The Witch Family

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Authors: Eleanor Estes

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The Witch Family
Eleanor Estes

ILLUSTRATED BY
EDWARD ARDIZZONE

AN ODYSSEY/HARCOURT YOUNG CLASSIC
HARCOURT, INC.
SAN DIEGO NEW YORK LONDON

Copyright © 1960 by Eleanor Estes
Copyright renewed 1988 by Eleanor Estes

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and
retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be
mailed to the following address: Permissions Department, Harcourt, Inc.,
6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.

First Harcourt Young Classics edition 2000
First Odyssey Classics edition 1990
First published 1960

www.HarcourtBooks.com

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Estes, Eleanor, 1906–1988.
The witch family/Eleanor Estes; illustrated by Edward Ardizzone.
p. cm.
"An Odyssey/Harcourt Young Classic."
Summary: Two little girls who love to draw witches build
an elaborate world around the imaginary Old Witch and her family.
[1. Witches—Fiction. 2. Imagination—Fiction.]
I. Ardizzone, Edward, 1900—, ill. II. Title.
PZ7.E749Wi 2000
[Fic]—dc21 99-89152
ISBN 0-15-202604-5 ISBN 0-15-202610-X (pb)

Printed in the United States of America
C E G H F D B
J L N P Q O M K I
(pb)

For
R.
and
H.
and
M.S.
and
W.
and
M.
and
P.
and
Y
O
U

CONTENTS

1. 
OLD WITCH, BANISHED
 1

2. 
LITTLE WITCH GIRL
 14

3. 
MALACHI, THE BUMBLEBEE
 26

4. 
THE WITCH SCHOOL
 38

5. 
LITTLE WITCH GIRL'S BIRTHDAY PARTY
 55

6. 
IN A "HAUNCHED" HOUSE
 66

7. 
THE MERMAID LAGOON
 83

8. 
THE BABY WITCH
 97

9. 
THE PAINTING FIELD
 111

10. 
DANGER IN THE PAINTING FIELD
 121

11. 
THE PICNIC AT THE MERMAID LAGOON
 132

12. 
THE SPELLING BEE
 143

13. 
THE GREAT NIGHT AT LAST
 158

14. 
HALLOWEEN ON GARDEN LANE
 168

15. 
THE REAL WITCH AND THE PRETEND WITCH
 175

16. 
A RIDE ON A BROOMSTICK
 188

17. 
MALACHI, TO THE RESCUE
 197

18. 
GRASS!
 210

1. Old Witch, Banished

One day, Old Witch, the head witch of all the witches, was banished. Amy, just an ordinary real girl, not a witch, said Old Witch would have to go away. So, Old Witch had to go. Instead of living in the briers and the brambles, the caves and the heaths, instead of flying around on her broomstick wherever she wanted, chanting runes, doing abracadabras, casting spells and hurly-burlies, this great-great (multiply the "great" by about one hundred and you have some idea of how old she was) old grandmother Old Witch had to go and live on the top of an awful, high, lonely, bare, bleak, and barren glass hill! And at first, she had to live in the witch house up on that hill all alone because at first there was no witch family—there was just herself.

She had to go and live on the bare glass hill because Amy, appalled at the wickedness of the old witch, had said she must. Amy was almost seven, and she had a friend, Clarissa, who was almost seven too. They both had blond hair that hung straight and long, and they both had blue eyes. Amy's blond hair was the color of moonlight. Clarissa's was the color of sunlight. They might have been sisters, they looked so much alike. But they were not sisters. They were best friends, and they were both in the same class in Jasper School.

They were both brave girls. Clarissa could go all the way to the library alone. And although Amy did not yet go to the library alone, she was a brave girl too, for she did not mind booster shots. Moreover, it was she who had the bravery to think it up and say, "Go!" to the mean old wicked old witch.

Amy and Clarissa lived three doors apart on a beautiful street named Garden Lane. Ginkgo trees, meeting high overhead, lined the street on both sides. This street was in the city of Washington, D.C. Clarissa's house was a small brick one painted light pink. It had a square front porch, where she and Amy, on hot days, sometimes had lunch, usually long "noodoos"—a name that Clarissa had long ago, when she was quite small, given to spaghetti, a name that in Clarissa's family, and in Amy's too, had stuck through the years. Or sometimes Amy and Clarissa just sat there on the front porch and ate popsicles and talked and watched the passersby.

But usually they played in Amy's house. Amy's house was a high red brick one. In front of it there was a tall and graceful ginkgo tree whose roots made the worn red bricks of the sidewalk bulge and whose branches fanned the sky. The ginkgo tree has little leaves shaped like fans that Amy and Clarissa liked to press and give to their dolls. The fruit of this tree is orange, but it is not good for eating. It has an odd fragrance that grownups do not like but that children do not mind, for it makes them think of fall and Halloween.

Near Amy's front stoop there was a small fir tree to which Amy had tied a fragile rope swing. It was a very little swing, but it was strong enough for Amy and Clarissa, each one of these girls weighing only thirty-eight pounds so far. Frequently, while Amy was at Jasper School, Bear or the doll, Patricia, was allowed to sit in this swing all morning. And swinging there on summer days, Amy or Clarissa could keep track of the bees that nested in the bare ground of the yard where the ivy did not grow.

