383 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
383 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
THE WISE GOODWIFE
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"Gramma, I feel hot."
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"Lands, child, on a cool fall day like this? Come here and let me
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feel of your forehead. Tsk! Feels like fever. Off to bed with you!"
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"Gramma, I don't feel good."
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"I know, child, I know. I reckon it's time to ask Goody Hawkins
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to help us."
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"Who's Goody Hawkins?"
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"Hush, now, try to sleep. I'll come back soon."
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"Gramma, where did you go?"
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"Out into the woods back of the farm, child."
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"Why, Gramma?"
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"To get Goody Hawkins' help."
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"Who's Goody Hawkins?"
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"Well, that's a long story."
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"Tell me a story, Gramma."
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Well, you know 'bout the pilgrim days, Thanksgiving and all.
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Those people way back then, that first time, were giving thanks that
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they'd lived a whole year in a whole new country, without too many of
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'em dyin'.
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Lotta times you see pictures, drawings, with lots of Indians
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standin' there to welcome them folks. Well, 'taint so. Weren't
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nobody there when they got off that boat, not but one Indian, all
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alone. Hist'ry books say it was him, Squanto, as taught them first
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folks how to live through one of our winters -- ice 'n sleet 'n snow
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'n all, not like they had back in England, where they come from. But
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that ain't rightly so, neither. Squanto, and a few other friendly
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Indians as wandered in later, they taught the menfolk. But the women,
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those days, well, they weren't s'posed to be important, even though
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they did most o' the work, so we don't hear 'bout them much.
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Well, a woman come off'n that boat, not quite yet old as your
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mamma, and her name was Grace Hawkins, but ever' one called her Goody
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Hawkins. "Goody" is short for "good wife", and it's like callin' a
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lady "Missus" today.
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Goody Hawkins was young and pretty, though you couldn't tell that
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very well, 'cause in those days the womenfolk wore long skirts and
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long sleeves and bonnets to tuck in and hide their hair. So Goody
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Hawkins had beautiful long brown hair, though you couldn't see it, and
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skin soft as the skin of a peach. But she had a nice young husband
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who loved her very much, and he knew how pretty she was.
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And Goody Hawkins was one more thing that made her very special:
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she was a wise woman, who knew plants and herbs and roots and barks to
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make sick people feel better. They didn't have doctors like we do
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now, just a lot of men who figured if you were sick your blood was bad
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and so they'd make you bleed. That got people sicker, more often than
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not. They thought they were real smart, them old doctors, and maybe
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they were smart about gettin' money from folks. But they weren't
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smart 'bout the folks themselves, mostly 'cause they were too busy
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listening to each other talking 'bout high-falutin' doctor things in
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big words than listening to the sick bodies of the sick people.
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But Goody Hawkins was different. She listened to the people
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talking 'bout what hurt them, and she felt of their heads and wrists
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and looked into their eyes and ears and mouths. And sometimes she
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didn't seem to look at them at all. She just closed her eyes and
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looked at them with her heart. And then she'd go into big clay pots
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and little wooden boxes in her house, and pick out just the thing a
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sick person needed. And do you know how she knew just the right
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thing, how Goody Hawkins could see with her heart and not just her
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eyes?
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Goody Hawkins was a witch.
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No, not like you dress up at Halloween. A real witch, a real wise
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woman. No warts, no wire hair, remember I told you she was pretty.
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And no flying broom, neither. She didn't need to fly, 'cause she
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could see ev'rything.
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Well, no, she didn't have a crystal ball. But they way my granny
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told me, and her granny told her, was that she had a big silver bowl,
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a real treasure. And she'd pour clear rainwater in that bowl, and
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look into it in the nighttime, with just a candle for light. And they
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say she could see miles away, and even years away. Into yesterday,
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say, or last year, or ten years ago. And sometimes, she could see
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tomorrow.
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A cauldron? Why of course she had a cauldron. Ever'one did,
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those days, just like we have pots and pans today. But she only had a
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little one at first--remember, they were poor in them first few years
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in America, and iron costed a lot of money. Goody Hawkins had just
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the little cauldron she brought with her from home, only as big as my
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big soup pot.
