My historical novels Rebel Puritan and The Reputed Wife, Herodias (Long) Hicks Gardner Porter, colonial New England, travels, and whatever else seizes my fancy...
Showing posts with label Rebel Puritan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rebel Puritan. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

One Hundred Words for Slut



Jezebel movie poster

Are there really fifty words for snow in the Eskimo/Inuit language? It’s said that Inuit have a huge number of terms for different types of snow – falling, flakes, needles, the type you’d use to make an igloo, etc. Wikipedia has a page disputing "50 words for snow" as a myth, but it also states that the Sami language used in Finland, Norway and Sweden has 180 words for snow. 

In upstate New York we have many ways to describe frozen stuff which falls out of the sky, lies on the ground, and makes our lives miserable for six months: sleet, graupel, powder, corn snow …. Let's just say that the Inuit, who live with snow and ice for most of the year, have many more. Moreover, I don’t really care how many words for snow there are.

However, I just had an eye-opening moment while composing the novel which, along with Rebel Puritan and The Reputed Wife, will conclude my series based on the scandalous life of Herodias Long of 17th century Rhode Island. In a quest to keep my language accurate for the time, I consult The Historical Thesaurus online.

Slut. I wasn’t looking it up for Herodias, though some people think that I was right on the money applying that word to her. Herodias was spurned by many 19th century genealogists for her marital and extra-marital hijinx. A fair amount of ink has been spilled psychoanalyzing her, and I’ve spent a lot of years getting into Herod’s head as I write about her.

However, I’m looking up slut as I bring to life the young woman who, in 1664, supplants Herod in George Gardner’s life: Lydia Ballou. I figure that slut was in use before 1664, but checked to be sure. The Historical Thesaurus contains words gleaned from the Oxford English Dictionary and the Thesaurus of Old English, and puts slut in use to describe an unchaste woman by 1450.

I can think of a whooooole bunch of similar words; many are modern, and several are even older than slut. Strumpet. Wench. Whore. However, I was dumbfounded to see the abundance of ways I could describe a loose woman.

There are 84 terms I could use in 1664 and preserve historical accuracy; from the Old English lufestre and scylcen to tub-tail and laced mutton. Surprisingly, tomboy and housewife were applied to loose women in the 1500s. Another 45 words have been added to the English language since 1664, making 129 in all. 

By comparison, there were only about 20 terms in play for a male lecher before 1664. Is that because the vast majority of plays and books about persons of loose morals were written by men? Were they less critical of their own sex, and inclined to be more inventive in describing women?

The Inuit are said to have 50 words for snow because that substance (in its many forms) is so vital to them. With 129 words in the English thesaurus for women of easy virtue, does that mean they are even more important in our lives? Or is it just that we love our sluttish wenches so?


Here’s the entire list for unchaste women from the Historical Thesaurus:

03.05.05.07.02|03.03.01 n
Unchastity :: sexual indulgence :: unchaste behaviour of woman :: unchaste/loose woman
There are 129 words at this level:

