
                      ARADIA:  Gospel of the Witches  

This book was written by Charles G. Leland in 1890.  I understand that the
copyright has expired and is thus in the public domain.  A lovely
centennial facsimile edition was printed by Phoenix Publishing in 1990 at
approximately US$6. 

Phoenix Publishing's address is PO Box 10, Custer WA 98240, United States.

Bibliographic info for this edition is Charles G. Leland, _Aradia: Gospel
of the Witches_, [1890] (Custer WA: Phoenix Publishing reprint, 1990). 
ISBN 0-919345-10-7

                                PREFACE

If the reader has ever met with the works of the learned folk-lorist G. 
Pitre, or the articles contributed by "Lady Vere de Vere" to the Italian
Rivista or that of J. H. Andrews to Folk-Lore, he will be aware that there
are in Italy great numbers of strege, fortune-tellers or witches, who
divine by cards, perform strange ceremonies in which spirits are supposed
to be invoked, make and sell amulets, and, in fact, comport themselves
generally as their reputed kind are wont to do, be they Black Voodoos in
America or sorceresses anywhere. 

     But the Italian strega or sorceress is in certain respects a
different character from these.  In most cases she comes of a family in
which her calling or art has been practiced for many generations.  I have
no doubt that there are instances in which the ancestry remounts to
mediaeval, Roman, or it may be Etruscan times.  The result has naturally
been the accumulation in such families of much tradition.  But in Northern
Italy, as its literature indicated, though there has been some slight
gathering of fairy tales and popular superstitions by scholars, there has
never existed the least interest as regarded the strange lore of the
witches, nor any suspicion that it embraced an incredible quantity of old
Roman minor myths and legends, such as Ovid has recorded, but of which
much escaped him and all other Latin writers. 

     This ignorance was greatly aided by the wizards and witches
themselves, in making a profound secret of all their traditions, urged
thereto by fear of the priests.  In fact, the latter all unconsciously
actually contributed immensely to the preservation of such lore, since the
charm of the forbidden is very great, and witchcraft, like the truffle,
grows best and has its raciest flavour when most deeply hidden.  Hopiter,
and Venus and Mercury, and the Lares or ancestral spirits, and in the
cities are women who prepare strange amulets, over which they mutter
spells, all known in the old Roman time, and who can astonish even the
learned by their legends of Latin gods, mingled with lore which may be
found in Cato or Theocritus.  With one of these I became intimately
acquainted in 1886, and have ever since employed her specially to collect
among her sisters of the hidden spell in many places all the traditions of
the olden time known to them.  It is true that I have drawn from other
sources, but this woman by long practice has perfectly learned what few
understand, or just what I want, and how to extract it from those of her
kind. 

     Among other strange relics, she succeeded, after many years, in
obtaining the following "Gospel", which I have in her handwriting.  A full
account of its nature with many details will be found in an Appendix.  I
do not know definitely whether my informant derived a part of these
traditions from written sources or oral narration, but believe it was
chiefly the latter.  However, there are a few wizards who copy or preserve
documents relative to their art.  I have not seen my collector since the
"Gospel" was sent to me.  I hope at some future time to be better
informed. 

     For brief explanation I may say the witchcraft is known to its
votaries as la vecchia religione, or the old religion, of which DIANA is
the Goddess, her daughter Aradia (or Herodius)  the female Messiah, and
that this little work sets forth how the latter was born, came down to
earth, established witches and witchcraft, and then returned to heaven. 
With it are given the ceremonies and invocations or incantations to be
addressed to Diana and Aradia, the exorcism of Cain, and the spells of the
holy-stone, rue, and verbena, constituting, as the text declares, the
regular church-service, so to speak, which is to be chanted or pronounced
at the witch meetings. There are also included the very curious
incantations or benedictions of the honey, meal, and salt, or cakes of the
witch-supper, which is curiously classical, and evidently a relic of the
Roman Mysteries. 

     The work could have been extended ad infinitum by adding to it the
ceremonies and incantations which actually form a part of the Scripture of
Witchcraft, but as these are nearly all - or at least in great number - to
be found in my works entitled Etruscan-Roman Remains and Legends of
Florence, I have hesitated to compile such a volume before ascertaining
whether there is a sufficiently large number of the public who would buy
such a work. 

     Since writing the foregoing I have met with and read a very clever
and entertaining work entitled Romanzo dei Settimani, G. Cavagnari, 1889,
in which the author, in the form of a novel, vividly depicts the manners,
habits of thought, and especially the nature of witchcraft, and the many
superstitions current among the peasants in Lombardy.  Unfortunately,
notwithstanding his extensive knowledge of the subject, it never seems to
have occurred to the narrator that these traditions were anything but
noxious nonsense or abominably un-Christian folly. That there exist in
them marvelous relics of ancient mythology and valuable folklore, which is
the very cor cordium of history, is as uncared for by him as it would be
by a common Zoccolone or tramping Franciscan.  One would think it might
have been suspected by a man who knew that a witch really endeavored to
kill seven people as a ceremony rite, in order to get the secret of
endless wealth, that such a sorceress must have had a store of wondrous
legends; but of all this there is no trace, and it is very evident that
nothing could be further from his mind than that there was anything
interesting from a higher or more genial point of view in it all. 

     His book, in fine, belongs to the very great number of those written
on ghosts and superstition since the latter has fallen into discredit, in
which the authors indulge in much satirical and very safe but cheap
ridicule of what to them is merely vulgar and false.  Like Sir Charles
Coldstream, they have peeped in the crater of Vesuvius after is had ceased
to "erupt", and found "nothing in it."  But there was something in it
once; and the man of science, which Sir Charles was not, still finds a
great deal in the remains, and the antiquarian a Pompeii or a Herculaneum
- 'tis said there are still seven buried cities to unearth.  I have done
what little (it is really very little) I could, to disinter something from
the dead volcano of Italian sorcery. 

     If this be the manner in which Italian witchcraft is treated by the
most intelligent writer who has depicted it, it will not be deemed
remarkable that there are few indeed who will care whether there is a
veritable Gospel of the Witches, apparently of extreme antiquity,
embodying the belief in a strange counter-religion which has held its own
from pre-historic time to the present day. "Witchcraft is all rubbish, or
something worse," said old writers, "and therefore all books about it are
nothing better."  I sincerely trust, however, that these pages may fall
into the hands of at least a few who will think better of them. 

     I should, however, in justice to those who do care to explore dark
and bewildering paths, explain clearly that witch-lore is hidden with most
scrupulous care from all save a very few in Italy, just as it is among the
Chippeway Medas or the Black Voodoo.  In the novel to the life of I
Settimani an aspirant is represented as living with a witch and acquiring
or picking up with pain, scrap by scrap, her spells and incantations,
giving years to it.  So my friend the late M.  Dragomanoff told me how a
certain man in Hungary, having learned that he had collected many spells
(which were indeed subsequently published in folklore journals), stole
them, so that the next year when Dragomanoff returned, he found the thief
in full practice as a blooming magician. Truly he had not got many
incantations, only a dozen or so, but a very little will go a great way in
the business, and I venture to say there is perhaps hardly a single witch
in Italy who knows as many as I have published, mine having been
assiduously collected from many, far and wide. Everything of the kind
which is written is, moreover, often destroyed with scrupulous care by
priests or penitents, or the vast number who have a superstitious fear of
even being in the same house with such documents, so that I regard the
rescue of the Vangelo as something which is to say the least remarkable. 








                                   ARADIA
                                   or the
                           GOSPEL OF THE WITCHES


                                 CHAPTER 1
                 HOW DIANA GAVE BIRTH TO ARADIA (HERODIUS)

    "It is Diana! Lo!
     She rises crescented."
                                                                                
                          -Krats' Endymion

    "Make more bright
     The Star Queen's crescent on her 
     marriage night."
                                                                                
                          -Ibid.

This is the Gospel of the Witches:

     Diana greatly loved her brother Lucifer, the god of the Sun and of
the Moon, the god of Light (Splendor), who was so proud of his beauty, and
who for his pride was driven from Paradise. 
     Diana had by her brother a daughter, to whom they gave the name of
Aradia (i.e.  Herodius). 
     In those days there were on earth many rich and many poor.
     The rich made slaves of the poor.
     In those days were many slaves who were cruelly treated; in every
palace tortures, in every castle prisoners. 
     Many slaves escaped.  They fled to the country; thus they became
thieves and evil folk. Instead of sleeping by nigh, they plotted escape
and robbed their masters, and then slew them.  So they dwelt in the
mountains and forests as robbers and assassins, all to avoid slavery. 

     Diana said one day to her daughter Aradia:

          'Tis true indeed that thou a spirit art,
          But thou wert born but to become again
          A mortal; thou must go to earth below
          To be a teacher unto women and men
          Who fain would study witchcraft in thy school

          Yet like Cain's daughter thou shalt never be
          Nor like the race who have become at last
          Wicked and infamous from suffering,
          As are the Jews and wandering Zingari,
          Who are all thieves and knaves; like unto them
          Ye shall not be...


          And thou shalt be the first of witches known;
          And thou shalt be the first of all I' the world;
          And thou shalt teach the art of poisoning,
          Of poisoning those who are great lords of all;
          Yea, thou shalt make them die in their palaces;
          And thou shalt bind the oppressor's soul (with power);
          And when ye find a peasant who is rich,
          Then ye shall teach the witch, your pupil, how
          To ruin all his crops with tempests dire, 
          With lightning and with thunder (terrible),
          And with the hail and wind...

          And when a priest shall do you injury
          By his benedictions, ye shall do to him
          Double the harm, and do it in the name 
          of me, Diana, Queen of witches all!

          And when the priests or the nobility
          shall say to you that you should put your faith
          In the Father, Son, and Mary, then reply;
          "Your God, the Father, and Maria are
          Three devils..."

          "For the true God the Father is not yours;
          For I have come to sweep away the bad
          The men of evil, all will I destroy!"

          "Ye who are poor suffer with hunger keen,
          And toil in wretchedness, and suffer too
          Full oft imprisonment; yet with it all
          Ye have a soul, and for your sufferings
          Ye shall be happy in the other world,
          But ill the fate of all who do ye wrong!"

     Now when Aradia had been taught, taught to work all witchcraft, how
to destroy the evil race (of oppressors), she (imparted it to her pupils)
and said unto them: 

          When I shall have departed from this world,
          Whenever ye have need of anything,
          Once in the month, and when the moon is full,
          Ye shall assemble in some desert place,
          Or in a forest all together join
          To adore the potent spirit of your queen,
          My mother, great Diana.  She who fain
          Would learn all sorcery yet has not won 
          Its deepest secrets, then my mother will
          Teach her, in truth all things as yet unknown.
          And ye shall all be freed from slavery,
          And so ye shall be free in everything;
          And as the sign that ye are truly free, 
          Ye shall be naked in your rites, both men
          And women also:  this shall last until
          The last of your oppressors shall be dead;
          And ye shall make the game of Benevento
          Extinguishing the lights, and after that
          Shall hold your supper thus:


                                  CHAPTER II

                  THE SABBAT, TREGUENDA OR WITCH-MEETING -
                       HOW  TO CONSECRATE THE SUPPER

Here follows the supper, of what it must consist, and what shall be said
and done to consecrate it to Diana. 

     You shall take meal and salt, honey and water, and make this
incantation:

The Conjuration of Meal

          I conjure thee, O Meal!
          Who art indeed our body, since without thee
          We could not live, thou who (at first as seed)
          Before becoming flower went in the earth, 
          Where all deep secrets hide, and then when ground
          Didst dance like dust in the wind, and yet meanwhile
          Didst bear with thee in flitting, secrets strange!

          And yet erewhile, when thou were in the ear,
          Even as a (golden) glittering grain, even then
          The fireflies came to cast on thee their light
          And aid thy growth, because without their help
          Thou couldst not grow nor beautiful become;
          Therefore thou dost belong unto the race
          Of witches or of fairies, and because 
          The fireflies do belong unto the sun...

.    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .
.    
.    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .    .

          Queen of the fireflies!  hurry apace,
          Come to me now as if running a race,
          Bridle the horse as you hear me now sing!
          Bridle, O bridle the son of the king!
          Come in a hurry and bring him to me!
          The son of the king will ere long set thee free!
          And because thou for ever art brilliant and fair,
          Under a glass I will keep thee; while there, 
          With a lens I will study they secrets concealed,
          Till all their bright mysteries are fully revealed,
          Yea, all the wondrous lore perplexed
          Of this life of our cross and of the next.
          Thus to all mysteries I shall attain,
          Yea, even to that at last of the grain;
          And when this at last I shall truly know,
          Firefly, freely I'll let thee go!
          When Earth's dark secrets are known to me,
          My blessing at last I will give to thee!

     Here follows the Conjuration of the Salt.