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What did she boil up in her cauldron? Well, not babies, I can
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tell you that! It was herbs, mostly, tree bark and roots and such.
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Anise and coltsfoot, simmered with a little sugar or honey, as good a
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cough syrup as you can find nowadays, and even better than some.
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That's a recipe my granny's granny knew, and likely Goody Hawkins as
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well. Goody Hawkins made ointments from herbs and grease, she made
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soaps for fleas and lice, she brewed teas, she made mashes for cuts
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and bad hurts to make them heal clean and fast.
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But I haven't told you the best part: Goody Hawkins could do
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magic. Not like making scarves disappear in her fist or pulling
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quarters out of your ear. I mean spells, oh yes, and special little
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bundles of things in little bags to keep in your pocket or put under
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your pillow. These had herbs in 'em, yes, and besides that she could
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put in a special rock, maybe, or a little short twig from a certain
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tree, or a piece of paper with secrets written on it, or any such
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small thing. You could wear one for good luck, sleep on one to have
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good dreams.
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In the nighttime, often, you could see a light shining in Goody
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Hawkins' cottage, warm and bright, and if you listened real hard, you
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might hear words, strong and beautiful, or singing so soft and sweet
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it might have come out of a fairy hill.
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And in the daytime, oh, the smells that came out of that cottage!
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You could tell what was brewing by the smells of the herbs in the
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breeze. Rosemary, mint, clove and cinnamon, lemon-leaf, basil,
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horehound and lavender.
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And hanging from the ceiling in one corner of the cottage were
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always bunches of drying herbs, filling the whole room with spicyness
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and sweetness. She brought the little boxes special from her home in
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England, but the rest she got right here, from the meadows and
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forests.
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One day she was in the forest, gathering plants for medicines.
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Some of the plants were just like at home, she knew them right away.
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Others she didn't know, and them she would look at, and smell, and
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taste of--it was right dangerous, that, but weren't no other way to
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find out about 'em. This spring day, after their first long hard,
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winter had passed, Goody Hawkins went to pluck a leaf off'n a plant,
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to taste it.
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Suddenly, she heard a crashing in the bushes and a woman's voice
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crying out to her. She turned around and who should she see but an
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Indian woman, near her own age, come runnin' toward her, talkin' words
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she couldn't understand. This Indian woman, she snatched that leaf
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from Goody Hawkins and shooed her away from that plant quick as she
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could. The Indian woman pulled out a thin stick, rounded at one end,
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and waved it so that Goody Hawkins thought the other woman might hit
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her with it, so she backed up, afraid.
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But the Indian woman turned to the plant and commenced to digging
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it out of the ground with her stick, digging up the roots. The Indian
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woman pulled off the roots and pushed them into Goody Hawkins' hands,
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keeping some for herself. She put the roots into a deerskin bag, and
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'twas then that Goody Hawkins saw other herbs and things in that bag,
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and figured out that t'other woman was in the woods for just the same
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job as herself, namely, getting herbs.
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Even though they didn't speak each other's language, by
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pantomiming and pointing they oculd understand each other, and Goody
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Hawkins learned that the leaf she'd been about to eat was deadly
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poison. But the roots were good eating, roasted or boiled just like a
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potato. How 'bout that! Plants are funny that way.
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Goody Hawkins realised she owed her life to the Indian woman, for
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warnin' her off'n them leaves. But she didn't know just how to thank
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her new friend. Still, they spent the rest of the day walkin' in the
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woods, an' Goody Hawkins learned more about the new world's plants in
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one day than she could've in weeks if she'd had to figure things out
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for herself.
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And by the end of the day, Goody Hawkins knew some Algonquin, and
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the Indian woman, Namequa, knew some words in English. Namequa saw
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Goody Hawkins back to the little town and then faded into the trees
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almost like magic.
