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Question 1 - Chapter I
Of the several Methods by which Devils through Witches Entice and
Allure the Innocent to the Increase of that Horrid Craft and Company.
There are three
methods above all by which devils, through the agency of witches, subvert the
innocent, and by which that perfidy is continually being increased. And the
first is through weariness, through inflicting grievous losses in their temporal
possessions. For, as S. Gregory says: The devil often tempts us to give way from
very weariness. And it is to be understood that it is within the power of a man
to resist such temptation; but that God permits it as a warning to us not to
give way to sloth. And in this sense is Judges ii to be understood, where
it says that God did not destroy those nations, that through them He might prove
the people of Israel; and it speaks of the neighbouring nations of the
Canaanites, Jebusites, and others. And in our time the Hussites and other
Heretics are permitted, so that they cannot be destroyed. Devils, therefore, by
means of witches, so afflict their innocent neighbours with temporal losses,
that they are to beg the suffrages of witches, and at length to submit
themselves to their counsels; as many experiences have taught us.
We know a stranger in the diocese of
Augsburg, who before he was forty-four years old lost all his horses in
succession through witchcraft. His wife, being afflicted with weariness by
reason of this, consulted with witches, and after following their counsels,
unwholesome as they were, all the horses which he bought after that (for he was
a carrier) were preserved from witchcraft.
And how many women have complained to
us in our capacity of Inquisitors, that when their cows have been injured by
being deprived of their milk, or in any other way, they have consulted with
suspected witches, and even been given remedies by them, on condition that they
would promise something to some spirit; and when they asked what they would have
to promise, the witches answered that it was only a small thing, that they
should agree to execute the instructions of that master with regard to certain
observances during the Holy Offices of the Church, or to observe some silent
reservations in their confessions to priests.
Here it is to be noted that, as has
already been hinted, this iniquity has small and scant beginnings, as that of
the time of the elevation of the Body of Christ they spit on the ground, or shut
their eyes, or mutter some vain words. We know a woman who yet lives, protected
by the secular law, who, when the priest at the celebration of the Mass blesses
the people, saying, Dominus uobiscum, always adds to herself these words
in the vulgar tongue "Kehr mir die Zung im Arss umb." Or they even say
some such thing at confession after they have received absolution, or do not
confess everything, especially mortal sins, and so by slow degrees are led to a
total abnegation of the Faith, and to the abominable profession of sacrilege.
This, or something like it, is the
method which witches use towards honest matrons who are little given to carnal
vices but concerned for worldly profit. But towards young girls, more given to
bodily lusts and pleasures, they observe a different method, working through
their carnal desires and the pleasures of the flesh.
Here it is to be noted that the devil
is more eager and keen to tempt the good than the wicked, although in actual
practice he tempts the wicked more than the good, because more aptitude for
being tempted is found in the wicked than in the good. Therefore the devil tries
all the harder to seduce all the more saintly virgins and girls; and there is
reason in this, besides many examples of it.
For since he already possesses the
wicked, but not the good, he tries the harder to seduce into his power the good
whom he does not, than the wicked whom he does, possess. Similarly any earthly
prince takes up arms against those who do not acknowledge his rule rather than
those who do not oppose him.
And here is an example. Two witches
were burned in Ratisbon, as we shall tell later where we treat of their methods
of raising tempests. And one of them, who was a bath-woman, had confessed among
other things the following: that she had suffered much injury from the devil for
this reason. There was a certain devout virgin, the daughter of a very rich man
whom there is no need to name, since the girl is now dead in the disposition of
Divine mercy, and we would not that his thought should be perverted by evil; and
the witch was ordered to seduce her by inviting her to her house on some Feast
Day, in order that the devil himself, in the form of a young man, might speak
with her. And although she had tried very often to accomplish this, yet whenever
she had spoken to the young girl, she had protected herself with the sign of the
Holy Cross. And no one can doubt that she did this at the instigation of a holy
Angel, to repel the works of the devil.
Another virgin living in the diocese
of Strasburg confessed to one of us that she was alone on a certain Sunday in
her father's house, when an old woman of that town came to visit here and, among
other scurrilous words, made the following proposition; that, if she liked, she
would take her to a place where there were some young men unknown to all the
townsmen. And when, said the virgin, I consented, and followed her to her house,
the old woman said, "See, we go upstairs to an upper room where the young
men are; but take care not to make the sign of the Cross." I gave her my
promise not to do so, and as she was going up before me and I was going up the
stairs, I secretly crossed myself. At the top of the stairs, when we were both
standing outside the room, the hag turned angrily upon me with a horrible
countenance, and looking at me said, "Curse you! Why did you cross
yourself? Go away from here. Depart in the name of the devil." And so I
returned unharmed to my home.
