Six Women of Salem: The Untold
Story of the Accused and Their Accusers in the Salem Witch Trials. By
Marilynne K. Roach. Da Capo. $18.99.
Young Mr. Roosevelt: FDR’s
Introduction to War, Politics, and Life. By Stanley Weintraub. Da Capo.
$25.99.
Now more than ever, the
United States seems determined to lurch forward with little regard for history
– except for certain very specific elements of history that specific groups
have a vested interest in specifically memorializing. In general, the country
has long been more forward-looking than past-oriented – a state of affairs that
is both a strength and a weakness. The result is that questions of what we can
learn from specific studies of history are inevitable when new books examining
particular people or periods are written. What Six Women of Salem has to teach us is that issues of class and
race, of gender, of religion, of community, of obedience and subservience, were
as crucial and complex in 1692 and 1693 as they are today, however different
the settings and the people. In fact, it is by showing some of those involved
in the Salem Witch Trials as people
rather than types that Marilynne K. Roach is most effective. She chooses to
profile six of the 255 people involved in the colony’s extended trauma, picking
the six from among those who were executed, died in prison, accused others,
were themselves accused, or passed judgment. Sharp-tongued widow Bridget
Bishop, educated Mary English, elderly Rebecca Nurse, anxiety-ridden Ann
Putnam, the slave Tituba and the hired girl Mary Warren are all portrayed with
care and sensitivity – and in somewhat more detail than even Roach’s meticulous
research can justify. For example, at one point, Mary Warren faces her master’s
anger, and Roach writes, “Mary nods, unable to speak. She has often wondered
what being this close to her master would be like, but this was not the sort of
touch she had daydreamed about.” These bits of novelistic, almost lurid excess
actually make sense in a story that is largely about mass hysteria and the
effects of sexual repression. But they fit somewhat uneasily with Roach’s
determination to include as many facts and as much accurate, primary-research
based dialogue in the book as possible. Just before the passage about Mary’s
imagined daydreams, for example, Roach offers this: “As [Mary] later described
it, a shape, possibly Goody Corey’s, drifted about the room, and as it passed
her, Mary snatched at it and pulled it toward herself. Yet when she did, she
found that the specter on her lap now had the appearance of her master, John
Procter. Procter himself stood elsewhere in the room, observing this suggestive
mime. ‘[I]tt is noe body but I,’ he said, ‘itt is my shadow that you see.’ Mary
tried to explain what she had seen, but Procter was disgusted. ‘I see there is
noe heed to any of your Talkings, for you are all possest With the Devill for
itt is nothing butt my shape.’”
Readers need to be as
comfortable dipping into the old-fashioned spellings and expressions as they
are with Roach’s imagined or re-created thoughts of the characters to get the
full effect of Six Women of Salem.
Yet the effort is by and large worthwhile, because amid all the recitations of
names and documents and accusations and complaints there emerges here a greater
sense of the underlying humanity of the people involved in the Salem Witch
Trials than other books about the subject have provided. It is very hard today
to understand the mindset and circumstances in which the trials took place, but
Roach so successfully humanizes her chosen six women that some of the sense of
being real-world people rubs off on those around them as well – even on those
who accused the supposed witches, tried them and executed them. The book is not
particularly easy reading, being filled with long sentences that list name
after name: “The documents in her [Susannah Martin’s] case include statements
from the afflicted (written out for them by Thomas Putnam), including Annie
Putnam, Mercy Lewis, and Sarah Bibber about her spectral torments during
Martin’s hearing and at other times; statements from Reverend Parris, Nathaniel
Ingersoll, and Thomas Putnam concerning what they saw the afflicted do and say
at certain times; and statements from various neighbors in Amesbury who had had
unfortunate encounters with her.” Still, for more than 400 pages, from the
initial set of introductions that portray the six women effectively and include
some imagined thoughts for each, through the events that ran from February 1692
to May 1693, Roach shows how thoroughly she has researched her subject (on
which she has written before and is considered an expert) while also giving
modern readers something to think about in our own days of social and political
witch hunts. Six Women of Salem is
primarily for those already familiar with and fascinated by the Salem Witch
Trials – for whom it may not shed new light on the events themselves, but will
provide a greater sense of the real-world lives of those who engaged in and
were victimized by those events.
Young Mr. Roosevelt deals with much more recent history and a much
better known individual, but it is of more limited interest than Roach’s book.
Stanley Weintraub here focuses on Franklin Delano Roosevelt from his appointment
at age 31, in 1913, to the post of assistant secretary of the Navy, through his
gaining of the Democratic vice-presidential nomination in 1920. There is a
modicum of almost-titillation here – this was the period when FDR, estranged
from his wife, Eleanor, became involved with Lucy Mercer – but Weintraub is too
focused on Washington infighting and political issues (and appears to be too
much of an old-fashioned gentleman) to place the affair front-and-center in his
narrative. Weintraub prefers writing like this: “By then, TR [Teddy Roosevelt]
(still ‘the Colonel’ to those on his side) had ended his relationship with The Outlook and begun publishing
articles through the Wheeler Syndicate, including two for The New York Times criticizing [Woodrow] Wilson’s ‘infirmity of
purpose.’ The Colonel sought a larger audience for his burgeoning pro-British
truculence, and Franklin, encouraged by the more militant admirals on the
Department staff in Washington, conceded that passive neutrality was
shortsighted, and that intervention, however deferred by distance, was
inevitable. ‘The difference, I think,’ TR explained to Rudyard Kipling, ‘is to
be found in the comparative widths of the [English] Channel and the Atlantic
Ocean.’” Those who enjoy political and literary name-dropping will find plenty
of it here – especially the former type – while those fascinated by the
intricacies of policymaking and infighting in Washington will be delighted to
learn, if they do not know it already, that backstabbing, half-truths and
changing loyalties are scarcely anything new. FDR fanciers who want to know
more about the way he rose from inconsequential playboy state senator to major
national political figure will find much to enthrall them in Young Mr. Roosevelt, and anyone who
happens upon the book by chance will surely be fascinated by the photos showing
a young, vigorous and decidedly not wheelchair-bound FDR (he did not contract
polio until 1921). But the book is strictly for those so enamored of FDR that
they want to know a great deal about the early political events that turned him
into a towering figure after the time chronicled here. Surely there are many
politicians today – Democrats and Republicans alike – who wish for the sort of
presidential power that FDR wielded seven to eight decades ago. But those were
deeply different times nationally as well as internationally, and while FDR
will no doubt continue to fascinate historians (obviously including Weintraub)
for years to come, it is doubtful that those without strong historical or
political involvements will find a great deal to interest them in this
chronicle of FDR’s first years on the national stage.
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