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Well, the seasons came and went, and Goody Hawkins had her hands
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full trying to keep people well, what with the snakes and unfriendly
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Indians and poisonous plants all around. The folks couldn't get none
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of the plants they brought with 'em to grow very well, 'cause the
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weather was so different from England's. That mean that folks weren't
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eatin' right, and 'specially with the children that was bad. But
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Namequa showed Goody Hawkins plants that were good eating, and Goody
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Hawkins showed the other womenfolk, and for a time the folks there
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lived like Indians, what with the menfolk learnin' to hunt and fish
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from Squanto and the women learnin' to gather wild plants to eat from
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Goody Hawkins and Namequa.
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That first thanksgiving feast, they didn't eat just the corn and
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squash and beans that Squanto showed the men how to grow, they also
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had roasted-seed mush and lamb's-quarters gathered by the women. All
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those, and the deer the neighboring Indians brought, well, that was
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some dinner!
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Well, little by little, them folks got settled. Other ships came,
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with more people, and, later, with cows and other stock. And then
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Goody Hawkins was busier than ever, 'cause she was s'posed to take
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care of sick animals, too. Back then, if a cow didn't give milk,
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folks were apt to think the fairies had stolen the milk in the night,
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so 'twas only natural they should ask their wise woman for help.
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Before long, there were babies, too, human and animal, and mothers
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needed Goody Hawkins' help to bring 'em into the world. Somehow,
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though, through all of this, Goody Hawkins kept time to visit with her
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good friend, and to keep learning, and to look into her silver bowl
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every now and again.
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Well, the years went on, and ever'body got older, and some folks
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just died from getting old. Goody Hawkins' husband died too, and they
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hadn't any children, so Goody Hawkins should have been alone inthe
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world. But she had her friend Namequa, and every little child in the
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town called her "Aunt Grace"--she wasn't their real aunt, you know, but
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they loved her like she was, 'cause she made them things, like
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sweet-scented pillows, and spicy cookies, and she always listened to
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them when they told her things. Goody Hawkins had learned a lot from
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Namequa's tribe, and now that she had no husband to take care of, she
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spent more time visiting with her Indian friends, and they learned
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from her too.
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Indian magic is full of drums and dreaming. Goody Hawkins' magic
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was full of words and wishing. But she was careful not to let the
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rest of the folks know she was learnin' and teachin' magic. Why not?
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Well, folks don't like what they don't understand, is all. People
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were afraid of lots of things in them days, 'specially in a strange
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new place.
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And as more o' them Puritan preachers come over from England, the
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folks would be more secret 'bout visiting Goody Hawkins, not wanting
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the preachers to know they was holding to the old ways. And the
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preachers, 'specially one Pastor Langford, looked sidewise and never
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straight on at Goody Hawkins, bein' afraid she might hex 'em or some
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such nonsense. Well, Pastor Langford thought she was workin' for the
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devil, but he didn't want to say it outright, 'cause folks liked her.
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But even that was changing as Goody Hawkins spent more time with
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Namequa's tribe, and folk got to whispering about it. There was a
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number of men interested in marryin' to her, after her husband died,
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saying it wasn't right for a woman to live alone, but she didn't care
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'bout any of 'em. She said no to all of 'em, and some of 'em went
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away mad. And folk got to saying things outright.
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One lady said she seen Goody Hawkins dancing naked with all them
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Indians. Another said there was a demon keeping Goody Hawkins
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company, which was why she wasn't wanting to marry again. Somebody
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else said that it was that demon that killed Goody Hawkins' husband.
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All round town words buzzed like stinging wasps. Now, when a cow
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wasn't giving milk, it was Goody Hawkins, not the fairies, who they
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thought had stolen it. Folks began to keep their children away from
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her. And Pastor Langford came right out and made fiery sermons about
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witches and the devil and sin and punishment.
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Goody Hawkins saw and heard all of this, but what could she do?
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It was her word against the words of respectable folk, and nobody was
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going to believe her. So she kept silent, kept to herself, and
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waited.
