HISTORY (NEOpagan; 1960s) [_Witchcraft Today_, by Gerald Gardner, 1969; 22-8.] I should like at this stage to deal with the view, not infrequently held, that witchcraft has connections with diabolism. Mr. Summers himself appears to think the question is settled because the Roman Catholic Church said the cult was diabolic, and Mr. Pennethorne Hughes's book also gives the impression.... ...I have attended many of these cult rites, and I declare that most of what he says is simply not true.... There are no crucifixes, inverted or otherwise, no sermons, mock or otherwise, and no absolution or hosts save for the cake and wine mentioned. Incense is used, but this has a practical purpose. There is no praise or homage to the Devil, no liturgy, evil or otherwise, nothing is said backwards, and there are no gestures with the left hand; in fact with the exception that it is a religious service and all religious services resemble one another, the rites are not in any way an imitation of anything I have ever seen. I do not say there have never been diabolists. I only say that, as far as I know, witches do not do the thins of which they have been accused, and knowing what I do of their religion and practices I do not think they ever did.... It is often thought that the performance of the Black Mass is part of the tradition of witchcraft; but to use the late Dr. Joad's words, "it all depends on what you mean" by the Black Mass. I understand it to be a blasphemous parody of the Catholic Mass. I have neither seen nor heard of this in connection with the cult, and I do not believe it ever existed as one of their rites.... Another thing I have always understood is that to perform a Black Mass you needed a Catholic priest who would perform a valid transubtantiation: God so present in the Host would then be descrated. Unless it were a valid communion there could be no desecration. I should be surprised to find a Catholic priest among witches nowadays, though in the past many are said to have been members of the cult. It has been suggested that witches did not really celebrate the Black Mass but that people become witches by obtaining hosts, either by stealing the reserved sacrament from the churches or by receiving the communion and keeping it under their tongues and then putting it in their pockets; this was then taken to the rites and desecrated. During my lifetime there has been much trouble because priests and missionaries have destroyed or desecrated figures of heathen gods, and I also believe that some eminent Nonconformist churchmen have obtained consecrated hosts and held them up to ridicule. But I have never heard that so doing made them witches, and I do not think that witches ever do it or did it.... I believe, however, that sometimes the Black Mass *is* performed. Once I doubted it, but in February, 1952, I was in Rome and was told that some unfrocked priests and nuns celebrated it at times. My informants said they could arrange for me to see it done properly by these unfrocked priests and nuns, but that it would cost me [20 lira]; I had not enough foreign exchange or else I would have gone, so as to settle the queston to my own satisfaction. I think it was probably a show put on for the tourists, though I was assured by responsible people that it was not. In short, I believe that people may perform Black Masses at times for a thrill, or with evil intent; but I do not believe that these people are witches, or know anything about witchcraft. Incidentally, I met more than one witch in Rome, though witches have to keep underground, and they knew nothing of this Black Mass.... ---------------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, p. 43-4.] Among the most common charges against witches is that they denied or repudiated the Christian religion. All I can say is, I and my friends have never seen or heard of such denial or repudiation. My opinion is that in the early days everyone was of the old faith and regularly worshipped the old gods before they were initiated. To people like the Romans and Romano-Britons it woudl only be worshipping their own gods who had become identified as Celti ones, so there would be nothing to repudiate. Possibly during the persecution times if unknown people turned up at a big religoius meeting they would be questioned to see if they were spies and might be asked to deny Christianity, as a sort of test. They would never initiate anyone, take him into the circle, unless they knew him well as one of the old faith. When the persecution grew fierce, the cult dived underground and practically only children, born and bred into the cult, were ever initiated. I can well believe that sometimes, if someone not of the blood wished to come in, he might be questioned; but it is to make him deny a belief in the Fidlers Green, which old sailors used to tell about: the paradise where old sailors went, which lay at the far side of Hell. So I think it is possible that though there may have been cases of people denying Christianity, these were very few. To say it is "proof" because many witches were tortured until they admitted repudiating Christianity is like saying that similar testimony is proof that they flew through the air on broomsticks. My great trouble in discovering what their beliefs were is that they have forgotten practically all about their god; all I can get is from the rites and prayers addressed to him.... ...it should be noted