The book of witches
The book of witchesON A POSSIBLE REVIVAL OF WITCHCRAFTA SABBATH-GENERALTHE ORIGINS OF THE WITCHTHE HALF-WAY WORLDS.THE WITCH'S ATTRIBUTESSOME REPRESENTATIVE ENGLISH WITCHESTHE WITCH OF ANTIQUITYTHE WITCH IN GREECE AND ROMEFROM PAGANISM TO CHRISTIANITYTHE WITCH-BULL AND ITS EFFECTSTHE LATER PERSECUTIONS IN ENGLANDPERSECUTIONS IN SCOTLANDOTHER PERSECUTIONSPHILTRES, CHARMS AND POTIONSTHE WITCH IN FICTIONSOME WITCHES OF TODAYCopyright
The book of witches
Oliver Madox Hueffer
ON A POSSIBLE REVIVAL OF WITCHCRAFT
To the superficial glance it might seem that he who would
urge a revival of witchcraft is confronted by a task more Herculean
than that of making dry bones live—in that the bones he seeks to
revivify have never existed. The educated class—which, be it
remembered, includes those who have studied in the elementary
schools of whatever nation—is united in declaring that such a
person as a witch never did, never could, and never will exist. It
is true that there are still those—a waning band—who, preserving
implicit faith in the literal exactitude of revealed religion,
maintain that witchcraft—along with Gardens of Eden, giants, and
Jewish leaders capable of influencing the movements of sun and
moon—flourished under the Old Dispensation, even though it has
become incredible under the New. Yet, speaking generally, the witch
is asextinct in civilised men's minds as is the dodo; so that they
who accept as gospel the vaticinations of race-course tipsters or
swallow patent medicines with implicit faith, yet moralise upon the
illimitability of human superstition when they read that
witch-doctors still command a following in West Africa, or that
Sicilian peasants are not yet tired of opening their purses to sham
sorcerers.Were the reality of sorcery dependent upon a referendum of
our universities—or, for that matter, of our elementary school
mistresses—it were at once proclaimed a clamant imposture.
Fortunately for the witch, and incidentally for a picturesque
aspect of the human intellect, the Enlightened, even if we include
among them those who accept their dogma as the New Gospel, are but
a small—a ridiculously small—item of the human race. Compared with
the whole population of the world, their numbers are so
insignificant as to be for all practical purposes nonexistent.
There are villages but a few miles beyond the boundary of the
Metropolitan Police District, where the witch is as firmly
enthroned in the imaginations of the mobility as in those of their
ancestors three centuries ago. There are many British legislators
who would refuse to start an electioneering campaign upon a Friday.
I myself have known a man—and know him still—a Romney
Marshlander, who, within the last decade, has suffered
grievously—himself and through his children—at the hands of witches
whose names and whereabout he can detail. And I have known a
woman—she kept a lodging-house in the Kennington Road—who, if not
herself a witch, was yet the daughter of one, and of acknowledged
power. It is true that, if the daughter's tale—told to me in the
small front parlour in intervals between the crashing passage of
electric trams and motor-lorries—may be accepted, her mother's
gifts were put to no worse use than the curing of her Devonshire
neighbours' minor ailments.There is no need to go fifty, nor five, miles from London to
find material for a revival in Black Magic. Scarcely a week passes
but some old crone is charged before a Metropolitan police
magistrate with having defrauded silly servant-girls on the
pretence of telling them their futures. You cannot pass down Bond
Street during the season without encountering a row of
sandwich-men—themselves preserving very few illusions—earning a
meagre wage in the service of this, that, or the other Society
crystal-gazer, palmist, or clairvoyant. Who has not seen some such
advertisement as the following—quoted from a current
journal—proffering information about the future, "calculated from
astrological horoscopes," at the very moderate charge of
half-a-crown. The advertiser—in deference to modern convention
heis described as a "Professor" rather than a sorcerer—further
protests his mastery of Phrenology, Graphology, Clairvoyance, and
Psychometry. And this advertiser is but one of many, all seeking to
gain some humble profit by following in the footsteps of Diana and
Mother Demdyke of Pendle Forest.Are there not a hundred and one select Societies, each with
its band of earnest adherents—many with official organs, published
at more or less regular intervals and commanding circulations of a
sort—openly furthering "arts" such as would, two centuries ago,
have entailed upon their members the charge of Witchcraft? Is not
spiritualism exalted into an international cult? The very existence
of such a coterie as the "Thirteen Club," with a membership sworn
to exhibit, _hic et ubique_, their contempt of degrading
superstitions, is the strongest testimony to their ubiquitous
regard. Most curious fact of all, it is in America, the New World,
home of all that is most modern and enlightened, that we find
