The Witches

by

Roald Dahl

The boy is the seven-year-old narrator of The Witches. When his parents die in a car crash, he begins to live with his Grandmamma and to learn all she knows about witches. The boy loves and dotes on his grandmother, but he also displays a rational streak when he struggles to accept her stories about witches without evidence. Nevertheless, he keeps an open mind and when he has his first encounter with a witch, his Grandmamma’s lessons save his life. The boy wants to grow up to be the owner of a mouse circus and he spends much of his summer vacation training the two white mice Grandmamma gave him as a gift. After he’s caught (accidentally) witnessing the English witches’ annual meeting, the Grand High Witch turns him into a mouse. Kind and caring, the boy makes sure to help Bruno Jenkins, whom the witches have also transformed, even though he’s an objectionable person. Like Grandmamma, the boy is quick-thinking and clever, as he demonstrates when he comes up with a plan to poison the English witches and the Grand High Witch with their own potion, Formula 86 Delayed-Action Mouse-Maker. The boy also demonstrates resilience and equanimity after he’s transformed into a mouse, because he chooses to look on the bright side of things rather than to feel sorry for himself. Although his transformation means that his life expectancy has been drastically reduced (Grandmamma estimates he will live only for about nine years as a mouse-person), he is grateful for her love and determined to make a difference by using that time to hunt down and vanquish as many witches as possible.

Boy Quotes in The Witches

The The Witches quotes below are all either spoken by Boy or refer to Boy. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Fate and Perspective Theme Icon
).
1. A Note about Witches Quotes

As far as children are concerned, a REAL WITCH is easily the most dangerous of all the living creatures on earth. What makes her doubly dangerous is the fact that she doesn’t look dangerous. Even when you know all the secrets (you will hear about those in a minute), you can still never be quite sure whether it is a witch you are gazing at or just a kind lady. If a tiger were able to make himself look like a large dog with a waggy tail, you would probably go up and pat him on the head. And that would be the end of you. It is the same with witches. They all look like nice ladies.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker)
Page Number: 9-10
Explanation and Analysis:
2. My Grandmother Quotes

She was apparently a great expert on these creatures and she made it very clear to me that her witch stories, unlike most of the others, were not imaginary tales. They were all true. They were the gospel truth. They were history. Everything she was telling me about witches had actually happened and I had better believe it. What was worse, what was far, far worse, was that witches were still with us. They were all around us and I had better believe that, too.

“Are you really being truthful, Grandmamma? Really and truly truthful?”

“My darling,” she said, “you won’t last long in this world if you don’t know how to spot a witch when you see one.”

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker)
Page Number: 14
Explanation and Analysis:

My grandmother was tremendously old and wrinkled, with a massive wide body which was smothered in grey lace. She sat there majestic in her armchair, filling every inch of it. Not even a mouse could have squeezed in to sit beside her. I myself, just over seven years old, was crouched on the floor at her feet, wearing pyjamas, dressing-gown, and slippers.

[…]

My grandmother was the only grandmother I ever met who smoked cigars. She lit one now, a long black cigar that smelt of burning rubber.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma, Grand High Witch of All the World
Related Symbols: Cigar
Page Number: 15-16
Explanation and Analysis:
3. How to Recognise a Witch Quotes

“It isn’t the dirt that the witch is smelling. It is you. The smell that drives a witch mad actually comes right out of your own skin. […] The point is this. When you haven’t washed for a week and your skin is all covered with dirt, then quite obviously the stink-waves cannot come oozing out nearly so strongly.”

“I shall never have a bath again,” I said.

“Just don’t have one too often,” my grandmother said. “Once a month is quite enough for a sensible child.”

It was moments like this that I loved my grandmother more than ever.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker)
Page Number: 27
Explanation and Analysis:
4. The Grand High Witch Quotes

“Why can’t we stay here in Norway? You would hate to live anywhere else! You told me you would!”

“I know,” she said. “But there are a lot of complications with money and with the house that you wouldn’t understand. Also, it said in the will that although all your family is Norwegian, you were born in England and you have started your education there and he wants you to continue going to English schools.”

“Oh Grandmamma!” I cried. “You don’t want to go and live in our English house, I know you don’t!”

“Of course I don’t,” she said. “But I am afraid I must. The will said that your mother felt the same way about it, and it is important to respect the wishes of the parents.”

There was no way out of it. We had to go to England, and my grandmother started making arrangements at once.

Related Characters: Grandmamma (speaker), Boy (speaker)
Page Number: 34-35
Explanation and Analysis:

Then suddenly, out of the corner of my eye, I caught sight of a woman standing immediately below me. She was looking up at me and smiling in the most peculiar way. […]

I noticed she was wearing a small black hat and she had black gloves on her hands and the gloves came nearly up to her elbows.

Gloves! She was wearing gloves!

I froze all over.

“I have a present for you,” she said […]

I didn’t answer.

