Wednesday, 24 August 2022
Lucy M. Boston's witch Melanie Powers and Green Knowe revisited
Monday, 6 December 2021
Some more Sagittarian writers of interest
I noticed a while back that a few writers of interest were born at the end of November.
I found some good connections while I was looking to see what these astrological Sagittarians had in common.
A few more writers whose work I like or at least am familiar with and/or who are of interest for other reasons were born under the sign of Sagittarius – some before the end of November and some in December.
Most of them have been featured or at least mentioned in articles in the past; there may be more to say about a few of them in the future. There may also be some new names to add to the list.
Although her books don't inspire commentary, she has been mentioned on here in a few articles in connection with suspicious deaths. She also appears in articles about tangled webs of connections.
She mentions a witch on one occasion:
“Ah, Mother! How do you do?” said he, giving her a hearty shake of the hand. “Where did you get that quiz of a hat? It makes you look like an old witch...”
From Northanger Abbey
His Ingoldsby Legends, which contain some stories about witches, are praised by Allan Quatermain in Sir Henry Rider Haggard's King Solomon's Mines and its sequel.
She lived to the age of 97. One of her Green Knowe books features the witch Dr. Melanie Powers, who is mentioned in a few places on here, and her autobiography is the subject of an article.
Flying horses, which were mentioned in connection with writers born in late November, appear in The River at Green Knowe.
Her children's classics A Little Princess, The Secret Garden and Little Lord Fauntleroy are her most famous works. They are rather dated but still selling well. She was involved with metaphysical matters; I will investigate this once the people and topics of current interest are finished with.
Monday, 10 December 2018
Lucy M. Boston, her birthday and her memoirs
Thursday, 29 August 2013
Linwood Sleigh’s witches: Miss Heckatty, Mother Withershins and Winnie Jago
Thursday, 22 August 2013
Three fictional modern-day witches
I no longer read such fiction just for enjoyment and escape: I am looking for examples of and information about the various types of unseen influences.
I remembered some books I read long ago that feature modern-day witches and have been re-reading them in the hope of finding relevant material. I already have enough for several articles: there are many connections to be made between some fictional modern-day witches and people I have encountered, and there are scenes in these books that remind me of incidents I have experienced myself.
It is interesting that some of these witches were created by men, although on the basis of their first names one or two of them are often assumed to be women.
I will start with three very different modern-day witches of interest created by three very different authors.
John Masefield’s witch: Sylvia Daisy Pouncer
The Midnight Folk and The Box of Delights, two children’s classic fantasy novels written by John Masefield, contain a character called Sylvia Daisy Pouncer, who is publicly a governess and secretly a witch.
She is said to have been modelled on Masefield's aunt, who raised him and his siblings after their parents died. She disapproved of his love of reading: she sent him as a teenager to live on a naval training ship to cure him of the filthy habit! She is also said to have been inspired by a hated governess who taught Masefield and his siblings.
