
“Witches have no wit, said the magician who was weak. Hula, hula, said the witches.”
Stephen Rojack, in Ch. 4
An American Dream (1965)
Statement of 25 August 1538, in Table-Talk, as translated by William Hazlitt (1857), DLXXVII
“Witches have no wit, said the magician who was weak. Hula, hula, said the witches.”
Stephen Rojack, in Ch. 4
An American Dream (1965)
"Adventures of Isabel" http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/adventures-of-isabel/
Bible Teaching and Religious Practice http://books.google.com/books?id=sujuHO_fvJgC&pg=PA568&dq=twain+%22Bible+Teaching+and+Religious+Practice%22&cd=1#v=onepage&q=twain%20%22Bible%20Teaching%20and%20Religious%20Practice%22&f=false.
"Bible Teaching and Religious Practice" (1923)
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900)
Context: There were only four witches in all the Land of Oz, and two of them, those who live in the North and the South, are good witches. I know this is true, for I am one of them myself, and cannot be mistaken. Those who dwelt in the East and the West were, indeed, wicked witches; but now that you have killed one of them, there is but one Wicked Witch in all the Land of Oz — the one who lives in the West.
Source: Short fiction, The Winter Players (1976), Chapter 3, “Red Ship” (p. 136)
“A witch is a person who hath conference with the Devil to consult with him or to do some act.”
Reported in Margaret Alice Murray, The Witch-Cult in Western Europe: A Study in Anthropology (2007) p. 18.
Attributed