superstitions commanding most implicit faith. It is only necessary
to glance through the advertisement pages of an American popular
magazine to realise how far the New World has outstripped the Old
in its blind adherence to this form of faith. Nowhere has the
Hypnotic, the Mesmeric, the Psychic Quack such unchallenged
empire.In Lady Charlotte Bury's "Memoirs of a Lady in Waiting," we
find an example of the belief in Witchcraft cherished in the most
exalted circle in the nineteenth century. Writing of the unhappy
Princess—later Queen—Caroline, wife of George IV., she says as
follows:—"After dinner her Royal Highness made a wax figure as
usual, and gave it an amiable addition of large horns; then took
three pins out of her garment and stuck them through and through,
and put the figure to roast and melt at the fire.... Lady —— says
the Princess indulges in this amusement whenever there are no
strangers at table, and she thinks her Royal Highness really has a
superstitious belief that destroying the effigy of her husband will
bring to pass the destruction of his Royal Person." We laugh at
this instance of Royal credulity; yet is not the "mascot" a
commonplace of our conversation? Madame de Montespan, it is
recorded, had recourse—not without success—to the Black Mass as a
means towards gaining the affections of Louis XIV. It is but a few
years since the attention of the police was directed towards the
practices of those—Society leaders for the most part—who had
revived, in twentieth-century Paris, the cult of Devil worship. The
most widely circulated London newspapers of the day gravely discuss
in "special articles" the respective value of various mascots for
motorists,or insert long descriptive reports of the vaticinations of
this spiritualist or that wise-woman as to the probable
perpetrators of mysterious murders. This is no exaggeration, as he
may prove for himself who has patience to search the files of the
London daily Press for 1907. And, be it remembered, the
self-proclaimed mission of the contemporary Press is to mirror the
public mind as the most obvious way of instructing it.Under these circumstances it is easy to credit the
possibility of a revival of the belief in witchcraft even in the
most civilised countries of the modern world. What is more, it is
far from certain that such a revival would be altogether
deplorable. Granted that oceans of innocent blood were shed in the
name of witchcraft—the same might be said of Christianity, of
patriotism, of liberty, of half a hundred other altogether
unexceptionable ideals. And, as with them, the total extinction of
the witchcraft superstition might, not impossibly, have results no
less disastrous than, for instance, the world-wide adoption of
European fashions in dress. This quite apart from any question of
whether or no witches have ever existed or do still exist. Even if
we grant that superstition is necessarily superstitious in the more
degraded sense of the word, we need not therefore deny it some
share in alleviating the human lot.A very large—perhaps the greater—share of human happiness is
based upon "make believe."The world would be dull, miserable, intolerable did we
believe only what our unfeeling stepmother Science would have us
believe. It is already perceptibly less endurable—for those
unfortunate enough to be civilised—since we definitely abandoned
judgment by the senses in favour of algebraical calculations. While
it might be too much to say that the number of suicides has
increased in proportion to the decline of witchcraft, it is at
least certain that superstition of whatever kind has, in the past,
played a notable part in making humanity contented with its lot.
The scientist has robbed us of Romance—he has taken from many of us
our hope of Heaven, without giving us anything to put in its place;
he reduces the beauty of Nature to a formula, so that we may no
longer regard a primrose as a primrose and nothing more; he even
denies us the privilege of regarding our virtues and vices as
anything more than the inevitable results of environment or
heredity. Every day he steals away more and more of our humanity,
strips us of yet another of the few poor garments of phantasy
shielding us from the Unbearable. He is indeed the Devil of modern
days, forcing knowledge upon us whether we will or no. And we,
instead of execrating him after the goodly fashion of our
forefathers, offer ourhappiness upon his altars as though he were indeed the God he
has explained away. And why? Purely on the faith of his own
asseverations.Why should we accept the scientist more than his grandmother,
the witch? We have no better reason for accepting him than for
rejecting what he tells us are no more than idle dreams. Let him
discover what he will, it does but vouch the more decidedly for the
illimitability of his, and our, ignorance. It is true he can
perform apparent miracles; so could the witch. He pooh-poohs the
arts that were so terrible to former generations; our posterity
will laugh at his boasted knowledge as at a boastful child's.
