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The Horn of Evenwood: A Grimoire of Sorcerous Operations, Charms, and Devices of Witchery

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The Horn of Evenwood, Also called ‘The Master’s Book of Conjury’ or ‘The Witchfather’s Bloodless Bones’, is a true book of Art, a Grimoire of sorcerous operations, charms, and devices of Witchery. Based on well-worn patterns and operations of Traditional sorcery and European Witchcraft from the 16th-19th centuries, this manual of magical arts provides a complete working system of Craft-sorcery which taps into the numina of the British Isles folk-tradition, the Luciferian mysteries of the Witchmaster, traditional wortcunning, the Rades of Edric and Godda, and the hidden roads to Faery-Elfhame. Included are incantations, conjurations, instructions in the application of the Ten Pillars of Sorcery, "The Service of Sigils" working, and the operations of ‘Biting the Tongues of Serpents’, ‘Summoning the Witch-Dream by Moth Flight’, ‘Binding the Lovers One to the Other’, ‘The Fruitful Working of the Womb-Seed’, and ‘A Pavis from Foul Imprecations’, all of which are intended to instruct an initiate in the use of this timeless arcane system.

172 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 13, 2007

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About the author

Robin Artisson

23 books74 followers
Robin Artisson has been studying folklore, mythology, and the interior metaphysics of sorcery and traditional witchcraft for over 20 years. His specialty areas of knowledge include spiritual ecology, occult history, herbalism and wortcunning, divination, and soul-flight or trance induction, along with a vocational interest in the extraordinary exploration of the eldritch dimensions of the mind, the soul, and the world.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Katie.
48 reviews12 followers
May 12, 2016
Aesthetically interesting but generally somewhat pretentious and lacking in substance.
Profile Image for Morgan Frey.
5 reviews2 followers
April 14, 2016
I've always found this book to be a really informative resource for prayers to the Witchfather and Queen of Elfhame, which is what I use it most for, although the spells and invocations Artisson lists are also very interesting and I've found it interesting to adapt them to my own practice. The only thing I do take issue with is his snobbery - he looks down on 'spiritual tourists' and even uses the word 'playgan' once or twice, which I just find mildly irritating, but take care.
Profile Image for Liam.
32 reviews1 follower
July 25, 2025
Honestly pretentious but gave me some ideas for my own work even if I have some doubts about some information provided by the author.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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