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King of the Witches: World of Alex Sanders PDF

85 Pages·1969·12.39 MB·English
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By the sameauthor i{iug of tbt .itcbt~ : TheGrasshopper Boy The World of Alex Sanders Zoo Without Bars JUNE JOHNS With photographs by JACK SMITH PETER DAVIES LONDON <toutents © 1969 byJuneJohns First published.1969 page Glossary viii Introduction I Chapters I. The Young Initiate 10 2. A Magic Childhood IS 3. The Haunted Hill 23 4. Call Down the Spirits 3° 5. Bewitched 36 6. The Devil to Pay © 45 illustrations 1969 byJack Smith 7. Time ofAtonement 53 8. In. Search ofAngels 64 9. The Unwelcome Apprentice 72 10. Relic ofthe Past 80 II. Witch Wedding 88 12. King ofthe Witches 96 13. Toil andTrouble l°S 14. Betrayal in the Coven II4 An Interview withAlex Sanders 120 Appendices A. The Book ofShadows 13° B. The Witches' Calendar 142 C. Initiation Ceremonies 145 D. The Magic ofMatter 152 Made and printed in Great Britain by Morrison and Gibb Limited;London and Edinburgh 3JIlustrations The illustrations appear betweenpages 56-57 and72-73. Alex Sanderswith hiscrystal Maxine blesses her athame Tarot cards The witches' circle . Maxine besidethe altar Alex honours the goddess Maxine inside the circle Breathing lifeinto the fith-fath The witches' dance Walking to covenstead Calling down the power The symbolic sexact The witches' altar Passingthe pentacle around the circle The witches fallto the ground Fertility rites The black mass 3lntrobuction ATHAMll Thewitch'sblack-hiltedknife. BOOK OF SHADOWS With book ofrules,written in witch's own hand writing andcopiedbysuccessive generations, Sincethe dawn ofhistory man has believedin miracles. The COVEN Groupofwitches. COVENS'rEAD Meetingplaceofacoven first tribesmen to discoverthe healing power ofherbs, or to ESBAT Smallmeeting, not necessarily ofafullcoven. recognizecloudsastheforerunners ofrain, were electedmagi, ESP Extra-sensoryperception or wisemen. From thisit wasbut ashort stepto divining the FAMILIAR Amassofenergyorpowerraisedbythewitchesand future and to the formulation ofspells to increase fertility or sentto work theirwill. destroyenemies. FITH-FATH Smallimage made ofclayor plasticineto represent Aslong ago astheStone Agethe wiseman ofthe tribe was aperson on whom a restraintisto be worked. THE KEy OF AncientHebrew book ofmagic. dressed in an animal skin; he was called 'devil', which meant SOLOMON 'little god', and was worshipped by hisfollowers asthe chief MEASURE Length ofcord measuring a witch's height at the god's representative. The earliest record of this custom is a time ofhisinitiation. Sometimesheld asa 'hostage' palaeolithicpainting found in a cave in the Ariege district of by thecovenleader. southern France. It depicts a man clad in a stag's skin, with PENTACLE Originally a five-sidedfigure but now any circular antlerson hishead-the Horned God, asymbol ofbenevolent pieceofmetal inscribedwith witch symbols. SABBAT Major meeting ofwhole covenor severalcovens. power in primitive times. Another, a man disguised as a TAROT CARD Cards usedin predicting the future. jackal, carved on slate,dates back to archaicEgypt. VOODOO Primitive form.ofreligion practisedby negroes of In about 1100 B.C. women and officers of the harem of Haiti andelsewhereintheWest IndiesandAmerica. RamesesIII were brought to trial for making wax imagesof WARLOCK Originally the witch who bound the initiate, but the Pharaoh to the accompaniment of magic incantations. usedonly by non-witches to describeamale-witch. WICCA Ancientword forwitchcraft. These images were fith-faths, still used by witches today WITCH Initi~t:dmaleorfemalememberofwitchcraftgroup. againsttheir enemies. WIZARD Magician,not necessarilyawitch. History shows that, asa new religion succeeds the old, the I gods ofthe latter are invariably condemned as the devilsof to distinguishbetween beneficial and harmful magic, it had the former, and it was thus that the pagan god became the little effecton the treatment ofthe witchesthemselves. From Christian devil. ill spite of this, Christianity and witchcraft being a joyous religion, witchcraft was changed overnight ~eBull.t~at co-existed peaceably for centuries. In Britain, for instance, when, in 1484,Pope InnocentVIIIputhisseal on London was stillheathen six hundred yearsafter the birth of condemned witches as hereticsfor interfering WIth fertility. Christ, and although Augustinemanaged to convert the King From now on terror would invadethelifeofanyonesuspected