Conjuration of the Salt

          I do conjure thee, salt, lo! here at noon,
          Exactly in the middle of a stream
          I take my place and see the water around,
          Likewise the sun, and think of nothing else
          While here besides the water and the sun;
          For all my soul is turned in truth to them;
          I do indeed desire no other thought,
          I yearn to learn the very truth of truths,
          For I have suffered long with the desire
          To know my future or my coming fate,
          If good or evil will prevail in it..
          Water and sun, be gracious unto me!

     Here follows the Conjuration of Cain.

The Conjuration of Cain

          I conjure thee, O Cain, as thou canst ne'er
          Have rest or peace until thou shalt be freed
          From the sun where thou art prisoned, and must go
          beating thy hands and running fast meanwhile:
          I pray thee let me know my destiny;
          And it 'tis evil, change its course for me!
          If thou wilt grant this grace, I'll see it clear
          In the water in the splendor of the sun;
          And thou, O Cain, shalt tell by word of mouth
          Whatever this my destiny is to be.
          And unless thou grantest this, 
          May'st thou ne'er know peace or bliss!

Then shall follow the Conjuration of Diana.

     You shall make cakes of meal, wine, salt, and honey in the shape of a
(crescent or horned)  moon, and then put them to bake, and say: 
     
          I do not bake the bread, nor with it salt,
          Nor do I cook the honey with the wine;
          I bake the body and the blood and soul,
          The soul of (great) Diana, that she shall
          Know neither rest nor peace, and ever be
          In cruel suffering till she will grant
          What I request, what I do most desire,
          I beg it of her from my very heart!
          And if the grace be granted, O Diana!
          In honor of thee I will hold this feast,
          Feast and drain the goblet deep,
          We will dance and wildly leap,
          And if thou grant'st the grace which I require,
          Then when the dance is wildest, all the lamps
          shall be extinguished and we'll freely love!

     And thus shall it be done:  all shall sit down to the supper all
naked, men and women, and the feast over, they shall dance, sing, make
music, and then love in the darkness, with all the lights extinguished;
for it is the Spirit of Diana who extinguishes them, and so they will
dance and make music in her praise. 

     And it came to pass that Diana, after her daughter had accomplished
her mission or spent her time on earth among the living (mortals),
recalled her, and gave her the power that when she had been
invoked...having done some good deed...she gave her the power to gratify
those who had conjured her by granting her or him success in love: 

     To bless or curse with power friends or enemies (to do good or evil).
     To converse with spirits.
     To find hidden treasures in ancient ruins.
     To conjure the spirits of priests who died leaving treasures.
     To understand the voice of the wind.
     To change water into wine.
     To divine with cards.
     To know the secrets of the hand (palmistry)
     To cure diseases.
     To make those who are ugly beautiful.
     To tame wild beasts.

     And whatever thing should be asked from the spirit of Aradia, that
should be granted unto those who merited her favor. 
     And thus must they invoke her:

Thus do I seek Aradia! Aradia! Aradia!  At midnight, at midnight I go into
a field, and with me I bear water, wine, and salt, I bear water, wine, and
salt, and my talisman - my talisman, my talisman, and a red small bag
which I ever hold in my hand - con dentro, con dentro, sale, with salt in
it, in it.  With water and wine I bless myself, I bless myself with
devotion to implore a favour from Aradia, Aradia.  (emphasize italics and
repetitions) 

Invocation to Aradia

          Aradia! my Aradia!
          Thou art my daughter unto him who was
          Most evil of all spirits, who of old
          Once reigned in hell when driven away from heaven,
          Who by his sister did thy sire become,
          But as thy mother did repent her fault,
          And wished to mate thee to a spirit who
          Should be benevolent,
          And not malevolent!

          Aradia, Aradia!  I implore
          Thee by the love which she did bear for thee!
          And by the love which I too feel for thee!
          I pray thee grant the grace which I require!
          And if this grace be granted, may there be
          One of three signs distinctly clear to me:
               The hiss of a serpent,
               The light of a firefly,
               The sound of a frog!


          But if you do refuse this favour, then
          May you in future know no peace nor joy,
          And be obliged to seek me from afar,
          Until you come to grant me my desire,
          In haste, and then thou may'st return again
          Unto thy destiny.  Therewith, Amen!


                                CHAPTER III
                     HOW DIANA MADE THE STARS AND THE RAIN

     Diana was the first created before all creation; in her were all
things; our of herself, the first darkness, she divided herself; into
darkness and light she was divided.  Lucifer, her brother and son, herself
and her other half, was the light. 

     And when Diana saw that the light was so beautiful, the light which
was her other half, her brother Lucifer, she yearned for it with exceeding
great desire.  Wishing to receive the light again into her darkness, to
swallow it up in rapture, in delight, she trembled with desire.  This
desire was the dawn. 

     But Lucifer, the light, fled from her, and would not yield to her
wishes; he was the light which flies into the most distant parts of
heaven, the mouse which flies before the cat. 

     Then Diana went to the fathers of the Beginning, to the mothers, the
spirits who were before the first spirit, and lamented unto them that she
could not prevail with Lucifer.  And they praised her for her courage;
they told her that to rise she must fall; to become the chief of goddesses
she must become mortal. 

     And in the ages, in the course of time, when the world was made,
Diana went on earth, as did Lucifer, who had fallen, and Diana taught
magic and sorcery, whence came witches and fairies and goblins - all that
is like man, yet not mortal. 

     And it came thus that Diana took the form of a cat.  Her brother had
a cat whom he loved beyond all creatures, and it slept every night on his
bed, a cat beautiful beyond all other creatures, a fairy: he did not know
it. 

     Diana prevailed with the cat to change forms with her; so she lay
with her brother, and in the darkness assumed her own form, and so by
Lucifer became the mother of Aradia.  But when in the morning he found
that he lay by his sister, and that light had been conquered by darkness,
Lucifer was extremely angry; but Diana with her wiles of witchcraft so
charmed him that he yielded to her love.  This was the first fascination;
she hummed the song, it was as the buzzing of bees (or a top spinning
round), a spinning-wheel spinning life.  She spun the lives of all men;
all things were spun from the wheel of Diana.  Lucifer turned the wheel. 

     Diana was not known to the witches and spirits, the fairies and elves
who dwell in desert place, the goblins, as their mother; she hid herself
in humility and was a mortal, but by her will she rose again above all. 
She had passion for witchcraft, and became so powerful therein, that her
greatness could not be hidden. 

     And thus it came to pass one night, at the meeting of all the
sorceresses and fairies, she declared that she would darken the heavens
and turn all the stars into mice. 

     All those who were present said -

     "If thou canst do such a strange thing, having risen to such power,
thou shalt be our queen." 

     Diana went into the street; she took the bladder of an ox and a piece
of witch-money, which has an edge from a knife - with such money witches
cut the earth from men's foot tracks - and she cut the earth, and with it
and many mice she filled the bladder, and blew into the bladder till it
burst. 

     And there came a great marvel, for the earth which was in the bladder
became the round heaven above, and for three days there was a great rain;
the mice became stars or rain.  And having made the heaven and stars and
the rain, Diana became Queen of the Witches; she was the cat who ruled the
star mice, the heaven and the rain. 


                               CHAPTER IV
             THE CHARM OF THE STONES CONSECRATED TO DIANA

     To find a stone with a hole in it is a special sign of the favour of
Diana.  He who does so shall take it in his hand and repeat the following,
having observed the ceremony as enjoined -

Invocation to the Holy-Stone

          I have found
          A holy-stone upon the ground.
          O Fate! I thank thee for the happy find.
          Also the spirit who upon this road
          Hath given it to me;
          And may it prove to be for my true good
          And my good fortune!

          I rise in the morning by the earliest dawn,
          And I go forth to walk through (pleasant) vales,
          All in the mountains or the meadows fair,
          Seeking for luck while onward still I roam,
          Seeking for rue and vervain scented sweet,
          Because they bring good fortune unto all.
          I keep them safely guarded in my bosom,
          That none may know it - 'tis a secret thing,
          And sacred too, and thus I speak the spell:
          "O vervain! ever be a benefit,
          And may thy blessing be upon the witch
          Or on the fairy who did give thee to me!"

          It was Diana who did come to me,
          All in the night in a dream, and said to me:
          "If thou would'st keep all evil folk afar,
          Then ever keep the vervain and the rue
          Safely beside thee!"

          Great Diana! thou
          Who art the queen of heaven and of earth,
          And of the infernal lands - yea, thou who art
          Protectress of all men unfortunate,
          Of thieves and murderers, and of women too
          Who lead an evil life, and yet hast known
          That their nature was not evil, thou, Diana
          Hast still conferred on them some joy in life.

          Or I may truly at another time
          So conjure thee that thou shalt have no peace
          Or happiness, for thou shalt ever be
          In suffering until thou greatest that
          Which I require in strictest faith from thee!

     [Here we have again the threatening the deity, just as in Eskimo or
other Shamanism, which represents the rudest primitive form of conjuring,
the spirits are menaced.  A trace of this is to be found among rude Roman
Catholics.  Thus when St. Bruno, some years ago, at a town in the Romagna,
did not listen to the prayers of his devotees for rain, they stuck his
image in the mud of the river, head downwards.  A rain speedily followed,
and the saint was restored in honour to his place in the church..]

The Spell or Conjuration of the Round Stone

     The finding of a round stone, be it great or small, is a good sign,
but it should never be given away, because the receiver will then get the
good luck, and some disaster befall the giver. 

     On finding a round stone, raise the eyes to heaven, and throw the
stone up three times (catching it every time), and say -

          Spirit of good omen,
          Who art come to aid me,
          Believe I had great need of thee.
          Spirit of the Red Goblin,
          Since thou hast come to aid me in my need,
          I pray of thee do not abandon me;
          I beg of thee to enter now this stone,
          That in my pocket I may carry thee, 
          And so when anything is needed by me,
          I can call unto thee: be what it may,
          Do not abandon me by night or day.

          Should I lend money unto any man
          Who will not pay when due, I pray of thee,
          Thou the Red Goblin, make him pay his debt!
          And if he will not and is obstinant,
          Go at him with thy cry of "Brie - brie!"
          And if he sleeps, awake him with a twitch,
          And pull the covering off and frighten him!
          And follow him about where'er he goes.

          

          So teach him with thy ceaseless "Brie - brie!"
          That he who obligation e'er forgets
          Shall be in trouble till he pays his debts.
          And so my debtor on the following day
          Shall either bring the money which he owes,
          Or send it promptly: so I pray of thee,
          O my Red Goblin, come unto my aid!
          Or should I quarrel with her whom I love,
          Then, spirit of good luck, I pray thee go
          To her while sleeping - pull her by the hair,
          And bear her through the night unto my bed!
          And in the morning, when all spirits go
          To their repose, do thou, ere thou return'st
          Into thy stone, carry her home again,
          And leave her there asleep.  Therefore, O Sprite!
          I beg thee in this pebble make thy home!
          Obey in every way all I command.
          So in my pocket thou shalt ever be,
          And thou and I will ne'er part company!


                                CHAPTER V
                  THE CONJURATION OF THE LEMON AND PINS

Sacred to Diana

     A lemon stuck full of pins of different colours always brings good
fortune.

     If you receive as a gift a lemon full of pins of divers colours,
without any black ones among them, it signifies that your life will be
perfectly happy and prosperous and joyful. 

     But if some black pins are among them, you may enjoy good fortune and
health, yet mingled with troubles which may be of small account. 
[However, to lessen their influence, you must perform the following
ceremony, and pronounce this incantation, wherein all is also described.]

          At the instant when the midnight came,
          I have picked a lemon in the garden,
          I have picked a lemon, and with it
          An orange and a (fragrant) mandarin.
          Gathering with care these (precious) things,
          And while gathering I said with care:
          "Thou who art Queen of the sun and of the moon
          And of the stars - lo! here I call to thee!
          And with what power I have I conjure thee
          To grant to me the favour I implore!
          Three things I've gathered in the garden here:
          A lemon, orange, and a mandarin;
          I've gathered them to bring good luck to me.
          Two of them I do grasp here in my hand,
          And that which is to serve me for my fate,
          Queen of the stars!
          Then make that fruit remain firm in my grasp.

     [Something is here omitted in the MS.  I conjecture that the two are
tossed without seeing them into the air, and if the lemon remains, the
ceremony proceeds as follows.  This is evident, since in it the
incantation is confused with a prose direction how to act]

     Saying this, one looks up at the sky, and I found the lemon in one
hand, and a voice said to me -
     "Take many pins, and carefully stick them in the lemon, pins of many
colours; and as thou wilt have good luck, and if thou desirest to give the
lemon to any one or to a friend, thou shouldst stick in it many pins of
varied colours. 
     "But if thou wilt that evil befall any one, put in it black pins.
     "But for this thou must pronounce a different incantation (thus)":


          Goddess Diana, I do conjure thee
          And with uplifted voice to thee I call,
          That thou shalt never have content or peace
          Until thou comest to give me all thy aid.
          Therefore tomorrow at the stoke of noon
          I'll wait for thee, bearing a cup of wine,
          Therewith a lens or a small burning glass.
          And thirteen pins I'll put into the charm;
          Those which I put shall all indeed be black,
          But thou, Diana, thou wilt place them all!