bepæcestre OE
firenhicgend OE
horcwene OE
lufestre OE
scand OE
scrætte OE
scylcen OE
synnecge OE
quean/cwene OE– now arch.
Whore/hore OE
wenchel c1300 
strumpet a1327 
wench 1362–1781 
parnel 1362–a1800 
filth 1402– obs. exc. dial. 
tickle-tail c1430 + 1869 dial. 
harlot 1432/50
slut c1450
kittock c1470–1706 Scots 
mignote 1489 
ribald a1500–1530 
sinner a1500–1688 
Kitty 1500/20–1572 
callet c1500–1785 
flag 1500/20–1535 + 1866 
trull 1519–1871 
miswoman 1528–a1600 
dant a1529 
stewed strumpet 1532–1575 
whore 1532–1575 
unchaghe 1534 
Katy 1535 
yaud 1545 Scots & northern dial. 
housewife/huswife 1546–1705 
jelot c1550(2) 
trinklet c1550 
whippet 1550–1597 
gillot 1557–1579/80 
Jezebel 1558
loon c1560–1828 Scots 
limmer 1566 + 1728 Scots 
marian 1567 
mort 1567–1812 cant 
mot/mott 1567– cant 
rannell 1573–1592 
blowze 1573–1719 
rig 1575–1694 + 1829– dial. 
kit a1577–1600 
poplet 1577 
laced mutton 1578–1694 
tomboy 1579–a1700 
Tib 1582–1681 
pucelle 1583–a1700 
harlotry 1584–c1836 
malkin/mawkin 1586 obs. exc. dial. 
light of love/light o' love/light a love 1589
flirt-gill 1592–1618 
wagtail 1592–1710 
hilding 1592–1713 
driggle-draggle 1593–1611 
tub-tail 1595 
franion 1596 
baggage 1596–1851 
hiren 1597–1615 
bona roba 1597–1680 + 1822 
lightskirts 1597/8
jay 1598–1611 
minx 1598–1728 + 1939
short-heels 1599 
cockatrice 1599–1747 
flirt 1600–1703 
light-heels 1602 
roba 1602 
fricatrice 1605–1708 + 1871 
rumbelow 1611–a1700 
open-tail a1618 
succubus 1622–1803 
snaphance a1625 
flap 1631 + 1892 dial. & slang 
nymph 1632
amorosa 1634 
puffkin 1638 
wrig 1638 
vizard 1652–1719 
In case you missed one of your favorite words to describe a soiled dove, here are more which came into use after 1664:
tomrig 1668–1728 
jilt 1672–1815 
crack 1676–1719 + 1785
buttered bun(s) 1679 
filthy 1681 
grass-girl 1691 
cousin a1700 cant Dict. + 1708 cant 
mobbed-head 1707 
trully 1711 
brim 1730/6–1808 
trollop 1742
trub 1746 dial. 
Cousin Betty 1749(2) 
demi-rep 1749–1887 
tittup 1762 + 1901 
buer 1807– slang & northern dial. 
lady of easy virtue 1809
blowen/blowing 1812–1851 slang 
sportswoman 1816 
fie-fie 1820 
trail 1825–1901 
streel/sthreal/sthreel 1842– chiefly Irish 
shickster 1846– slang 
trolly(-mog) 1851– dial. 
scarlet woman 1853
amazon 1860 fig. 
anonyma 1864–1889 
pick-up 1871
wish-wife 1886 
chippy 1886– slang, orig. US 
tart 1887– slang 
tartlet a1890 + 1961 
fly girl/fly-girl 1893– US slang 
demi-mondaine 1894–1969 
scrub 1900– slang 
demi-vierge 1908–1951 
floosie/floozie 1911
muff 1914– slang, orig. US 
tarty 1918 colloq. 
sporting girl/woman 1925– N. Amer. 
hooer 1937 Austral. & NZ 
half-virgin 1946–1965 
messer 1951 slang 
bim 1953 US slang 
demi-virgin 1953 
puta 1967– slang 

As for lustful men, they have far fewer descriptive words in the Historical Thesaurus, and I had to do numerous searches to find these terms:

galsere OE
lecher c1175
lecherer c1380–1605
priapist 1532
venerien 1567
franion 1571–1600 + 1810
colt 1586
luster 1591–1705
simpler 1592–1602
libertine 1593
twigger 1594
venerist 1596–1623
Corinthian 1596–1697 + 1785
tit 1599
venerian 1601
luxur 1604–1607 rare
libertine 1605
night-neaker 1611
niggler 1613–1659
libidinist 1628–1634
high-boy 1668–a1680
goat 1675
swinge-bow 1675
man of the town a1700–1785
town-bull 1709
capriped 1730/6 Dict. + 1916 + 1925
lothario 1756
satyr 1781– fig.
gay-deceiver 1803
playboy/play-boy 1829– colloq.
gay-dog 1900
lech 1934
ram 1935– colloq.
lizard 1935
tom(-)cat 1942– colloq., orig. US fig. transf.
skirt chaser 1943
stoat a1960–1978 fig.