“Come down out of that tree, little boy,” she said “and I shall give you the most exciting present you’ve ever had.” […]

Without taking her eyes from my face, she very slowly put one of those gloved hands into her purse and drew out a small green snake. She held it up for me to see.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma
Page Number: 43-44
Explanation and Analysis:
5. Summer Holidays Quotes

When there were only three weeks of the Summer Term left, an awful thing happened. My grandmother got pneumonia. She became very ill, and a trained nurse moved into the house to look after her. The doctor explained to me that pneumonia is not normally a dangerous illness nowadays because of penicillin, but when a person is more than eighty years old, as my grandmother was, then it is very dangerous indeed. He said he didn’t even dare move her to hospital in her condition, so she stayed in her bedroom and I hung about outside the door while oxygen cylinders and all sorts of other frightening things were taken in to her.

“Can I go in and see her?” I asked.

“No, dear,” the nurse said. “Not at the moment.”

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma
Page Number: 48-49
Explanation and Analysis:

I taught them to climb up the back of my neck onto the top of my head. I did this by putting cake crumbs in my hair.

On the very first morning after our arrival, the chambermaid was making my bed when one of my mice poked its head out from under the sheets. The maid let out a shriek that brought a dozen people running to see who was being murdered. I was reported to the Manager. There followed an unpleasant scene in the Manager’s office with the Manager, my grandmother, and me.

The Manager, whose name was Mr. Stringer, was a bristly man in a black tail-coat. “I cannot permit mice in my hotel, madam,” he said to my grandmother.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Mr. Stringer (speaker), Grand High Witch of All the World, Grandmamma
Page Number: 52
Explanation and Analysis:

The trick I was going to teach them today was tight-rope walking. It is not all that difficult to train an intelligent mouse to be an expert tight-rope walker provided you know exactly how to go about it. First, you must have a piece of string. I had that. Then you must have some good cake. […]

Now here’s what you do. You stretch the string tight between your two hands, but you start by keeping it very short, only about three inches. You put the mouse on your right hand and a little piece of cake on your left hand. The mouse is therefore only three inches away from the cake. […] He only has to take two steps along the string to reach this tasty morsel. He ventures forward, one paw on the string, then the other. If the mouse has a good sense of balance […] he will get across easily.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Mr. Stringer, Grandmamma
Page Number: 57-58
Explanation and Analysis:
7. Frizzled Like a Fritter Quotes

The first thing I noticed about this woman was her size. She was tiny, probably no more than four and a half feet tall. She looked quite young, I guessed about twenty-five or twenty-six, and she was very pretty. She had on a rather stylish long black dress that reached right to the ground and she wore black gloves that came up to her elbows. Unlike the others, she wasn’t wearing a hat.

She didn’t look to me like a witch at all, but she couldn’t possibly not be one, otherwise what on earth was she doing up there on the platform? And why, for heaven’s sake, were all the other witches gazing at her with such a mixture of adoration, awe, and fear?

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma, Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 65-66
Explanation and Analysis:
8. Formula 86 Delayed Action Mouse-Maker Quotes

“Each of you vill be buying for herself a sveet shop. You vill be buying the very best and most rrree-spectable sveet shops in Inkland.”

[…]

“I am vonting no tuppenny-ha’penny crrrummy little tobacco-selling-newspaper-sveet-shops!” shouted The Grand High Witch. “I am vonting you to get only the very best shops filled up high vith piles and piles of luscious sveets and tasty chocs!”

[…]

“You vill be having no trouble in getting vot you vont,” shouted The Grand High Witch, “Because you vill be offering four times as much as a shop is vurth and nobody is rrree-fusing an offer like that! Money is not a prrroblem to us vitches as you know very vell. I have brrrought vith me six trrrunks stuffed full of Inklish bank-notes, all new and crrrisp. And all of them,” she added with a fiendish leer, “all of them homemade.”

Related Characters: Grand High Witch of All the World (speaker), Boy
Page Number: 79
Explanation and Analysis:

“A mouse!” cried the witches. “What a frumptious thought!”

“Classrooms vill all be svorrrming vith mice!” shouted The Grand High Witch. “Chaos and pandemonium vill be rrreigning in every school in Inkland! Teachers vill be hopping up and down! Vimmen teachers vill be standing on desks and holding up skirts and yelling ‘Help, help, help!’”

“They will! They will!” cried the audience.

“And vot,” shouted The Grand High Witch, “is happening next in every school?”

“Tell us!” they cried. “Tell us, O Brainy One!”

The Grand High Witch stretched her stringy neck forward and grinned at the audience, showing two rows of pointed teeth, slightly blue. She raised her voice louder than ever and shouted, “Mouse-trrraps is coming out!”