          And thou shalt call for me the fiends from hell;
          Thou'lt send them as companions of the Sun,
          And all the fire infernal of itself
          Those fiends shall bring, and bring with it the power
          Unto the Sun to make this (red) wine boil,
          So that these pins by heat may be red-hot;
          And with them I do fill the lemon here,
          That unto her or him to whom 'tis given
          Peace and prosperity shall be unknown.

          If this grace I gain from thee
          Give a sign, I pray, to me!
          Ere the third day shall pass away,
          Let me either hear or see
          A roaring wind, a rattling rain,
          Or hail a clattering on the plain;
          Till one of these three signs you show,
          Peace, Diana, thou shalt not know.
          Answer well the prayer I've sent thee,
          Or day and night will I torment thee!

     As the orange was the fruit of the Sun, so is the lemon suggestive of
the Moon or Diana, its colour being of a lighter yellow.  However, the
lemon specially chosen for the charm is always a green one, because it
"sets hard" and turns black.  It is not generally known that orange and
lemon peel, subjected to pressure and combined with an adhesive may be
made into a hard substance which can be moulded or used for many purposes. 
I have devoted a chapter to this in an as yet unpublished work entitled
One Hundred Minor Arts.  This was suggested to me by the hardened lemon
given to me for a charm by a witch. 


                               CHAPTER VI
                           A SPELL TO WIN LOVE

     When a wizard, a worshipper of Diana, one who worships the Moon,
desires the love of a woman, he can change her into the form of a dog,
when she, forgetting who she is, and all things besides, will at once come
to his house, and there, when by him, take on again her natural form and
remain with him.  And when it is time for her to depart, she will again
become a dog and go home, where she will turn into a girl.  And she will
remember nothing of what has taken place, or at least but little or mere
fragments, which will seem as a confused dream.  And she will take the
form of a dog because Diana has ever a dog by her side. 

     And this is the spell to be repeated by him who would bring a love to
his home. 

     (The beginning of this spell seems to be merely a prose introduction 
explaining the nature
of the ceremony)

     Today is Friday, and I wish to rise very early, not having been able
to sleep all night, having seen a very beautiful girl, the daughter of a
rich lord, whom I dare not hope to win.  Were she poor, I could gain her
with money; but as she is rich, I have no hope to do so.  Therefore will I
conjure Diana to aid me. 

          Diana, beautiful Diana!
          Who art indeed as good as beautiful,
          By all the worship I have given thee,
          And all the joy of love which thou hast known,
          I do implore thee to aid me in my love!
          What thou wilt 'tis true
          Thou canst ever do:
          And if the grace I seek thou'lt grant to me,
          Then call, I pray, they daughter Aradia,
          And send her to the bedside of the girl,
          And give that girl the likeness of a dog,
          And make her then come to me in my room,
          But when she once has entered it, I pray
          That she may reassume her human form,
          As beautiful as e'er she was before,
          And may I then make love to her until
          Our souls with joy are fully satisfied.
          Then by the aid of the great Fairy Queen
          And of her daughter, fair Aradia,
          May she be turned into a dog again,
          And then to human form as once before!

     Thus it will come to pass that the girl as a dog will return to her
home unseen and unsuspected, for thus will it be affected by Aradia; and
the girl will think it is all a dream, because she will have been
enchanted by Aradia. 


                               CHAPTER VII
          TO FIND OR BUY ANYTHING, OR TO HAVE GOOD FORTUNE THEREBY

     The man or woman who, when about to go forth into the town, would
fain be free from danger or risk of an accident, or to have good fortune
in buying, as, for instance, if a scholar hopes that he may find some rare
old book or manuscript for sale very cheaply, or if any one wishes to buy
anything very desirable or to find bargains or rarities.  This
scongiurazione serves for good health, cheerfulness of heart, and absence
of evil or the overcoming enmity.  These are words of gold unto the
believer. 

          'Tis Tuesday now, and at an early hour
          I fain would turn good fortune to myself,
          Firstly at home and then when I go forth,
          And with the aid of beautiful Diana
          I pray for luck ere I do leave this house!

          First with three drops of oil I do remove
          All evil influence, and I humbly pray,
          O beautiful Diana, unto thee
          That thou wilt take it all away from me,
          And send it all to my worst enemy!

          When the evil fortune
          Is taken from me,
          I'll cast it out to the middle of the street
          And if thou wilt grant me this favour,
          O beautiful Diana, 
          Every bell in my house shall merrily ring!

          Then well contented
          I will go forth to roam,
          Because I shall be sure that with thy aid
          I shall discover ere I return
          Some fine and ancient books,
          And at a moderate price.

          And thou shalt find the man,
          The one who owns the book,
          And thou thyself wilt go
          And put it in his mind,
          Inspiring him to know
          What 'tis that thou would'st find
          And move him into doing
          All that thou dost require.
          Or if a manuscript
          Written in ancient days,
          Thou'lt gain it all the same,
          It shall come in thy way,
          And thus at little cost.
          Thou shalt buy what thou wilt
          By great Diana's aid.

     The foregoing was obtained, after some delay, in reply to a query as
to what conjuration would be required before going forth, to make sure
that one should find for sale some rare book, or other object desired, at
a very moderate price.  Therefore the invocation has been so worded as to
make it applicable to literary finds; but those who wish to buy anything
whatever on equally favorable terms, have but to vary the request,
retaining the introduction, in which the magic virtue consists.  I cannot,
however, resist the conviction that this is most applicable to, and will
succeed best with, researches for objects of antiquity, scholarship, and
art, and it should accordingly be deeply impressed on the memory of every
bric-a-brac hunter and bibliographer.  It should be observed, and that
earnestly, that the prayer, far from being answered, will turn to the
contrary or misfortune, unless the one who repeats it does so in fullest
faith, and this cannot be acquired by merely saying to oneself, "I
believe."  For to acquire real faith in anything requires long and serious
mental discipline, there being, in fact, no subject which is so generally
spoken of and so little understood.  Here indeed, I am speaking seriously,
for the man who can train his faith to actually believe in and cultivate
or develop his will can really work what the world by common consent
regards as miracles.  A time will come when this principle will form not
only the basis of all education, but also that of all moral and social
culture.  I have, I trust, fully set it forth in a work entitled "Have you
a Strong Will? or how to Develop it or any other Faculty or Attribute of
the Mind, and render it Habitual," &c. London: George Redway. 

     The reader, however, who has devout faith, can, as the witches
declare, apply this spell daily before going forth to procuring or
obtaining any kind of bargains at shops, to picking up or discovering lost
objects, or, in fact, to finds of any kind.  If he incline to beauty in
female form, he will meet with bonnes fortunes; if a man of business,
bargains will be his.  The botanist who repeats it before going into the
fields will probably discover some new plant, and the astronomer by night
be almost certain to run against a brand new planet, or at least an
asteroid.  It should be repeated before going to the races, to visit
friends, places of amusement, to buy or sell, to make speeches, and
specially before hunting or any nocturnal goings-forth, since Diana is the
goddess of the chase and of night.  But woe to him who does it for a jest! 


                                  CHAPTER VIII
         TO HAVE A GOOD WINE AND VERY GOOD WINE BY THE AID OF DIANA

     He who would have a good vintage and fine wine, should take a horn
full of wine and with this go into the vineyards or farms wherever vines
grow, and then drinking from the horn say -

          I drink, and yet it is not wine I drink,
          I drink the blood of Diana,
          Since from wine it has changed into her blood,
          And spread itself through all my growing vines,
          Whence it will give me good return in wines,
          Though even if good vintage should be mine,
          I'll be free from care, for should it chance
          That the grape ripens in the waning moon,
          Then all the wine would come to sorrow, but
          If drinking from this horn I drink the blood - 
          The blood of great Diana - by her aid - 
          If I do kiss my hand to the new moon,
          Praying the Queen that she will guard my grapes,
          Even from the instant when the bud is born
          Until it is a ripe and perfect grape,
          And onward to the vintage, and to the last
          Until the wine is made - may it be good!
          And may it so succeed that I from it
          May draw good profit when at last 'tis sold,
          So may good fortune come unto my vines,
          And into all my land where'er it be!

          But should my vines seem in an evil way,
          I'll take my horn, and bravely will I blow
          In the wine-vault at midnight, and I'll make
          Such a tremendous and a terrible sound
          That thou, Diana fair, however far
          Away thou may'st be, still shalt hear the call,
          And casting open door or window wide,
          Shalt headlong come upon the rushing wind,
          And find and save me - that is, save my vines,
          Which will be saving me from dire distress;
          For should I lose them I'd be lost myself,
          But with thy aid, Diana, I'll be saved.

     This is a very interesting invocation and tradition, and probably of
great antiquity from very striking intrinsic evidence.  For it is firstly
devoted to a subject which has received little attention - the connection
of Diana as the moon with Bacchus, although in the great Dizionario
Storico Mitologico, by Pozzoli and others, it is expressly asserted that
in Greece her worship was associated with that of Bacchus, Esculapius and
Apollo.  The connecting link is the horn.  In a medal of Alexander
Severus, Diana of Ephesus bears the horn of plenty.  This is the horn or
horn of the new moon, sacred to Diana.  According to Callimachus, Apollo
himself built an altar consisting entirely of horns to Diana. 

     The connection of the horn with wine is obvious.  It was usual among
the old Slavonians for the priest of Svantevit, the Sun god, to see if the
horn which the idol held in his hand was full of wine, in order to
prophesy a good harvest for the coming year.  If it was filled, all was
right; if not, he filled the horn, drank from it, and replaced the horn in
the hand, and predicted that all would eventually go well.  It cannot fail
to strike the reader that this ceremony is strangely like that of the
Italian invocation, the only difference being that in one the Sun, and in
the other the Moon is invoked to secure a good harvest. 

     In the Legends of Florence there is one of the Via del Corno, in
which the hero, falling into a vast tun or tina of wine, is saved from
drowning by sounding a horn with tremendous power.  At the sound, which
penetrates to an incredible distance, even to unknown lands, all came
rushing as if enchanted to save him.  In this conjuration, Diana, in the
depths of heaven, is represented as rushing at the sound of the horn, and
leaping through doors or windows to save the vintage of the one who blows. 
There is a certain singular affinity in these stories. 

     In the story of the Via del Corno, the hero is saved by the Red
Goblin or Robin Goodfellow, who gives him a horn, and it is the same
sprite who appears in the conjuration of the Round Stone, which is sacred
to Diana.  This is because the spirit is nocturnal, and attendant on
Diana-Titania. 

     Kissing the hand to the new moon is a ceremony of unknown antiquity,
and Job, even in his time, regarded it as heathenish and forbidden - which
always means antiquated and out of fashion - as when he declared (xxxi,
26, 27), "If I beheld the moon walking in brightness...and my heart hath
been secretly enticed or my mouth hath kissed my hand...this also were an
iniquity to be punished by the Judge, for I should have denied the God
that is above."  From which it may or ought to be inferred that Job did
not understand that God made the moon and appeared in all His works, or
else he really believed the moon was an independent deity.  In any case,
it is curious to see the old forbidden rite still living, and as heretical
as ever. 

     The tradition, as given to me, very evidently omits a part of the
ceremony, which may be supplied from classic authority.  When the peasant
performs the rite, he must not act as once a certain African, who was a
servant of a friend of mine, did.  The man's duty was to pour out every
morning a libation of rum to a fetish - and he poured it down his own
throat.  The peasant should also sprinkle the vines, just as the
Devonshire farmers who observed all Christmas ceremonies, sprinkled, also
from a horn, their apple trees. 

                                  CHAPTER IX
                  TANA AND ENDAMONE, OR DIANA AND ENDYMION
     
     "Now it is fabled that Endymion, admitted to Olympus, whence he was
expelled for want of respect to Juno, was banished for thirty years to
earth.  And having been allowed to sleep this time in a cave of Mount
Latmos, Diana, smitten with his beauty visited him every night till she had by him fifty daughters and one
son.  And after this Endymion was recalled to Olympus."

-Diz. 
Stor. Mitol

     The following legend and the spells were given under the name or
title of TANA.  This was the old Etruscan name for Diana, which is still
preserved in the Romagna Toscana.  In more than one Italian and French
work I have found some account or tale how a witch charmed a girl to sleep
for a lover, but this is the only explanation of the whole ceremony known
to me. 

TANA

     Tana is a beautiful goddess, and she loved a marvelously handsome
youth names Endamone; but her love was crossed by a witch who was her
rival, although Endamone did not care for the latter. 

     But the witch resolved to win him, whether he would or not, and with
this intent she induced the servant of Endamone to let her pass the night
in the latter's room. And when there, she assumed the appearance of Tana,
whom he loved, so that he was delighted to behold her, as he thought, and
welcomed her with passionate embraces.  Yet this gave him into her power,
for it enabled her to perform a certain magic spell by clipping a lock of
his hair. 