Sources:


Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Meet My Main Character



1705 Gardner and Watson home lots at Pettaquamscutt

It’s been a while since I last added a post to my Rebel Puritan blog. However, my neglect has been for the right reason: I’m deep into the manuscript for The Golden Shore, the final book in my trilogy about Herodias Long and her family. Currently, I’m recreating Pettaquamscutt, the town where Herodias and her children settled on the west side of Narragansett Bay. Pettaquamscutt was burned out in King Philip’s War, a sad event which will be featured in Golden Shore.
Anyhow, I’m back here as part of a fun historical fiction blog hop, and here’s my thank you to Paula Lofting for tagging me.
Rebel Puritan and The Reputed Wife
We participants are introducing readers to our main characters. I’ve written before about Herodias, in connection with her heroic protest against abuse of the Quakers by Puritans, as depicted in The Reputed Wife, and also in her struggle for personal freedom in Rebel Puritan. Now that I’m writing about Herod’s efforts to ensure her family’s bright future in The Golden Shore, it’s time to bring readers up to date.
1) What is the name of your character? Is he/she fictional or a historic person?

Herodias (Long) Hicks Gardner Porter really did scandalize her contemporaries with her outspoken ways, and also mothered a dynasty. I am proud to be her 8th-great granddaughter.

2) When and where is the story set?

King Charles II
Seventeenth- century Rhode Island battled for existence for twenty-five years before King Charles II guaranteed its existence with a royal charter in 1663, and commanded the Puritan colonies to stop interfering with Rhode Island’s affairs. Rhode Islanders’ freedom of conscience was also included in the royal charter. Herodias was whipped and Mary (Barrett) Dyer
was hanged in Massachusetts for civil disobedience in defense of religious freedom. With the new charter, Puritan colonies could no longer punish Rhode Islanders for their religious beliefs.

However, the charter did not put an end to Rhode Islanders’ struggles. In the 1660s, New Englanders are expanding into Indian lands, and tension between Englishmen and Native Americans is building toward open warfare in 1675.

3) What should we know about Herodias?

Herod has rebuilt her life after youthful impulse led her to marry the abusive John Hicks in Rebel Puritan. In The Reputed Wife, Herod reconciled with her oldest daughter, Hannah (Hicks) Haviland, and has borne seven children with George Gardner. Herod walked sixty miles to Boston to protest the abuse of Quakers, only to be whipped and jailed herself. With that abuse ended by royal mandate, and Rhode Island’s future ensured, Herod’s life should be equally secure.

4) What is the main conflict? What messes up her life?

Herod is still hiding a secret – twenty years ago, she refused to wed George Gardner because she feared being bound to him. When the opportunity arises to turn her children’s future golden, but George Gardner holds back, what should Herod do?

5) What is the personal goal of the character?

Ever since Herod’s father died when she was twelve and she was unwillingly sent to London by her mother, Herod has craved security. And, though most seventeenth-century women were essentially their husbands’ property, Herod seeks to control her own life.

6) Is there a working title for this novel, and can we read more about it?

The title is The Golden Shore, and you can read the first chapter below.

7) When can we expect the book to be published?

I wish that I could say this year, but the scope of Golden Shore requires extra time. It will be printed in 2015.

Now it’s Peni Renner’s turn. Her post will be up in a few days, and you can find it at:



And finally, here’s the first chapter of The Golden Shore. Let’s see how much it changes in the print version!

