July 19th: The Fairy-Faith

Unless the other Bastards throw me into the trunk of a car, and then drive the car into a marsh and abandon it to slowly sink into the mud as forlorn seabirds squawk in the distance, this is probably our last week for The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries! This Wednesday we discuss pages 163-225, from “VI. IN CORNWALL” to the end of Chapter II.

Meanwhile, we are swiftly approaching the one year anniversary of our illustrious organization! Suggestions for a celebratory reading are welcome.

Yours faithfully,

Grang

 

June 14th: The Visions of Isobel Gowdie

This Wednesday, the Bastards will discuss a selection from Emma Wilby’s The Visions of Isobel Gowdie. Pages 31-36 will furnish a bit of context about the alleged witch and the Scottish Witch Trials. The heart of the matter is the confessions themselves, pages 37-52. Please read through the confessions before coming, and attempt your own translation of some portion of the text. The Confessions are written in delightful but sometimes confusing 17th century Scots.

May 31st: Vincent Price

This coming Wednesday, at the recommendation of Sorcerix Helios, we will discuss our first-ever audio text: Vincent Price’s 1969 recording, “Witchcraft – Magic: An Adventure in Demonology.” Listen to it before you come to us, and formulate a few questions for the group to discuss!

Helios offered the following comments:

“Vincent Price’s Witchcraft – Magic: An Adventure In Demonology is a highly narrative audio grimoire released on vinyl in 1969. With just enough detail to help a fledgling witch get started, the long form lecture is interspersed with sound effects, dramatic readings from Shakespeare, and a plentiful helping of Price’s characteristic editorializing and dramatic charm. I swear by the gems that can be plucked from this performance; the details in this audio have served to bridge gaps in my research on the Sumerian Zisurru Magic Circle rite.”

May 24th: Cultus Sabbati

Everything seems to be coming up Dysnomia. This week, a few compact pieces from Andrew D. Chumbley, late Magister of the Cultus Sabbati and an enigmatic icon of the sabbatic craft. We’ll look at pieces from both volumes of Opuscula Magica: from vol. 1, “A Short Critique and Comment Upon Magic” (pp. 19-24) and “The Hermit” (pp. 35-42), from vol. 2, “The Crooked Path” pts. I and II (pp. 21-34). This is for you.

May 17: Peacock Angel

Dysnomia here. Wednesday we’ll read a few sections from Peter Lamborn Wilson’s Peacock Angel on the antinomian religion of the Yezidis. The reading will of necessity be a bit longer, so pace yourself. We’ll discuss Chapters 2 (“Cosmogony”) & 5 (“The Redemption of Satan”) — any more is at your discretion. Methinks you’ll like it.

I’d rather be censured (it would be a delight)

than suffer ungratified wishes.

The spread of ardent desire is finer than a breeze.