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360 pages, Leather Bound
First published January 1, 1726
The Truth is, I think, as it was a very mean Employment for any thing that wears a human Coutenance to take up, so I must acknowledge, I think, 'twas a mean low priz'd Business for Satan to take up with; below the very Devil; below his dignity as an Angelic, tho' condemn'd Creature; below him even as a Devil; to go to talk to a parcel of ugly, deform'd, spiteful, malicious Old Women; to give them Power to do Mischief, who never had a Will, after they enter’d into the State of old Woman-Hood, to do any thing else: Why the Devil always chose the ugliest old Women he could find; whether Wizardism made them ugly, that were not so before, and whether the Ugliness, as it was a Beauty in Witchcraft, did not encrease according to the meritorious Performance in the Black-Trade?He also speculates that devils only walk among humans in female form and includes an anecdote in which he accuses a beautiful, accomplished lady of being one such fiend - to her natural astonishment - and of course is proven correct. (Based on Defoe's other "nonfiction," including Journal of the Plague Year and The Storm, we can safely assume this account is entirely fictitious.) Considering the Salem witch trials happened during his lifetime, this is pretty damn oofy.