of Kent to Christianity, the rest of the country preferred ofworking miracles. pagan ritesofwitchcraft. In 1486, two members of the Inquisition, with the full an~ ha~ publis~ed boo~ But asthe 'establishment'becameChristian,theold religion approval of the Pope, wrote the fellintodisrepute,andinA.D.668theArchbishopofCanterbury Malleus Male.ficarum, which described in considerable det~11 ruled that people who ate and drank in heathen temples, or methods of discovering and punishing witches and ways m wore the headsofbeasts, should do three years' penance.The which magic could be harmful. The book, which by. 1520 witches continued to use the stag's horns, however. Their had run to fourteen editions, confirmed popular miscon only concession was to meet secretly,on moors or in lonely ceptionsand hostility towards witchcraft and wasto influe~ce public opinion in Europe until after the Reformation forests. These meetings were known as 'sabbats'.* After homage had beenpaidto thedevil,usuallypresentin theguise (Protestants were even greater witch-haters than their of a black goat, or his deputy, the witches held a banquet. predecessors). . One of the first countries to declare war on Witches had This was followed by the main feature of the sabbat, the dance, the tempo of which was often raised to a frenzy in been France, where they .were burnt at the stake several preparation for the final climax ofsexualorgy. decades before the PapalBull.At that time whole villagesstill It isimportant to note at this point that although we have followed the old religion and even the priests, who were few historicalrecordsof'white' witchesat thistime and must mostly drawn from the peasant class, were only outwardly Christian.Having tried to stampout witchcraftby persuasion, include them under the general term 'witches', modem white witches,who arethesubjectofthisbook, believethat they are the clergy, backed by civil law, overcame it by force-the descended from, andadhere to, aseparatetradition embracing samefateashad befallenthe ancientreligionsofEgypt and of the worship not of Satan, but of the Homed God and the the Aztecs. Earth Mother-symbol offertility, the oldestgoddessknown ill England tolerance had prevailed until the arrival ofthe to man. Certain aspects ofwhite-witch dogma can be traced inquisitors. At first the law forbade them to usetorture, but in ancientreligionsallover the world, in Druidicalbeliefs, for nevertheless rumour and terror were rifein everyvillage.The instance,and theincantationsin Runic havebeen passed from clergyclaimedthat allwitcheshad madeapactwith the Devil who, inreturn, gavethem a'familiar', usuallyintheform ofa generation to generation. White witchcraft is invariably con domestic animal, to run errands for them and bewitch their fmedto doinggood, restrainingevilandpromotingfertility. enemies. At a time when most peoplebelievedthat the earth But although some attempt was made in the Middle Ages was flat, it was not difficult to imagine such evil properties * Often confused, erroneously, with the term 'coven'. The latter ismuch in anyobedientanimal,especiallyifitsowner were unsociable; more recent and refers to the basic organizational grouping of thirteen and lived alone. (Spiteful women are not confmed to the witches-six couples and a leader, or eleven priests, a high priest and high twentieth century; they abounded in medieval Europe!) priestess. 3 2 0 As e activi~ies of the witch-hunters increased, Henry the threat ofdeath from haemorrhage or blood-poisoning to VIIIhimselfdecId~d to ~rofit by it. In 1542 a law waspassed that ofexecution. not only condemning witches to death but confiscatingtheir Another certain proofwas the finding of a spot that was landsand money. Allover the country men and women were insensible to pain and that did not bleedwhen stabbedwith a dragged from their homes on the flimsiest evidence.In Kent pin. The Scotsdeveloped this method to such a fine art that amother an? daughter were condemned to deathfor 'feeding somecitiesin Englandhired expertsfrom across the border to and employmg an evil spirit in the likeness ofa black dog'. conduct their witch-hunts for them. Alt~ough,torture wa~ ostensiblystillforbidden, witchescould In 1649 the town bell-ringer of Newcastle-on-Tyne was be tested. Naked, witharmscrossed and thumbs tied to their sent round the streets to gather accusations against supposed bigtoes, they were flung into the nearestdeepwater. Ifthey witches.Within a few hours thirty women were forced to go s:mJe they were innocent-but