MAGNALIA CHRISTI
AMERICANA;
or
THE ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY OF NEW-ENGLAND
by Cotton Mather (1663-1728)
Now Reproduced from the
Edition of 1852
and Published in 1967 by Russell & Russell
A Division of Atheneum House, Inc.
From: Volume 2, Article XXV, pages 634-636
On March 15, 1697, the salvages
made a descent upon the skirts of Haverhill, murdering and captivating about thirty-nine
persons, and burning about half a dozen houses. In this broil, one Hannah Dustan, having
lain in about a week, attended with her nurse, Mary Neff, a body of terrible Indians drew
near unto the house where she lay, with designs to carry on their bloody devastations. Her
husband hastened from his employments abroad unto the relief of his distressed family; and
first bidding seven of his eight children (which were from two to seventeen years of age)
to get away as fast as they could unto some garrison in the town, he went in to inform his
wife of the horrible distress come upon them. Ere she could get up, the fierce Indians
were got so near, that, utterly desparing to do her any service, he ran out after his
children; resolving that on the horse which he had with him, he would ride away with that
which he should in this extremity find his affections to pitch most upon, and leave the
rest unto the care of the Divine Providence. He overtook his children, about forty rod
from his door; but then such was the agony of his parental affections, that he found it
impossible for him to distinguish any one of them from the rest; wherefore he took up a
courageous resolution to live and die with them all. A party of Indians came up with him;
and now, though they fired at him, and he fired at them, yet he manfully kept at the reer
of his little army of unarmed children, while they marched off with the pace of a child of
five years old; until, by the singular providence of God, he arrived safe with them all
unto a place of safety about a mile or two from his house. But his house must in the mean
time have more dismal tragedies acted at it. The nurse, trying to escape with the new-born
infant, fell into the hands of the formidable salvages; and those furious tawnies coming
into the house, bid poor Dustan to rise immediately. Full of astonishment, she did so; and
sitting down in the chimney with an heart full of most fearful expectation, she saw the
raging dragons rifle all that they could carry away, and set the house on fire. About
nineteen or twenty Indians now led these away, with about half a score other English
captives; but ere they had gone many steps, they dash'd out the brains of the infant
against a tree; and several of the other captives, as they began to tire in the sad
journey, were soon sent unto their long home; the salvages would presently bury their
hatchets in their brains, and leave their carcases on the ground for birds and beasts to
feed upon. However, Dustan (with her nurse) notwithstanding her present condition,
travelled that night about a dozen miles, and then kept up with their new masters in a
long travelof an hundred and fifty miles, more or less, within a few days ensuing, without
any sensible damage in their health, from the hardships of their travel, their lodging,
their diet, and their many other difficulties.
These two poor women were now in the hands of those whose "tender mercies are
cruelties;" but the good God, who hath all "hearts in his own hands," heard
the sighs of these prisoners, and gave them to find unexpected favour from the master who
hath laid claim unto them. That Indian family consisted of twelve persons; two stout men,
three women, and seven children; and for the shame of many an English family, that has the
character of prayerless upon it, I must now publish what these poor women assure me. 'Tis
this: in obedience to the instructions which the French have given them, they would have
prayers in their family no less than thrice every day; in the morning, at noon, and in the
evening; nor would they ordinarily let their children eat or sleep, without first saying
their prayers. Indeed, these idolaters were, like the rest of their whiter brethren,
persecutors, and would not endure that these poor women should retire to their English
prayers, if they could hinder them. Nevertheless, the poor women had nothing but fervent
prayers to make their lives comfortable or tolerable; and by being daily sent out upon
business, they had opportunities, together and asunder, to do like another Hannah, in
"pouring out their souls before the Lord." Nor did their praying friends among
our selves forbear to "pour out" supplications for them. Now, they could not
observe it without some wonder, that their Indian master sometimes when he saw them
dejected, would say unto them, "What need you trouble your self? If your God will
have you delivered, you shall be so!" And it seems our God would have it so to be.
This Indian family was now travelling with these two captive women, (and an English youth
taken from Worcester, a year and a half before,) unto a rendezvous of salvages, which they
call a town, some where beyond Penacook; and they still told these poor women that when
they came to this town, they must be stript, and scourg'd, and run the gantlet through the
whole army of Indians. They said this was the fashion when the captives first came to a
town; and they derided some of the faint-hearted English, which, they said, fainted and
swooned away under the torments of this discipline. But on April 30, while they were yet,
it may be, about an hundred and fifty miles from the Indian town, a little before break of
day, when the whole crew was in a dead sleep, (reader, see if it prove not so!) one of
these women took up a resolution to imitate the action of Gael upon Siberia; and being
where she had not her own life secured by any law unto her, she thought she was not
forbidden by any law to take away the life of the murderers by whom her child had been
butchered. She heartened the nurse and the youth to assist her in this enterprize; and all
furnishing themselves with hatchets for the purpose, they struck such home blows upon the
heads of their sleeping oppressors, that ere they could any of them struggle into any
effectual resistance, "at the feet of these poor prisoners, they bow'd, they fell,
they lay down; at their feet they bow'd, they fell; where they bow'd, there they fell down
dead." Only one squaw escaped, sorely wounded, from them in the dark; and one boy,
whom they reserved asleep, intending to bring him away with them, suddenly waked, and
scuttled away from this desolation. But cutting off the scalps of the ten wretches, they
came off, and received fifty pounds from the General Assembly of the province, as a
recompence of their action; besides which, they received many "presents of
congratulation" from their more private friends: but none gave 'em a greater taste of
bounty than Colonel Nicholson, The Governour of Maryland, who, hearing of their action,
sent 'em a very generous token of his favour. |
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