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She didn't have to wait long. One evening, she came home from a
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visit to her Indian friends and found her cottage in ruins. Jars were
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smashed, boxes thrown all over. The herb-bunches had been torn down
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from the ceiling, her cauldron overturned, Bible verses scrawled all
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over the walls with charcoal from her fireplace. "Thou shalt not
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suffer a witch to live", they said, and Goody Hawkins felt cold in her
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heart because she knew that the people wanted to kill her.
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And worst of all, her beautiful silver bowl was all bent and
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crushed, like someone had hit it with a hammer. Goody Hawkins sat
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down at the table in the midst of the mess, and cried.
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She felt helpless and angry. She wished she really could turn
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people into toads. She made half-hearted tries at cleaning up, but
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gave it up. Her heart burned with wanting to hurt the people who'd
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done it, and froze with knowing her life wasn't worth a straw to 'em.
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My granny said, that in that hour the devil did come to her,
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offerin' to kill the townsfolk for her, if she'd give up her soul to
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him, but Goody Hawkins chased him out with her broom. I think more
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likely, she thought about putting poison in the well-water, but knew
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that not only would that poison the townsfolk, it'd poison the water
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and the earth, and the water and earth hadn't hurt her. And she knew
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that killing all those folks would poison her soul, too, forever, make
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her sour and angry as a real wicked witch.
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So instead, she gathered all her power to her, all her love and
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strength; she threw down her hiding bonnet, and shook out her hair,
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which was getting grey by now, and walked proud and tall out into the
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town square. The folks began to gather round, saying hateful things.
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But Goody Hawkins lifted up her arms and began to sing, strong and
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sweet, in the old tongue that nobody but wise folk could speak
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anymore. And when the folks saw that their words couldn't hurt her,
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they commenced to pick up stones to throw at her.
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But before they could throw their stones, the preachers came and
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said she'd have to have a proper trial. So soldiers took Goody
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Hawkins away with them, away from the shouting people, and she was
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still singing as they locked her up.
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They tried to get her to tell them things, like was she partners
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with the devil, and had she hexed people and animals, and did she have
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a demon helper, and did she change into a cat to steal milk, but she
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never did nothing but close her eyes and sing softly, smiling like she
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saw something beautiful. So finally they gave up and took her to the
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courthouse.
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There all kinds of people told stories about Goody Hawkins and
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things she'd never really done. And all through it, Goody Hawkins
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stood tall, and looked straight in the faces of the folks as was doing
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the telling. When ever'one was through with their lyin', the judge
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asked Goody Hawkins had she anything to say.
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Goody Hawkins looked round at the folks, looking like your momma
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when she's gonna scold you, and began tellin' each one what she'd done
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for them. This one wouldn't be alive if Goody Hawkins hadn't helped
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his mother with the birthing. That one's daughter was deathly sick
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with fever, and Goody Hawkins cured her. The other one's cows were
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dropping down dead before Goody Hawkins found out they were eating
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poisonous leaves. There wasn't one person in that courtroom Goody
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Hawkins hadn't helped somehow over the years. And folks were looking
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like you do when you're getting a scolding and you know you've been
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wrong.
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But Pastor Langford butted in and said that Goody Hawkins must
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have led the cows to the poison leaves, she must have made the little
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girl sick, she must have put a hex on the mother so her baby had
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trouble being born. And even though some folks still looked
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uncertain, the rest of 'em started howling for Goody Hawkins to die,
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and that was that.
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They took her out to the town square where there was a big oak
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tree, to hang her onto it. Some soldiers held the crowd back, while
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two of the others tied Goody Hawkins up, tied a rope around her neck,
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and threw the other end over one of the branches of the tree. Goody
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Hawkins wasn't scared to die, but she was scared of the pain, though
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she didn't let the people see that. She looked out at them and
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smiled, and was glad to see some people quit their shouting and look
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worried.
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Pastor Langford come up, looking nervous, and said, "Do you wish
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to confess your sins? You may yet be forgiven and reach Heaven."
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Goody Hawkins just smiled and said, "I have nothing to confess or
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be forgiven for, nothing I am ashamed of. I want no part of your
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heaven."
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The preacher fairly threw a fit right there, choking and
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stuttering, he wanted so bad to cuss and swear at her but couldn't in
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front of the townsfolk. So he just pointed to the soldier holding the
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end of the rope, and he commenced to hauling on it.