usuallythey were dead by the into thetownhalland,oneby one,werestrippednaked.Their time they were hauled out. Ifthey could swim it wascertain faces covered, they were stretched out on the draughty floor proofoftheir guilt, and they could behanged after what was and, watched by ajeering mob, had pins up to three inches only the formality ofa trial. long stuckinto them. The expert, who wasbeing paidtwenty Queen Elizabethwent further than her father; she had an shillings for every proven witch, seemedto be having a.good Act passed condemning anyone who, by witchcraft, tried to day, for none ofthe women was able to say exactly where foresee how long she would reign and who would be her in her numbed flesh theneedles had beenstuck. Fortunately a u.cei successor. more enlightenedwitness,a Hobson,refusedto accept The t~me of.the terror leftno one secure.Ifthey were seen thisproofand demanded that the women be allowedto stand out at night WIt?strang~ men, young girlswould be brought so that their blood could flow freely. Their subsequent before the magistrates, Her companion had cloven hoofs,' screaminglost the bounty-hunter hisfeeand gave them back theaccuserswould cry, or, 'A tailhung beneathhiscloak.' No their freedom. amountofdenialscouldspareagirltheagonyofbeingstripped In 1662 so many peoplehad died from the resultsofbeing naked, after which the hair would be shaved from all parts 'pricked' that thecustomwasdropped andreplacedby gentler ofherbody andlocalcroneswould pokeandprod her,looking forms ofpersuasion, such as denial ofsleep.The suspectwas for warts, tumours or protuberance-s.* Doctors today know put upon awooden stoolin the centreofthe room sothat she thatsupernumerarynipples,occurringinboth menandwomen couldnot resther back. Her captors took it in tum to cross on almost any part ofthe body, are common and harmless. examine her day and night, without respite.In addition they At the time ofthe Inquisition, however, and for some time kept watch for any spiders, mice or flies, sincethey might be after,.they meant cert~n death to their owner, for any such Satan'sagentscome to help her. Ifsomething did appear and blemish was automatically regarded as the Devil's Mark the gaolers could not catch it, they regarded it as proofthat used by a witch to suckleher familiar. When a 'witch' was it was the devil's messenger. By the time the woman had sat warned .she mi~~t be arres.ted, she .would often amputate on the stool for twenty-four hours without food, water or a potential DeVIls Mark WIth the kitchen knife, preferring rest,shewasusuallyreadyto confessto anything. The factthat shemight recant later wasnot much help to her; her gaolers * Or, atthestartoftheterror, forthemarkofthethree-nailedclaw known could alwaysembroider their evidencewith accountsoftheir asth~~itch's.Mark, with which witchesusedto tattoo their conv;rts. Not valiant attempts to catch Satan'simps. surpnsmgly thiscustom wassoon discontinued. 4 5 Perhapsbecausethey ledsuchwretched lives,childrenwere The law, the church and the state felt no guilt; like the often the first to accuse their parents. One testimony was earlymap-makerswho, knowing that none might prove them sufficient to hang a person. A child who felt he had been wrong, labelledunexplored territory 'Here Be Dragons', they unjustly punished might run to the village gossip with the preferred to condemn inexplicable phenomena rather than news that his mother had been visited by an owl at dead of admit they were baffled. Better to blame the devilsthey knew night. The factthat the owl had nestedoutsidehishome ever than let the publicsuspectthere might be greater devilsasyet sincehe could remember would be convenientlyignored, and undreamed of ifthe child repented and tried to tell the truth when he saw The last person in England to die for being a witch was his mother being taken off to gaol, everyone would nod Alice Mollard of Exeter, who was hanged in 1684. In 1736 sagelyandagreethat thepoor childhad beenbewitched. Nine the Act ofJames I was repealed. It now became illegal to women werecondemnedatLeicesterontheevidenceofasingle prosecute for witchcraft, sorcery or enchantment. Instead, boy who claimed they had bewitched him, and at Lancaster anyone claiming to be able to work magic by witchcraft in 1612 the court acceptedthe evidenceofanine-year-old. could be sent to prison for a year, during which he had to Not every witch deniedthe charges;many went into great spend a whole day per quarter in the pillory of the nearest detailabout the