Friday, 17 April 2026

Montague Summers: another paranoid narrow mind from the past




 

Montague Summers : 

Another example of the narrow minds and bigotry that haunted our past

Nuns! Drink! Grrrls!

Full  name Augustus Montague Summers, later styling himself as the Reverend Alphonsus Joseph-Mary Augustus Montague Summers; 1880–1948) was an English author, independent scholar, literary critic, and eccentric figure best known for his extensive writings on witchcraft, demonology, vampires, werewolves, and the occult. He also produced scholarly work on Restoration drama, Gothic literature, and the history of the English stage.


Background and Personality

Born in Bristol to a wealthy family, Summers studied at Clifton College and Trinity College, Oxford. He was ordained as a deacon in the Church of England in 1908 but faced scandals (including a charge of pederasty, of which he was acquitted) that ended his Anglican career. 


He converted to Roman Catholicism around 1909 and presented himself for the rest of his life as a Catholic priest—though he was never formally ordained by any diocese or order, and the validity of any claims remains doubtful. He cultivated a theatrical, anachronistic persona: dressing in old-fashioned clerical black with a cape, speaking in a high-pitched, lisped voice, and often greeting acquaintances with the request, “Tell me strange things.” Contemporary accounts describe him as a brilliant conversationalist but also artificial, dandyish, and sometimes viewed as lecherous or mad by critics like Henry “Chips” Channon.


Summers had a genuine and absolute belief in the supernatural, including the literal reality of witchcraft, demons, vampires (as animated corpses), and werewolves. He was acquainted with figures like Aleister Crowley and contributed to sexology societies, while maintaining a conservative Catholic outlook that equated witchcraft with heresy and evil. His eccentricity made him a colorful character in London literary and high-society circles, though obituaries and later biographies often portrayed him as a throwback to the Middle Ages.

Nice hair cut dude… not!!

Major Works on Witchcraft and the Occult

Summers’ books on the occult remain his most enduring (and controversial) legacy. He approached the subject not as folklore or psychology but as a real, dangerous force tied to Satanism and heresy. 


Key titles include:

•  The History of Witchcraft and Demonology (1926): His most famous work, a detailed exploration of witchcraft’s origins, practices, beliefs, and historical cases. It covers topics such as the witch as heretic and anarchist, demons and familiars, the Sabbat, witchcraft in the Bible, diabolic possession, modern spiritualism, and witches in literature. Summers portrays witches as genuine evil-doers—poisoners, blackmailers, and members of a secret organisation anization hostile to Church and State—rather than innocent victims or pagan survivors. He defends the Church’s historical role in combating them and links witchcraft to broader heresy (“Heresy grows with witchcraft, and witchcraft with heresy”).

•  The Geography of Witchcraft (1927): A companion volume surveying witchcraft across different regions and cultures.

•  Witchcraft and Black Magic (1945 or earlier editions) and A Popular History of Witchcraft (1937): More accessible overviews drawing on court records, literature, and biblical evidence, with close attention to cases like the Salem trials.


He also produced the first full English translation of the infamous 15th-century witch-hunters’ manual, the Malleus Maleficarum (1928), which remained the standard version for decades. Other related books cover vampires (The Vampire: His Kith and Kin, 1928) and werewolves (The Werewolf, 1933).


His style is vivid, highly readable, and steeped in primary sources (trial records, demonological texts), but it is often sensational, polemical, and uncritical of inquisitorial claims. He explicitly rejected modern skeptical or anthropological interpretations.


Views on Witchcraft and Sabbats

Summers believed witchcraft was a real, perverse, and blasphemous cult involving pacts with the Devil, Black Masses, sexual corruption, and harm to society. He saw the Sabbat as a genuine gathering of evil—obscene, orgiastic, and diabolical—rather than delusion or innocent folklore. Witches, in his view, were social pests who practiced poisoning, abortion, and other crimes while blaspheming. 


He was particularly concerned to refute Margaret Murray’s “witch-cult hypothesis,” which portrayed European witchcraft as the survival of an organised pre-Christian pagan fertility religion centered on a horned god, with joyful Sabbats (seasonal assemblies like May Eve and November Eve) involving dances, feasts, and rites. Summers dismissed Murray’s ideas as “ingenious” but “wholly untenable,” insisting instead that witchcraft was a Christian heresy allied with Satanism, not a legitimate ancient religion. 


