Every story has an origin, a starting point where the events from there on become the body of the overall narrative. Although many people assume that the general area in which the Salem Witch Trails occurred was in Salem, it is important to know that the precise location of the story started in the Parris’s house located in Salem Village. This narrative starts with a slave from the Caribbean and two children with youthful mind creating a world of fantasy. These fantasies were started by Tituba, the slave. Tituba told the young children Abigail and Betty the stories she had heard told in the Caribbean. Yearning the non-existing adventure that she could not have, 9-year-old Abigail Williams wanted more of that freedom and its addicting attraction. “Once she started, Abigail, thirsting for excitement, must have egged her on to further revelation, conspiring with her to find occasion for the sport, and Betty became a timid accomplice.”(Starkey 30), the life that Abigail walked was not sufficient and as interesting so Abigail began to want more of Tituba’s fascinating absurd tales. The inevitable
Every story has an origin, a starting point where the events from there on become the body of the overall narrative. Although many people assume that the general area in which the Salem Witch Trails occurred was in Salem, it is important to know that the precise location of the story started in the Parris’s house located in Salem Village. This narrative starts with a slave from the Caribbean and two children with youthful mind creating a world of fantasy. These fantasies were started by Tituba, the slave. Tituba told the young children Abigail and Betty the stories she had heard told in the Caribbean. Yearning the non-existing adventure that she could not have, 9-year-old Abigail Williams wanted more of that freedom and its addicting attraction. “Once she started, Abigail, thirsting for excitement, must have egged her on to further revelation, conspiring with her to find occasion for the sport, and Betty became a timid accomplice.”(Starkey 30), the life that Abigail walked was not sufficient and as interesting so Abigail began to want more of Tituba’s fascinating absurd tales. The inevitable