Related Characters: Grand High Witch of All the World (speaker), Boy, Mrs. Jenkins, Grandmamma
Page Number: 83-84
Explanation and Analysis:
10. Bruno Jenkins Disappears Quotes

“Let me in!” came the boy’s voice from behind the doors. “Where are those chocolate bars you promised me? I’m here to collect! Dish them out!”

“He is not only smelly, he is also grrreedy,” said The Grand High Witch. “Rrreee-moof the chains from the doors and let him come in.” The extraordinary thing about her mask was that its lips moved quite naturally when she spoke. You really couldn’t see it was a mask at all.

One of the witches leapt to her feet and unfastened the chains. She opened the two huge doors. Then I heard her saying, “Why hello, little man. How lovely to see you. You have come for your chocolate bars, have you not? They are all ready for you. Do come in.”

Related Characters: Bruno Jenkins (speaker), Grand High Witch of All the World (speaker), Boy, Mr. Jenkins, Mrs. Jenkins
Page Number: 99
Explanation and Analysis:
11. The Ancient Ones Quotes

“Here is a sample of vot I am giving you,” shouted The Grand High Witch. She fished around in a pocket of her dress and brought out a very small bottle. She held it up and shouted, “In this tiny bottle is five hundred doses of Mouse-Maker! Is enough to turrrn five hundred children into mice!” I could see that the bottle was made of dark-blue glass and that it was very small, about the same size as the ones you can buy at the chemists with nose-drops in them. “Each of you ancient vuns vill get two of these bottles!” she shouted.

Related Characters: Grand High Witch of All the World (speaker), Boy
Page Number: 107-108
Explanation and Analysis:
13. Bruno Quotes

What’s so wonderful about being a little boy anyway? Why is that necessarily any better than being a mouse? I know that mice get hunted and they sometimes get poisoned or caught in traps. But little boys sometimes get killed, too. Little boys can be run over by motor-cars or they can die of some awful illness. Little boys have to go to school. Mice don’t. Mice don’t have to pass any exams. Mice don’t have to worry about money. Mice, as far as I can see, have only two enemies, humans and cats. My grandmother is a human, but I know for certain she will always love me whoever I am. And she never, thank goodness, keeps a cat. When mice grow up, they don’t ever have to go to war and fight against other mice. Mice, I felt pretty certain, all like each other. People don’t.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grand High Witch of All the World, Grandmamma
Page Number: 118-119
Explanation and Analysis:

“Your biggest problem at the moment is your parents. How are they going to take this? Will they treat you with sympathy and kindness?”

Bruno considered this for a moment. “I think,” he said, “that my father is going to be a bit put out.”

“And your mother?”

“She’s terrified of mice,” said Bruno.

“Then you’ve got a problem, haven’t you?”

“Why only me?” he said. “What about you?”

“My grandmother will understand perfectly,” I said. “She knows all about witches.”

Related Characters: Bruno Jenkins (speaker), Boy (speaker), Grandmamma, Mr. Jenkins, Mrs. Jenkins, Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 122
Explanation and Analysis:
14. Hello Grandmamma Quotes

My grandmother had come forward now in her armchair so that she was sitting right on the edge of it. Both her hands were cupped over the gold knob of the stick she always used when walking, and she was staring at me with eyes as bright as two stars.

Then I told her how The Grand High Witch had shot out the fiery white-hot sparks and how they had turned one of the other witches into a puff of smoke.

“I’ve heard about that!” my grandmother cried out excitedly. “But I never quite believed it! You are the first non-witch ever to see it happening! It is the Grand High Witch’s most famous punishment. It is known as ‘getting fried,’ and all the other witches are petrified of having it done to them!”

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker), Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 130
Explanation and Analysis:
15. The Mouse-Burglar Quotes

“Oh, hello,” came my grandmother’s voice. “I just dropped my knitting over the balcony by mistake. But it’s all right. I’ve got hold of one end of it. I can pull it up by myself, thank you all the same.” I marvelled at the coolness of her voice.

“Who vur you talking to just now?” snapped The Grand High Witch. “Who vur you telling to hurry up and come out qvickly?”

“I was talking to my little grandson,” I heard my grandmother saying. “He’s been in the bathroom for hours and it’s time he came out. He sits in there reading books and he forgets completely where he is. Do you have any children, my dear?”

“I do not!” shouted The Grand High Witch, as she came quickly back into the bedroom, slamming the balcony door behind her.

Related Characters: Grand High Witch of All the World (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker), Boy
Page Number: 143
Explanation and Analysis:
16. Mr and Mrs Jenkins Meet Bruno Quotes

“I’ll talk where I dashed well want to, madam,” Mr Jenkins said. “Come on now, out with it! If Bruno has broken a window or smashed your spectacles, I‘ll pay for the damage, but I’m not budging out of this seat!”

[…]

“Where is Bruno, anyway?” Mr Jenkins said. “Tell him to come here and see me.”

“He’s here already,” my grandmother said. “He’s in my handbag.” She patted the big floppy leather bag with her walking-stick.