A SCANDALOUS LIFE: THE GOLDEN SHORE
Chapter 1
June 1, 1660

HERODIAS GARDNER’S SHOULDERS straightened, and she turned toward the gallows where Mary Dyer’s trussed corpse swayed in the breeze coming off Massachusetts Bay. To get to the docks, where Herod and John Porter could board the first ship headed south from Boston’s Harbor, they had to pass by her dear friend’s body.
 John warned, “Don’t look,” but Herod wanted to prepare herself. Not only must she cross under the gallows’ shadow; she also had to ride by the governor who had condemned Mary to die.
The executioner had tied Mary’s gray skirt around her ankles before turning her off the ladder. It wouldn’t do to have the woman exposed as she was dying, would it? But Mary’s garment had come loose and was billowing in the wind.
“We must pass by ….” John nodded toward the gallows. “This horse is too tired to make a fuss, but Endecott is still there. Pull up your hood, keep your eyes on me, and say nothing. If he remembers you, all hell will be loosed. Hang on.”
Herod tugged her cloak’s hood over her head, tilting it to hide her face, and then laced her fingers in the horse’s straw-colored mane. Her heart was racing despite her exhaustion. Two days ago she and John had set out from Newport, Rhode Island, headed for Boston as quickly as the inexperienced Herod could ride. They had hoped to talk Mary into accepting Puritan clemency. Instead, slowed by their lamed horse, they reached Boston’s gate just in time to watch Mary hang.
John clicked his tongue at the horse and tugged it through the dispersing crowd. Herod thought, ‘John must be as sore-footed as this beast. He walked most of the way from Dedham.’ As they neared the gallows, Herod kept her gaze on John’s back. His sleeves and green woolen doublet were powdered with dust, and so was his gray-streaked hair.
Then, twenty feet to their right, a man called, “John Porter, is that you?”
Herod’s neck creaked as her unwilling head swiveled. There, clad in somber black, were three men who still haunted her dreams.
Only two years ago, Herod put her newborn daughter in a sling and walked fifty wilderness miles from her home in Newport to Weymouth, Massachusetts. She and her first husband, John Hicks, had dwelt there for a time, and perhaps some of Herod’s old friends still did. A pair of Quaker women was sentenced to be whipped in Boston, and maybe Herod could persuade her friends to help stop it.
Herod made an impromptu protest in the marketplace, but was then arrested by the militia and hauled to the governor’s home in Boston. Then, stripped to her waist, Herod was lashed in Boston’s public square. Now the men responsible for her ordeal stood just a few feet before her.
Reverend John Wilson. After she was flogged, that black-cloaked hypocrite had come to Herod’s dank cell. Under the guise of saving her soul, the preacher sought words from Herod that he could twist into heresy, or witchery done by Mary Dyer. A half hour ago Herod had watched him endorse Mary’s hanging.
The tall man with a plumed hat at Wilson’s side was General Humphrey Atherton. The militia commander’s eyes were as hard as his polished iron breastplate. Atherton had tried to tear her infant from Herod’s arms at the whipping post. Certain that she’d never see Rebecca again, Herod had desperately clung to her. When the executioner turned his lash on Herod, only her arms protected Rebecca from the three-corded whip. Herod still lived that battle in her dreams.
The third man, stout and black-cloaked, was the one who had called to Porter. Governor John Endecott’s puffy cheeks were flushed with triumph. He said, “Mr. Porter, what brings you to Boston?”
The white tuft of hair on the governor’s chin twitched as he talked. Herod couldn’t tear her eyes away, thinking, ‘Papa’s old billy goat, out at pasture with the sheep. His beard waggled just like that when he cudded.’
John answered Endecott’s question, “Business with Mr. Hull.” He led Herod’s mount forward, but Atherton caught the animal’s bridle. “You needn’t hurry. The excitement is past.” The general’s full lips twitched at the corners.
Herod’s bleak mood blazed into fury. How dare Atherton find amusement in Mary’s tragic death? John gripped her ankle again, but his warning wasn’t necessary. She choked down her wrath and her eyes dropped to the horse’s neck.
John said to Atherton, “I was supposed to meet Hull an hour ago, but was delayed by this sad affair.”