     Then she went home, and taking a piece of sheep's intestine, formed
of it a purse, and in this she put that which she had taken, with a red
and a black ribbon bound together, with a feather, and pepper and salt,
and then sang a song.  These are the words, a song of witchcraft of the
very old time. 

          This bag for Endamon' I wove,
          It is my vengeance for the love,
          For the deep love I had for thee,
          Which thou would'st not return to me,
          But bore it all to Tana's shrine,
          And Tana never shall be thine!
          Now every night in agony
          By me thou shalt oppressed be!
          From day to day, from hour to hour,
          I'll make thee feel the witch's power;
          With passion thou shalt be tormented,
          And yet with pleasure ne'er be contented;
          Enwrapped in slumber thou shalt lie,
          To know that thy beloved is by,
          And, ever dying, never die,
          Without the power to speak a word,
          Nor shall her voice by thee be heard;
          Tormented by Love's agony,
          There shall be no relief for thee!
          For my strong spell thou canst not break,
          And from that sleep thou ne'er shalt wake;
          Little by little thou shalt waste,
          Like taper by the embers placed.
          Little by little thou shalt die,
          Yet, ever living, tortured lie,
          Strong in desire, yet ever weak,
          Without the power to move or speak,
          With all the love I had for thee,
          Shalt thou thyself tormented be,
          Since all the love I felt of late
          I'll make thee feel in burning hate,
          For ever on thy torture bent,
          I am revenged, and now content.

     But Tana, who was far more powerful than the witch, though not able
to break the spell by which he was compelled to sleep, took from him all
pain (he knew her in dreams), and embracing him, she sang this counter
charm. 

          Endamone, Endamone, Endamone!
          By the love I feel, which I
          Shall ever feel until I die,
          Three crosses on thy bed I make,
          And then three wild horse chestnuts take,
          In that bed the nuts I hide,
          And then the window open wide,
          That the full moon may cast her light
          Upon the love as fair and bright,
          And so I pray to her above
          To give wild rapture to our love,
          And cast her fire in either heart,
          Which wildly loves to never part;
          And one thing more I beg of thee!
          If any one enamoured be,
          And in my aid his love hath placed,
          Unto his call I'll come in haste.

     So it came to pass that the fair goddess made love with Endamone as
if they had been awake (yet communing in dreams).  And so it is to this
day, that whoever would make love with him or her who sleeps, should have
recourse to the beautiful Tana, and so doing there will be success. 

     This legend, while agreeing in many details with the classical myth,
is strangely intermingled with practices of witchcraft, but even these, if
investigated, would all prove to be as ancient as the rest of the text. 
Thus the sheep's intestine - used instead of the red woolen bag which is
employed in beneficent magic - the red and black ribbon, which mingles
threads of joy and woe, the (peacock) feather, pepper and salt, occur in
many other incantations, but always to bring evil and cause suffering. 

     I have never seen it observed, but it is true, that Keats in his
exquisite poem of Endymion completely departs from or ignores the whole
spirit and meaning of the ancient myth, while in this rude witch-song it
is minutely developed.  The conception is that of a beautiful youth
furtively kissed in his slumber by Diana of reputed chastity.  The ancient
myth is, to begin with, one of darkness and light, or day and night, from
which are born the fifty-one (now fifty-two) weeks of the year.  This is
Diana, the night, and Apollo, the sun, or light in another form.  It is
expressed as love-making during sleep, which, when it occurs in real life,
generally has for active agent some one who, without being absolutely
modest, wishes to preserve appearances.  The established character of
Diana among the Initiated (for which she was bitterly reviled by the
Fathers of the Church) was that of a beautiful hypocrite who pursued
amours in silent secrecy. 

          "Thus as the moon Endymion lay with her,
          So did Hippolytus and Verbio."

     But there is an exquisitely subtle, delicately strange idea or ideal
in the conception of the apparently chaste "clear, cold moon" casting her
living light by stealth into the hidden recesses of darkness and acting in
the occult mysteries of love or dreams.  So it struck Byron as an original
thought that the sun does not shine on half the forbidden deeds which the
moon witnesses, and this is emphasized in the Italian witch-poem.  In it
the moon is distinctly invoked as the protectress of a strange and secret
amour, and as the deity to be especially invoked for such love-making. 
The one invoking says that the window is opened, that the moon may shine
splendidly on the bed, even as our love is bright and beautiful...and I
pray her to give great rapture to us. 

     The quivering, mysteriously beautiful light of the moon, which seems
to cast a spirit of intelligence or emotion over silent Nature, and dimly
half awaken it - raising shadows into thoughts and causing every tree and
rock to assume the semblance of a living form, but one which, while
shimmering and breathing, still sleeps in a dream - could not escape the
Greeks, and they expressed it as Diana embracing Endymion.  But as night
is the time sacred to secrecy, and as the true Diana of the Mysteries was
the Queen of Night, who wore the crescent moon, and mistress of all hidden
things, including "sweet secret sins and loved iniquities,"  there was
attached to this myth far more than meets the eye.  And just in the degree
to which Diana was believed to be Queen of the emancipated witches and of
Night, or the nocturnal Venus-Astarte herself, so far would the love for
sleeping Endymion be understood as sensual, yet sacred and allegorical. 
And it is entirely in this sense that the witches in Italy, who may claim
with some right to be its true inheritors, have preserved and understood
the myth. 

     It is a realization of forbidden or secret love, with attraction to
the dimly seen beautiful-by-moonlight, with the fairy or witch-like charm
of the supernatural - a romance combined in a single strange form - the
spell of Night! 

          "There is a dangerous silence in that hour
          A stillness which leaves room for the full soul
          To open all itself, without the power
          Of calling wholly back its self-control;
          The silver light which, hallowing tree and flower,
          Sheds beauty and deep softness o'er the whole,
          Breathes also to the heart, and o'er it throws
          A loving languor which is not repose."

     This is what is meant by the myth of Diana and Endymion.  It is the
making divine or aesthetic (which to the Greeks was one and the same) that
which is impassioned, secret, and forbidden.  It was the charm of the
stolen waters which are sweet, intensified to poetry.  And it is
remarkable that it has been so strangely preserved in Italian with
traditions. 


                              CHAPTER X
                            MADONNA DIANA

     Once there was, in the very old time in Cettardo Alto, a girl of
astonishing beauty, and she was betrothed to a young man who was as
remarkable for good looks as herself; but though well born and bred, the
fortune or misfortunes of war or fate had made them both extremely poor.
And if the young lady had one fault, it was her great pride, nor would she
willingly be married unless in good style, with luxury and festivity, in a
fine garment, with many bridesmaids of rank. 

     And this became to the beautiful Rorasa - for such was her name -
such an object of desire, that her head was half turned with it, and the
other girls of her acquaintance, to say nothing of the many men whom she
had refused, mocked her so bitterly, asking her when the fine wedding was
to be, with many other jeers and sneers, that at last in a moment of
madness she went to the top of a high tower, whence she cast herself; and
to make it worse, there was below a terrible ravine into which she fell. 

     Yet she took no harm, for as she fell there appeared to her a very
beautiful woman, truly not of earth, who took her by the hand and bore her
through the air to a safe place. 

     Then all the people round who saw or heard of this thing cried out,
"Lo, a miracle!" and they came and made a great festival, and would fain
persuade Rorasa that she had been saved by the Madonna. 

     But the lady who had saved her, coming to her secretly, said, "If
thou hast any desire, follow the Gospel of Diana, or what is called the
Gospel of the Witches, who worship the moon." 

          "If thou adorest Luna, then
          What thou desir'st thou shalt obtain!"

     Then the beautiful girl went forth alone by night to the fields, and
kneeling on a stone in an old ruin, she worshipped the moon and invoked
Diana thus: 

          Diana, beautiful Diana!
          Thou who didst save from a dreadful death
          When I did fall into the dark ravine!
          I pray thee grant me still another grace.
          Give me one glorious wedding, and with it
          Full many bridesmaids, beautiful and grand;
          And if this favour thou wilt grant me,
          True to the Witches' Gospel I will be!

     When Rorasa awoke in the morning, she found herself in another house,
where all was far more magnificent, and having risen, a beautiful maid led
her into another room, where she was dressed in a superb wedding garment
of white silk with diamonds, for it was her wedding dress indeed.  Then
there appeared ten young ladies, all splendidly attired, and with them and
many distinguished persons she went to the church in a carriage.  And all
the streets were filled with music and people bearing flowers. 

     So she found the bridegrooms, and was wedded to her heart's desire,
ten times more grandly than she had ever dreamed of.  Then, after the
ceremony, there was spread a feast at which all the nobility of Cettardo
were present, and, moreover, the whole town, rich and poor, were feasted. 

     When the wedding was finished, the bridesmaids made every one a
magnificent present to the bride - one gave diamonds, another a parchment
(written) in gold, after which they asked permission to go all together
into the sacristy.  And there they remained for some hours undisturbed,
until the priest sent his chierico to inquire whether they wanted
anything.  But what was the youth's amazement at beholding, not the ten
bridesmaids, but their ten images or likenesses in wood and in
terra-cotta, with that of Diana standing on a moon, and they were all so
magnificently made and adorned as to be of immense value. 

     Therefore the priest put these images in the church, which is the
most ancient in Cettardo, and now in many churches you may see the Madonna
and Moon, but it is Diana.  The name Rorasa seems to indicate the Latin
ros the dew, rorare, to bedew, rorulenta, bedewed - in fact, the goddess
of the dew.  Her great fall and being lifted by Diana suggest the fall of
dew by night, and its rising in vapor under the influence of the moon.  It
is possible that this is a very old Latin mythic tale.  The white silk and
diamonds indicate the dew. 


                              CHAPTER XI
                        THE HOUSE OF THE WIND

     The following story does not belong to the Gospel of Witches, but I
add it as it confirms the fact that the worship of Diana existed for a
long time contemporary with Christianity.  Its full title in the original
MS, which was written out by Maddalena, after hearing it from a man who
was a native of Volterra, is The Female Pilgrim of the House of the Wind. 
It may be added that, as the tale declares, the house in question is still
standing. 

     There is a peasants house at the beginning of the hill or ascent
leading to Volterra, and it is called the House of the Wind.  Near it
there once stood a small palace, wherein dwelt a married couple, who had
but one child, a daughter, whom they adored.  Truly if the child had but a
headache, they each had a worse attack from fear. 

     Little by little as the girl grew older, and all the thought of the
mother, who was very devout, was that she should become a nun.  But the
girl did not like this, and declared that she hoped to be married like
others.  And when looking from her window one day, she saw and heard the
birds singing in the vines and among the trees all so merrily, she said to
her mother that she hoped some day to have a family of little birds of her
own, singing round her in a cheerful nest.  At which the mother was so
angry that she gave her daughter a cuff.  And the young lady wept, but
replied with spirit, that if beaten or treated in any such manner, that
she would certainly soon find some way to escape and get married, for she
had no idea of being made a nun against her will. 

     At hearing this the mother was seriously frightened, for she knew the
spirit of her child, and was afraid lest the girl already had a lover, and
would make a great scandal over the blow; and turning it all over, she
thought of an elderly lady of good family, but much reduced, who was
famous for her intelligence, learning, and power of persuasion, and she
thought, "This will be just the person to induce my daughter to become
pious, and fill her head with devotion and make a nun of her."  So she
sent for this clever person, who was at once appointed the governess and
constant attendant of the young lady, who, instead of quarreling with her
guardian, became devoted to her. 

     However, everything in this world does not go exactly as we would
have it, and no one knows what fish or crab may hide under a rock in a
river.  For it so happened that the governess was not a Catholic at all,
as will presently appear, and did not vex her pupil with any threats of a
nun's life, nor even with an approval of it. 

     It came to pass that the young lady, who was in the habit of lying
awake on moonlight nights to hear the nightingales sing, thought she heard
her governess in the next room, of which the door was open, rise and go
forth on the great balcony.  The next night the same thing took place, and
rising very softly and unseen, she beheld the lady praying, or at least
kneeling in the moonlight, which seemed to her to be very singular
conduct, the more so because the lady kneeling uttered words which the
younger could not understand, and which certainly formed no part of the
Church service. 

     And being much exercised over the strange occurrence, she at last,
with timid excuses, told her governess what she had seen.  Then the
latter, after a little reflection, first binding her to a secrecy of life
and death, for, as she declared, it was a matter of great peril, spoke as
follows: 

     "I, like thee, was instructed when young by priests to worship an
invisible god.  But an old woman in whom I had great confidence once said
to me, 'Why worship a deity whom you cannot see, when there is the Moon in
all her splendor visible?  Worship her.  Invoke Diana, the goddess of the
Moon, and she will grant your prayers.' This shalt thou do, obeying the
Gospel of (the Witches and of) Diana, who is Queen of the Fairies and of
the Moon" 

     Now the young lady being persuaded, was converted to the worship of
Diana and the Moon, and having prayed with all her heart for a lover
(having learned the conjuration to the goddess), was soon rewarded by the
attention and devotion of a brave and wealthy cavalier, who was indeed as
admirable a suitor as any one could desire.  But the mother, who was far
more bent on gratifying vindictiveness and cruel vanity than on her
daughter's happiness, was infuriated at this, and when the gentleman came
to her, she bade him begone, for her daughter was vowed to become a nun,
and a nun she should be or die. 