“What the heck d’you mean he’s in your handbag?” Mr Jenkins shouted.

“Are you trying to be funny?” Mrs. Jenkins said, very prim.

“There’s nothing funny about this,” my grandmother said. “Your son has suffered a rather unfortunate mishap.”

“He’s always suffering mishaps,” Mr Jenkins said. “He suffers from overeating and then he suffers from wind. You should hear him after supper. He sounds like a brass band!”

Related Characters: Mr. Jenkins (speaker), Mrs. Jenkins (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker), Boy, Bruno Jenkins, Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 151-152
Explanation and Analysis:
18. In the Kitchen Quotes

Quite soon another waiter came in and shouted, “Everyone in the big RSPCC party wants the soup!” That’s when I started sitting up and taking notice. I was all ears now. I edged a bit farther around the garbage-bin so that I could see everything that was going on in the kitchen. A man with a tall white hat who must have been the head chef shouted, “Put the soup for the big party in the large silver soup-tureen!”

I saw the head chef place a huge silver basin on the wooden side-bench that ran along the whole length of the kitchen against the opposite wall. Into that silver basin is where the soup is going, I told myself. So that’s where the stuff in my little bottle must go as well.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 165-166
Explanation and Analysis:

I thought to myself, Oh boy, this is the life! What fun it is to be a mouse doing an exciting job like this! I kept right on swinging. I swung most marvellously from handle to handle, and I was enjoying myself so much that I completely forgot I was in full view of anyone in the kitchen who might happen to glance upwards. What came next happened so quickly I had no time to save myself. I heard a man’s voice yelling, “A mouse! Look at that dirty little mouse!” And I caught a glimpse below me of a white-coated figure in a tall white hat and then there was a flash of steel as the carving-knife whizzed through the air and there was a shoot of pain at the end of my tail and suddenly I was falling and falling head-first toward the floor.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker)
Page Number: 168-169
Explanation and Analysis:
19. Mr Jenkins and His Son Quotes

“Bruno is a mouse,” my grandmother said, calm as ever.

“He most certainly is not a mouse!” shouted Mr Jenkins.

“Oh yes I am!” Bruno said, poking his head up out of the handbag.

Mr Jenkins leapt about three feet into the air.

“Hello, Dad” Bruno said. He had a silly sort of mousy grin on his face.

Mr Jenkins’s mouth dropped open so wide I could see the gold fillings in his back teeth.

“Don’t worry, Dad,” Bruno went on. “It’s not as bad as all that. Just so long as the cat doesn’t get me.”

[…]

“B-b-but B-B-Bruno!” stammered Mr Jenkins again. “H-how did this happen?” The poor man had no wind left in his sails at all.

“Witches,” my grandmother said. “The witches did it.”

“I can’t have a mouse for a son!” shrieked Mr Jenkins.

Related Characters: Grandmamma (speaker), Mr. Jenkins (speaker), Bruno Jenkins (speaker), Boy, Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 180-181
Explanation and Analysis:
20. The Triumph Quotes

You could hear Mrs Jenkins’s shrill voice all over the room. “Herbert!” it was screaming. “Herbert, get me out of here! There’s mice everywhere! They’ll go up my skirts!” […]

My grandmother advanced upon them and thrust Bruno into Mr Jenkins’s hand. “Here’s your little boy,” she said. “He needs to go on a diet.”

“Hi, Dad!” Bruno said. “Hi, Mum!”

Mrs Jenkins screamed even louder. My grandmother, with me in her hand, turned and marched out of the room. She went straight across the hotel lobby and out through the front entrance into the open air.

Outside it was a lovely warm evening and I could hear the waves breaking on the beach just across the road from the hotel.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Bruno Jenkins (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker), Mrs. Jenkins (speaker), Mr. Jenkins
Page Number: 188
Explanation and Analysis:
21. The Heart of a Mouse Quotes

“A mouse-person will almost certainly live for three times as long as an ordinary mouse,” my grandmother said. “About nine years.”

“Good!” I cried. “That’s great! It’s the best news I’ve ever had!”

“Why do you say that?” she asked, surprised.

“Because I would never want to live longer than you,” I said. “I couldn’t stand being looked after by anybody else.”

[…]

“How old are you, Grandmamma?” I asked.

“I’m eighty-six,” she said.

“Will you live another eight or nine years?”

“I might,” she said, “with a bit of luck.”

“You’ve got to,” I said. “Because by then I’ll be a very old mouse and you’ll be a very old grandmother and soon after that we’ll both die together.”

“That would be perfect,” she said.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker)
Page Number: 195-196
Explanation and Analysis:
22. It’s Off to Work We Go! Quotes

“So we have work to do, you and I!” she cried out. “We have a great task ahead of us! Thank heavens you’re a mouse! A mouse can go anywhere! All I’ll have to do is put you down somewhere near The Grand High Witch’s Castle and you will very easily be able to get inside it and creep around looking and listening to your heart’s content!”