He argued that trial confessions reflected actual malefic practices, not distorted pagan survivals.


In contrast to Murray’s relatively sympathetic, anthropological lens (which influenced modern Wicca), Summers took a staunchly Catholic, demonological stance: the witch trials were largely justified responses to a real threat.


Comparison to Ronald Seth and Margaret Murray

•  Vs. Margaret Murray: Direct opposites. Murray romanticised witches as pagan fertility practitioners with structured covens and ecstatic Sabbats; Summers saw them as Satanic criminals deserving persecution. He actively critiqued her theories, while she represented the emerging folklorist/anthropological view that later shaped neopaganism.

•  Vs. Ronald Seth: Seth’s Witches and Their Craft (1967) is a broader, more journalistic and entertaining historical survey from ancient rites to 1960s occult pop culture (e.g., Rosemary’s Baby). It compiles trial details and beliefs in a neutral-to-rationalist tone without strong advocacy. Seth does not push a grand thesis like Murray’s pagan survival or Summers’ literal demonism; he treats Sabbats and related elements as recurring features of accusations and cultural phenomena. Summers is far more credulous and polemical, fully endorsing the reality of demonic witchcraft, while Seth leans toward archival compilation with some skepticism of sensational claims. Both draw on similar historical records, but Summers defends the persecutors’ worldview, whereas Seth presents a mid-20th-century popular overview.


Summers’ works influenced horror literature, film, and occult enthusiasts but are now often read as period pieces or curiosities—valuable for their source compilations and literary flair, yet unreliable as objective history due to his bias and credulity. Modern scholars (e.g., Ronald Hutton) view his contributions as erratic but occasionally insightful in recognising witchcraft’s ties to Christian heresy rather than pure paganism.


His books are still reprinted (often by occult or Dover-style publishers) and collected for their gothic charm. If you’re exploring Sabbats specifically, Summers describes them in lurid, demonic terms drawn from inquisitorial accounts, emphasising blasphemy and vice over Murray’s frolicsome fertility rites.


Summers remains a fascinating, larger-than-life character—part scholar, part showman, and full believer in the shadows he chronicled. His work is, no doubt, scholarly is to be studied as part of the history of the occult and witchcraft so long as it is balanced with the work of other key figures. His work was to a great extent influenced by the religious fervour of his era and he did nothing to cool the religious and political temperature, rather he helped to make matters worse. As with many of such people it is for us all to learn from the superstitions and prejudices of the past so that they are not repeated.

Books: Making Magickal Incenses and Ritual Perfumes by Keith Morgan

 






Making Magickal Incenses & Ritual Perfumes

By Keith Morgan

Paperback 86 pages

First published 1993 by Pentacle Enterprises, London.

ISBN-10 1872189024
ISBN-13 978-1872189024

I’m continuing my look at the books of Keith / Kimberley Morgan ( check out my bio on her ) with another of their mini guides from the 1990s. 




Also styled with slight variations in punctuation) is a short, practical self-published guide from 1993 by Keith Morgan, a practicing witch and Wiccan author. 

The images shown are of my own First Edition.


It runs about 84–88 pages in a compact paperback format (roughly 5.75 x 8.25 inches) and was originally issued by Pentacle Enterprises (or later Mandrake Pr). The full subtitle is something like A Wealth of Information & Accurate Recipes for Producing Your Own Ritual Incenses & Perfumes. It focuses on hands-on instructions for creating granular ritual incenses and magickally charged perfumed oils for use in Wiccan, pagan, and ceremonial magic practices.  The text is clear and concise with only a couple of basic illustrations by Elizabeth Taylor ( a common feature of Morgan’s early works) .




The book emphasises that incense and oils are powerful magickal tools that should be made with pure, natural ingredients (resins, herbs, essential oils, gums, roots) to align with ritual intentions and correspondences. 


Morgan stresses avoiding cheap commercial substitutes like joss sticks, which lack magickal charge, and instead advocates making your own for better results in meditation, pathworking, spellwork, and circle casting. 