Already there are world-wide signs that whatever his success in the
material world, mankind is ready to revolt against his tyranny over
the Unseen. The innumerable new religious sects, the thousand and
one ethical fads, the renaissance of so many ancient faiths—the
Spiritualist and the Theosophist, the Christian Scientist and the
Cooneyite, the Tolstoyan and the Salvationist—laugh at them
individually who may—are all alike outward and visible signs of the
revolt of man against being relegated to the insignificance of a
scientific incident. And among such troubled waters witchcraft may
well come into its own again. For it, as much as any, has brought
happiness out of misery. Consider the unsuccessful man. Under the _régime_ of enlightenment he can find
no one to blame for his sorrows, nor anywhere to look for their
solacement. Everything works according to immutable laws; he is
sick, poor, miserable, because the Law of the Inevitable will have
it so; he has no God to whom he can pray for some capricious
alleviation; he cannot buy good fortune from the Devil even at the
price of his soul—there is no God, nor Devil, nor good fortune nor
ill; nothing but the imperturbably grinding cog-wheels upon whose
orbit he is inevitably bound. Were he not a happier man if he might
find an old-time witch whose spells, being removed, would leave him
hope, even though fulfilment never come? Undoubtedly. We have been
told that had there been no God, it would have been necessary to
invent one. Yes, and along with Him a Devil and good and evil
spirits, and good luck and bad, and superstitions as many as we can
cram into our aching pates—anything, everything that may save us
from the horrible conception of a machine-like Certainty, from
which there is no escape, after which there is no future. Surely it
were better that a few thousand old women be murdered in the name
of superstition, a few millions of human beings butchered in the
name of religion, than that all mankind be doomed to such a
fate.Be it remembered, too, that even the witch has her grievance
against the learned numbskulls whohave undone her. For the witch-life was not without its
alleviations. Consider. Without her witchcraft she was no more than
a poor old, starved, shrunken woman, inconsiderable and
unconsidered, ugly, despised, unhappy. With it she became a Power.
She was feared—as all mankind wishes to be—hated perhaps, but still
feared; courted, also, by those who sought her help. She was again
Somebody, a recognisable entity, a human being distinguished from
the common ruck. Surely that more than outweighed the chances of a
fiery death. Nor was the method of her death without its
compensations. Painful indeed it was, though scarcely more so than
slow starvation. But if she knew herself innocent, she knew as well
that her short agony was but the prelude to the eternal reward of
martyrdom. If she believed herself, with that poor weary brain of
hers, sold to the Devil, what a world of consolation in the thought
that he, the Prince of the Powers of Darkness, scarcely inferior to
the Almighty Himself, and to Him alone, should have singled her out
as the one woman whose help he needed in all the countryside. And
this being so, was there not always the hope that, as he had
promised, he might appear even at the eleventh hour and protect his
own. If he failed, the witch had but little time to realise it and
all the Hereafter, full of infinite possibilities, before her. Few
witches, I think, but would have preferred their grim pre-eminence, with its sporting interest,
to being made the butt of doctors little wiser than themselves in
the sight of infinity, held up to mockery as silly old women,
cozening or self-cozened.If witches do not in fact exist for us, it is because we have
killed them with laughter—as many a good and evil cause has been
killed. Had we laughed at them from the beginning of things it is
even possible that they had never existed. But, as between them and
Science, the whole weight of evidence is in their favour. There is
the universal verdict of history. For untold centuries, as long as
mankind has lorded it over the earth, their active existence was
never held in doubt, down to within the last few generations. The
best and wisest men of their ages have seen them, spoken with them,
tested their powers and suffered under them, tried, sentenced,
executed them. Every nation, every century bears equal testimony to
their prowess. Even to-day, save for a tiny band of over-educated
scoffers sprung for the most part from a race notorious for its
wrong-headed prejudice, the universal world accepts them without
any shadow of doubt. In August of the present year a police-court
case was heard at Witham, an Essex town not fifty miles from
London, in which the defendant stood accused of assaulting another
man because his wife had bewitched him. Andit was given in evidence that the complainant's wife was
generally regarded as a witch by the inhabitants of the Tiptree
district. Nor, as I have already pointed out, does Tiptree stand
alone. Dare we, then, accept the opinion of so few against the
experience, the faith, of so many? If so, must we not throw all
history overboard as well? We are told that an Attila, a Mahomet,
an Alexander, or, to come nearer to our own days, a Napoleon
existed and did marvellous deeds impossible to other men. We read
of miracles performed by a Moses, a Saint Peter, a Buddha. Do we
refuse to believe that such persons ever existed because their