spells they had worked, andwere proud to be market square. named. These same prisoners went to the gallows almost Thepersecutorsandwitch-prickershaddonetheirworkwell. gaily, just as much martyrs to their religion as the early The books ofmagic, or 'grimoires' asthey were called,were Christianswho were thrown to the lions. seized upon by collectors-many of the witches' closest Despite the vivid imagination of witnesses, the credulity secrets were discovered in The Key of Solomon, a copy of of the public that encouraged them to believe the fantastic which is preserved in the British Museum. Clutching the liesthey were told, and the general fear ofwitchcraft, many remnants oftheir faith, the survivorsofthe witch-hunts went judges refusedto acceptthe evidenceevenwhen it included a underground. But not for long. confession. An average of 20 per cent of the accused were Eliphas Levi was born in Francein 1810. Roman Catholic found guilty and executed; the others were eitherlet offwith priest and magician, Levi was not ashamedto announce that a year in gaol-which could amount to a death sentence in he wasawitch and could conjure up spirits.Laterhe revealed those unsanitary days-or were set free. hismethods to anEnglishoccultgroup ledby Bulwer Lytton, Witch mania did not develop in England until the second thenovelist.Soonhalfadozensimilarsocietieshad sprung up. halfofthe sixteenthcentury. Between 1542 and 1684 about a Themembersdabbledinmagicandwitchcraft,blackandwhite, thousand people were executed for witchcraft, the most theformer for revengeandevenmurder, thelatterfor healing, dangerous period being from 1598 to 1607 when 41 per cent divination and self-preferment. By the time Levi died in ofthosecharged were sent to the gallows.In Scotland,where 1875, he had paved the way for a renaissance in witchcraft. the terror flourished more strongly, the number ofexecutions AleisterCrowleywasborn in the sameyearand he cameto wasconsiderablyhigher. Thesearenot figuresto be proud of, consider himself the reincarnation of Levi. When Crowley but they are puny when compared with those ofthe rest of wasinhistwentieshejoined the Societyofthe GoldenDawn, Europewhere,accordingto churchauthorities,inthefifteenth, ofwhich W. B. Yeatswasamember, and hebecameaskilled sixteenth and seventeenth centuries over 250,000 people died magician. Before long he was recognized as an incurable at the stake for practising witchcraft. practitioner ofblackwitchcraft, by which meanshe indulged 6 7 his sexual appetites and his ine f made a mockery ofthei 1 cravI~g or power. Although he J of competent writers have already dealt with this subject heroi . elr aws WIthhi . d ' Dr Margaret Murray, for one, in her Witch Cult in Western eroinheis stillacknowled d d ..s orgies an his use of witches..Known.as 'The J;ea~respected by manyEnglish Europe. I have merely attempted to portray the world of Alex Sanders, to describe the life and activities ofone ofthe on magIc,Magick in Theory and ;ast: he wrote a textbook The man who p h racttce.He died in 1947 most powerful living witches and to gauge the appeal of , . .. .er aps most infl d· h ' . witchcraft to thousands ofordinary men and women. wItchcraft in England in thi' • uence t e revival of wh0 was born in 1884 G· .·ds·.c.:e':nt.ury,w,as Gerald .Gardner My own position with regard to the phenomenon is that I gra·de ofthe cult by awi.tcharca.nlleerdw'Dasffmi ,it~iated imto the first' would nomore become a witch than I would a parachutist andforthesamereason: fear.Evenlooking into my ownfuture and he proceeded to recrui't·. a 0 m the New Forest, ha ' ,.... .many covens in' f hi holdsno attraction for me. That witches can seethe future vmgreceived initiation into th d spire 0 s not or part ofit-I have no doubt. That they can alter its course, By dilig.ent study. of an.' H be secon and third grades.. , .. . Clent· e rew and E . . I prefer to deny. Witches have no monopoly ofwisdom and scnpts,hedevisedhisownritual . . ':gyptian manu- Museum in the Isle.ofM ;.In~950h~.setupaWitchcraft the only common denominator amongst them isthejoy they of witch weapons He d~dW ,ere e exhibited his collection fmd in their god. , . Ie m 1964 T d' . ? Reared first as a nonconformist and then as an Anglican, I wItches ate considered novices bh· ay, ?ardnerian' ~ e~edltary wastaughtearly to fearGod. Laterinlife,whenIwasexposed learnt their ritualsfrom recordh d wItches who acce;te~e ~'fll to high-powered evangelism, I found that He could be a to generation; they are 1. from ,generation only