     Then the young lady was shut up in a cell in a tower, without even
the company of her governess, and put to strong and hard pain, being made
to sleep on the stone floor, and would have died of hunger had her mother
had her way. 

     Then in this dire need she prayed to Diana to set her free; when lo! 
she found the prison door unfastened, and easily escaped.  Then having
obtained a pilgrims dress, she traveled far and wide, teaching and
preaching the religion of old times, the religion of Diana, the Queen of
the Fairies and of the Moon, the goddess of the poor and oppressed. 

     And the fame of her wisdom and beauty went forth over all the land,
and the people worshipped her, calling her La Bella Pellegrina.  At last
her mother, hearing of her, was in a greater rage than ever, and, in fine,
after much trouble, succeeded in having her arrested and cast into prison. 
And then in evil temper indeed she asked her whether she would become a
nun; to which she replied that it was not possible, because she had left
the Catholic Church and become a worshipper of Diana and of the Moon. 

     And the end of it was that the mother, regarding her daughter as
lost, gave her up to the priests to be put to torture and death, as they
did all who would not agree with them or who left their religion. 

     But the people were not well pleased with this, because they adored
her beauty and goodness, and there were few who had not enjoyed her
charity. 

     But by the aid of her lover she obtained, as a last grace, that on
the night before she was to be tortured and executed she might, with a
guard, go forth into the garden of the palace and pray. 

     This she did, and standing by the door of the house, which is still
there, prayed in the light of the full moon to Diana, that she might be
delivered from the dire persecution to which she had been subjected, since
even her own parents had willingly given her over to an awful death. 

     Now her parents and the priests, and all who sought her death, were
in the palace watching lest she should escape. 

     When lo! in answer to her prayer there came a terrible tempest and
overwhelming wind, a storm such as man had never seen before, which
overthrew and swept away the palace with all who were in it; there was not
one stone left upon another, nor one soul alive of all who were there. 
The gods had replied to the prayer. 

     The young lady escaped happily with her lover, wedded him, and the
house of the peasant where the lady stood is still called the House of the
Wind. 

     This is very accurately the story as I received it, but I freely
admit that I have very much condensed the language of the original text,
which consists of twenty pages, and which, as regards needless padding,
indicates a capacity on the part of the narrator to write an average
modern fashionable novel, even a second rate French one, which is saying a
great deal. It is true that there are in it no detailed descriptions of
scenery, skies, trees, or clouds - and a great deal might be made of
Volterra in that way - but it is prolonged in a manner which shows a gift
for it.  However, the narrative itself is strangely original and vigorous,
for it is such a relic of pure classic heathenism, and such a survival of
faith in the old mythology, as all the reflected second hand Hellenism of
the Aesthetes cannot equal.  That a real worship of or belief in classic
divinities should have survived to the present day in the very land of
Papacy itself, is a much more curious fact than if a living mammoth had
been discovered in some out of the way corner of the earth, because the
former is a human phenomenon.  I forsee that the day will come, and that
perhaps not so very far distant, when the world of scholars will be amazed
to consider to what a late period an immense body of antique tradition
survived in Northern Italy, and how indifferent the learned were regarding
it;  there having been in very truth only one man, and he a foreigner, who
earnestly occupied himself with collecting and preserving it. 

     It is very probably that there were as many touching episodes among
the heathen martyrs who were forced to give up their beloved deities, such
as Diana, Venus, the Graces, and others, who were worshipped for beauty,
as there were even among the Christians who were thrown to the lions.  For
the heathen loved their gods with a human personal sympathy, without
mysticism or fear, as if they had been blood relations; and there were
many among them who really believed that such was the case when some
damsel who had made a faux pas got out of it by attributing it all to some
god, faun, or satyr; which is very touching.  There is a great deal to be
said for as well as against the idolaters or worshippers of dolls, as I
heard a small girl define them. 


                               CHAPTER XII
                         TANA THE MOON GODDESS

     The following story, which appeared originally in the Legends of
Florence, collected from the people by me, does not properly belong to the
Witch's Gospel, as it is not strictly in accordance with it; and yet it
could not well be omitted, since it is on the same subject. In it Diana
appears simply as the lunar goddess of chastity, therefor not as a witch. 
It was given to me as Fana, but my informant said that it might be Tana;
she was not sure.  As Tana occurs in another tale, and as the subject is
certainly Diana, there can hardly be a question of this. 

     Tana was a very beautiful girl, but extremely poor, and as modest and
pure as she was beautiful and humble.  She went from one contadino to
another, or from farm to farm to work, and thus led an honest life. 

     There was a young boor, a very ugly, bestial, and brutish fellow, who
was after his fashion raging with love for her, but she could not so much
as bear to look at him, and repelled all his advances. 

     But late one night, when she was returning alone from the farmhouse
where she had worked to her home, this man who had hidden himself in a
thicket, leaped out on her and cried, "Thou canst not flee; mine thou
shalt be!" 

     And seeing no help near, and only the full moon looking down on her
from heaven, Tana in despair cast herself on her knees and cried to it: 

          "I have no one on earth to defend me,
          Thou alone dost see me in this strait;
          Therefore I pray to thee, O Moon!
          As thou art beautiful so thou art bright
          Flashing thy splendor over all mankind;
          Even so I pray thee light up the mind
          Of this poor ruffian, who would wrong me here,
          Even to the worst.  Cast light into his soul,
          That he may let me be in peace, and then
          Return in all thy light unto my home!"

     When she had said this, there appeared before her a bright but
shadowy form, which said: 

          "Rise, and go to thy home!
          Thou has well deserved this grace;
          No one shall trouble thee more,
          Purest of all on earth!
          Thou shalt a goddess be,
          The Goddess of the Moon,
          Of all enchantment Queen!"

     Thus it came to pass that Tana became the dea or spirit of the Moon.
     
     Though the air be set to a different key, this is a poem of pure
melody, and the same as Wordsworth's "Goody Blake and Harry Gill."  Both
Tana and the old dame are surprised and terrified; both pray to a power
above: 

          "The cold, cold moon above her head,
          Thus on her knees did Goody pray;
          Young Harry heard what she had said,
          And icy cold he turned away."

     The dramatic center is just the same in both.  The English ballad
soberly turns into an incurable fir of ague inflicted on a greedy young
boor; the Italian witch-poetess, with finer sense, or with more sympathy
for the heroine, casts the brute aside without further mention, and
apotheosizes the maiden, identifying her with the Moon.  The former is
more practical and probable, the latter more poetical. 

     And here it is worth while, despite digression, to remark what an
immense majority there are of people who can perceive, feel, and value
poetry in mere words or form - that is to say, objectively - and hardly
know or note it when it is presented subjectively or as thought, but not
put into some kind of verse or measure, or regulated form.  This is a
curious experiment and worth studying.  Take a passage from some famous
poet; write it out in pure simple prose, doing full justice to its real
meaning, and if it still actually thrills or moves as poetry, then it is
of the first class.  But if it has lost its glamour absolutely, it is
second rate or inferior; for the best cannot be made out of mere words
varnished with associations, be they of thought or feeling. 

     This is not such a far cry from the subject as might be deemed. 
Reading and feeling them subjectively, I am often struck by the fact that
in these Witch traditions which I have gathered there is a wondrous poetry
of thought, which far excels the efforts of many modern bards, and which
only requires the aid of some clever workman in words to assume the
highest rank.  A proof of what I have asserted may be found in the fact
that, in such famous poems as the Finding of the Lyre, by James Russell
Lowell, and that on the invention of the pipe by Pan, by Mrs. Browning,
that which formed the most exquisite and refined portion of the original
myths is omitted by both authors, simply because they missed or did not
perceive it.  For in the former we are not told that it was the breathing
of the god Air (who was the inspiring soul of ancient music, and the
Bellaria of modern witch-mythology) on the dried filament of the tortoise,
which suggested to Hermes the making an instrument wherewith he made the
music of the spheres and guided the course of the planets.  As for Mrs.
Browning, she leaves out Syrinx altogether, that is to say, the voice of
the nymph still lingering in the pipe which had been her body.  Now to my
mind the old prose narrative of these myths is much more deeply poetical
and moving, and far more inspired with beauty and romance, than are the
well-rhymed and measured, but very imperfect versions given by our poets. 
And in fact, such want of intelligence or perception may be found in all
the 'classic' poems, not only of Keats, but of almost every poet of the
age who has dealt in Greek subjects. 

          Great license is allowed to painters and poets, but when they
take a subjective, especially a deep tradition, and fail to perceive its
real meaning or catch its point, and simply give us something very pretty,
but not so inspired with meaning as the original, it can hardly be claimed
that they have done their work as it might, or, in fact, should have been
done. I find that this fault does not occur in the Italian or Tuscan witch
versions of the ancient fables; on the contrary, they keenly appreciate,
and even expand, the antique spirit.  Hence I have often had occasion to
remark that it was not impossible that in some cases popular tradition,
even as it now exists, has been preserved more fully and accurately than
we find it in any Latin writer. 

     Now apropos of missing the point, I would remind certain very literal
readers that if they find many faults of grammar, misspelling, and worse
in the Italian texts in this book, they will not, as a distinguished
reviewer has done, attribute them all to the ignorance of the author, but
to the imperfect education of the person who collected and recorded them. 
I am reminded of this by having seen in a circulating library copy of my
Legend of Florence, in which some good careful soul had taken pains with a
pencil to correct all the archaisms.  Wherein, he or she was like a
certain Boston proof reader, who in a book of mine changed the spelling of
many citations from Chaucer, Spenser, and others into the purest, or
impurest, Webster; he being under the impression that I was extremely
ignorant of orthography.  As for the writing in or injuring books, which
always belong partly to posterity, it is a sin of vulgarity as well as
morality, and indicates what people are more than they dream. 

          "Only a cad as low as a thief
          Would write in a book or turn down a leaf,
          Since 'tis thievery, as well is know,
          To make free with that which is not our own."


                               CHAPTER XIII
                         DIANA AND THE CHILDREN

     There was in Florence in the oldest time a noble family, but grown so
poor that their feast days were few and far between.  However, they dwelt
in their old palace (which was in the street now called La Via
Cittadella), which was a fine old building, and so they kept up a brave
show before the world, when many a day they hardly had anything to eat. 

     Round this palace was a large garden, in which stood an ancient
marble statue of Diana, like a beautiful woman who seemed to be running
with a dog by her side.  She held in her hand a bow, and on her forehead
was a small moon.  And it was said that by night, when all was still, the
statue became like life and fled, and did not return till the moon set or
the sun rose. 

     The father of the family had two children, who were good and
intelligent.  On day they came home with many flowers that had been given
to them, and the little girl said to the brother, "The beautiful lady with
the bow ought to have some of these!" 

     Saying this, they laid flowers before the statue and made a wreath,
which the boy placed on her head. 

     Just then the great poet and magician Virgil, who knew everything
about the god and fairies, entered the garden and said, smiling, "You have
made the offering of flowers to the goddess quite correctly, as they did
of old; all that remains is to pronounce the prayer properly, and it is
this:" 

     So he repeated the invocation of Diana:

          Lovely Goddess of the bow!
          Lovely Goddess of the arrows!
          Of all hounds and of all hunting
          Thou who wakest in starry heaven
          When the sun is sunk in slumber
          Thou with moon upon thy forehead,
          Who the chase by night preferrest
          Unto hunting in the daylight,
          With thy nymphs unto the music
          Of the horn - thyself the huntress,
          And most powerful:  I pray thee
          Think, although but for an instant,
          Upon us who pray unto thee!

     Then Virgil taught them also the spell to be uttered when good
fortune or aught is specially required -

          Fair goddess of the rainbow,
          Of the stars and of the moon!
          The queen most powerful
          Of hunters and the night!
          We beg of thee thy aid,
          That thou may'st give to us
          The best of fortune ever!
          If thou heed'st our evocation
          And wilt give good fortune to us,
          Then in proof give us a token!

     And having taught them this, Virgil departed.

     Then the children ran to tell their parents all that had happened,
and the latter impressed it on them to keep it a secret, nor breathe a
word or hint thereof to any one.  But what was their amazement when they
found early the next morning before the statue a deer freshly killed,
which gave them good dinners for many a day; nor did they want thereafter
at any time game of all kinds, when the prayer had been devoutly
pronounced. 

     There was a neighbor of this family, a priest, who held in hate all
the ways and worship of the gods of the old time, and whatever did not
belong to his religion, and he, passing the garden one day, beheld the
statue of Diana crowned with roses and other flowers.  And being in a
rage, and seeing in the street a decayed cabbage, he rolled it in the mud,
and threw it all dripping at the face of the goddess, saying, "Behold,
thou vile beast of idolatry, this is the worship which thou has from me,
and the devil do the rest for thee!" 