recorded deeds are more or less incompatible with the theories of
modern science? The witch carries history and the supernatural
tightly clasped in her skinny arms. Let us beware lest in turning
her from our door she carry them along with her, to leave us in
their place the origin of species, radium, the gramophone, and some
imperfect flying-machines.Those same flying-machines provide yet another argument in
the witch's favour. Why deny the possibility that she possessed
powers many of which we possess ourselves. The witch flew through
the air upon a broomstick; Mr. Henry Farman and Mr. Wilbur Wright,
to mention two out of many, are doing the same daily as these lines
are written. The vast majority of us have never seen either
gentleman; we take theirachievements on trust from the tales told by newspaper
correspondents—a race of men inevitably inclined towards
exaggeration. Yet none of us deny that Mr. Farman exists and can
fly through the air upon a structure only more stable than a
broomstick in degree. Why deny to the witch that faith you extend
to the aeronaut? Or, again, a witch cured diseases, or caused them,
by reciting a charm, compounding a noxious brew in a kettle, making
passes in the air with her hands. A modern physician writes out a
prescription, mixes a few drugs in a bottle—and cures diseases. He
could as easily cause them by letting loose invisible microbes out
of a phial. Is the one feat more credible than the other? The witch
sent murrains upon cattle—and removed them. He were a poor
M.R.C.V.S. who could not do as much. In a story quoted elsewhere in
this volume, a sorcerer of Roman days bewitched his horses and so
won chariot-races. We refuse him the tribute of our belief, but we
none the less warn the modern "doper" off our racecourses. The
witch could cause rain, or stay it. Scarcely a month passes but we
read well attested accounts of how this or that desert has been
made to blossom like the rose by irrigation or other means. But a
few months since we were told that an Italian scientist had
discovered a means whereby London could be relieved of fogs through
some subtle employment of electricity. It is true thatsince then we have had our full complement of foggy weather;
but does anyone regard the feat as incredible?In all the long list of witch-attainments there is not one
that would gain more than a passing newspaper paragraph in the
silly season were it performed in the London of to-day. Why, then,
this obstinate disbelief in the perfectly credible? Largely,
perhaps, because the witch was understood to perform her wonders by
the aid of the Devil rather than of the Dynamo. But must she be
therefore branded as an impostor? Certainly not by those who
believe in a personal Spirit of Evil. I do not know the proportion
of professing Christians who to-day accept the Devil as part of
their faith, but it must be considerable; and the same is the case
with many non-Christian beliefs. They who can swallow a Devil have
surely no excuse for refusing a witch. Nor is the difficulty
greater for those who, while rejecting the Devil, accept the
existence of some sort of Evil Principle—recognise, in fact, that
there is such a thing as evil at all. For them the picturesque
incidentals of witch-life, the signing of diabolical contracts,
aerial journeyings to the Sabbath, and so forth, are but
allegorical expression of the fact that the witch did evil and was
not ashamed, are but roundabout ways of expressing a great truth,
just as are the first three chapters of Genesis or the story that
Hannibal cut his way through the Alps by the use of
vinegar.The conscientious agnostic, again, has no greater reason for
disbelieving in witches and all their works than for refusing his
belief to such historical characters as Cleopatra and Joan of
Arc—eminent witches both, if contemporary records may be trusted. I
pass over the great army of heterodox sects, Unitarians, Christian
Scientists, and the like, many of whom unite with the orthodox in
accepting the principle of Evil in some form or other, and with it,
as a natural corollary, the existence of earthly agencies for its
better propagation; while, for the rest, witchcraft stands in no
worse position than do the other portions of revealed religion
which they accept or do not accept, as their inclinations lead
them.It is sometimes held out as an argument for implicit belief
in the Biblical legend of the Deluge that its universality among
all races of mankind from China to Peru can only be accounted for
by accepting Noah and his Ark. How much more forcibly does the same
argument uphold the _bona fides_ of the witch. Not only has she
been accepted by every age and race, but she has everywhere and
always been dowered with the same gifts. We find the witch of
ancient Babylon an adept in the making of those same waxen or clay
images in which, as we have seen,a nineteenth-century Queen of England placed such fond
reliance. Witch-knots, spells, philtres, divination—the witch has
been as conservative as she has been enduring. Every other
profession changes and has changed its aspects and its methods from
century to century. Only the witch has remained faithful to her
original ideals, confident in the perfection of her art. And for
all reward of such unexampled steadfastness we, creatures of the
moment, deny that this one unchanging human type, this Pyramid of
human endeavour, has ever existed at all! Buttressed, then, upon
the Scriptures, to say nothing of the holy writings of Buddhist,