ofthefirst grade, egttlmate wItches, but jolly good fellow when pleased and a thunderer when thwarted. Butnone ofthis prepared me for the utter natural ,The repeal in 1951 of the old ' wirches.from the fear of . WItchcraft Act releasing nessoftherelationship betweenthe witch and hisgod; itisone . persecutIOn did h h oflove and understanding. Without artifice or hypocrisy, the revIVal ofthe cult but th . muc to elp the , ,ose Covens op t d b h wItches claim to h era e y rereditary witches I met were truly pious. ave met co' 1 centuries. Alexander Sandershi ~l~tenty throughout the When I consider their ways of worship, in particular the line of Welsh witches d ms~ .l~ descendedfrom along nude rites that appear to be so ludicrously out of place in as grandmother. He is ess:tial7 mltlated, as a child by his . religion, I find I must rethink my attitude towards more rOkfess~onal familiar religions. To an agnostic, is the caIling down ofthe though he has experimented J'thbPI white witch,. dang dh ac wItchcraft kn . moon any more absurd than the act ofgenuflecting? Is the , ,ers, an . asexperienced the difficul f '. ows Its true cult after having flout d i 1 ty 0 returmng to the lighting ofa candle to a long-dead saint more credible than 65 tying cords round a wax image? Isthe immaculate conception 'King of,the Witches', a titl: l:::h:'W·'In 19 he was elected by Owain Glyndwr th 1 . d m the fifteenth century more easilybelieved than a vision in a bowl ofwater? from whom Sander~ bel' astln ependene Prince of W:tles I have drawn no conclusions beyond this: for those like from hiIS title however ehiev'es"he IS descended. QU'lte apart' me who prefer their spirits mixed with soda, witchcraft the taskofm'akinghi 'l"e~s uroque in that he hassethimself affordsafascinatingglimpseinto another world; but for those factio~sreanlgdlofin.r~spect.able, in view ofthe a herculean labour who are drawn to the supernatural, who are prepared to frm' ge reli,gI,on. nctl0ns inheren.t m' so bitzarre a devote time and trouble to it, witchcraft offers no lessthan the power to achieve a new dimension oflife. This book isnotintended asastudy ofwitchcraft; anumber 8 K.W.-2 9 addicted to alcohol, and during an engagement in Argyllshire he appeared on the stage drunk. He was instantly dismissed. His reputation preceded him-never again ~as he able to~et work in the theatre. He became a hod-carrier and the fanuly rented the terraced house in Grape Street, Manchester, until they had saved enough to move to Chorlton, 1 ~bt lloung 3Jnftfatt Now it was one long struggle to keep heads above water. Harold took private pupils for lessons on the comet, and sometimesworked for prizebrassor silverbandsatweek-ends. But frequently he took refuge in drink, distressing his wife and terrifying his children. Hannah reassured them about their father's 'illness'. She regaled them with stories oftheir paternal great-grand~ather who had been captain ofa tea clipper. (Shenever mentioned that he had been captured by Chinesepiratesand buried alive.) She cleaned for a tailor in Chorlton who had a son the same size as Alex, and once every six months she agreed to forgo There was nothing about the day to suggest it would change her wages of3S. 6d. a week in return for a parcel ofclothes the course ofhis lifeand influencehim until the day he died. outgrown by the tailor's son. The family lived on bread and Itwasgrey and cheerless, like manyotherdaysin Manchester, dripping those weeks, but Alex was warmly shod and well and Alex was an undersized seven-year-old passing through dressed for another half-year. mean backstreetson hisway fromSt George's Primary School His Grandma Bibby had moved from her birthplace, in Hulme to the home ofhisgrandmother. Bethesda in North Wales, to be near her daughter. Widowed The Sandersfamily had recently moved to a semi-detached for many years, she was now sixty-six ~d had dark h~r house-No.2 StrattonRoad, Chorlton-agreat improvement which, sheboasted, shecould sit on. Asa girl shehad been in over the old Victorian house near the central goods yard in service with Lord Penrhyn and had learnt to be an excellent Manchester, where mother, father and three children had had cook. Alex enjoyed visiting her for that reason, but she was to make do in one room. But living in a better-class district stillvery much a stranger, having moved to the district only had its drawbacks. The rent was high and Mrs Sanders had months before. taken a charringjob to eke out her husband's wage. On this particular day Alex was tired and,h~gry, and Small-barely five-foot-and wiry, Hannah Sanders was feeling a little sorry for himsel£ Why c?