Mary Rowlandson: Capture Story The book titled The Sovereignty and Goodness of God was first published in the year 1682 by Mary Rowlandson. It is based on the firsthand account of Mary Rowlandson experiences as a captive of the Indians during the “King Philips’s,” War. It is a book credited to be one of the earliest autobiographical works published by an Anglo-American woman, and delves into the dynamics of the relationship between the colonists and the native Indians during the war period. In the book Rowlandson refers to her experiences in twenty removes, with each remove signifying her sojourn with the Indians as a captive during the 11 weeks she spent with the Indians. Through her narrative, Rowlandson’s provides a glimpse of how her religious beliefs impacted her experiences as a captive In the book, she talks about the invasion of …show more content…
They were killing mothers and their children and those who attempted to escape. She talked specifically about how thirty seven people were killed in one single house alone. She tells sorrowfully about how the colonists suffered loss and pain from the invasion of the Indians during that period. The darkness of that period was so much that her elder sister said “Lord, let me die with them” after she had witnessed the gruesome killings and heard of the death of her son, William. Those who survived had to deal with the death of their loved ones and some others, the separation of their loved ones. Rowlandson for example was separated from her two older children, her husband and her sister. To worsen the situation for them, the Indians displayed no form of conscience towards their actions. One can easily empathize with her when she talks about powerless she felt about the treatment from the native Indians. All they could do at that point in time was to hold on to bible passages to serve as source of comfort from their