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Goody Hawkins felt the rope tighten and her ears started to ring,
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and she took what she was sure was her last breath. But suddenly
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there was a scream, and the rope went loose. Her head cleared, she
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looked around, and saw the soldier who'd been pulling her up holding
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onto his arm, where there was an arrow sticking out of it.
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Folks was shouting and running all over the place, and Goody
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Hawkins saw that a whole tribe of Indians had come out of the woods
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like magic with bows and arrows and spears and all. The soldiers
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couldn't get a clear shot at none of the Indians, what with folks
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running round like ants when their hill gets kicked over. And in the
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middle of all that hollerin' and confusion, Goody Hawkins felt a sharp
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blade between her wrists, cutting the ropes that tied her.
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There was two Indians there, a big young man and Goody Hawkins'
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friend Namequa who held a finger to her lips to shush her. The young
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man scooped Goody Hawkins up in his arms, and ran into the woods
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carrying her.
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All of a sudden, the Indians disappeared like morning mist, and
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when the folks looked round, Goody Hawkins was gone too.
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The folks never saw her again, and Namequa's tribe were never as
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friendly to them. Goody Hawkins' cottage was just left to fall down
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and rot, and nothing in it was ever touched. But some folks was sorry
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Goody Hawkins was gone, 'specially when they got sick, or their
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children or animals. And one day a mother whose little baby was sick
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as could be and nobody could help her, she went into the woods by
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herself, carrying an iron pot. She walked into a clearing, and
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waited, listening. The woods got quiet, like they were listening too,
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and the lady commenced to talking about the baby's problem and asking
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for help of whoever was listening.
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She put the pot down, turned around, and walked out of the woods
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without looking back. The next day, she came back, and where she'd
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left the pot, there was a little bundle of herbs, wrapped up in a soft
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deerskin. She ran home with it, and made it into tea for her baby,
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and the baby got better.
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Well, word of the cure got round among the womenfolk. Real quiet
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like, it got round, not like the lies 'bout Goody Hawkins had gotten
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round before. They kept it a secret from the preachers, and after a
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while the preachers forgot about Goody Hawkins.
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And ever' once in a while, a woman would slip away from the town,
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out into the woods, carrying some small thing, that she thought Goody
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Hawkins might be able to use, knowing that Goody Hawkins was out there
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somewhere, and would hear them. And always there would be an herb
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packet there the next day, or a little charm, or some such.
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As the years went by, the herb packets stopped appearing, but the
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woman who turned back would see a shaft of light fall on some plant,
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and would take of that back home with her. And finally, even that
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stopped, but somehow the help always came, somebody got better. There
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was a song, too. My granny's granny taught her this song, and my
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granny taught it to me, to sing to Goody Hawkins when we needed help:
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With heavy heart I come and stand
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The oak and bonny ivy,
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A gift to offer in my hand.
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The hazel, ash and bay tree.
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How can I hope for any good
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The oak and bonny ivy,
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By standing in the empty wood?
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The hazel, ash and bay tree.
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But I will trust and dry my tears,
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The oak and bonny ivy,
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And know that the Wise Goodwife hears.
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The hazel, ash, and bay tree.
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Tsk! Asleep already. Good.
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"Child, what are you doing out of bed?"
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"I feel better, gramma!"
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"Let me feel of your forehead. Well, that's fine."
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"Gramma, can I have my coat?"
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"Where are you going, child?"
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"Out to the woods, gramma."
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"What's that you have there?"
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"It's a picture, gramma, look."
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"Well, that's right nice. I think I can guess who that is. And I
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see you've given her back her silver bowl! She'll be happy. Off you
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go, then."
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"Bye bye, gramma. I'll come back soon."
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(c)copyright 1986, Leigh Ann Hussey. Used with permission.
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If you enjoyed this story, send $5 to: Leigh Ann Hussey, 2240 Blake St.
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#308, Berkeley, CA 94704, and I'll send you a nicely typeset copy for
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your library!
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