~dnt his.mother determined to raise her children above their environment. be like other mothers, be at home wattmg for him? He When first married ten years previously she and her husband resented being sent to Gran's to askifshewould give him his had been comfortably off. He had been a musician and for tea. Usually his mother finished work soon after three, but five years or so shetravelled with him. When their first child today shewasworking late. Alex was born, he too made the tour ofthe music halls and No. 46 Wilton Road was a terraced family house with an theatres. Soon, however, Harold Sandersbecame increasingly alley separating it from its neighbour at ground level. Instead 10 II ofringing thefront-door bell,Alexwent round to the backto ofheavenandearth willstrikeyou ifyou breakyour promise. surprise Prince the collie, who lived in the yard and was Don't look soscared,lad---' sherealizedsuddenlythat he was always ready for a rough-and-tumble. Today the yard door white and shaking-'you'll live to thank me for this. I'll was open and thedog.was not there. Granalways.preferred teach you things you never heard of, how to make magic people, even relatives, to knock, but the small boy forgot and seethe future.' thisand walked right in through theback door. Instead ofbeing comforted,Alex was even more terrified. The sightthatmethiseyesinthekitchendumbfounded him. 'You're not a ... witch?' he whispered,remembering fairy An old, old :Woman, with wrinkled belly and match-stick talesabout old hags who could turn children into toads. thighs,stood in the centre ofthe-room surrounded by a cloth 'OfcourseI'm a witch, and soareyou now.' circle on which curious objectshad been placed. Only when She handed him his clothes and, while they both dressed, shespoke did he recognizehis grandmother. told him how, through the ages, witches had been feared, 'What are you doing here?' she snapped. 'Who sent you?' slandered and burnt at the stake. She spoke ofthe power of Unabletotearhiseyesaway,theboystammeredhismother's healinglearntby the witches,and ofthestupendousignorance message. ofnon-believerswho preferred to sufferrather than be cured 'I'll give you your tea, all right,' his grandmother said by a witch. grimly. 'But first, come over here.' 'You, too, maybe persecuted,' shewarned, 'which is why Fearfullythe child went towards her, shrinkingfrom con you must work in secret,asIhave done ever sincemy grand tact with the sallow wrinkled flesh and the flowing black mother taught the magic to me asa child.' hair which, released from its pins, did indeed hang to below Shesathim in her bestarmchair besidethe blackleadgrate her waist. while sheclearedaway the circlewith itsstrange designs and 'Take off your clothes,' she commanded, and when he started making the tea. Alex looked cautiouslyround the hesitated after removing his coat and shoes, added, 'All of large well-furnished kitchen. Over the mantelpiece was them-s-everylaststitch.' draped aredchenilleclothfringedwithtiny bobblesand there Teeth chattering with fright, he peeled off his vest and were others on the dealWelsh dresserand the teatable. Now pantsand stoodtherelikealamb about to beslaughtered.The that thecirclehadbeenremoved together with thebrassbowls old lady bent down andpicked up a smallsickle-shaped knife and other strange objects, there was nothing to show that from the edge ofthe circlesurrounding her. this was not an ordinary kitchen-nothing except the 'I'm going to make sure that you never tell another living small knife that had cut him and a pair of swords on the soul what you have seen this day,' she whispered. 'If you dresser. so much asbreathe one word ofit, I'll kill you.' Granfollowed hisgazeand went to put the weaponsin the 'I won't, Gran, honest I won't,' cried the boy, cowering bottom cupboard of a chest on the far side of the room. before her. As she opened its door, she demonstrated the elaborate 'Bend over,' shesaid,and forced his shoulderstowards his double-lock. knees.There wasasearingpainand the boy feltblood trickle 'It's a fine piece of furniture,' she said. 'My grandfather down from his scrotum. used to drive the stage-coach from Bangor to London and 'You can stand up now.' Shelet go ofhim and dried the he had this strong chestspecially made to house the silverhe bloodfrom theknife.'You'reoneofusnow, andallthepower had collected.' 12 13

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