
Besides him who kneeled in the ring, there also stood one with a gun in his
hand. Then he on the deerskin made a speech, and all manifested assent to it;
and so they did many times together. Then they bade him with the gun go out of
the ring, which he did. But when he was out, they called him in again; but he
seemed to make a stand; then they called the more earnestly, till he returned
again. Then they all sang. Then they gave him two guns, in either hand one. And
so he on the deerskin began again; and at the end of every sentence in his
speaking, they all assented, humming or muttering with their mouths, and
striking upon the ground with their hands. Then they bade him with the two guns
go out of the ring again; which he did, a little way. Then they called him in
again, but he made a stand. So they called him with greater earnestness; but he
stood reeling and wavering as if he knew not whither he should stand or fall,
or which way to go. Then they called him with exceeding great vehemency, all of
them, one and another. After a little while he turned in, staggering as he
went, with his arms stretched out, in either hand a gun. As soon as he came in
they all sang and rejoiced exceedingly a while. And then he upon the deerskin,
made another speech unto which they all assented in a rejoicing manner. And so
they ended their business, and forthwith went to Sudbury fight. To my thinking
they went without any scruple, but that they should prosper, and gain the
victory. And they went out not so rejoicing, but they came home with as great a
victory. For they said they had killed two captains and almost an hundred men.
One Englishman they brought along with them: and he said, it was too true, for
they had made sad work at Sudbury, as indeed it proved. Yet they came home
without that rejoicing and triumphing over their victory which they were wont
to show at other times; but rather like dogs (as they say) which have lost
their ears. Yet I could not perceive that it was for their own loss of men.
They said they had not lost above five or six; and I missed none, except in one
wigwam. When they went, they acted as if the devil had told them that they
should gain the victory; and now they acted as if the devil had told them they
should have a fall. Whither it were so or no, I cannot tell, but so it proved,
for quickly they began to fall, and so held on that summer, till they came to
utter ruin. They came home on a Sabbath day, and the Powaw that kneeled upon
the deer-skin came home (I may say, without abuse) as black as the devil. When
my master came home, he came to me and bid me make a shirt for his papoose, of
a holland-laced pillowbere. About that time there came an Indian to me and bid
me come to his wigwam at night, and he would give me some pork and ground nuts.
Which I did, and as I was eating, another Indian said to me, he seems to be
your good friend, but he killed two Englishmen at Sudbury, and there lie their
clothes behind you: I looked behind me, and there I saw bloody clothes, with
bullet-holes in them. Yet the Lord suffered not this wretch to do me any hurt.
Yea, instead of that, he many times refreshed me; five or six times did he and
his squaw refresh my feeble carcass. If I went to their wigwam at any time,
they would always give me something, and yet they were strangers that I never
saw before. Another squaw gave me a piece of fresh pork, and a little salt with
it, and lent me her pan to fry it in; and I cannot but remember what a sweet,
pleasant and delightful relish that bit had to me, to this day. So little do we
prize common mercies when we have them to the full.
Your blog would be easier to read if you switch to a white background with black writing.
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