The people of colonial New England lived in a densely metaphoric
landscape--a world where familiars invaded bodies without warning,
witches passed with ease through locked doors, and houses blew down
in gusts of angry, providential wind. Meaning, Robert St. George
argues, was layered, often indirect, and inextricably intertwined
with memory, apprehension, and imagination. By exploring the
linkages between such cultural expressions as seventeenth-century
farmsteads, witchcraft narratives, eighteenth-century crowd
violence, and popular portraits of New England Federalists, St.
George demonstrates that in early New England, things mattered as
much as words in the shaping of metaphor. These forms of cultural
representation--architecture and gravestones, metaphysical poetry
and sermons, popular religion and labor politics--are connected
through what St. George calls a 'poetics of implication.' Words,
objects, and actions, referentially interdependent, demonstrate the
continued resilience and power of seventeenth-century popular
culture throughout the eighteenth century. Illuminating their
interconnectedness, St. George calls into question the actual
impact of the so-called Enlightenment, suggesting just how long a
shadow the colonial climate of fear and inner instability cast over
the warm glow of the early national period.