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Question 1 - Chapter VII
How, as it were, they Deprive Man of his Virile Member.
We have already
shown that they can take away the male organ, not indeed by actually despoiling
the human body of it, in the manner which we have already declared. And of this
we shall instance a few examples.
In the town of Ratisbon a certain
young man who had an intrigue with a girl, wishing to leave her, lost his
member; that is to say, some glamour was cast over it so that he could see or
touch nothing but his smooth body. In his worry over this he went to a tavern to
drink wine; and after he had sat there for a while he got into conversation with
another woman who was there, and told her the cause of his sadness, explaining
everything, and demonstrating in his body that it was so. The woman was astute,
and asked whether he suspected anyone; and when he named such a one, unfolding
the whole matter, she said: "If persuasion is not enough, you must use some
violence, to induce her to restore to you your health." So in the evening
the young man watched the way by which the witch was in the habit of going, and
finding her, prayed her to restore to him the health of his body. And when she
maintained that she was innocent and knew nothing about it, he fell upon her,
and winding a towel tightly about her neck, choked her, saying: "Unless you
give me back my health, you shall die at my hands." Then she, being unable
to cry out, and growing black, said: "Let me go, and I will heal you."
The young man then relaxed the pressure of the towel, and the witch touched him
with her hand between the thighs, saying: "Now you have what you
desire." And the young man, as he afterwards said, plainly felt, before he
had verified it by looking or touching, that his member had been restored to him
by the mere touch of the witch.
A similar experience is narrated by a
certain venerable Father from the Dominican House of Spires, well known in the
Order for the honest of his life and for his learning. "One day," he
says, "while I was hearing confessions, a young man came to me and, in the
course of his confession, woefully said that he had lost his member. Being
astonished at this, and not being willing to give it easy credence, since the
opinion of the wise it is a mark of light-heartedness to believe too easily, I
obtained proof of it when I saw nothing on the young man's removing his clothes
and showing the place. Then, using the wisest counsel I could, I asked whether
he suspected anyone of having so bewitched him. And the young man said that he
did suspect someone, but that she was absent and living in Worms. Then I said:
'I advise you to go to her as soon as possible and try your utmost to soften her
with gentle words and promises'; and he did so. For he came back after a few
days and thanked me, saying that he was whole and had recovered everything. And
I believed his words, but again proved them by the evidence of my eyes."
But there are some points to be noted
for the clearer understanding of what has already been written concerning this
matter. First, it must in no way be believed that such members are really torn
right away from the body, but that they are hidden by the devil through some
prestidigitory art so that they can be neither seen nor felt. And this is proved
by the authorities and by argument; although is has been treated of before,
where Alexander of Hales says that a Prestige, properly understood, is an
illusion of the devil, which is not caused by any material change, but exists
only in the perceptions of him who is deluded, either in his interior or
exterior senses.
With reference to these words it is
to be noted that, in the case we are considering, two of the exterior senses,
namely, those of sight and touch, are deluded, and not the interior senses,
namely, common-sense, fancy, imagination, thought, and memory. (But S. Thomas
says they are only four, as has been told before, reckoning fancy and
imagination as one; and with some reason, for there is little difference between
imagining and fancying. See S. Thomas, I, 79.) And these senses, and not only
the exterior senses, are affected when it is not a case of hiding something, but
the causing something to appear to a man either when he is aware or asleep.
As when a man who is awake sees
things otherwise than as they are; such as seeing someone devour a horse with
its rider, or thinking he sees a man transformed into a beast, or thinking that
he is himself a beast and must associate with beasts. For then the exterior
senses are deluded and are employed by the interior senses. For by the power of
devils, with God's permission, mental images long retained in the treasury of
such images, which is the memory, are drawn out, not from the intellectual
understanding in which such images are stored, but from the memory, which is the
repository of mental images, and is situated at the back of the head, and are
presented to the imaginative faculty. And so strongly are they impressed on that
faculty that a man has an inevitable impulse to imagine a horse or a beast, when
the devil draws from the memory an image of a horse or a beast; and so he is
compelled to think that he sees with his external eyes such a beast when there
is actually no such beast to see; but it seems to be so by reason of the
impulsive force of the devil working by means of those images.
And it need not seem wonderful that
devils can do this, when even a natural defect is able to effect the same
result, as is shown in the case of frantic and melancholy men, and in maniacs
and some drunkards, who are unable to discern truly. For frantic men think they
see marvellous things, such as beasts and other horrors, when in actual fact
they see nothing. See above, in the question, Whether witches can turn the minds
of men to love and hatred; where many thing are noted.
And, finally, the reason is
self-evident. For since the devil has power over inferior things, except only
the soul, therefore he is able to effect certain changes in those things, when
God allows, so that things appear to be otherwise than they are. And this he
does, as I have said, either by confusing and deluding the organ of sight so
that a clear thing appears cloudy; just as after weeping, owing to the collected
humours, the light appears to different from what it was before. Or by operating
on the imaginative faculty by a transmutation of mental images, as has been
said. Or by some agitation of various humours, so that matters which are earthy
and dry seem to be fire or water: as some people make everyone in the house
strip themselves naked under the impression that they are swimming in water.
It may be asked further with
reference to the above method of devils, whether this sort of illusions can
happen indifferently to the good and to the wicked: just as other bodily
infirmities can, as will be shown later, be brought by witches even upon those
who are in a state of grace. To this question, following the words of Cassian in
his Second Collation of the Abbot Sirenus, we must answer that they
cannot. And from this it follows that all who are deluded in this way are
presumed to be in deadly sin. For he says, as is clear from the words of S.
