The Witch of Blackbird Pond Visions of America Quotes

How we cite our quotes:

Quote #7

For two days they had been boiling the small gray bayberries that Kit and Judith had gathered in the fields, and Rachel had skimmed off the thick greenish tallow. It simmered now in the huge iron kettle, beneath which the fire must be kept glowing all through the long hot day. At the opposite end of the kitchen, at a good distance from the heat of the fire, the candle rods hung suspended between chairbacks. Back and forth the three women walked, carrying the candle rods, dipping the dangling wicks in the tallow, hanging them back to cool, and dipping them again, till the wax fattened slowly into the hard slow-burning candles that would fill the house with fragrance all through the coming months (12.2).

Candle making is just one of the many difficult chores facing the families in New England.

Quote #8

Going through the shed door one marooning, with her arms full of linens to spread on the grass, Kit halted, wary as always, at the sight of her uncle. He was standing not far from the house, looking out toward the river, his face half turned form her. He did not notice her. He simply stood, idle for one rare moment, staring at the golden fields. The flaming color was dimmed now. Great masses of curled brown leaves lay tangled in the dried grass, and the branches that thrust against the graying sky were almost bare. As Kit watched, her uncle bent slowly and scooped up a handful of brown dirt from the garden patch at his feet, and stood holding it was a curious reverence, as though it were some priceless substance. As it crumbled through his fingers his hand convulsed in a sudden passionate gesture. (14.2)

What is the importance of land to Uncle Matthew? How does Kit feel about her uncle in this moment?

Quote #9

“Please,” Kit ventured. “Those other women you spoke of – Good Harrison and the other? What happened to them?”

“Goody Harrison was banished from the colony. They hanged Goody Johnson.” (18.71-72)

A harsh fate awaits social outcasts in the Puritan New England colony. The Salem Witch trials were a historical fact.