     Then the priest heard a voice in the gloom where the leaves were
dense, and it said, "It is well!  I give thee warning, since thou hast
made thy offering, some of the game to thee I'll bring;  thou'lt have thy
share in the morning." 

     All that night the priest suffered from horrible dreams and dread,
and when at last, just before three o'clock, he fell asleep, he suddenly
awoke from a nightmare in which it seemed as if something heavy rested on
his chest.  And something indeed fell from him and rolled on the floor.
And when he rose and picked it up, and looked at it by the light of the
moon, he saw that it was a human head, half decayed. 

     Another priest, who had heard his cry of terror, entered his room,
and having looked at the head, said, "I know that face!  It is of a man
whom I confessed, and who was beheaded three months ago at Siena." 

     And three days after, the priest who had insulted the goddess died.

     The foregoing tale was not given to me as belonging to the Gospel of
Witches, but as one of a very large series of traditions relating to
Virgil as a magician.  But it has its proper place in this book, because
it contains the invocation to and incantation of Diana, these being
remarkably beautiful and original.  When we remember how these 'hymns'
have been handed down or preserved by old women, and doubtless much
garbled, changed, and deformed by transmission, it cannot but seem
wonderful that so much classic beauty still remains in them, as, for
instance, in -

          Lovely Goddess of the bow!
          Lovely Goddess of the arrows!
          Thou who walk'st I starry heaven!

     Robert Browning was a great poet, but if we compare all the Italian
witch poems of and to Diana with the former's much admired speech of
Diana-Artemis, it will certainly be admitted by impartial critics that the
spells are fully equal to the following by the bard -

          I am a goddess of the ambrosial courts,
          And save by Here, Queen of Pride, surpassed
          By none whose temples whiten this the world;
          Through heaven I roll my lucid moon along,
          I shed in Hell o'er my pale people peace,
          On Earth, I, caring for the creatures, guard
          Each pregnant yellow wolf and fox bitch sleek,
          And every feathered mother's callow brood,
          And all that love green haunts and loneliness.

     This is pretty, but it is only imitation, and neither in form or
spirit really equal to the incantations, which are sincere on faith.  And
it may here be observed in sorrow, yet in very truth, that in a very great
number of modern poetical handlings of classic mythic subjects, the
writers have, despite all their genius as artists, produced rococo work
which will appear to be such to another generation, simply from their
having missed the point, or omitted from ignorance something vital which
the folk lorist would probably not have lost.  Achilles may be admirably
drawn, as I have seen him, in a Louis XIV. wig with a Turkish scimitar,
but still one could wish that the designer had been a little more familiar
with Greek garments and weapons. 


                               CHAPTER XIV
               THE GOBLIN MESSENGERS OF DIANA AND MERCURY

     The following tale was not given to me as connected with the Gospel
of the Witches, but as Diana appears in it, and as the whole conception is
that of Diana and Apollo in another form, I include it in the series. 

     Many centuries ago there was a goblin, or spirit or devil-angel, and
Mercury, who was the god of speed and of quickness, being much pleased
with this imp, bestowed on him the gift of running like the wind, with the
privilege that whatever he pursued, be it spirit, a human being, or
animal, he should certainly overtake or catch it. 

     This goblin had a beautiful sister, who like him, ran errands, not
for the gods, but for the goddesses (there was a female god for every
male, even down to the small spirits); and Diana on the same day gave to
this fairy the power that, whoever might chase her, she should, if
pursued, never be overtaken. 

     On day the brother saw his sister speeding like a flash of lightning
across the heaven, and he felt a sudden strange desire in rivalry to
overtake her.  So he dashed after as she flitted on; but though it was his
destiny to catch, she had been fated never to be caught, and so the will
of one supreme god was balanced by that of another. 

     So the two kept flying round and round the edge of heaven, and at
first all the gods roared with laughter, but when they understood the
case, hey grew serious, and asked one another how it was to end. 

     Then the great father-god said, "Behold the earth, which is in
darkness and gloom!  I will change the sister into a Moon, and her brother
into a sun.  And so shall she ever escape him, yet will he ever catch her
with his light, which shall fall on her from afar;  for the rays of the
sun are his hands, which reach forth with burning grasp, yet which are
ever eluded." 

     And thus it is said that this race begins anew with, the first of
every month, when the moon being cold, is covered with as many coats as an
onion.  But while the race is being run, as the moon becomes warm she
casts off one garment after another, till she is naked and then stops, and
then when dressed the race begins again. 

     As the vast storm cloud falls in glittering drops, even so the great
myths of the olden time are broken up into small fairy tales, and as these
drops in turn reunite. 

     "On silent lake or streamlet lone" as Villon hath it, even so minor
myths are again formed from the fallen waters.  In this story we clearly
have the dog made by Vulcan and the wolf - Jupiter settled the question by
petrifying them - as you may read in Julius Pollux his fifth book, or any
other on mythology. 

          "Which hunting hound, as well is known,
          Was changed by Jupiter to stone."

     It is remarkable that in this story the moon is compared to an onion. 
"The onion," says Friedrich, "was, on account of its many skins, among the
Egyptians the emblem and hieroglyph of the many formed moon, whose
different phases are so clearly seen I the root when it is cut through,
also because its growth or decrease corresponds with that of the planet. 
Therefore it was dedicated to Isis, the Moon Goddess."  And for this
reason the onion was so holy as to be regarded as having in itself
something of deity; for which reason Juvenal remarks that the Egyptians
were happy people to have gods growing in their gardens. 


                               CHAPTER XV
                                LAVERNA

     The following very curious tale, with the incantation, was not in the
text of the Vangelo, but it very evidently belongs to the cycle or series
of legends connected with it.  Diana is declared to be the protectress of
all outcasts, those to whom the night is their day, consequently of
thieves;  and Laverna, as we may learn from Horace and Plautus, was
pre-eminently the patroness of pilfering and all rascality.  In this story
she also appears as a witch and humorist. 

     It was given to me as a tradition of Virgil, who often appears as one
familiar with the marvelous and hidden lore of the olden time. 

     It happened on a time that Virgil, who knew all things hidden or
magical, he who was a magician and poet, having heard a speech (or
oration) by a famous talker who had not much in him, was asked what he
thought of it.  And he replied, "It seems to me to be impossible to tell
whether it was all introduction or all conclusion; certainly there was no
body in it.  It was like certain fish of whom one is in doubt whether they
are all head or all tail, or only head and tail; or the goddess Laverna,
of whom no one ever know whether she was all head or all body, or neither
or both." 

     Then the emperor inquired who this deity might be, for he had never
heard of her. 

     And Virgil replied, "Among the gods or spirits who were of ancient
times - may they be ever favorable to us!  Among them (was) one female who
was the craftiest and most knavish of them all.  She was called Laverna. 
She was a thief, and very little known to the other deities, who were
honest and dignified, for she was rarely in heaven or in the country of
the fairies. 

     "She was almost always on earth, among thieves, pickpockets, and
panders - she lived in darkness. 

     "Once it happened that she went (to a mortal), a great priest in the
form and guise of a very beautiful stately priestess (of some goddess),
and said to him: -

     " ' You have an estate which I wish to buy.  I intend to build on it
a temple to (our) God.  I swear to you on my body that I will pay thee
within a year'

     "Therefore the priest transferred to her the estate. 
     "And very soon Laverna had sold off all the crops, grain, cattle,
wood, and poultry.  There was not left the value of four farthings. 
     "But on the day fixed for payment there was no Laverna to be seen. 
The fair goddess was far away, and had left her creditor in the lurch! 
     "At the same time Laverna went to a great lord and bought of him a
castle, well furnished within and broad rich lands without. 
     "But this time she swore on her head to pay in full in six months.
     "And as she had done by the priest, so she acted to the lord of the
castle, and stole and sold every stick, furniture, cattle, men, and mice -
there was not left wherewith to feed a fly. 
     "Then the priest and the lord, finding out who this was, appealed to
the gods, complaining that they had been robbed by a goddess. 
     "And it was soon made known to them all that this was Laverna.
     "Therefore she was called to judgment before all the gods.
     "And when she was asked what she had done with the property of the
priest, unto whom she had sworn by her body to make payment at the time
appointed (and why she had broken her oath)? 
     "She replied by a strange deed which amazed them all, for she made
her body disappear, so that only her head remained visible, and it cried:
-
     " "Behold me!  I swore by my body, but body have I none!'
     "Then all the gods laughed.
     "After the priest came the lord who had also been tricked, and to
whom she had sworn by her head.  And in reply to him Laverna showed all
present her whole body without mincing matters, and it was one of extreme
beauty, but without a head; and from the neck thereof came a voice which
said: -
          'Behold me, for I am Laverna, who
          Have come to answer to that lord's complaint,
          Who swears that I contracted debt to him,
          And have not paid although the time is o'er
          And that I am a thief because I swore
          Upon my head - but, as you all can see,
          I have no head at all, and therefore I
          Assuredly ne'er swore by such an oath.'

     "Then there was indeed a storm of laughter among the gods, who made
the matter right by ordering the head to join the body, and bidding
Laverna pay up her debts, which she did. 
     "Then Jove spoke and said: -
     " 'Here is a roguish goddess without a duty (or a worshipper), while
there are in Rome innumerable thieves, sharpers, cheats, and rascals who
live by deceit. 
     " "These good folk have neither a church nor a god, and it is a great
pity, for even the very devils have their master, Satan, as the head of
the family.  Therefore, I command that in future Laverna shall be the
goddess of all the knaves or dishonest tradesman, with the whole rubbish
and refuse of the human race, who have been hitherto without a god or a
devil, inasmuch as they have been too despicable for the one or the
other.'
     "And so Laverna became the goddess of all dishonest and shabby
people. 
     "Whenever any one planned or intended any knavery or aught wicked, he
entered her temple, and invoked Laverna, who appeared to him as a woman's
head.  But if he did his work of knavery badly or maladroitly, when he
again invoked her he saw only the body; but if he was clever, then he
beheld the whole goddess, head and body. 
     "Laverna was no more chaste than she was honest, and had many lovers
and many children.  It was said that not being bad at heart or cruel, she
often repented her life and sins; but do what she might, she could not
reform, because her passions were so inveterate. 
     "And if a man had got any woman with child or any maid found herself
enceinte, and would hide it from the world and escape scandal, they would
go every day to invoke Laverna. 
     "Then when the time came for the suppliant to be delivered, Laverna
would bear her in sleep during the night to her temple, and after the
birth cast her into slumber again, and bear her back to her bed at home. 
And when she woke in the morning, she was ever in vigorous health and felt
no weariness, and all seemed to her as a dream. 
     "But to those who desired in time to reclaim their children, Laverna
was indulgent if they led such lives as pleased her and faithfully
worshipped her. 
     "And this is the ceremony to be performed and the incantation to be
offered every night to Laverna. 

     "There must be a set place devoted to the goddess, be it a room, a
cellar, or a grove, but ever a solitary place. 
     "Then take a small table of the size of forty playing cards set close
together, and this must be hid in the same place, and going there at
night... 
     "Take forty cards and spread them on the table, making of them a
close carpet or cover on it. 
     "Take of the herbs paura and concordia, and boil the two together,
repeating meanwhile the following: -

          I boil the cluster of concordia
          To keep in concord and at peace with me
          Laverna, that she may restore to me
          My child, and that she by her favoring care
          May guard me well from danger all my life!
          I boil this herb, yet 'tis not it which boils,
          I boil the fear, that it may keep afar
          Any intruder, and if such should come
          (to spy upon my rite), may he be struck
          With fear and in his terror haste away!

     Having said thus, put the boiled herbs in a bottle and spread the
cards on the table one by one, saying: -

          I spread before me now the forty cards
          Yet 'tis not forty cards which here I spread,
          But forty of the gods superior
          To the deity Laverna, that their forms
          May each and all become volcanoes hot,
          Until Laverna comes and brings my child;
          And 'till 'tis done may they all cast at her
          Hot flames of fire, and with them glowing coals
          From noses, mouths, and ears (until she yields);
          Then may they leave Laverna at her peace,
          Free to embrace her children at her will!

     "Laverna was the Roman goddess of thieves, pickpockets, shopkeepers
or dealers, plagiarists, rascals, and hypocrites.  There was near Rome a
temple in a grove where robbers went to divide their plunder.  There was a
statue of the goddess.  Her image, according to some, was a head without a
body; according to others, a body without a head; but the epithet of
'beautiful' applied to her by Horace indicates that she who gave disguises
to her worshippers had kept one to herself."  She was worshipped in
perfect silence.  This is confirmed by a passage to Horace, where an
impostor, hardly daring to move his lips, repeats the following prayer or
incantation: -
     
          "O goddess Laverna!
          Give me the art of cheating and deceiving,
          Of making men believe that I am just,
          Holy, and innocent! extend all darkness
          And deep obscurity o'er my misdeeds!"