Key sections include:

•  Introduction and basics: What incense is, obtaining ingredients, choosing burners, and how to consecrate/charge your creations.

•  A directory of recipes organized by tradition or purpose:

•  Wiccan incenses & perfumes.

•  Sabbat (seasonal festival) blends.

•  Deity-specific ones.

•  Zodiacal (astrological sign) incenses.

•  Elemental.

•  Planetary.

•  Egyptian.

•  Cabbalistic (including Tree of Life correspondences, which reviewers often highlight positively).

•  Specialist blends (e.g., for protection, love/sexual attractants like “Lord Wywewood,” “Lady Wywewood,” “Sappho,” or “Ganymede”).

•  Instructions for making ritual perfumed oils (worn on the body, alcohol-free bases, safe for skin with patch-testing advised).

•  Appendix on casting a magickal circle. 




Recipes involve grinding ingredients in a mortar and pestle, blending at specific planetary hours/days (e.g., Hour of Venus on day of Mars), aging mixtures (often 28 days to 3 months in sealed jars), and consecrating them. The tone is straightforward, experience-based, and encouraging for beginners, demystifying the process while stressing intent and correspondences. 



It has a modest but positive reputation in occult circles as a useful, no-nonsense recipe book.Many like myself  praise the practical recipes, the author’s evident experience, and sections on Kabbalistic and zodiacal blends. Like all their books I appreciate it as a compact reference for compounding incenses and oils. Some note it feels like a foundational or introductory booklet rather than an exhaustive tome. I would agree with that.

Copies are somewhat scarce and can be pricey in the used market. 

It’s a niche title aimed at Wiccans, pagans, and magickal practitioners interested in crafting their own tools rather than a general history or theory book. PDFs and scans circulate online, but physical copies are the authentic way to own it. If you’re into herbalism, aromatherapy, or ritual crafting, it’s a straightforward resource with tested formulas.


https://amzn.eu/d/01W1EOEh


Thursday, 16 April 2026

Deck time: Angel Numbers Oracle



 


The Angel numbers oracle deck


Cheap as chips way to dip a toe into angel Magick and oracles!


This Angel Numbers Oracle Card Deck is a plainly designed deck featuring 44 cards, each corresponding to a sacred angel number (like 111, 222, 333, and beyond). Every card includes a meaningful message of guidance, intuition, and healing from the angelic realm.

Whether you’re seeking clarity, daily inspiration, or deeper connection with your spiritual path, this deck will help you interpret the synchronicities and number sequences you encounter. The card’s simple design makes them easily accessible without a need for a guide book. You should, however, consider studying the angel numbers to understand what these numbers represent.



What Are Angel Numbers?

Angel numbers are repeating number sequences (e.g., 111, 444, 888) believed to carry spiritual meaning and divine guidance. Many people see these numbers during pivotal life moments or transitions. Each number sequence resonates with specific energies — from new beginnings and inner growth to alignment, protection, and manifestation.


With no fixed system, the deck is unique, “making it ideal for beginners and experienced spiritual seekers alike. “ The Angel Numbers Oracle combines numerical symbolism with messages of light, offering personal empowerment with every draw.


How to Use:

  1. Shuffle the deck while focusing on your question or energy.
  2. Draw one or more cards intuitively.
  3. Read the message and reflect on how the angel number relates to your current path.
  4. Use it for daily pulls, affirmations, or paired with crystal work or journaling.




Perfect For:

  • People who frequently see repeating numbers and want to understand them
  • Spiritual seekers, lightworkers, and energy readers
  • Daily inspiration and self-healing practices
  • Gifts for loved ones on a spiritual journey



These decks are cheap, frankly they look and feel cheap. But, for a couple of quid from online sellers (don’t pay more than £4)  they represent a cute little deck that may end up wetting your appetite for more expensive and better looking cards. Remember, it’s not the cards that really matter it’s your own intent, concentration and patience. An expensive deck may look gorgeous but it will be no more effective. What matters is what decks resonates best with you regardless of price.

