The witch of EdmontonBuchdr. von H. John, 1904 - 36 pages |
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Page 7
... children aud cattle , strangely aud suddenly to happen ; dazu G. LXXXVIII she would ( therefore thus revenge herself in this manner viz . ) witch to death their nurse - children , aud cattle endlich G. LXXXIV fictions of her bewitching ...
... children aud cattle , strangely aud suddenly to happen ; dazu G. LXXXVIII she would ( therefore thus revenge herself in this manner viz . ) witch to death their nurse - children , aud cattle endlich G. LXXXIV fictions of her bewitching ...
Page 8
... children had in the hand , that night my mother died it was done ; for I was stooping by the bedside , and I by chance did hit my eye on the sharp end of the stick . Zu dieser Frage hat sich Goodcole genötigt gesehen , weil ihm ...
... children had in the hand , that night my mother died it was done ; for I was stooping by the bedside , and I by chance did hit my eye on the sharp end of the stick . Zu dieser Frage hat sich Goodcole genötigt gesehen , weil ihm ...
Page 9
... children came , aud saw you feeding of them ? Obwohl nach einer Randbemerkung ' some children of a good bigness , and reasonable understanding ' dem Gerichtshof an- gegeben haben , dass sie zu verschiedenen Malen gesehen haben , wie die ...
... children came , aud saw you feeding of them ? Obwohl nach einer Randbemerkung ' some children of a good bigness , and reasonable understanding ' dem Gerichtshof an- gegeben haben , dass sie zu verschiedenen Malen gesehen haben , wie die ...
Page 21
... children and cattle ] should presently then come : and it was ob- served and affirmed to the Court , that Elizabeth Sawyer would presently frequent the house of them that burnt the thatch which they plucked of [ off ] her house , and ...
... children and cattle ] should presently then come : and it was ob- served and affirmed to the Court , that Elizabeth Sawyer would presently frequent the house of them that burnt the thatch which they plucked of [ off ] her house , and ...
Page 23
... children and cattle und XC ( fast die gleichen Worte ) . p . 240 schilt M. S : Why then one me Or any lean old beldam ? now an old woman Ill favour'd grown with years , if she be poor Must be call'd bawd or witch . Dies ist eine ...
... children and cattle und XC ( fast die gleichen Worte ) . p . 240 schilt M. S : Why then one me Or any lean old beldam ? now an old woman Ill favour'd grown with years , if she be poor Must be call'd bawd or witch . Dies ist eine ...
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Common terms and phrases
Agnes alte Banks alte Hexe angered Ann Ratcliffe Answer beasts bending blood body was crooked Brandls bring unto call the Devil cattle cause children confess crooked and deformed Cuddy Banks curse death of nurse-children Dramatiker Dramen Elizabeth Sawyer fear ferrets found thee Cursing Frank Thorney Gifford Goodcoles great Hamluc Handlung Heinrich VI help Hexe von Edmonton Höllenhund house indem John Ford Jonson Justice Köppel a. a. little LXXXVI Macbeth make mischief Mohrentanz Morsbach Mother Sawyer Mother Sawyer's Mummenschanz neighbours never Newgate oaths pray Question Rache Ratcleife revenge revenged Sanctibicetur nomen tuum schwarze Hund seeing the death Shakespeare shame shape Sir Arthur Somerton sometimes soul and body suck Susanne Carter swearing swearing and blaspheming Teufel Teufelshund thatch thing Tragikomödie trial Tyburn UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA unserem unto the Devil Verfasser Verhör Vorlage white Winnifrede Witch of Edmonton witchery Worte XCIV XCIX XCVII Zauberformel
Popular passages
Page 10 - Or anything that's ill ; so I might work Revenge upon this miser, this black cur, That barks and bites, and sucks the very blood Of me, and of my credit.
Page 9 - And hated like a sickness : made a scorn To all degrees and sexes. I have heard old beldams Talk of Familiars in the shape of mice, Rats, ferrets, weasels, and I wot not what, That have appear'd ; and suck'd, some say, their blood.
Page 10 - I'd go out of myself, And give this fury leave to dwell within This ruined cottage, ready to fall with age : Abjure all goodness, be at hate with prayer, And study curses, imprecations, Blasphemous speeches, oaths, detested oaths, Or...
Page 30 - Dog. I'll thus much tell thee : thou never art so distant From an evil spirit but that thy oaths, Curses, and blasphemies pull him to thine elbow ; Thou never tell'st a lie, but that a devil Is within hearing it ; thy evil purposes Are ever haunted ; but when they come to act, — As thy tongue slandering, bearing false witness, Thy hand stabbing, stealing, cozening, cheating, — He's then within thee : thou play'st, he bets upon thy part; Although thou lose, yet he will gain by thee.
Page 7 - Cause I am poor, deform'd, and ignorant, And like a bow buckled and bent together By some more strong in mischiefs than myself; Must I for that be made a common sink For all the filth and rubbish of men's tongues To fall and run into ? Some call me Witch, And being ignorant, of myself, they go About to teach me how to be one : urging That my bad tongue (by their bad usage made so) Forespeaks their cattle, doth bewitch their corn, Themselves, their servants, and their babes at nurse : This they enforce...
Page 4 - Elizabeth Sawyer was a poor woman, that in the superstitious reign of James the First probably incurred the displeasure of some more potent neighbour, who, having no just cause of complaint to allege against her, accused her of witchcraft ; a crime that, of all others, was at this period most dreaded : very little time was allowed between the accusation, condemnation, and death of a suspected witch ; and if a voluntary confession was wanting, they never failed extorting a forced one by tormenting...
Page 13 - Out, alas! My soul and body ? Dog. And that instantly, And seal it with thy blood ; if thou deniest, I'll tear thy body in a thousand pieces.
Page 21 - Saw. I am none. None but base curs so bark at me; I am none. Or would I were! if every poor old woman, Be trod on thus by slaves, reviled, kick'd, beaten, As I am daily, she to be revenged Had need turn witch. Sir Ar. And you to be revenged Have sold your soul to th
Page 4 - The wonderfull discoverie of Elizabeth Sawyer, a witch, late of Edmonton ; her conviction, and condemnation and death ; together with the [relation of the] divel's accesse to her, and their conference together.
Page 30 - Were it not possible for thee to become an honest dog yet?— 'Tis a base life that you lead, Tom, to serve witches, to kill innocent children, to kill harmless cattle, to stroy ' corn and fruit, etc. : 'twere better yet to be a butcher and kill for yourself.