“Sad?” scoffed Wilson. “Satan’s hand is snatched away from our Godly people, and you call it sad?”
“It’s sad to murder a fine woman guilty only of defying your laws, Reverend Wilson.”
Endecott coughed, and Herod stole another look at him. His mouth worked silently, and then he asked John, “After you see Mr. Hull, then you return to Rhode Island?”
“Aye.”
The elderly governor jerked his head toward the masked body hanging from the gallows. “Know you who that is?”
“William Dyer’s wife,” John said, each word emphasized coldly. “Do you not fear his response? Mr. Dyer is not without influence in Parliament, and ’twas they who appointed him to act against the Dutch. Sir Henry Vane was friends with the Dyers, and he won’t look kindly on your foul act either.”
“Vane is out of favor in Parliament,” scoffed Endecott. “Dyer knew well what would happen if he didn’t keep his wife at home. We even reprieved the woman last year. She took her own life today, surely as if she hurled herself on Atherton’s sword.”
Endecott’s pouched eyes narrowed. “Carry a warning to your Quakers to keep themselves and their witchery in Rhode Island. This is what heretics face in Massachusetts.”
John passed the horse’s reins from one hand to the other. His voice was silky when he asked Endecott, “What of the king?”
“Charles? He’s not king yet. It will never come to pass.”
“The royalists have risen, and they’ve invited Charles back onto the throne,” John told the governor. “It’s naught but a matter of time now. Your Puritan brethren sliced off his father’s head.” John pointed at the gallows. “Will Charles look kindly on such handiwork when he rules you?” Endecott’s mouth opened, but John told him, “What if our new king sends a royal commissioner to oversee your affairs?”
“Bear the governor’s warning to the Quakers, Porter, and mind that we don’t search your baggage for their pamphlets,” Atherton sneered. “Is your woman one of them?”
Herod’s head jerked up, but Atherton and Governor Endecott were looking at John, not her. “She’s got naught to do with Quakers, and neither do I, gentlemen,” John said, the cold edge back in his voice again. “I’m off to see Hull. Portsmouth’s court is in a few days, and if I hope to be there I must sail on the first ship.”
Endecott was speaking, but Herod was too distracted by a barely-glimpsed movement to hear. There, just behind Endecott’s shoulder, Mary’s bound feet dangled. The sea breeze lifted her skirt again, flaring out like laundry on a line. Herod’s mount snorted and flinched away as Mary’s feet began to move, her toes rotating left, then right, then left again.
For just a moment, Herod’s hope flared too. Somehow her friend had survived! Then she realized that it was no more than the wind, turning Mary like a weathercock.
A man passing by commented to Endecott, “She hangs like a flag.”
“Indeed,” sneered Atherton. “A flag to warn all Quakers.”
Somehow Herod clenched her teeth on her furious reply. Atherton peered more closely at her, and said to John, “Are you bringing doxies with you now? I haven’t known you to seek them here, but –”
John’s eyes narrowed. “Have a care, General. This is my wife’s servant, come to visit her sister. She’s a widow, and a little slow.”
“Miz Porter sent me,” Herod agreed, but she dared not look at Endecott. What would he make of this flimsy story?
“Kind of you to hire such an unfortunate,” Endecott told John. Then to Herod he said, “Good day,” in dismissal. She glanced at him under the edge of her hood. Judging by his dark ringed eyes, the governor was feeling every one of his sixty-odd years. ‘I hope the plague takes you,’ Herod thought viciously, picturing the gruesome death suffered by her father when she was twelve. ‘I hope you rot!’
She would have cheered to see the governor stagger and fall at her horse’s hooves, but Endecott merely turned back to the passing crowd, assessing their approval of the morning’s work.
John jerked the tired horse forward, and Herod clenched her teeth on bitter words as she ducked her head to stare at her sunburned hands. Even so, she could see Mary’s corpse out of the corner of her eye as they passed.
Mary’s face was still shrouded by Rev. John Wilson’s white neckcloth. As they rode by, the wind turned Mary’s body as though her eyes were fixed on Herod. Her scalp prickled as Herod murmured, “Goodbye, Mary. I pray you are with God now.”
Safely through the gate into Boston, John let the horse stumble to a halt in the grassy common. The animal eagerly dropped its head to graze. John wiped his sweaty face on his sleeve, then asked Herod, “Are you well? Can you walk?”
