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submission awakened the fury of Philip, and he smote to death one of his followers who proposed an expedient of peace. The brother of the victim made his escape, and, in revenge, betrayed the retreat of his chieftain.

48. A body of white men and Indians were immediately dispatched to the swamp where Philip lay crouched, glaring with fury and despair. Before he was aware of their ap proach they had begun to surround him. In a little while he saw five of his trustiest followers laid dead at his feet. All resistance was vain. He rushed forth from his cover and made a headlong attempt to escape; but was shot through the heart by a renegade Indian of his own nation. Such is the scanty story of the brave but unfortunate King Philip." His body was cut in quarters, and his head was sent to Plymouth, where it was exposed on a gibbet for twenty years. His captive child was sold as a slave in Bermuda.

49. In the year 1692, Sir William Phipps, a native of Maine, came from England with

a commission from King William, as governor of Massachu

setts. Within the Salem limits of his province were the old colony

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Witchcraft.

THE STOCKS. 1

of Plymouth and the territories of Maine and Nova Scotia. All this region, not including New Hampshire, was now called Massachusetts. Phipps was a "ship carpenter and a fortune-seeker. Accustomed from boyhood to the axe and the oar, he had gained distinction

"The stocks and pillory were movable machines on wheels, and had no fixed position. Both were used as a means of enforcing attendance at church meetings, or punishing offences against the church, and their location at its very portal served no doubt as a gentle reminder to the congregation. It is related that in the year 1753 a woman stood for an hour in the pillory of the Town House, Boston, amid the scoffs and jeers of the multitude."-Drake's Old Landmarks.

1692

The Salem Witchcraft.

79

only by his wealth, the fruits of his enterprise with the diving-bell in raising treasures from a Spanish wreck." Almost as soon as he assumed the government he became engaged in a very frightful business.

50. In the little village of Salem, now Danvers, were two young girls, in the family of a clergyman, who "began to have strange caprices. They complained of being pinched and pricked with pins; and often would pretend to be seized with strange convulsions, and would cry out that witches were afflicting them." This led to a strange excitement and alarm. Numbers of persons were accused of the crime of witchcraft, and, to escape torture, con

fessed that they were guilty. More than fifty, in this way, were compelled to make such a confession. Twenty persons were put to death, and many others were cast into prison. This dreadful delusion lasted more than six months; and it was not until some of the magistrates themselves, and even the governor's wife, were accused, that the people began to see how terribly they had been deceived. All the prisoners were set at liberty; "but the innocent dead could not be restored to life; and the hill where they were executed will always remind people of the saddest and most humiliating passage in our history.

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THE PILLORY.

51. "It is well known that no exclusive reproach can with justice be cast upon any part of New England on account of a delusion which equally prevailed in the most enlightened countries of Europe, and received Witchcraft

in

Europe.

the countenance of the most learned and intelligent men and upright magistrates. In contemplating this sorrowful page in the history of our ancestors, we must bear in mind that, as I have already intimated, no

peculis reproach attaches to them. They acted upon principles which all professed, and in which the sincere in all parts of Christendom reposed an undoubting faith."

New York and New Jersey.

1. Two years after Smith and his companions had begun to fell the trees for the settlement of Jamestown, but eleven years before the Mayflower landed the Pilgrims at Plymouth, the Half-Moon, a Dutch

ship, entered the harbor of New
York (1609).1 Its
Discovery of
the Hudson commander, Henry
river. Hudson, was an Eng-

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HENRY HUDSON.

lishman. In the service of his countrymen, Hudson had twice tried to find a shorter passage by water from the Atlantic to the Pacific than the one discovered by Magellan around the southern part of the American continent. Now, in the service of a Dutch company, he was making his third attempt. 2. "The ship was soon visited by canoes full of native warriors; but no one was suffered to come on board, though their oysters and beans were gladly purchased. The first of Europeans, Hudson, now began to explore the Half-Moon great river which stretched before him to the ascending north, opening, as he hoped, the way to eastern seas. Slowly drifting upward with the flood-tide, he anchored one night just above Yonkers, in sight of 'a

The

the Hudson.

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In behalf of the French, it has been claimed, and the claim has been very generally allowed, that Verrazzani explored a part of the eastern coast of North America in 1524, and then discovered the Hudson river. But this claim has been disputed (See the works on the subject by H. C. Murphy and J. C. Brevoort).

1609 The Half-Moon Ascending the Hudson.

81

high point of land, which showed out' five leagues off to the north. The next day, a southeast wind carried him up rapidly through the majestic pass guarded by the frowning

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Donderberg. At nightfall he anchored his yacht near West Point, in the midst of the sublimest scenery of the mountains.

3. The next morning was misty until the sun arose, and the grandeur of the overhanging highlands was again revealed. A fair south wind sprung up as the weather became clear, and a bright autumnal day succeeded. Running sixty miles up along the varied shores which lined the deep channel, and delighted every moment with the ever-changing scenery and the magnificent virgin forests which clothed the river-banks with their gorgeous autumnal hues, Hudson arrived towards evening opposite the loftier' mountains which lic from the river's side,' and anchored the Half-Moon near

Catskill landing. Here he found a very loving people, and very old men.'

4. The friendly natives flocked on board the yacht as she remained lazily at anchor the next morning, and brought the crew 'ears of Indian corn, and pumpkins, and tobacco,' which were readily bought for trifles. In the afternoon Hudson went six miles further up the river, and anchored one night near the marshes which divide the channel opposite the flourishing city which now bears his name. Early the next morning he set sail again, and, slowly working his way through the shoaling channel and among the small islands which embarrassed navigation, anchored toward evening about eighteen miles further up. Here the Half-Moon remained at anchor all the next day. With the flood-tide on the following morning the vessel ran higher up, and anchored in deep water near the site of the present city of Albany.

5. The people of the country came flocking on board, and brought grapes and pumpkins, and beaver and otter skins, which were purchased for beads, knives, and hatchets. Here the yacht lingered for several days. Everything now seemed to indicate that the Half-Moon had reached the head of ship navigation. The downward current was fresh and clear, the shoaling channel was narrow and obstructed; yet Hudson, unwilling, perhaps, to abandon his long-cherished hope, dispatched the mate, with a boat's crew, to sound the river higher up. After going eight or nine leagues, and finding 'but seven feet of water and inconstant soundings,' the exploring party returned, and reported that they had found it to be at an end for shipping to go in.' Hudson now reluc tantly prepared to return."

The

6

6. The Dutch made no more attempts to find a northwestern passage from ocean to ocean, but they sent first ships to the country which Hudson had discovered settlement. for them, and explored the coast from both sides of Delaware bay to Massachusetts bay. To a company of mer

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