“I will! I will!” I answered. “No one will ever see me! Moving about in a big Castle will be child’s play compared with going into a crowded kitchen full of cooks and waiters!”

“You could spend days in there if necessary!” my grandmother cried. In her excitement, she was waving her stick all over the place, and suddenly she knocked over a tall and very beautiful vase […] “Forget it,” she said. “It’s only a Ming.”

Related Characters: Grandmamma (speaker), Boy (speaker), Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 202-203
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire The Witches LitChart as a printable PDF.
The Witches PDF

Boy Quotes in The Witches

The The Witches quotes below are all either spoken by Boy or refer to Boy. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Fate and Perspective Theme Icon
).
1. A Note about Witches Quotes

As far as children are concerned, a REAL WITCH is easily the most dangerous of all the living creatures on earth. What makes her doubly dangerous is the fact that she doesn’t look dangerous. Even when you know all the secrets (you will hear about those in a minute), you can still never be quite sure whether it is a witch you are gazing at or just a kind lady. If a tiger were able to make himself look like a large dog with a waggy tail, you would probably go up and pat him on the head. And that would be the end of you. It is the same with witches. They all look like nice ladies.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker)
Page Number: 9-10
Explanation and Analysis:
2. My Grandmother Quotes

She was apparently a great expert on these creatures and she made it very clear to me that her witch stories, unlike most of the others, were not imaginary tales. They were all true. They were the gospel truth. They were history. Everything she was telling me about witches had actually happened and I had better believe it. What was worse, what was far, far worse, was that witches were still with us. They were all around us and I had better believe that, too.

“Are you really being truthful, Grandmamma? Really and truly truthful?”

“My darling,” she said, “you won’t last long in this world if you don’t know how to spot a witch when you see one.”

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker)
Page Number: 14
Explanation and Analysis:

My grandmother was tremendously old and wrinkled, with a massive wide body which was smothered in grey lace. She sat there majestic in her armchair, filling every inch of it. Not even a mouse could have squeezed in to sit beside her. I myself, just over seven years old, was crouched on the floor at her feet, wearing pyjamas, dressing-gown, and slippers.

[…]

My grandmother was the only grandmother I ever met who smoked cigars. She lit one now, a long black cigar that smelt of burning rubber.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma, Grand High Witch of All the World
Related Symbols: Cigar
Page Number: 15-16
Explanation and Analysis:
3. How to Recognise a Witch Quotes

“It isn’t the dirt that the witch is smelling. It is you. The smell that drives a witch mad actually comes right out of your own skin. […] The point is this. When you haven’t washed for a week and your skin is all covered with dirt, then quite obviously the stink-waves cannot come oozing out nearly so strongly.”

“I shall never have a bath again,” I said.

“Just don’t have one too often,” my grandmother said. “Once a month is quite enough for a sensible child.”

It was moments like this that I loved my grandmother more than ever.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker)
Page Number: 27
Explanation and Analysis:
4. The Grand High Witch Quotes

“Why can’t we stay here in Norway? You would hate to live anywhere else! You told me you would!”

“I know,” she said. “But there are a lot of complications with money and with the house that you wouldn’t understand. Also, it said in the will that although all your family is Norwegian, you were born in England and you have started your education there and he wants you to continue going to English schools.”

“Oh Grandmamma!” I cried. “You don’t want to go and live in our English house, I know you don’t!”

“Of course I don’t,” she said. “But I am afraid I must. The will said that your mother felt the same way about it, and it is important to respect the wishes of the parents.”

There was no way out of it. We had to go to England, and my grandmother started making arrangements at once.

Related Characters: Grandmamma (speaker), Boy (speaker)
Page Number: 34-35
Explanation and Analysis:

Then suddenly, out of the corner of my eye, I caught sight of a woman standing immediately below me. She was looking up at me and smiling in the most peculiar way. […]

I noticed she was wearing a small black hat and she had black gloves on her hands and the gloves came nearly up to her elbows.

Gloves! She was wearing gloves!

I froze all over.

“I have a present for you,” she said […]

I didn’t answer.

“Come down out of that tree, little boy,” she said “and I shall give you the most exciting present you’ve ever had.” […]

Without taking her eyes from my face, she very slowly put one of those gloved hands into her purse and drew out a small green snake. She held it up for me to see.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma
Page Number: 43-44
Explanation and Analysis:
5. Summer Holidays Quotes

When there were only three weeks of the Summer Term left, an awful thing happened. My grandmother got pneumonia. She became very ill, and a trained nurse moved into the house to look after her. The doctor explained to me that pneumonia is not normally a dangerous illness nowadays because of penicillin, but when a person is more than eighty years old, as my grandmother was, then it is very dangerous indeed. He said he didn’t even dare move her to hospital in her condition, so she stayed in her bedroom and I hung about outside the door while oxygen cylinders and all sorts of other frightening things were taken in to her.