She nodded. “How far to Mr. Hull’s home?”
“Fifteen minutes at the most, but I want to let this nag rest while the streets clear. I hope the soreness will pass before I take it to the hostler, because they will charge me more if I bring it in lame.”
Herod swung down from the saddle with John’s help, groaning as her trembling legs protested. She dared not speak of Mary yet, so she said, “Those men – I scarce believe we spoke to them. I thought that they would send us straight to jail.”
“They didn’t recognize you, and a good thing that was. Those are the blackest-hearted bastards I’ve ever known. Wilson and Endecott claim they are doing God’s work – Gah! As for that arrogant popinjay Atherton, he is naught but Endecott’s minion.
“Remember when I took you up the Pettaquamscutt River?” John’s abrupt change of topic drew a sigh of relief from Herod, and she nodded. “My partners and I own the west side. The east bank is a lovely neck of land, and we sought to buy it from Kachanaquant –”
 “Kachana … who?”
“Bless you.” Herod eyed John in bewilderment. He winked, and said, “Kach-oo. Bless you.” Despite the grim events of the day and Herod’s weariness, she chuckled.
“Kachanaquant. He is one of the chief Narragansett sachems, but he’s not the leader that his grandfather Canonicus was. Humphrey Atherton spirited Kachanaquant up to Boston, got him falling-down drunk, then sweet-talked him into ‘giving’ Atherton the whole neck in trade for baubles and another keg of liquor. Atherton and his friends are dividing the land, and calling it Boston Neck, and Massachusetts is using it to lay claim to the whole Narragansett region. Connecticut claims everything from their line to Narragansett Bay, including the land Hull and I bought two years back.
“My partners and I are buying land from Kachanaquant fair and square, and I need John Hull’s signature on the deed, but I also came here up to consult with him. If anyone has influence with the Puritans, it’s John Hull.
“That’s Rhode Island’s land, Herod, chartered to us near twenty years ago by the king! I don’t know how we’ll ever get those claims settled, and Parliament refuses to help. All I can tell you is that if Humphrey Atherton ever comes on my land, I’ll set my dogs on him.”
“Can I watch?” Herod asked. “That man helped the hangman whip me two years ago, and he tried to take Rebecca from me. I bit him.”
“You bit Atherton?” John grinned broadly for the first time that day.
“To the bone. Can I watch your dogs bite him too?”
“I changed my mind,” John laughed, pleased that Herod’s thoughts were diverted away from Mary’s hanging. “No dogs. Instead, I’ll catch him in an ambuscade and you can take the first shot. Even if we only see him skulking on the other side of the river on his own land, Humphrey Atherton is a doomed man.”
“I just pray that Endecott is with him,” Herod said grimly.
John left Herod at a dockside inn to dine and rest. He told her he would go to the docks to see about a ship, then meet with John Hull. “My partners and I are buying the rest of that river valley I showed you, and much more land. I need presents for Kachanaquant and his wives, and money from Hull.”
“How much?” Herod knew that John wouldn’t mind her asking. He often told the Gardners of his cheap Narragansett land, inviting George to buy some at a bargain price. When John brought her home to Newport after her whipping two years ago, he detoured to show her a beautiful riverbank and ridgeline he had bought for the price of a milking cow. Ever since, Herod had begged George to buy acreage; if not for himself, then for his sons. Maybe this time George would agree.
“The rest of the western riverbank, and much more. Bottom land, miles of prime pasture, oaks fit enough for a ship’s keel and pines tall enough for her mast. Twelve square miles for one hundred thirty-five pounds.”
When John left Herod at the inn, she was wondering how she could persuade George to buy that land. Then the inn’s serving girl placed a steaming bowl of chicken stew with Indian meal dumplings before her, and Herod forgot everything but her hunger.
*****
It wasn’t long before John returned. He hustled her out through the inn’s door, telling Herod that he’d sped through his business with John Hull. “A ship came from England two days past, and is bound for ports south of Boston this afternoon. The captain has room to spare since he left most of his passengers here.”