Brahmin, Mahometan, and every other religion of the first class,
countenanced, increasingly though unwittingly, by the researches of
science into the vastness of our ignorance; acceptable to orthodox
and heterodox alike, vouched for by history and personal testimony
of the most convincing, our rejection of the witch is based but
upon the dogmaticisms of one inconsiderable class, the impenitent
atheist, blinded by the imperfection of his senses into denying
everything beyond their feeble comprehension. To deny our
recognition to a long line of women who, however mistakenly, have
yet, in the teeth of prodigious difficulties, persevered in their
self-allotted task with an altruistic enthusiasm perhaps unrivalled
in the history of the world—to relegate those who have left
suchenduring marks upon the face of history to an obscure corner
of the nursery, and that upon such feeble and suspect testimony,
were to brand ourselves as materialists indeed. Rather let us
believe—and thus prove our belief in human nature—that long after
the last atheist has departed into the nothingness he claims as his
birthright, the witch, once more raised to her seat of honour, will
continue to regulate the lives and destinies of her devotees as
unquestioned and as unquestionable as she was in the days of Saul
and of Oliver Cromwell. It is to women that we must look chiefly
for the impetus towards this renaissance. Always the more devout,
the more faithful half of humanity, there is yet another peculiar
claim upon her sympathies towards the witch. In days such as ours,
when the whole problem of the rights and wrongs of women is among
the most urgent and immediate with which we have to deal, it were
as anachronistic as unnatural that Woman should allow the high
purpose, the splendid endurance, the noble steadfastness in
inquiry, of a whole great section of her sex—including some of the
most deservedly famous women that ever lived—should allow all this
not only to be forgotten, but to be absolutely discredited and
denied. Persecuted by man-made laws as she has ever been, and as
eternally in revolt against them, there could be no more
appropriate or deserving figure to bechosen as Patroness of the great fight for freedom than the
much-libelled, much-martyrised, long-enduring, eternally
misunderstood Witch.No. The time has come when we can appreciate the artistic
temperament of Nero; when Bluebeard is revealed to us in the newer
and more kindly aspect of an eccentric Marshal of France; when many
of us are ready to believe that Cæsar Borgia acted from a mistaken
sense of duty; and that Messalina did but display the qualities
natural to a brilliant Society leader. Surely among them all not
one is more deserving of "whitewashing" than that signal instance
of the _femme incomprise_, the Witch. We may not approve all her
actions, we may not accept her as an example to be generally
followed; let us at least so far escape the charge of
narrow-mindedness and lack of imagination as to pay her the
tribute, if not of a tear, at least of respectful
credulity.
A SABBATH-GENERAL
It is wild weather overhead. All day the wind has been
growing more and more boisterous, blowing up great mountains of
grey cloud out of the East, chasing them helter-skelter across the
sky, tearing them into long ribbons and thrashing them all together
into one whirling tangle, through which the harassed moon can
scarcely find her way. The late traveller has many an airy buffet
to withstand ere he can top the last ascent and see the hamlet
outlined in a sudden glint of watery moonlight at his feet. Those
who lie abed are roused by the moaning in the eaves, to mutter
fearfully, "The witches are abroad to-night!"The witch lives by herself in a dingle, a hundred yards
beyond the last cottage of the hamlet. The dingle is a wilderness
of brush-wood, through which a twisted pathway leads to the witch's
door. Matted branches overhang her roof-tree, and even when the
moon, breaking for a moment from its net of cloud, sends down
abrighter ray than ordinary, it does but emphasise the
secretiveness of the ancient moss-grown thatch and the ill-omened
plants, henbane, purple nightshade, or white bryony, that cluster
round the walls. He were a bold villager who dared venture anywhere
within the Witch's dingle on such a night as this. The very wind
wails among the clashing branches in a subdued key, very different
from its boisterous carelessness on the open downs
beyond.There is but one room—and that of the barest—in the witch's
cottage. The village children, who whisper of hoarded wealth as old
Mother Hackett passes them in the gloaming, little know how scant
is the fare and small the grace they must look for who have sold
themselves to such a master. She sleeps upon the earthen floor,
with garnered pine-needles for mattress. She has a broken stool to
sit on, and a great iron pot hangs above the slumbering embers on
the clay hearth.It wants still an hour to midnight, this eve of May Day, when
there comes a stirring among these same embers. They are thrust
aside, and up from beneath them Something heaves its way into the
room. It is the size of a fox, black and hairy, shapeless and with
many feet. From somewhere in its middle two green eyes shed a
baleful light that horribly illuminates the room. It moves across
the floor, after the manner of agreat caterpillar, and as it nears her the witch casts a
skinny arm abroad and mutters in her sleep. It reaches the bed,