It can be seen from this how craftily
that old enemy labours in the seduction of souls. For it was in this way that
the bath-woman whom we have mentioned, and who was burned, confessed that she
had been seduced by some old women. A different method, however, was used in the
case of her companion witch, who had met the devil in human form on the road
while she herself was going to visit her lover for the purpose of fornication.
And when the Incubus devil had seen her, and has asked her whether she
recognized him, and she had said that she did not, he had answered" "I
am the devil; and if you wish, I will always be ready at your pleasure, and will
not fail you in any necessity." And when she had consented, she continued
for eighteen years, up to the end of her life, to practise diabolical filthiness
with him, together with a total abnegation of the Faith as a necessary
condition.
There is also a third method of
temptation through the way of sadness and poverty. For when girls have been
corrupted, and have been scorned by their lovers after they have immodestly
copulated with them in the hope and promise of marriage with them, and have
found themselves disappointed in all their hopes and everywhere despised, they
turn to the help and protection of devils; either for the sake of vengeance by
bewitching those lovers or the wives they have married, or for the sake of
giving themselves up to every sort of lechery. Alas! experience tells us that
there is no number to such girls, and consequently the witches that spring from
this class are innumerable. Let us give a few out of many examples.
There is a place in the diocese of
Brixen where a young man deposed the following facts concerning the bewitchment
of his wife.
"In the time of my youth I loved
a girl who importuned me to marry her; but I refused her and married another
girl from another country. But wishing for friendship's sake to please her, I
invited her to the wedding. She came, and while the other honest women were
wishing us luck and offering gifts, she raised her hand and, in the hearing of
the other women who were standing round, said, You will have few days of health
after to-day. My bride was frightened, since she did not know her (for, as I
have said, I had married her from another country), and asked the bystanders who
she was who had threatened her in that way; and they said that she was a loose
and vagrom woman. None the less, it happened just as she had said. For after a
few days my wife was so bewitched that she lost the use of all her limbs, and
even now, after ten years, the effects of witchcraft can be seen on her
body."
If we were to collect all the similar
instances which have occurred in one town of that diocese, it would take a whole
book; but they are written and preserved at the house of the Bishop of Brixen,
who still lives to testify to their truth, astounding and unheard-of though they
are.
But we must not pass over in silence
one unheard-of and astonishing instance. A certain high-born Count in the ward
of Westerich, in the diocese of Strasburg, married a noble girl of equal birth;
but after he had celebrated the wedding, he was for three years unable to know
her carnally, on account, as the event proved, of a certain charm which
prevented him. In great anxiety, and not knowing what to do, he called loudly on
the Saints of God. It happened that he went to the State of Metz to negotiate
some business; and while he was talking about the streets and squares of the
city, attended by his servants and domiciles, he met a certain women who had
formerly been his mistress. Seeing her, and not at all thinking of the spell
that was on him, he spontaneously addressed her kindly for the sake of their old
friendship, asking her how she did, and whether she was well. And she, seeing
the Count's gentleness, in her turn asked very particularly after his health and
affairs; and when he answered that he was well, and that everything prospered
with him, she was astonished and was silent for a time. The Count, seeing her
thus astonished, again spoke kindly to her, inviting her to converse with him.
So she inquired after his wife, and received a similar reply, that she was in
all respects well. Then she asked if he had any children; and the Count said he
had three sons, one born in each year. At that she was more astonished, and was
again silent for a while. And the Count asked her, Why, my dear, do you make
such careful inquiries? I am sure that you congratulate my on my happiness. Then
she answered, Certainly I congratulate you; but curse that old woman who said
she would bewitch your body so that you could not have connexion with your wife!
And in proof of this, there is a pot in the well in the middle of your yard
containing certain objects evilly bewitched, and this was placed there in order
that, as long as its contents were preserved intact, for so long you would be
unable to cohabit. But see! it is all in vain, and I am glad, etc. On his return
home the Count did not delay to have the well drained; and, finding the pot,
burned its contents and all, whereupon he immediately recovered the virility
which he had lost. Wherefore the Countess again invited all the nobility to a
fresh wedding celebration, saying that she was now the Lady of that castle and
estate, after having for so long remained a virgin. For the sake of the Count's
reputation it is not expedient to name that castle and estate; but we have
related this story in order that the truth of the matter may be known, to bring
so great a crime into open detestation.
From this it is clear that witches
use various methods to increase their numbers. For the above-mentioned woman,
because she had been supplanted by the Count's wife, case that spell upon the
Count with the help of another witches; and this is how one witchcraft brings
innumerable others in its train.
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