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Witchcraft
from the Inside
By Raymond
Buckland


Price: $12.95
Celtic
Connection Price $11.95
The word Witchcraft has been misunderstood for centuries. In the past 500 years,
millions of people have faced persecution, torture, and even death after being
accused of practicing Witchcraft.
For many people the word "Witch" still
conjures up images of secret spells and diabolical midnight rituals. So what
exactly is Witchcraft (also called Wica or Wicca), and how did it evolve into
one of today's fastest-growing religions?
Witchcraft From the Inside
presents the history of Witchcraftfrom its roots in ancient fertility
religions, to the madness of the Malleus Maleficarum and the European
Witch trials, to the growth of modern Wicca in Britain and the United States.
Essays contributed by leading Wiccan authorities explore the present state of
Wicca and provide a glimpse into the future of this peaceful nature
religion.
Author Ray Buckland studied Witchcraft under Gerald Gardner,
the man largely credited for the revival of Witchcraft and the establishment of
Wicca as a modern religion. Mr. Buckland was instrumental in bringing Gardnerian
Witchcraft from England to the United States and is considered to be one of the
leading American authorities on Witchcraft.
In the following excerpt,
Mr. Buckland explains the mundane truths behind the seemingly horrific
ingredients of the legendary "witches' brews".
We know, from Shakespeare
and other sources, that the Witches threw into their pots the most gruesome
ingredients, right? There were things like the tongue of a snake, bloody
fingers, catgut, donkey's eyes, frog's foot, goat's beard, a Jew's ear, mouse
tail, snake head, swine snout, wolf's foot, and so on. Pretty disgusting by the
sound of itif you take them at face value! In fact these were all the most
innocuous of ingredients: normal plants and herbs. Today all plants have a
Latin name, so that they may be distinct and positively identified. Yet years
ago they were known only by common, local names. A plant or herb might be known
by one name in one part of the country and a quite different name in another
part of the country. And these names were colorful ones, frequently given to the
plant because of its looks, color, or other attributes. In the above list,
adder's tongue was a name given to the dogtooth violet (Erythronium
americanum); bloody fingers was the foxglove (Digitalis purpurea);
catgut was the hoary pea (Tephrosia virginiana); donkey's eyes were the
seeds of the cowage plant (Mucuna pruriens); frog's foot was the bulbous
buttercup (Ranunculus bulbosus); goat's beard was the vegetable oyster
(Tragopogon porrofolius); Jew's ear was a fungus that grew on elder trees
and elm trees (Peziza auricula); mouse tail was common stonecrop
(Sedum acre); snake head was balmony (Chelone glabra); swine snout
was the dandelion (Taraxacum dens leonis); and wolf's foot was bugle weed
(Lycopus virginicus). So the seemingly fearsome concoctions that the
Witches mixed up in their cauldrons were nothing more than simple herbs going
into a cookpot!

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