     It is interesting to compare this unquestionably ancient classic
invocation to Laverna with the one which is before given.  The goddess was
extensively known to the lower orders, and in Plautus a cook who has been
robbed of his implements calls on her to revenge him. 

     I call special attention to the fact that in this, as in a great
number of Italian witch incantations, the deity or spirit who is
worshipped, be it Diana herself or Laverna, is threatened with torment by
a higher power until he or she grants the favour demanded.  This is quite
classic (Grecco-Roman or Oriental) in all of which sources the magician
relies not on favour, aid, or power granted by either God or Satan, but
simply on what he has been able to wrench and wring, as it were, out of
infinite nature or the primal source by penance and study.  I mention this
because a reviewer has reproached me with exaggerating the degree to which
diabolism - introduced by the Church since 1500 - is deficient in Italy. 
But in fact, among the higher classes of witches, or in their traditions,
it is hardly to be found at all.  In Christian diabolism the witch never
dares to threaten Satan or God, or any of the Trinity or angels, for the
whole system is based on the conception of a Church and of obedience. 

     The herb concordia probably takes its name from that of the goddess
Concordia, who was represented as holding a branch.  It plays a great part
in witchcraft, after verbena and rue. 

                               APPENDIX

     So long ago as the year 1886 I learned that there was in existence a
manuscript setting forth the doctrines of Italian witchcraft, and I was
promised that, if possible, it should be obtained for me.  In this I was
for a time disappointed.  But having urged it on Maddalena, my collector
of folk lore, while she was leading a wandering life in Tuscany, to make
an effort to obtain or recover something of the kind, I at last received
from her, on January 1, 1897, from Colle, Val d'Elsa, near Siena, the MS
entitled Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches. 

     Now be it observed, that every leading point which forms the plot or
center of this Vangel, such as that Diana is Queen of the Witches; an
associate of Herodius (Aradia) in her relations to sorcery; that she bore
a child to her brother the Sun (here Lucifer); that as a moon-goddess she
is in some relation to Cain, who dwells as prisoner in the moon, and that
the witches of old were people oppressed by feudal lands, the former
revenging themselves in every way, and holding orgies to Diana which the
Church represented as being the worship of Satan - all of this, I repeat,
had been told or written out for me in fragments by Maddalena (not to
speak of other authorities), even as it had been chronicled by Horst or
Michelet; therefore all this is in the present document of minor
importance.  All of this I expected, but what I did not expect, and what
was new to me, was that portion which is given as prose-poetry and which I
have rendered in meter or verse.  This being traditional, and taken down
from wizards, is extremely curious and interesting, since in it are
preserved many relics of lore which, as may be verified from records, have
come down from days of yore. 

     Aradia is evidently enough Herodius, who was regarded in the
beginning as associated with Diana as chief of the witches.  This was not,
as I opined, derived from the Herodias of the New Testament, but from an
earlier replica of Lilith, bearing the same name.  It is, in fact an
identification or twin-ing of the Aryan and Shemitic Queens of Heaven, or
of Night and of Sorcery, and it may be that this was known to the earliest
myth makers.  So far back as the sixth century the worship of Herodias and
Diana by witches was condemned by a Church Council at Ancyra.  Pipernus
and other writers have noted the evident identity of Herodias with Lilith. 
Isis preceded both. 

     Diana is very vigorously, even dramatically, set forth in this poem
as the goddess of the god forsaken and ungodly, of thieves, harlots, and,
truthfully enough, of the 'minions of the moon,' as Falstaff would have
fain had them called.  It was recognized in ancient Rome, as it is in
modern India, that no human being can be so bad or vile as to have
forfeited all right to divine protection of some kind or other, and Diana
was this protectress.  It my be as well to observe here, that among all
free thinking philosophers, educated parias, and literary or book
bohemians, there has ever been a most unorthodox tendency to believe that
the faults and errors of humanity are more due (if not altogether due) to
unavoidable causes which we cannot help, as, for instance, heredity, the
being born savages, or poor, or in vice, or unto 'bigotry and virtue' in
excess, or unto inquisitioning - that is to say, when we are so over
burdened with innately born sin that all our free will cannot set us free
from it. 

     It was during the so called Dark Ages, or from the downfall of the
Roman Empire until the thirteenth century, that the belief that all which
was worst in man owed its origin solely to the monstrous abuses and
tyranny of Church and State.  For then, at every turn in life, the vast
majority encountered downright shameless, palpable iniquity and injustice,
with no law for the weak who were without patrons. 

     The perception of this drove vast numbers of the discontented into
rebellion, and as they could not prevail by open warfare, they took their
hatred out in a form of secret anarchy, which was, however, intimately
blended with superstition and fragments of old tradition.  Prominent in
this, and naturally enough, was the worship of Diana the protectress, for
the alleged adoration of Satan was a far later invention of the Church,
and it has never really found a leading place in Italian witchcraft to
this day.  That is to say, purely diabolical witchcraft did not find
general acceptance till the end of the fifteenth century, when it was, one
may almost say, invented in Rome to supply means wherewith to destroy the
threatening heresy of Germany. 

     The growth of Sentiment is the increase of suffering; man is never
entirely miserable until he finds out how wronged he is and fancies that
he sees far ahead a possible freedom.  In ancient times men as slaves
suffered less under even more abuse, because they believed they were born
to low conditions of life.  Even the best reform brings pain with it, and
the great awakening of man was accompanied with griefs, many of which even
yet endure.  Pessimism is the result of too much culture and introversion. 

     It appears to be strangely out of sight and out of mind with all
historians, that the sufferings of the vast majority of mankind, or the
enslaved and poor, were far greater under early Christianity, or till the
end of the Middle Ages and the Emancipation of Serfs, than they were
before.  The reason for this was that in the old 'heathen' time the humble
did not know, or even dream, that all are equal before God, or that they
had many rights, even here on earth, as slaves;  for, in fact, the whole
moral tendency of the New Testament is utterly opposed to slavery, or even
sever servitude.  Every word uttered teaching Christ's mercy and love,
humility and charity, was, in fact, a bitter reproof, not only to every
lord in the land, but to the Church itself, and its arrogant prelates. 
The fact that many abuses had been mitigated and that there were
benevolent saints, does not affect the fact that, on the whole, mankind
was for a long time worse off than before, and the greatest cause of this
suffering was what may be called a sentimental one, or a newly born
consciousness of rights withheld, which is always of itself a torture. 
And this was greatly aggravated by the endless preaching to the people
that it was a duty to suffer and endure oppression and tyranny, and that
the rights of Authority of all kinds were so great that they on the whole
even excused their worst abuses.  For by upholding Authority in the
nobility the Church maintained its own. 

     The result of it all was a vast development of rebels, outcasts, and
all the discontented, who adopted witchcraft or sorcery for a religion,
and wizards as their priests.  They had secret meetings in desert places,
among old ruins accursed by priests as the haunt of evil spirits or
ancient heathen gods, or in the mountains.  To this day the dweller in
Italy may often find secluded spots environed by ancient chestnut forests,
rocks, and walls, which suggest fit places for the Sabbat, and are
sometimes still believed by tradition to be such.  And I also believe that
in this Gospel of the Witches we have a trustworthy outline at least of
the doctrine and rites observed at these meetings.  They adored forbidden
deities and practiced forbidden deeds, inspired as much by rebellion
against Society as their own passions. 

     There is, however, in the Evangel of the Witches an effort made to
distinguish between the naturally wicked or corrupt and those who are
outcasts or oppressed, as appears from the passage:  -

          "Yet like Cain's daughter (offspring) thou shalt never be,
          Nor like the race who have become at last
          Wicked and infamous from suffering,
          As are the Jews and wandering Zingari,
          Who are all thieves: like then ye shall not be."

     The supper of the Witches, the cakes of meal, salt, and honey, in the
form of crescent moons, are known to every classical scholar.  The moon or
horn shaped cakes are still common.  I have eaten of them this very day,
and though they are known all over the world, I believe they owe their
fashion to tradition. 

     In the conjuration of the meal there is a very curious tradition
introduced to the effect that the glittering grains of wheat from which
spikes shoot like sun rays, owe their brilliant likeness to a resemblance
to the firefly, 'who comes to give the light.' We have, I doubt not, in
this a classic tradition, but I cannot verify it.  Hereupon the Vangelo
cites a common nursery rhyme, which may also be found a nursery tale, yet
which, like others, is derived from witch lore, by which the lucciola is
put under a glass and conjured to give by its light certain answers. 

     The conjuration of the meal or bread, as being literally our body as
contributing to form it, and deeply sacred because it had lain in the
earth, where dark and wondrous secrets bide, seems to cast a new light on
the Christian sacrament.  It is a type of resurrection from earth, and was
therefore used at the Mysteries and Holy Supper, and the grain had
pertained to chthonic secrets, or to what had been under the earth in
darkness.  Thus even earthworms are invoked in modern witchcraft as
familiar with dark mysteries, and the shepherd's pipe to win the Orphic
power must be buried three days in the earth.  And so all was, and is, in
sorcery a kind of wild poetry based on symbols, all blending into one
another, light and darkness, fireflies and grain, life and death. 

     Very strange indeed, but very strictly according to ancient magic as
described by classic authorities, is the threatening Diana, in case she
will not grant a prayer.  This recurs continually in the witch exorcisms
or spells.  The magus, or witch, worships the spirit, but claims to have
the right, drawn from a higher power, to compel even the Queen of Earth,
Heaven and Hell to grant the request.  "Give what I ask, and thou shalt
have honor and offerings;  refuse, and I will vex thee by insult."  So
Canidia and her kind boasted that they could compel the gods to appear. 
This is all classic.  No one ever heard of a Satanic witch invoking or
threatening the Trinity, or Christ or even the angels or saints.  In fact,
they cannot even compel the devil or his imps to obey - they work entirely
by his good will as slaves.  But in the old Italian lore the sorcerer or
witch is all or nothing, and aims at limitless will or power. 

     Of the ancient belief in the virtues of a perforated stone I need not
speak.  But it is to be remarked that in the invocation the witch goes
forth in the earliest morning to seek for verbena or verbain.  The ancient
Persian magi, or rather their daughters, worshipped the sun as it rose by
waving freshly plucked verbena, which was one of the seven most powerful
plants in magic. These Persian priestesses were naked while they thus
worshipped, nudity being a symbol of truth and sincerity. 

     The extinguishing the lights, nakedness, and the orgy, were regarded
as symbolical of the body being laid in the ground, the grain being
planted, or of entering into darkness and death, to be revived in new
forms, or regeneration and light.  It was the laying aside of daily life. 

     The Gospel of the Witches, as I have given it, is in reality only the
initial chapter of the collection of ceremonies, incantations, and
traditions current in the fraternity or sisterhood, the whole of which are
in the main to be found in my Etruscan Roman Remains and Florentine
Legends.  I have, it is true, a great number as yet unpublished, and there
are more ungathered, but the whole scripture of this sorcery, all its
principal tenets, formulas, medicaments, and mysteries may be found in
what I have collected and printed.  Yet I would urge that it would be
worth while to arrange and edit it all into one work, because it would be
to every student of archeology, folk lore, or history of great value.  It
has been the faith of millions in the past it has made itself felt in
innumerable traditions, which deserve to be better understood than they
are, and I would gladly undertake the work if I believed that the public
would make it worth the publisher's outlay and pains. 

     It may be observed with truth that I have not treated this Gospel,
nor even the subject of witchcraft, entirely as folk lore, as the word is
strictly defined and carried out; that is, as a mere traditional fact or
thing to be chiefly regarded as a variant like or unlike sundry other
traditions, or to be tabulated and put away in pigeon holes for reference. 
That it is useful and sensible to do all this is perfectly true, and it
has led to an immense amount of valuable search, collection, and
preservation.  But there is this to be said, and I have observed that here
and there a few genial minds are beginning to awake to it, that the mere
study of the letter in this way has developed a great indifference to the
spirit, going in may cases so far as to produce, like Realism in Art (to
which it is allied), even a contempt for the matter or meaning of it, as
originally believed in. 

     I was lately much struck by the fact that in a very learned work on
Music, the author, in discussing that of ancient times and of the East,
while extremely accurate and minute in determining pentatonic and all
other scales, and what may be called the mere machinery and history of
composition, showed that he was utterly ignorant of the fundamental fact
that notes and chords, bars and melodies, were in themselves ideas or
thoughts.  Thus Confucius is said to have composed a melody which was a
personal description of himself.  Now if this be not understood, we cannot
understand the soul of early music, and the folk lorist who cannot get
beyond the letter and fancies himself 'scientific' is exactly like the
musician who has no idea of how or why melodies were anciently composed. 