Our Magical Solar System: Mars

 






Mars: The Red Planet 

Deities: Mars, Ares, Mangala, Nergal, Tyr, Sekhmet , Huitzilopochtli, Montu , Kali and Morrigan 

Colour: Red

Metal: Iron

Chakra: Root and Solar Plexus 

Element: Fire

Sign: Aries and Scorpio 

Number: 5 or 9

Incense: Myrrh, patchouli, cinnamon, black pepper, musk

Masculine, yang


Tarot:  Emperor (structure in action), The Tower (sudden breakthrough), Strength


Offering: Red candles, spicy foods, iron objects, or acts of courageous service


Crystal :

Garnet, bloodstone, ruby, red jasper, flint, red aventurine


Herbs:

Ginger, garlic, nettle, cayenne, mustard, wormwood, basil, dragonsblood


Uses in Magic:

•  Protection and Defense: Shields, reversal spells, warding against attack.

•  Courage and Victory: Sports/competition success, leadership, assertiveness.

•  Conflict and Binding: Hexing (ethically), breaking curses, or “war” against obstacles.

•  Vitality: Building physical strength, libido, or willpower.

•  Talismans: Created in Mars hour/day with iron or red materials, inscribed with Mars sigils or magic squares (5x5 square of Mars for potency). Check out the end of this article for how to make one!


Mars, the “red planet,” holds profound metaphysical and spiritual significance across astrology, planetary magic, alchemy, and esoteric traditions

It embodies raw, dynamic life force—the spark of action, will, and transformation. Unlike gentler planets, Mars represents the primal “yes” to existence: the drive to assert, protect, create, and conquer obstacles.


Its astrological glyph—a circle (spirit) with an arrow pointing outward and upward—symbolises the spear and shield of the warrior, or the directed flow of vital energy. This icon captures Mars’ essence: outward-directed force rooted in inner strength.


Mythological and Archetypal Roots

In Roman mythology, Mars (Greek Ares) is the god of war, but also agriculture, protection, and vitality—far more than mere aggression. He rules conflict as a path to victory and honor. In spiritual terms, Mars is the “inner warrior” or masculine (yang) principle: the instinct for survival, assertion, and passionate pursuit. Esoteric traditions link him to deities like the Norse Tyr (justice in battle), Morrigan (Celtic battle goddess), Kali (fierce transformation), or Huitzilopochtli (Aztec warrior sun).


Spiritually, Mars teaches that true power arises from channeling raw energy consciously rather than suppressing or unleashing it destructively. It bridges the root chakra (Muladhara—for physical survival and grounding) and solar plexus (Manipura—for personal will and empowerment). Some traditions associate it with the navel center, where fire ignites action.


Core Metaphysical and Spiritual Properties

•  Action and Willpower: Mars is the planet of doing. It fuels motivation, ambition, courage, and the drive to turn ideas into reality. Spiritually, it represents personal agency—the ability to assert your truth and manifest change. 

•  Energy and Vitality: Linked to physical stamina, blood, muscles, and life force (prana or chi). In Vedic astrology (as Mangal or Mangala), it governs karma yoga (action as spiritual practice), athleticism, and land/property as extensions of earthly power. It enhances health through disciplined effort. 

•  Passion and Sexuality: Mars rules desire, libido, and creative fire. It embodies the raw, procreative urge—sexual energy as a sacred force for union or self-empowerment.

•  Courage and Victory: It bestows the strength to face challenges, overcome enemies (internal or external), and achieve triumph. In magic, Mars energy supports protection, breaking obstacles, legal victories, or building confidence. 

•  Transformation Through Fire: Alchemically tied to iron (its metal) and the element of fire, Mars symbolizes forging the self in the heat of experience—refining will through trials. 


Balanced Mars inspires progress, resilience, and purposeful growth. Misaligned (e.g., retrograde or afflicted), it can manifest as anger, impulsivity, frustration, conflict, or burnout—lessons in redirecting energy constructively. 



Magical Correspondences

Planetary magick practitioners work with Mars (especially on Tuesdays, its sacred day) for rituals involving courage, defense, passion, or success.


Ritual Practices:

•  Light a red candle inscribed with the Mars symbol during a Tuesday Mars hour; meditate on the glyph while focusing intent.

•  Carry iron nails, bloodstone, or a Mars talisman for protection.

•  Burn dragon’s blood incense or nettle in defensive workings.

•  Physical acts (martial arts, exercise) as offerings to embody the energy.