“Can I go in and see her?” I asked.

“No, dear,” the nurse said. “Not at the moment.”

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma
Page Number: 48-49
Explanation and Analysis:

I taught them to climb up the back of my neck onto the top of my head. I did this by putting cake crumbs in my hair.

On the very first morning after our arrival, the chambermaid was making my bed when one of my mice poked its head out from under the sheets. The maid let out a shriek that brought a dozen people running to see who was being murdered. I was reported to the Manager. There followed an unpleasant scene in the Manager’s office with the Manager, my grandmother, and me.

The Manager, whose name was Mr. Stringer, was a bristly man in a black tail-coat. “I cannot permit mice in my hotel, madam,” he said to my grandmother.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Mr. Stringer (speaker), Grand High Witch of All the World, Grandmamma
Page Number: 52
Explanation and Analysis:

The trick I was going to teach them today was tight-rope walking. It is not all that difficult to train an intelligent mouse to be an expert tight-rope walker provided you know exactly how to go about it. First, you must have a piece of string. I had that. Then you must have some good cake. […]

Now here’s what you do. You stretch the string tight between your two hands, but you start by keeping it very short, only about three inches. You put the mouse on your right hand and a little piece of cake on your left hand. The mouse is therefore only three inches away from the cake. […] He only has to take two steps along the string to reach this tasty morsel. He ventures forward, one paw on the string, then the other. If the mouse has a good sense of balance […] he will get across easily.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Mr. Stringer, Grandmamma
Page Number: 57-58
Explanation and Analysis:
7. Frizzled Like a Fritter Quotes

The first thing I noticed about this woman was her size. She was tiny, probably no more than four and a half feet tall. She looked quite young, I guessed about twenty-five or twenty-six, and she was very pretty. She had on a rather stylish long black dress that reached right to the ground and she wore black gloves that came up to her elbows. Unlike the others, she wasn’t wearing a hat.

She didn’t look to me like a witch at all, but she couldn’t possibly not be one, otherwise what on earth was she doing up there on the platform? And why, for heaven’s sake, were all the other witches gazing at her with such a mixture of adoration, awe, and fear?

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma, Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 65-66
Explanation and Analysis:
8. Formula 86 Delayed Action Mouse-Maker Quotes

“Each of you vill be buying for herself a sveet shop. You vill be buying the very best and most rrree-spectable sveet shops in Inkland.”

[…]

“I am vonting no tuppenny-ha’penny crrrummy little tobacco-selling-newspaper-sveet-shops!” shouted The Grand High Witch. “I am vonting you to get only the very best shops filled up high vith piles and piles of luscious sveets and tasty chocs!”

[…]

“You vill be having no trouble in getting vot you vont,” shouted The Grand High Witch, “Because you vill be offering four times as much as a shop is vurth and nobody is rrree-fusing an offer like that! Money is not a prrroblem to us vitches as you know very vell. I have brrrought vith me six trrrunks stuffed full of Inklish bank-notes, all new and crrrisp. And all of them,” she added with a fiendish leer, “all of them homemade.”

Related Characters: Grand High Witch of All the World (speaker), Boy
Page Number: 79
Explanation and Analysis:

“A mouse!” cried the witches. “What a frumptious thought!”

“Classrooms vill all be svorrrming vith mice!” shouted The Grand High Witch. “Chaos and pandemonium vill be rrreigning in every school in Inkland! Teachers vill be hopping up and down! Vimmen teachers vill be standing on desks and holding up skirts and yelling ‘Help, help, help!’”

“They will! They will!” cried the audience.

“And vot,” shouted The Grand High Witch, “is happening next in every school?”

“Tell us!” they cried. “Tell us, O Brainy One!”

The Grand High Witch stretched her stringy neck forward and grinned at the audience, showing two rows of pointed teeth, slightly blue. She raised her voice louder than ever and shouted, “Mouse-trrraps is coming out!”

Related Characters: Grand High Witch of All the World (speaker), Boy, Mrs. Jenkins, Grandmamma
Page Number: 83-84
Explanation and Analysis:
10. Bruno Jenkins Disappears Quotes

“Let me in!” came the boy’s voice from behind the doors. “Where are those chocolate bars you promised me? I’m here to collect! Dish them out!”

“He is not only smelly, he is also grrreedy,” said The Grand High Witch. “Rrreee-moof the chains from the doors and let him come in.” The extraordinary thing about her mask was that its lips moved quite naturally when she spoke. You really couldn’t see it was a mask at all.

One of the witches leapt to her feet and unfastened the chains. She opened the two huge doors. Then I heard her saying, “Why hello, little man. How lovely to see you. You have come for your chocolate bars, have you not? They are all ready for you. Do come in.”