lifts itself upon it, and mumbles something in her ear. She awakes,
rises upon her elbow, and replies peevishly. She has no fear of the
Thing—it is a familiar visitant. She is angry, and scolds it in a
shrill old voice for disturbing her too soon. Has she not the
Devil's marks upon her—breast and thigh—round, blue marks that are
impervious to all pain from without, but itch and throb when it is
time for her to go about her devilish business? The Thing takes her
scoldings lightly, twitting her with having overslept herself at
the last Sabbath—which she denies. They fall a-jesting; she calls
it Tom—Vinegar Tom; and they laugh together over old exploits and
present purposes.A moonbeam glints through a hole in the thatch. Where the
witch has lain now sits a black cat, larger than any of natural
generation—as large, almost, as a donkey. It talks still with the
witch's voice, and lingers awhile, the two pairs of green eyes
watching each other through the darkness. At last, with a careless
greeting, it bounds across the floor, leaps up the wall to the
chimney opening, and is gone. The shapeless Thing remains upon the
bed. Its sides quiver, it chuckles beneath its breath in a way
half-human, yet altogether inhuman and obscene.The black cat is hastening towards the hamletunder the shadow of the brush-wood. When she comes within
sight of the end house, she leaves the path and strikes out into
the gorse-clad waste beyond the pasture, keeping to it until she is
opposite the cottage of Dickon the waggoner. A child has been born,
three days back, to Dickon and Meg his wife. It is not yet
baptised, for the priest lives four miles away, beyond the downs,
and Dickon has been too pressed with work to go for him. To-morrow
will be time enough, for it is the healthiest child, not to say the
most beautiful, the gossips have ever set eyes upon. Perhaps, if
Meg had not forgotten in her new-found happiness how, just after
her wedding, when old Mother Hackett passed her door, she made the
sign of the cross and cried out upon the old dame for a foul witch,
she might not be sleeping so easily now with her first-born on her
bosom.The black cat creeps on under the shadow of a hedge. Old
Trusty, the shepherd's dog, left to guard the flock during the
night, sees where she goes, and, taking her for a lurking fox,
charges fiercely towards the hedge, too eager to give tongue. But
at the first flash of the green eyes as she turns her head, he
knows with what he has to deal, and flies whimpering for shelter in
the gorse, his tail between his legs. For a dog can tell a witch
more readily than can his master—and fears her as
greatly.The black cat being come to Dickon's cottage, waits for a
moment to be sure that all is quiet, then leaps upon the low roof,
gains the summit, and so descends by way of the chimney to the room
where lie the sleeping family. Again it waits, listening to their
regular breathing, its tail whipping to and fro in suppressed
excitement. It rises upon its hinder legs and makes certain passes
in the air, North and South and East and West. It approaches the
bed, and softly, softly draws the child from its sleeping mother's
arms. It makes again for the chimney, and in two bounds is in the
open air, carrying the child nestled against its warm black fur.
Scarcely has it gained the shadow of the hedge when the mother, her
sleep disturbed, it may be, by some vague presentiment of danger,
opens her eyes. But the warm weight is still upon her breast, and
she drops off to sleep again in security. Did you peep into the
witch's cottage now, you would find that the black shapeless Thing
is gone. For the Devil's imps can take what shape they will in
their master's service.The black cat, with its sleeping charge, hastens back towards
the dingle. Reaching the cottage, it places the child upon the bed,
turns twice, and in that moment the witch, clad only in her shift,
stands where the cat has been. She is awaiting something, and grows
anxious and uneasy, hobbling hither and thither about the
room,mumbling below her breath, and once, when the child wakes and
wails, taking it in her arms and hushing it, almost as might a
woman. It is close upon midnight, yet the sign has not come. For
the Evil One, being above all things inconstant, never lets his
servants know time or place until the last moment, and that in some
unlooked-for way.At last, when she is quite tormented with anxiety lest she
have unwittingly angered her master, comes a stealthy clattering of
wings upon the thatch, and down through the hole that serves for
chimney rustles a black raven with fiery eyes. It flutters straight
for the witch's shoulder and there settles, whispering hoarsely in
her ear, while the light from its eyes throws her lean features,
with their twitching muscles, into pale relief against the
darkness. Nodding eager assent to the message, Mother Hackett
hobbles to her bed, and, from a safe hiding-place among the
rustling pine-needles, draws out a phial. Next she makes for the
corner beside the hearth, and picks up the broomstick leaning
against the wall. The raven quits her shoulder for the pillow,
thence to watch her with its head at an approving angle. She opens
the phial and smears the contents on the broomstick, head and
handle. It is an ointment, and it shines with the phosphorescent
light that is born of corruption. Well it may, for it is compounded
of black millet and thedried powdered liver of an unbaptised child, just such a one