that there are certain rites where a man must be the leader, but if a man of requisite rank is not available, a chief priestess belts a sword on and is thought of as a man for the occasion. But although woman can on occasion take man's place, man can never take woman's place. This may derive from the time of the associations of Druidesses of whom the Romans spoke as witches. Whether these were true Druidesses I do not know. It seems to have been a separate religious organization, possibly under th rule of the chief Druid, much in the same way that there was a priest or someone who might turn up at a witches' meeting and be acknowledged chief who came to be called "The Devil" in mediaeval times. I think the use of the witches' circle, in magic, may have come from Druid, or rather the pre-Druid, people, who built Stonehenge..... ----------------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, p. 48-51.] There is, of course, the orthodox Roman Catholic view that the cult was either invented by the Devil or made up by people who hated the Catholic Church. If this was the case, I think it would certainly have shown in the rites or the teaching; but these all run as if the practisers have never heard of either, which points to its being at least pre-Christian.... After all, the witches' paradise is very attractive to the ordinary man. Similar causes on the Continent may have brought in new ideas. Possibly the Great God, the Protector, the giver of rest and peace, slowly came to be thought of only in his function as god of death and so became more or less identified with the Devil.... The Church had never taken much notice of sorcery as it was not a rival in the way that witchcraft was, and many Popes and prominent Churchmen were said to practise it. With the Renaissance the spirit of enquiry led to freethinking, and this in turn led to a revival of mathematical magic, astrology, and the Kabbala, to classical studies and thence to knowledge of the classic gods. The legend of Faust was seized upon and the story circulated that to practise magic one had to sell one's soul to the Devil. The best-known treatment of the theme in English literature is, of course, the "atheist" Marlowe's *Doctor Faustus*, whilst a long series of histories and plays on the theme in Europe culminated in Goethe's magnificent *Faust*. It was a credulous age and the story was readily believed: no one seems to have considered whether anyone would think it worth while to sufer millions of years of torture for the sake of a few year's pleasure. There are examples of the existence of such pacts, but it is presumed that either they were based on false evidence planted to convict the poor wretch, or on the acts of stout freethinkers or madmen. Bishop Wilson reports a Manx case in his notebook dated Peel, November 29, 1720, as follows: "John Curlitt of Murlough, in the county of Down in the parish of Killough, did give himself body and soul to Satan the Devil, who is called Lucifer, after the term of nine years, on condition that he would give him as much money during that time as he should please, on performance of which he did bind himself to the performance of this bargain and promises to fight under his banner during ye said term, which if he do desert he leaveth himself to Satan's pleasure, and promises at the end of nine years to go himself. Signed with blood, sealed and delivered to the Devil. John Curlitt." John Curlitt stoutly denied writing this, saying that it had been planted on him. The Bishop said it was in his handwriting and evidently believed in it but, curiously enough, seems not to have taken any legal action. This may have been a case of forgery by some enemy, or possibly done for bravado, as there were several Hell Fire Clubs then in existence. But at that time the idea of making pacts with the Devil was firmly believed in and jurists accepted the idea that if anyone were so evil as to sell his soul for money or any other reason, then it was clear proof of heresy. And heresy meant death. Seemingly they did not bother to think that if they executed the creiminal the Devil would get his soul all the sooner. The Church took measures to obtain information on all subjects, and to counteract all practices disapproved of.... ...the Church got to know the type of people who were likely to be witches. The quest men pried and searched everywhere, and they would be the people who searched the belongings of John Curlitt and found, or pretended to find, the pact with Satan.... -------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, pp. 112-3.] ...Witches do not kiss the Devil's posterior, first because they never kiss anyone's posterior, and, secondly, because the Devil is never there for anyone to kiss. I cannot make it any clearer than that, can I? As I have said, there is no pact with the Devil or anyone else. This, I think, arose from the Faust type of legend which may have been coined by clerics to frighten people from thinking of engaging in magical practices, or possibly to explain why people who performed magical experiments of the more or less permitted Key of Solomon type, without using a medium, usually did not succeed. These stories were usually fabricated in order to boost the power of some saint and were to the effect that a sorcerer, after years of failure, had made a pact with the Devil, selling his soul for so many years of wealth and power. When his time