Related Characters: Bruno Jenkins (speaker), Grand High Witch of All the World (speaker), Boy, Mr. Jenkins, Mrs. Jenkins
Page Number: 99
Explanation and Analysis:
11. The Ancient Ones Quotes

“Here is a sample of vot I am giving you,” shouted The Grand High Witch. She fished around in a pocket of her dress and brought out a very small bottle. She held it up and shouted, “In this tiny bottle is five hundred doses of Mouse-Maker! Is enough to turrrn five hundred children into mice!” I could see that the bottle was made of dark-blue glass and that it was very small, about the same size as the ones you can buy at the chemists with nose-drops in them. “Each of you ancient vuns vill get two of these bottles!” she shouted.

Related Characters: Grand High Witch of All the World (speaker), Boy
Page Number: 107-108
Explanation and Analysis:
13. Bruno Quotes

What’s so wonderful about being a little boy anyway? Why is that necessarily any better than being a mouse? I know that mice get hunted and they sometimes get poisoned or caught in traps. But little boys sometimes get killed, too. Little boys can be run over by motor-cars or they can die of some awful illness. Little boys have to go to school. Mice don’t. Mice don’t have to pass any exams. Mice don’t have to worry about money. Mice, as far as I can see, have only two enemies, humans and cats. My grandmother is a human, but I know for certain she will always love me whoever I am. And she never, thank goodness, keeps a cat. When mice grow up, they don’t ever have to go to war and fight against other mice. Mice, I felt pretty certain, all like each other. People don’t.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grand High Witch of All the World, Grandmamma
Page Number: 118-119
Explanation and Analysis:

“Your biggest problem at the moment is your parents. How are they going to take this? Will they treat you with sympathy and kindness?”

Bruno considered this for a moment. “I think,” he said, “that my father is going to be a bit put out.”

“And your mother?”

“She’s terrified of mice,” said Bruno.

“Then you’ve got a problem, haven’t you?”

“Why only me?” he said. “What about you?”

“My grandmother will understand perfectly,” I said. “She knows all about witches.”

Related Characters: Bruno Jenkins (speaker), Boy (speaker), Grandmamma, Mr. Jenkins, Mrs. Jenkins, Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 122
Explanation and Analysis:
14. Hello Grandmamma Quotes

My grandmother had come forward now in her armchair so that she was sitting right on the edge of it. Both her hands were cupped over the gold knob of the stick she always used when walking, and she was staring at me with eyes as bright as two stars.

Then I told her how The Grand High Witch had shot out the fiery white-hot sparks and how they had turned one of the other witches into a puff of smoke.

“I’ve heard about that!” my grandmother cried out excitedly. “But I never quite believed it! You are the first non-witch ever to see it happening! It is the Grand High Witch’s most famous punishment. It is known as ‘getting fried,’ and all the other witches are petrified of having it done to them!”

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker), Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 130
Explanation and Analysis:
15. The Mouse-Burglar Quotes

“Oh, hello,” came my grandmother’s voice. “I just dropped my knitting over the balcony by mistake. But it’s all right. I’ve got hold of one end of it. I can pull it up by myself, thank you all the same.” I marvelled at the coolness of her voice.

“Who vur you talking to just now?” snapped The Grand High Witch. “Who vur you telling to hurry up and come out qvickly?”

“I was talking to my little grandson,” I heard my grandmother saying. “He’s been in the bathroom for hours and it’s time he came out. He sits in there reading books and he forgets completely where he is. Do you have any children, my dear?”

“I do not!” shouted The Grand High Witch, as she came quickly back into the bedroom, slamming the balcony door behind her.

Related Characters: Grand High Witch of All the World (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker), Boy
Page Number: 143
Explanation and Analysis:
16. Mr and Mrs Jenkins Meet Bruno Quotes

“I’ll talk where I dashed well want to, madam,” Mr Jenkins said. “Come on now, out with it! If Bruno has broken a window or smashed your spectacles, I‘ll pay for the damage, but I’m not budging out of this seat!”

[…]

“Where is Bruno, anyway?” Mr Jenkins said. “Tell him to come here and see me.”

“He’s here already,” my grandmother said. “He’s in my handbag.” She patted the big floppy leather bag with her walking-stick.

“What the heck d’you mean he’s in your handbag?” Mr Jenkins shouted.

“Are you trying to be funny?” Mrs. Jenkins said, very prim.

“There’s nothing funny about this,” my grandmother said. “Your son has suffered a rather unfortunate mishap.”

“He’s always suffering mishaps,” Mr Jenkins said. “He suffers from overeating and then he suffers from wind. You should hear him after supper. He sounds like a brass band!”