John had already paid for beds in recently vacated cabins, and Herod promised him a firkin of goat cheese in return. He thanked her, adding, “We’re in luck! I’d been hoping to be back in Portsmouth for town meeting a few days hence. If the wind stays fair, I’ll get there with a day to spare. We will dock at Newport first, but it’s an easy walk to Portsmouth.”
Herod stood at the rail beside John to watch Boston’s docks and warehouses recede. Last time she’d done this was two years ago, with John Porter at her side that time as well. However, Rebecca had been in Herod’s arms, and twelve-year old Mary Stanton was on her other side. The poor girl only went to Massachusetts to help Herod carry her baby from Newport, but they were both whipped as Quakers. Herod reached up to rub a knotted scar on her collarbone – a reminder of the three-corded lash the Puritans used to whip Quakers.
John was talking with a well-dressed passenger, and exclaimed his delight when the man said he’d just come from London. Herod listened to their conversation, too weary to contribute.
She learned that Prince Charles had agreed to return to England from exile in the Netherlands, and there would soon be a king on the British throne again. That news didn’t excite Herod as much as it did John. He turned to say, “Herod, soon we Rhode Islanders will have a friend in charge, not the stiff-necked Puritans in Parliament.”
“Parliament demands a stronger hand for letting the prince return. Charles may not have much of a say,” replied the man in the expensive leather doublet. It might be hot inland, but the ocean winds were still cool, and Herod clutched her own cloak to her for warmth, envying that man his warm clothing.
John began to reply, and Herod touched his arm. “I’m tired, John. I’m going to lie down.”
*****
After two days on horseback, fraught with anxiety and sleeping poorly in inns, Herod thought she would fall asleep in moments. No other woman shared her cabin, so why did Herod lie awake, even though her eyes were aflame for lack of sleep.
Mary. Mary kept returning to Herod’s churning mind, no matter how hard she tried not to think of her friend. She hadn’t spoken with Mary since last fall. What drove her friend to return to Boston, knowing she would hang? What had gone through Mary’s mind before her climb to the gallows?
Herod thought back to their last conversation. Mary said she would lay down her life to shame the Puritans into changing their own laws. When confronted with the prospect of hanging a woman, maybe the general court would vote down the bloody laws. If not, when the Quakers caught Parliament – or the new king’s eye – with news of a peaceful woman’s hanging, they might step in.
Lastly, the Puritans were damned by their evil acts, and only repudiating their evil laws would save them. Mary told Herod, “My life is torture so long as I hear those damned souls crying out. Jesus redeemed the damned by his death, my Friends sacrifice themselves for our Lord, and so will I.”
“Perhaps they deserve it,” is what Herod shouted at Mary. “Those people laughed and lusted when I was whipped. They should burn!” The same rush of frustration which had gripped Herod then caused her heart to pound now. Why shouldn’t the Puritans be damned for hanging Mary, whipping old women, and scarring Herod’s naked back with their lash?
Anger threatened the mental dam Herod had placed around her grief, so she commanded herself, ‘Stop! Think of something else.’ Boston receding in the ship’s wake, finally vanishing behind Dorchester hill. Escaping recognition by Endecott and the sharp-eyed Atherton. The jail where she had lain with her tiny daughter for two weeks no longer threatened, and she no longer risked banishment. Now Herod had left behind the gallows where –
Mary’s body. Alarm prickled the hairs on Herod’s arms and nape. Murderers and pirates’ bodies would be left to hang for years as a warning, but John assured her that Mary would be buried by her friends that night. Herod pictured somber-clad men climbing a torch-lit ladder to cut the rope, tenderly handing Mary down, swathing her in a sheet before laying her in a secret resting place. And what then?
Herod remembered Mary’s last words to her: “I will go to eternal joy with God upon that day.”
‘Dear Mary, I pray you were right,’ Herod thought, and then she finally wept.
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