     The strange and mystical chapter 'How Diana made the Stars and the
Rain' is the same given in my Legends of Florence, but much enlarged, or
developed to a cosmogonic-mythologic sketch.  And here a reflection occurs
which is perhaps the most remarkable which all this Witch Evangel
suggests.  In all other Scriptures of all races, it is the male, Jehovah,
Buddha or Brahma, who creates the universe; in Witch Sorcery it is the
female who is the primitive principle. Whenever in history there is a
period of radical intellectual rebellion against long established
conservatism, hierarchy, and the like, there is always an effort to regard
Woman as the fully equal, which means the superior sex.  Thus in the
extraordinary war of conflicting elements, strange schools of sorcery,
Neo-Platonism, Cabala, Hermetic Christianity, Gnosticism, Persian Magism
and Dualism, with the remains of old Greek and Egyptian theologies in the
third and fourth centuries at Alexandria, and in the House of Light of
Cairo in the ninth, the equality of Woman was a prominent doctrine.  It
was Sophia or Helena, the enfranchised, who was then the true Christ who
was to save mankind. 

     When Illumination, in company with magic and mysticism, and a resolve
to regenerate society according to extreme free thought, inspired the
Templars to the hope that they would master the Church and the world, the
equality of Woman derived from the Cairene traditions, again received
attention.  And it may be observed that during the Middle Ages, and even
so late as the intense excitements which inspired the French Huguenots,
the Jansenists and the Anabaptists, Woman always came forth more
prominently or played a far greater part than she had done in social or
political life.  This was also the case in the Spiritualism founded by the
Fox sisters of Rochester, New York, and it is manifesting itself in many
ways in the Fin de Siecle, which is also a nervous chaos according to
Nordau - Woman being evidently a fish who shows herself most when the
waters are troubled. 

     But we should also remember that in the earlier ages the vast
majority of mankind itself, suppressed by the too great or greatly abused
power of Church and State, only manifested itself at such periods of
rebellion against forms or ideas grown old.  And with every new rebellion,
every fresh outburst or wild inundation and bursting over the barriers,
humanity and woman gain something, that is to say, their just dues or
rights.  For as every freshet spreads more widely its waters over the
fields, which are in due time the more fertilized thereby, so the world at
large gains by every revolution, however terrible or repugnant it may be
for a time. 

     The Emancipated or Woman's Rights woman, when too enthusiastic,
generally considers man as limited, while Woman is destined to gain on
him.  In earlier ages a contrary opinion prevailed, and both are, or were,
apparently in the wrong, so far as the future is concerned.  For in truth
both sexes are progressive, and progress in this respect means not a
conflict of the male and female principle, such as formed the basis of the
Mahabarata, but a gradual ascertaining of true ability and adjustment of
relations or coordination of powers. 

     These remarks are appropriate to my text and subject, because it is
in studying the epochs when woman has made herself prominent and
influential that we learn what the capacities of the female sex truly are. 
Among these, that of witchcraft as it truly was - not as it is generally
quite misunderstood - is a deeply interesting as any other.  For the
witch, laying aside all question as to magic or its non-existence - was
once a real factor or great power in rebellious social life, and to this
very day it is recognized that there is something uncanny, mysterious, and
incomprehensible in woman, which neither she herself nor man can explain. 

          THE CHILDREN OF DIANA, OR HOW THE FAIRIES WERE BORN

     All things were made by Diana, the great spirits of the stars, men in
their time and place, the giants which were of old, and the dwarfs who
dwell in the rocks, and once a month worship her with cakes. 

     There was once a young man who was poor, without parents, yet he was
good. 
     One night he sat in a lonely place, yet it was very beautiful, and
there he saw a thousand little fairies, shining white, dancing in the
light of the full moon. 
     "Gladly would I be like you, O fairies!" said the youth, "free from
care, needing no food. But what are ye?" 

     "We  are moon rays, the children of Diana," replied one - 
          We are children of the Moon.
          We are born of shining light;
          When the Moon shoots forth a ray,
          Then it takes a fairy's form.
     "And thou art one of us because thou wert born when the Moon, our
mother Diana, was full; yes, our brother, kin to us, belonging to our
band. 
     "And if thou art hungry and poor...and wilt have money in thy pocket,
then think upon the Moon, on Diana, unto whom thou wert born; then repeat
these words -

          "'Moon, Moon, beautiful Moon!
          Fairer far than any star;
          Moon, O Moon, if it may be,
          Bring good fortune unto me!'

     "And then, if thou has money in thy pocket, thou wilt have it
doubled. 
     "For the children who are born in a full moon are sons or daughters
of the Moon, especially when they are born of a Sunday when there is a
high tide. 

          "Full moon, high sea,
          Great man shalt thou be!"

     Then the young man, who had only a paolo in his purse, touched it,
saying -

          "Moon, Moon, beautiful Moon,
          Ever be my lovely Moon!"

     And so the young man, wishing to make money, bought and sold and made
money, which he doubled every month. 

     But it came to pass that after a time, during one month he could sell 
nothing, so made
nothing.  So by night he said to the Moon - 

          "Moon, O Moon, whom I by far
          Love beyond another star,
          Tell me why it was ordained
          That I this month have nothing gained?"

     Then there appeared to him a little shining elf, who said - 
          "Money will not come to thee,
          Nor any help or aid can'st see,
          Unless you work industriously."

     Then he added - 
          "Money I ne'er give, 'tis clear,
          Only help to thee, my dear!"

     Then the youth understood that the Moon, like God and Fortune, does
the most for those who do the most for themselves. 

     To be born in a full moon means to have an enlightened mind, and a
high tide signifies an exalted intellect and full of thought.  It is not
enough to have a fine boat of Fortune.  And it is said -

          "Fortune gives and Fortune takes,
          And to man a fortune makes,
          Sometimes to those who labor shirk,
          But oftener to those who work."


       DIANA, QUEEN OF THE SERPENTS, GIVER OF THE GIFT OF LANGUAGES

     In a long a strange legend of Melambo, a magian and great physician
of divine birth, there is an invocation to Diana which has a proper place
in this work.  The incident in which it occurs is as follows -

     One day Melambo asked his mother how it was that while it had been
promised that he should know the language of all living thins, it had not
yet come to pass. 

     And his mother replied, "Patience, my son, for it is by waiting and 
watching ourselves that we learn how to be taught.  And thou hast within
thee the teachers who can impart the most, if thou wilt seek to hear them;
yes, the professors who can teach thee more in a few minutes than others
learn in a life." 

     It befell that one evening Melambo, thinking on this while playing
with a nest of young serpents which his servant had found in a hollow oak,
said, "I would that I could talk with you. Well I know that ye have a
language, as graceful as your movement, as brilliant as your color." 

     Then he fell asleep, and the young serpents twined in his hair and
began to lick his lips and eyes, while their mother sang -

          Diana! Diana! Diana!
          Queen of all enchantresses
          And of the dark night
          And of all nature, 
          Of the stars and of the moon, 
          And of all fate or fortune!
          Thou who rulest the tide,
          Who shinest by night on the sea,
          Casting light upon the waters;
          Thou who art mistress of the ocean
          In thy boat made like a crescent,
          Crescent moon bark brightly gleaming,
          Ever smiling high in heaven,
          Sailing too on earth, reflected
          In the ocean, on its water;
          We implore thee give this sleeper,
          Give unto this good Melambo
          The great gift of understanding
          What all creatures say while talking!

     This legend contains much that is very curious; among other things an
invocation to the firefly, one to Mefitia, the goddess of malaria, and a
long poetic prophecy relative to the hero.  It is evidently full of old
Latin mythologic lore of a very marked character.  The whole of it may be
found in a forthcoming work by the writer of this book, entitled "The
Unpublished Legends of Virgil." 

             DIANA AS GIVING BEAUTY AND RESTORING STRENGTH

     Diana hath the power to do all things, to give glory to the lowly,
wealth to the poor, joy to the afflicted, beauty to the ugly.  Be not in
grief, if you are her follower; though you be in prison and in darkness,
she will bring light - many there are whom she sinks that they may rise
the higher. 

     There was of old in Monteroni a young man so ugly that when a
stranger was passing through the town he was shown this Gianni, as one of
the sights of the place.  Yet, hideous as he was, because he was rich,
though of no family, he had confidence, and hoped boldly to win and wed
some beautiful young lady of rank. 

     Now there came to dwell in Monteroni a wonderfully beautiful blonde
young lady of culture and condition, to whom Gianni, with his usual
impudence, boldly made love, getting, as was also usual, a round No for
his reply. 

     But this time, being more than usually fascinated in good truth, for
there were influences at work he knew not of, he became as one possessed
or mad with passion, so that he hung about the lady's house by night and
day, seeking indeed an opportunity to rush in and seize her, or by some
desperate trick to master and bear her away. 

     But here his plans were defeated, because the lady had ever by her a
great cat which seemed to be of more than human intelligence, and,
whenever Gianni approached her or her home, it always espied him and gave
the alarm with a terrible noise.  And there was indeed something so
unearthly in its appearance, and something so awful in its great green
eyes which shone like torches, that the boldest man might have been
appalled by them. 

     But one evening Gianni reflected that it was foolish to be afraid of
a mere cat, which need only scare a boy, and so he boldly ventured on an
attack.  So going forth, he took a ladder, which he carried and placed
against the lady's window.  But while he stood at the foot, he found by
him an old woman, who earnestly began to beg him not to persevere in his
intention.  "For thou knowest well, Gianni," she said, "that the lady will
have none of thee;  thou art a terror to her.  Do but go home and look in
the glass, and it will seem to thee that thou art looking on a mortal sin
in human form." 

     Then Gianni in a roaring rage cried, "I will have my way and my will,
thou old wife of the devil, if I must kill thee and the girl too!"  Saying
which, he rushed up the ladder; but before he had opened or could enter
the window, and was at the top, he found himself as it were turned to wood
or stone, unable to move. 

     Then he was overwhelmed with shame, and said, "Ere long the whole
town will be here to witness my defeat.  However, I will make one last
appeal."  So he cried, "Oh, vecchia! thou who didst mean me more kindly
than I knew, pardon me, I beg thee, and rescue me from this trouble! And
if, as I well ween, thou art a witch, and if I, by becoming a wizard, may
be freed from my trials and troubles, then I pray thee teach me how it may
be done, so that I may win the young lady, since I now see that she is of
thy kind, and that I must be of it to be worthy of her." 

     Then Gianni saw the old woman sweep like a flash of light from a
lantern up from the ground, and, touching him, bore him away from the
ladder, when lo! the light was a cat, who had been anon the witch, and she
said, "Thou wilt soon set forth on a long journey, and in thy way wilt
find a wretched worn out horse, when thou must say -
          
          'Fairy Diana! Fairy Diana! Fairy Diana!
          I conjure thee to do some little good
          To this poor beast.'
          Then thou wilt find
          A great goat
          A true he-goat
          And thou shalt say,
          'Good evening, fair goat!
          And he will reply,
          'Good evening, fair sir!
          I am so weary
          That I can go no farther'
          And thou shalt reply as usual,
          'Fairy Diana, I conjure thee
          To give to this goat relief and peace!'

     "Then will we enter in a great hall where thou wilt see many
beautiful ladies who will try to fascinate thee; but let thy answer ever
be, 'She whom I love is her of Monteroni.'

     "And now Gianni, to horse; mount and away!"  So he mounted the cat,
which flew as quick as thought, and found the mare, and having pronounced
over it the incantation, it became a woman and said -

          In the name of the Fairy Diana!
          Mayest thou hereby become
          A beautiful young man,
          Red and white in hue,
          Like to milk and blood!

     After this he found the goat and conjured it in like manner, and it
replied -
          In the name of the Fairy Diana!
          Be thou attired more richly than a prince!

     So he passed to the hall, where he was wooed by beautiful ladies, but
his answer to them all was that his love was at Monterone. 

     Then he saw or knew no more, but on awakening found himself in
Monterone, and so changed to a handsome youth that no one knew him.  So he
married his beautiful lady, and all lived the hidden life of witches and
wizards from that day, and are now in fairy land. 

                                  NOTES

     As a curious illustration of the fact that the faith in Diana and the
other deities of the Roman mythology, as connected with divination, still
survives among the Italians of 'the people,' I may mention that after this
work went to press, I purchased for two soldi or one penny, a small
chapbook in which is shown how, by a process of conjuration or evocation
and numbers, not only Diana, but 39 other deities may be made to give
answers to certain questions.  The work is probably taken from some old
manuscript, as it is declared to have been discovered and translated by
P.P. Francesco di Villanova Monteleone.  It is divided into two parts, one
entitled Circe and the other Medea. 

     As such works must have pictures, Circe is set forth by a page cut of
a very ugly old woman in the most modern costume of shawl and mob cap with
ribbons.  She is holding an ordinary candlestick.  It is quite the ideal
of a common fortune teller, and it is probably that the words Maga Circe
suggested nothing more or less than such a person to him who 'made up' the
book.  That of Medea is, however, quite correct, even artistic,
representing the sorceress as conjuring the magic bath, and was probably
taken from some work on mythology.  It is ever so in Italy, where the most
grotesque and modern conceptions of classic subjects are mingled with much
that is accurate and beautiful - of which indeed this work supplies many
examples. 

--- EOF aradia.txt -----