Related Characters: Mr. Jenkins (speaker), Mrs. Jenkins (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker), Boy, Bruno Jenkins, Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 151-152
Explanation and Analysis:
18. In the Kitchen Quotes

Quite soon another waiter came in and shouted, “Everyone in the big RSPCC party wants the soup!” That’s when I started sitting up and taking notice. I was all ears now. I edged a bit farther around the garbage-bin so that I could see everything that was going on in the kitchen. A man with a tall white hat who must have been the head chef shouted, “Put the soup for the big party in the large silver soup-tureen!”

I saw the head chef place a huge silver basin on the wooden side-bench that ran along the whole length of the kitchen against the opposite wall. Into that silver basin is where the soup is going, I told myself. So that’s where the stuff in my little bottle must go as well.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 165-166
Explanation and Analysis:

I thought to myself, Oh boy, this is the life! What fun it is to be a mouse doing an exciting job like this! I kept right on swinging. I swung most marvellously from handle to handle, and I was enjoying myself so much that I completely forgot I was in full view of anyone in the kitchen who might happen to glance upwards. What came next happened so quickly I had no time to save myself. I heard a man’s voice yelling, “A mouse! Look at that dirty little mouse!” And I caught a glimpse below me of a white-coated figure in a tall white hat and then there was a flash of steel as the carving-knife whizzed through the air and there was a shoot of pain at the end of my tail and suddenly I was falling and falling head-first toward the floor.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker)
Page Number: 168-169
Explanation and Analysis:
19. Mr Jenkins and His Son Quotes

“Bruno is a mouse,” my grandmother said, calm as ever.

“He most certainly is not a mouse!” shouted Mr Jenkins.

“Oh yes I am!” Bruno said, poking his head up out of the handbag.

Mr Jenkins leapt about three feet into the air.

“Hello, Dad” Bruno said. He had a silly sort of mousy grin on his face.

Mr Jenkins’s mouth dropped open so wide I could see the gold fillings in his back teeth.

“Don’t worry, Dad,” Bruno went on. “It’s not as bad as all that. Just so long as the cat doesn’t get me.”

[…]

“B-b-but B-B-Bruno!” stammered Mr Jenkins again. “H-how did this happen?” The poor man had no wind left in his sails at all.

“Witches,” my grandmother said. “The witches did it.”

“I can’t have a mouse for a son!” shrieked Mr Jenkins.

Related Characters: Grandmamma (speaker), Mr. Jenkins (speaker), Bruno Jenkins (speaker), Boy, Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 180-181
Explanation and Analysis:
20. The Triumph Quotes

You could hear Mrs Jenkins’s shrill voice all over the room. “Herbert!” it was screaming. “Herbert, get me out of here! There’s mice everywhere! They’ll go up my skirts!” […]

My grandmother advanced upon them and thrust Bruno into Mr Jenkins’s hand. “Here’s your little boy,” she said. “He needs to go on a diet.”

“Hi, Dad!” Bruno said. “Hi, Mum!”

Mrs Jenkins screamed even louder. My grandmother, with me in her hand, turned and marched out of the room. She went straight across the hotel lobby and out through the front entrance into the open air.

Outside it was a lovely warm evening and I could hear the waves breaking on the beach just across the road from the hotel.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Bruno Jenkins (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker), Mrs. Jenkins (speaker), Mr. Jenkins
Page Number: 188
Explanation and Analysis:
21. The Heart of a Mouse Quotes

“A mouse-person will almost certainly live for three times as long as an ordinary mouse,” my grandmother said. “About nine years.”

“Good!” I cried. “That’s great! It’s the best news I’ve ever had!”

“Why do you say that?” she asked, surprised.

“Because I would never want to live longer than you,” I said. “I couldn’t stand being looked after by anybody else.”

[…]

“How old are you, Grandmamma?” I asked.

“I’m eighty-six,” she said.

“Will you live another eight or nine years?”

“I might,” she said, “with a bit of luck.”

“You’ve got to,” I said. “Because by then I’ll be a very old mouse and you’ll be a very old grandmother and soon after that we’ll both die together.”

“That would be perfect,” she said.

Related Characters: Boy (speaker), Grandmamma (speaker)
Page Number: 195-196
Explanation and Analysis:
22. It’s Off to Work We Go! Quotes

“So we have work to do, you and I!” she cried out. “We have a great task ahead of us! Thank heavens you’re a mouse! A mouse can go anywhere! All I’ll have to do is put you down somewhere near The Grand High Witch’s Castle and you will very easily be able to get inside it and creep around looking and listening to your heart’s content!”

“I will! I will!” I answered. “No one will ever see me! Moving about in a big Castle will be child’s play compared with going into a crowded kitchen full of cooks and waiters!”

“You could spend days in there if necessary!” my grandmother cried. In her excitement, she was waving her stick all over the place, and suddenly she knocked over a tall and very beautiful vase […] “Forget it,” she said. “It’s only a Ming.”

Related Characters: Grandmamma (speaker), Boy (speaker), Grand High Witch of All the World
Page Number: 202-203
Explanation and Analysis: