A R A D I A
Or The
GOSPEL OF THE WITCHES
(by Charles G. Leland)
CHAPTER I: How Diana Gave Birth To Aradia
(Herodias)
"It is Diana! Lo!
She rises crescented."
-Keats' Endymion
"Make more bright
The Star Queen's crescent on her
marriage night."
-Ibid.
This is the Gospel (Vangelo) of the Witches:
DIANA greatly loved her brother LUCIFER, the god
of the Sun and of the Moon, the god of Light (Splendor),
who was so proud of his beauty, and who for his
pride was driven from Paradise.
DIANA had by her brother a daughter, to whom they
gave the name of Aradia (i.e. Herodias).
In those days there were on earth many rich and
many poor.
The rich made slaves of all the poor.
Translation (Pg. 4)
'Tis true indeed that thou a spirit art,
But thou wert born but to become again
A mortal; thou must go to earth below
To be a teacher unto women and men
Who fain would study witchcraft in thy school.
Yet like Cain's daughter thou shalt never be,
Nor like the race who have become at last
Wicked and infamous from suffering,
As are the Jews and wandering Zingari,
Who are all thieves and knaves;
Like unto them ye shall not be...
The Invocation to Aradia (Pg. 16)
Aradia! my Aradia!
Thou who art daughter unto him who was
Most evil of all spirits, who of old
Once reigned in hell when driven away from heaven,
Who by his sister did thy sire become,
But as thy mother did repent her fault,
And wished to mate thee to a spirit who
Should be benevolent,
And not malevolent!
Aradia, Aradia! I implore
Thee by the love which she did bear for thee!
And by the love which I too feel for thee!
I pray thee grant the grace which I require!
And if this grace be granted, may there be
One of three signs distinctly clear to me:
The hiss of a serpent,
The light of a firefly,
The sound of a frog!
But if you do refuse this favor, then
May you in future know no peace nor joy,
And be obliged to seek me from afar,
Until you come to grant me my desire,
In haste, and then thou may'est return again
Unto thy destiny. Therewith Amen! |