But now it was wintertime. There were no bees in the front yard to watch, though there was one ancient hoary bee—it was hard to tell whether he was dead or alive—in a sunny corner of the backyard. This was a bumblebee.

Amy and Clarissa always had a great deal to do. They both loved to draw pictures, and, seated opposite each other at Amy's little yellow table in her mother's big front bedroom, high up behind the ginkgo tree, they were drawing pictures now, pictures of witches.

It was cold late February, not Halloween. But at lunchtime, while Amy was eating her lamb chop, and Clarissa was standing by watching her eat it bite by bite—she had already had her long "noodoos"—Amy's mother had told a story about Old Witch. Summer, spring, winter, fall, Amy loved to hear stories about Old Witch. "One day, Old Witch..." Mama always began.

And that was the way she had begun today, and had then told an awful, though not too awful, story about Old Witch, with many interruptions and suggestions from Amy.

That is why now, after lunch, Amy and Clarissa, having Old Witch very much on their minds, happened to be drawing pictures of her.

"Go, go, go! To the glass hill, go!" Amy sang as she drew. She looked closely at her picture for a moment. "You go!" she repeated firmly. "And never come back!" she said with finality as she banished Old Witch.

"Go," echoed Clarissa. "To the glass hill, go!"

"Don't put any flowers on it!" said Amy. "Nothing grows on this awful bare glass hill. It is all glass, just plain glass. Up there there are no trees, no flowers, no violets. There is plain nothing."

"Nothing," said Clarissa, chewing the end of her crayon thoughtfully.

"The only food that Old Witch can eat is what she can get by magic," declared Amy. "And her magic will not work very well on this shiny place. You know, witch magic works best in dark and gloom. And she can't have any little rabbits to eat at all. You know that rabbits are what she loves best to eat? Don't you, Clarissa?"

"Oh, yes," said Clarissa.

"She can have only herbs to eat," said Amy.

"Yes," said Clarissa. "Herb soup morning, noon, and night."

"And the only thing that she can take with her is Old Tom, the awful old black cat, the real head witch cat," declared Amy, going on with the banishment orders. "Oh, yes, and her awful old broomstick. And
that's all!
"

At first Amy and Clarissa felt pleased over the banishment of the mean old witch. "I banquished her," said Amy proudly. Sometimes Amy joined two words together, creating one new word. Here, banish and vanquish had become "banquish." "I banquished her," she said. Then she became thoughtful. Doubt swept over her. "It is all right not to have wicked Old Witch most of the year," she thought. "But what about Halloween?"

"Clarissa," she said, "what use is Halloween without the real, right, regular old witch?"

Clarissa clasped her head between her hands, rolled her eyes, and said, "No good!"

"It would be like Christmas without Santa Claus," said Amy.

"And Easter without the Bunny," said Clarissa.

"Same thing," said Amy. "I have to change the order," she said. "Change it to be that Old Witch must stay on top of the glass hill always except for Halloween. She can come down for Halloween. No other time."

"Yes," said Clarissa.

"On Halloween she can ride her broomstick down the glass hill instead of just around the top of it. But only on that one night, can't she, Clarissa?"

"OK," said Clarissa.

"If," said Amy, in an ominous voice, "she can learn to be good, that is."

"Yes, of course," said Clarissa.

"Not eat any little rabbits."

"No," said Clarissa.

"Not try to come down off the glass hill at any other time
at all,
" said Amy.

"No," said Clarissa.

"You mean, 'yes," said Amy.

"Yes," said Clarissa, drawing.

After this change of rule had been decided upon, Amy and Clarissa put away their drawings of witches and went outdoors to the square little backyard. Though the backyard was tiny, still it was big enough to hold Amy's jungle gym with its two swings and glider.

Today was a crisp and sunny day. In summer and in winter the backyard was shaded by a high and lovely linden tree in the corner of the backyard of the house next door, belonging to Polly and Christopher Knapp. Polly Knapp was eight, and she was Amy's and Clarissa's next best friend. Polly let Amy and Clarissa climb her high linden tree in her yard whenever they liked. And Polly, in turn, could swing on Amy's swings and glide on her glider whenever she liked. But she must not go too high and she must never swing on the fragile rope swing in the little fir tree in the front yard because she weighed forty-seven pounds. Neither could Christopher, who was nine, because he weighted sixty-five pounds.

Clarissa got into one of the swings now and started to swing. Amy stood aside for a moment, thinking. In the sunny corner of the yard where Amy was standing dwelled the huge, old, hoary, weather-beaten bumblebee. Amy had discovered him just a few days ago. She had told her father about him. "What is a good name for a bumblebee?" she'd asked.

"Malachi," her father had answered without a second thought. So Amy called the bumblebee Malachi.

There he was now, basking in the sunshine. Some might have thought that he was dead, for he never moved and summer was gone. But Amy knew that Malachi was just sleeping. "Bumblebees do sleep with their eyes open," she told Clarissa.

"Hello," said Amy to Malachi gently. He did not stir or wink an eye. So Amy swung herself onto the green board fence and up into Polly Knapp's linden tree.

Suddenly, dark clouds swept over the sun. "It must be Old Witch going," thought Amy. She looked down at Clarissa. "Did you hear a little thunder?" she asked.

"No," said Clarissa.

"I did. Just a little in the distance. You do not have to be afraid. Probably Old Witch is on her way. Tell her the change in the banquishment order," said Amy. "Tell her she can come down for Halloween! That's all."

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