The Great Controversy The Great Controversy | Page 308
carpenter left his tools, the blacksmith his forge, the tradesman his
counter. Schools were dismissed, and tremblingly the children fled
homeward. Travelers put up at the nearest farmhouse. ‘What is coming?’
queried every lip and heart. It seemed as if a hurricane was about to dash
across the land, or as if it was the day of the consummation of all things.
“Candles were used; and hearth fires shone as brightly as on a
moonless evening in autumn.... Fowls retired to their roosts and went to
sleep, cattle gathered at the pasture bars and lowed, frogs peeped, birds
sang their evening songs, and bats flew about. But the human knew that
night had not come....
“Dr. Nathanael Whittaker, pastor of the Tabernacle church in Salem,
held religious services in the meeting-house, and preached a sermon in
which he maintained that the darkness was supernatural. Congregations
came together in many other places. The texts for the extemporaneous
sermons were invariably those that seemed to indicate that the darkness
was consonant with Scriptural prophecy.... The darkness was most dense
shortly after eleven o’clock.”—The Essex Antiquarian, April, 1899, vol.
3, No. 4, pp. 53, 54. “In most parts of the country it was so great in
the daytime, that the people could not tell the hour by either watch or
clock, nor dine, nor manage their domestic business, without the light of
candles....
“The extent of this darkness was extraordinary. It was observed
as far east as Falmouth. To the westward it reached to the farthest
part of Connecticut, and to Albany. To the southward, it was
observed along the seacoasts; and to the north as far as the American
settlements extend.”—William Gordon, History of the Rise, Progress,
and Establishment of the Independence of the U.S.A., vol. 3, p. 57.
The intense darkness of the day was succeeded, an hour or two before
evening, by a partially clear sky, and the sun appeared, though it was still
obscured by the black, heavy mist. “After sundown, the clouds came
again overhead, and
307