as now lies upon the witch's bed, with the grim raven gazing down
on it. The witch—deluded wretch—believes the ointment to have magic
powers; that, smeared upon her broomstick, it gives the senseless
wood volition and the power to carry her sky-high; or, if she
swallow it, that it will render her insensible to pain, so that the
worst efforts of the torturer and the executioner shall force her
to confess nothing. The Devil, her master, knows—none better—that
no such potency is in any ointment, but that his own hellish magic
supports his minions in the air and comes, and he so will, to their
aid in time of trial. But this he hides from them, so that in their
folly they may be led to murder babes—the sacrifice he loves above
all other.The witch takes a broken eggshell and smears it also with the
ointment. She goes to the bed and picks up the child, the
broomstick hopping after her across the floor. Being now ready to
set out, she steps astride the broom-handle, that holds itself
aslant for her easier mounting. She waves her hand to the attendant
raven, and with a rush that sends a spirtle of bright sparks up
from the embers, she is away—up the chimney, through the
overhanging branches, through the ragged clouds, and far on her
journey under the stars. Yet, if any should enter the witch's hut
then or thereafter till the dawn, they wouldfind her sleeping peacefully upon the bed. The raven, having
carried their master's message, has this further duty: to take upon
himself the witch's shape until her return, lest any, finding her
from home, should scent out her errand.The wind is from the East. The witch must steer across it,
for the Sabbath-General, as the corvine messenger has told her, is
to be held on a lonely peak of the Cevennes, in mid-France. Her
task is not of the easiest, for the gusts come fierce and sudden,
and the broomstick dips and leaps before them like a cockle-boat on
a rough sea. The witch's scanty locks and scantier clothing stream
out almost at a right angle, and once the baby in her arms raises
its voice in a tiny wail that would soften the heart of any but a
servant of the Devil. Up here the moonlight wells down unchecked,
turning the clouds below into the shifting semblance of snow
mountains and lakes of silver. They open out now and again at the
wind's bidding to allow glimpses of the dark, silent earth far down
beneath.So for a time—a little time, for Devil's messengers fly
fast—the witch drives onward in mid-air. At last the broomstick
slackens speed, seems to hesitate, circles twice or thrice, and
then dives earthwards. The hag alights upon the sea-shore, upon a
pebbly beach whereon the waves fling themselves in white fury at
the lashings of the wind, now grown so high that
MotherHackett can scarcely stand against it. Whether because he
foresees some chance of evil-doing, or from mere inconstancy, for
he works without method and against reason, the Devil has ordered
that she shall not cross the Channel on her broomstick. She seizes
the interval between two waves to launch the eggshell she has
brought with her, steps into it, raises the broomstick aloft as
sail or ensign, and puts out to sea in the teeth of the gale. The
great waves roar far above her head, in foaming whirlpools that
might sink a war-fleet, but the eggshell rides triumphantly among
them, dancing upon their crests and shipping never a drop of water
on its passage. Nor can the best efforts of the wind stay its
speed. Only once does it deviate from its course, when a straining
ship, its spars and sails all splintered and riven, drives through
the mist to leeward. As she nears it, the witch rises to her feet,
throws out one skinny hand towards it, and shrieks an incantation
down the wind. A flicker of lightning shows itself in the East, and
a cloud drives over the face of the moon. When its shadow is past,
there is no more sign of the ship or its toiling crew upon the
lonely face of the waters. Mother Hackett mews gleefully as she
speeds Francewards.Coming to where the low grey coast rises from the waves, she
once more sets herself astride the broomstick. As she speeds on,
sky-high, towardsthe meeting-place, she falls in with company bent on the same
errand. From all sides they come, converging to the goal, old, lean
hags like herself, women in the prime of life, young girls not yet
out of their teens. Some bear with them unweaned babes, others
children of a larger growth, yet others youths or grown men, as
offerings to Satan. These they carry pillion-wise before them, for
in the Devil's kingdom all is awry, imperfect, contrariwise to the
ways of Christian folk. Some of them are mounted on goats, some
upon great toads, or flying snakes, or reptiles of uncertain shape,
or simple broomsticks, as fancy has directed their imperious
despot. One—a man—rides side-seated upon a great fiery dragon, that
in the distance glows like a newly-risen star. He is a mighty
sorcerer, one who commands Satan instead of serving him, coming to
the Sabbath for some reason of his own, and mounted on a steed of
his own providing.The meeting-place of the Sabbath-General, as Satan, in
mockery of Christian ritual, chooses to call this foregathering of
his servants, is a bare peak in the loneliest part of the Cevennes.
It stands a little removed from the centre of a great mountain
amphitheatre, and just below the summit is a mountain tarn,
crystal-pure and casting back the starlight as peacefully as though
there were no such things as witch or warlock beneath God's Heaven.