•  Invoke deities like Mars/Ares, Kartikeya, or Tyr alongside.


Working with Mars Spiritually

To align with Mars energy:

•  Meditate on its red glow or glyph during a Tuesday Mars hour.

•  Engage in physical movement (exercise, martial arts) as devotion.

•  Journal intentions for bold action while holding a red crystal.

•  In Vedic remedies, practices like Mangal mantras or donating red items honor its lessons without amplifying malefic effects.




Cautions: Mars is malefic when unbalanced—workings can backfire as anger, accidents, or conflict. Grounding, moderation, and ethical intent are essential. In hermetic and Solomonic traditions, proper timing (planetary hours) and purification enhance efficacy.


Ultimately, Mars reminds us that the universe rewards the courageous spirit. Its energy is not inherently destructive—it is the forge where raw potential becomes purposeful power, guiding us toward authentic self-expression and victory in life’s battles. Whether viewed through Western astrology, Vedic jyotish, or hermetic magic, Mars calls us to act with heart, honor our instincts, and wield our will wisely.



Create a Mars talisman

Mars talismans in planetary magic are objects charged with the potent, fiery energy of Mars (Mangal/Kuja) to amplify courage, protection, victory, strength, willpower, and the ability to overcome obstacles or enemies. They draw from traditions like the Picatrix ( as shown below) Cornelius Agrippa’s Three Books of Occult Philosophy, the Key of Solomon, and related grimoires. These talismans act as “batteries” or focal points for Martial virtues when created under precise astrological elections. 



Core Principles and Timing

Traditional construction requires an electional astrology chart where Mars is strong and unafflicted:

•  Mars in its signs of rulership (Aries or Scorpio), exaltation (Capricorn), or a favourable house (especially angular).

•  Mars rising or culminating (near the Ascendant or Midheaven).

•  Not combust (too close to the Sun) or retrograde.

•  Supported by a swift, well-aspected Moon (not void of course).


Best times: Tuesday (Mars’ day) during a Mars planetary hour (there are typically 3–4 per day/night). Use planetary hour tables for precision. 



The talisman is created, inscribed, and consecrated in that window—often fumigated with Martial incenses (dragon’s blood, myrrh, pepper, cinnamon, or tobacco) while invoking Martial spirits, angels (e.g., Graphiel as Intelligence, or Kamael/Samael as archangel), or deities like Mars/Ares, Kartikeya, or Hanuman.


Materials and Forms

•  Metals: Iron or steel (primary); sometimes red brass or alloys. Pure iron can be challenging to work with, so steel or iron filings in other bases are common.

•  Stones/Gems: Bloodstone, garnet, ruby, red jasper, diamond (per some Picatrix recipes), or red coral.

•  Other: Engraved on rings, medals, pendants, plates, swords, or even paper/parchment for temporary use. Worn as jewelry, carried, or placed in a home/vehicle. 


Key Designs and Inscriptions

The most iconic element is the Magic Square (Kamea) of Mars—a 5x5 grid with numbers 1–25 where each row, column, and diagonal sums to 65 (the total sum is 325). Lines drawn through the numbers in sequence create the sigil of Mars’ Intelligence (Graphiel).


Common Inscriptions (from Agrippa and Picatrix):

•  Sigils/seals of Mars, its Intelligence (Graphiel), and Spirit (Barzabel).

•  Images: A crowned warrior with sword and shield; a man riding a lion holding a sword and severed head; an armed soldier with lance.

•  Names of Martial angels or spirits (e.g., Samael, Graphiel).

•  Verses or barbarous names for potency in war, victory, or protection.


Construction Steps (Simplified Traditional Approach)

1.  Calculate and select the election time.

2.  Prepare the material (cleanse and engrave/inscribe during the hour).

3.  Fumigate with appropriate incense and invoke (e.g., “Om Kram Kreem Kroum Sah Bhaumaya Namah” or Solomonic conjurations).

4.  Charge by exposure to Martial forces (visualisation, blood-red candles, or battlefield symbolism).

5.  Seal and carry/wear with intent; periodically “feed” with incense or blood (symbolic).


You may use paper versions, jewellery, or digital aids for accessibility, but traditional sources emphasize precise timing and materia.