[ Yelling ] A witch!
>> We have found a
witch. May we burn her?
[ Yelling ]
>> How do you know
she is a witch?
>> She looks like one.
[ Yelling ]
>> [Inaudible] forward.
>> I'm not a witch.
I'm not a witch.
>> But you are dressed as one.
>> They dressed me up like this.
[ Yelling ]
And this isn't my nose.
It's a false one.
[ Animal Sounds ]
>> Well, we did do the nose.
>> The nose?
>> And the hat.
>> But she's a witch.
[ Yelling ]
>> Did you dress
her up like this?
>> No.
[ Yelling ]
>> Yes. Yes.
>> Yes.
>> A bit [multiple speakers].
A bit. She has got a wart.
>> What makes you
think she is a witch?
>> Well, she turned
me into a newt.
>> A newt?
>> I got better.
Burn her! [ Yelling ]
>> Quiet. Quiet.
Quiet. There are ways of
telling whether she is a witch.
>> I don't know [multiple
speakers].
>> Tell me, what do
you do with witches?
Burn her! [ Yelling ]
And what do you burn
apart from witches?
>> More witches.
>> Shh.
>> Wood?
>> So why do witches burn?
[ Silence ]
>> Because they're made of... wood.
>> Good.
>> Oh yeah.
>> So, how do we tell
whether she is made of wood?
>> Build a bridge out of her.
>> Ah, but can you not also
make bridges out of stone?
>> Oh yeah.
>> Oh yeah, true.
>> But does wood sink in water?
>> No. No.
It floats.
It floats.
>> Throw her into the pond.
[ Yelling ]
>> What also floats in water?
>> Bread, apples.
>> Very small rocks.
>> Cider. Great gravy.
Cherries [multiple speakers].
Lead. Lead.
>> A duck.
>> Exactly.
So logically if she
weighs the same as a duck?
>> She's made of wood.
>> And therefore?
>> A witch.
>> A witch.
[ Yelling ]
>> We should use
my largest scales.
[ Yelling ]
>> All right.
Remove the supports.
[ Banging Noise ]
[ Yelling ]
>> It's a [inaudible].
[ Yelling ]