Yet it is not the firsttime the same meeting-place has been chosen, for not a blade
of grass, not the humblest creeping plant, grows upon the sterile
rocks. Every growing thing withered away, root and branch, when
last the forces of Hell gathered here. So must the place remain,
desert and bare, mute witness of its desecration, until the
Judgment Day.The witches come skirling down from the sky like a flight of
unclean birds, circling above the crags, hovering to choose a
settling-place where no sharp-pointed rock shall gash their naked
feet, chattering shrilly the while. Those already arrived are
seated in a wide circle on a flat rock-ledge jutting from the
mountain side. They are mostly witches of the neighbourhood, who
have come afoot and have set out betimes lest they be detained upon
the way. As more and more join the circle you may find proof that
they lie who declare the Devil's servants mostly women. It is true
that woman, by reason of the frailty of her nature, seeks more
often to pry into forbidden things, to her own destruction, and
thus there are many more witches than warlocks or magicians. Yet of
those gathered for this Sabbath-General, for every witch there is
one mortal man, to say nothing of demons; for while some, as Mother
Hackett, have come alone, others, being the younger and fairer of
the witches, have brought with them two or even three youths or
youngmen, ready to take service with the Evil One and cast away
their hope of salvation, as did our Father Adam, at the bidding of
these Delilahs. Thus it is that, in the unholy dances which are to
follow, every witch will have a man for her partner, save the most
favoured who dance with the superior demons, for thus the Devil
will have it.Mother Hackett, when she dismounts from her broomstick, takes
her place beside one Luckie, a gossip of former Sabbaths,
ill-favoured as herself, who comes from the kingdom of Fife, where
she is much feared for the sudden tempests she raises when the
fishing-fleets are sailing homeward with full catches. Next to her
is a younger witch, fair and well-born, Sidonia by name, of a noble
house in Mecklenburg. She is a tall, pale girl, with hair the
colour of ripe wheat, and grey-blue eyes. She is held in high
esteem by Satan, both for her beauty and for the number of
well-born youths she has delivered into his hands. Next to her is a
witch of Spain, beautiful also, though brown and with black, beady
eyes. Between these two there is little love lost, seeing that they
are women no less than witches, and either would do the other a
mischief could she compass it.Though all those bidden have joined the circle, there is yet
no sign of the Devil's coming. The witches cease their clacking and
scan the sky impatiently, muttering curses against
theirmaster. Can it be that he means to play them false, having
bidden them merely for a jest and to make a mock of them? It would
not be for the first time—for his mind is so crafty and so
uncertain, his purpose so errant, that not the most favoured of his
ministers has any inkling of it.Suddenly there is an eager rustling around the expectant
circle. A figure has appeared in the centre. But their relief fades
into angry disappointment. It is not the Devil himself. It is a
small, mean, inconsiderable devil, so inferior in the infernal
hierarchy that he has not even horns upon his head. The circle
grows smaller as the witches press towards him, buzzing with angry
questions. They have no fear, no respect for him; he is a servant
like themselves. If he have been deputed to represent his master,
he must expect to pay dearly for the honour. He scans the lowering
faces anxiously and mutters apologies. No doubt their Master is
upon the way and will soon arrive. He himself is but a poor devil,
a little devil; they may be sure that he would not think of putting
a slight on witches of such eminence. But fair words will not
placate them. Already hands are raised to strike him, already some
of them are preparing to scratch him with the nails of their little
fingers, always worn long and sharp by witches, such being one of
the signs you may know them by. Alreadyhe has been tweaked and buffeted as earnest of what he is to
look for. But now another, more dreadful shape looms up in the very
centre of the circle, and the angry witches fall back before it in
grovelling terror. At first, seen in the dim light of the waning
moon, it is shapeless, inchoate. Slowly it takes form before their
eyes into the trunk of a great tree, with tangled limbs stretching
out from it. It has about it the suggestion of a face, leering and
horrible, with set features that half emerge and half conceal
themselves in the gnarling of the bark—such a face as a man may see
peering after him out of the darkness when he passes, tip-toe,
through the depths of an ancient forest at midnight. Before it the
witches make obeisance, turning their backs upon it and bowing to
the ground, in mockery of Christian reverence. When they turn again
the tree has changed into a goat, its eyes aflame with obscene
passion, and, even as they look, the goat fades into a lion with
bloody jaws. The lion fades in turn into a man, a comely man in all
but his expression, and his eyes, which, whatever his shape, are
always those of a goat, bestial and foul. He is dressed all in
black, but his face and hands are dull red—for his vitals are
consuming in the flames of Hell—and when he raises his hand, his
wrist and forearm glow within his cuff as though they were made of
molten iron. On his left hand the fingers are all grown
togetherinto one misshapen claw, for however fair the human seeming
into which the Devil moulds himself, you may always know him for
what he is, in that some part of him, an ear, a foot, or a hand, is
horribly misshapen.