came he prayed to a particular saint, who called up the Devil and by force or trickery got the pact back. The sorcerer then promptly gave all the profits of his sorcery to the saint's shrine and died in an odour of sanctity. The story of these pacts is rather naive, but there was a belief in them, and *Grimoires*, textbooks of semi-Black Magic, were printed, professing to tell how to raise the Devil and conclude a pact with him, and at the same time to trick him.... [Gardner goes on at some length about particular cases of pacts with the Devil...] I suppose these books were sold to the type of people who believe nowadays in sixpenny fortune-telling pamphlets; they were made to sell, and the most famous among them was the *Grimoire* of Pope Honorius. The whole question of belief in such pacts intrigues me, because a certain number of specimens do exist. It would seem that the belief was that at the last day, as a great trial, the soul swore that it had never used any sorcery; it was on the point of gaining Heaven, when suddenly a Devil would produce the missing document from his files. It would be admitted as evidence, proved to be the accused signature, and the Devil would win the case and the soul. Now each coven is independent, and during the fierce persecution the members of some of them may have used some sort of pact to bind them together; but this would not have had any diabolical associations, if only because this would have had hte most disastrous results if found. Again, when the Hell Fire Clubs were in vogue amongst freethinkers two hundred years ago.... Members of these Clubs might have been interested in things phallic, as they interested Aleister Crowley fifty years ago. He belonged to the witch cult; he certainly knew about it and he may have had some hand in reconstructing rituals. If he did, he kept his oaths of secrecy and never gave a hint of it away in any of his writings.... --------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, pp. 130-2.] Now the god is represented by the high priest (if there is one) and it is he who was called the Devil in the old days. I was very curious about him and asked at once when I was "inside", by which they mean a member of the cult: "Who and what is called the Devil?" Though members of the cult never use and, indeed, dislike the term, they knew what I meant and said: "You know him, the leader. He is the high priest the high priestess's husband." This, though true, was not the exact answer. It really should be: "He is whoever the high priestess appoints to take his position." In practice she always appoints her husband if he has sufficient rank; but she may appoint anyone who is eligible, including herself; she belts on a sword and acts as a man. In the old days it was often a distinguished visitor who was appointed. In the times when the People of the Heaths held their meetings the high priest was a man of great learning in the cult, probably a tribal chief, or possibly a Druid, and most likely everyone would know who he was. He was the horned god, recieved divine honours and possibly took precedence of the high priestess; but when the people of the mixed races became strong in the cult, I thin kthere came a time when the masked (unknown) man took his place, and he was most likely a Norman manorial lord or local churchman who protected the cult in secret. It is very likely that it might be agreed that at one meeting the masked unknown (whom I shall for convenience call the Devil) took the place and, at the next, the old known tribal chief took it. It seems likely that this depended on local arrangements. It was soon found that the uninitiated congregation of farmers, fishermen and such-like had such awe of the great unknown that the cult became more powerful, and that then, even when the old tribal chief played the part, he too was masked and unknown. The Church called him the "devil" and he became known as such. "If this mysterious man turned up," I asked, "how would you recognize him?" and I found that they had joked about this. They wouldn't know if he were genuine or not! It had never happened to their knowledge; but there was always the possibility of someone from another coven turning up and claming this right. Actually, the high priestess said: "I'd talk to him and if I found he really had great knowledge and I liked him and found him interesting, I'd treat him as a distinguished visitor and appoint him for the day. Another high priestess might think otherwise." She went on to say: "I wish one of the old sort, a great protector, would turn up, who had a great big house and grounds to lend us for meetings. If he really were of us, I wouldn't bother too much about his vast learning; I'd appoint him and teach him the job." So here's a chance for anyone who wants to play the Devil! I trust I have made myself clear. The Devil is, or rather was, an invention of the Church. Witches found that popular view that Satan was one of them added to their power, and rather adopted it, though they never called him by that name except perhaps, on the rack; and even then, as Dr. Murray has pointed out, sometimes a confession made under torture would name him as their god, but a transcript produced in court would substitute the world DEVIL. Now you cannot blame the poor witch for this. The tortures witches suffered would make anyone confess anything.... ------------------------------------------------------