Antony: The devil can in no way enter the mind or body of any man, nor has the
power to penetrate into the thoughts of anybody, unless such a person has first
become destitute of all holy thoughts, and is quite bereft and denuded of
spiritual contemplation.
This agrees with Boethius where he
says in the Consolation of Philosophy: We had given you such arms that,
if you had not thrown them away, you would have been preserved from infirmity.
Also Cassian tells in the same place
of two Pagan witches, each in his own way malicious, who by their witchcraft
sent a succession of devils into the cell of S. Antony for the purpose of
driving him from there by their temptations; being infected with hatred for the
holy man because a great number of people visited him every day. And though
these devils assailed him with the keenest of spurs to his thoughts, yet he
drove them away by crossing himself on the forehead and breast, and by
prostrating himself in earnest prayer.
Therefore we may say that all who are
so deluded by devils, not reckoning any other bodily infirmities, are lacking in
the gift of divine grace. And so it is said in Tobias vi: The devil has
power against those who are subject to their lusts.
This is also substantiated by what we
told in the First Part in the question, Whether witches can change men into the
shapes of beasts. For we told of a girl who was turned into a filly, as she
herself and, except S. Macharius, all who looked at her were persuaded. But the
devil could not deceive the senses of the holy man; and when she was brought to
him to be healed, he saw true woman and not a horse, while on the other hand
everyone else exclaimed that she seemed to be a horse. And the Saint, by his
prayers, freed her and the others from that illusion, saying that this had
happened to her because she had not attended sufficiently to holy things, nor
used as she should Holy Confession and the Eucharist. And for this reason,
because in her honesty she would not consent to the shameful proposal of a young
man, who had caused a Jew who was a witch to bewitch the girl so that, by the
power of the devil, he turned her into a filly.
We may summarize our conclusions as
follows: - Devils can, for their profit and probation, injure the good in their
fortunes, that is, in such exterior things as riches, fame, and bodily health.
This is clear from the case of the Blessed Job, who was afflicted by the devil
in such matters. But such injuries are not of their own causing, so that they
cannot be led or driven into any sin, although they can be tempted both inwardly
and outwardly in the flesh. But the devils cannot afflict the good with this
sort of illusions, either actively or passively.
Not actively, but deluding their
senses as they do those of others who are not in a state of grace. And not
passively, by taking away their male organs by some glamour. For in these two
respects they could never injure Job, especially in regard to the venereal act;
for he was of such continence that he was able to say: I have vowed a vow with
my eyes that I shall never think about a virgin, and still less about another
man's wife. Nevertheless the devil knows that he has great power over sinners
(see S. Luke xi: When a strong man armed keepeth his palace, his goods
are in peace).
But it may be asked, as to illusions
in respect of the male organ, whether, granted that the devil cannot impose this
illusion on those in a state of grace in a passive way, he cannot still do so in
an active sense: the argument being that the man in a state of grace is deluded
because he ought to see the member in its right place, when he who thinks it has
been taken away from him, as well as other bystanders, does not see in in its
place; but if this is conceded, it seems to be contrary to what has been said.
It can be said that there is not so much force in the active as in the passive
loss; meaning by active loss, not his who bears the loss, but his who sees the
loss from without, as is self-evident. Therefore, although a man in a state of
grace can se the loss of another, and to that extent the devil can delude his
senses; yet he cannot passively suffer such loss in his own body, as, for
example, to be deprived of his member, since he is not subject to list. In the
same way the converse is true, as the Angel said to Tobias: Those who are given
to lust, the devil has power over them.
And what, then, is to be thought of
those witches who in this way sometimes collect male organs in great numbers, as
many as twenty or thirty members together, and put them in a bird's nest, or
shut them up in a box, where they move themselves like living members, and eat
oats and corn, as has been seen by many and is a matter of common report? It is
to be said that it is all done by devil's work and illusion, for the senses of
those who see them are deluded in the way we have said. For a certain man tells
that, when he had lost his member, he approached a known witch to ask her to
restore it to him. She told the afflicted man to climb a certain tree, and that
he might take which he liked out of the nest in which there were several
members. And when he tried to take a big one, the witch said: You must not take
that one; adding, because it belongs to a parish priest.
All these things are caused by devils
through an illusion or glamour, in the manner we have said, by confusing the
organ of vision by transmuting the mental images in the imaginative faculty. And
it must not be said that these members which are shown are devils in assumed
members, just as they sometimes appear to witches and men in assumed aerial
bodies, and converse with them. And the reason is that they effect this thing by
an easier method, namely, by drawing out an inner mental image from the
repository of the memory, and impressing it on the imagination.
And if anyone wishes to say that they
could go to work in a similar way, when they are said to converse with witches
and other men in assumed bodies; that is, that they could cause such apparitions
by changing the mental images in the imaginative faculty, so that when men
thought the devils were present in assumed bodies, they were really nothing but
an illusions caused by such a change of the mental images in the inner
perceptions.
It is to be said that, if the devil
had no other purpose than merely to show himself in human form, then there would
be no need for him to appear in an assumed body, since he could effect his
purpose well enough by the aforesaid illusion. But this is not so; for he has
another purpose, namely, to speak and eat with them, and to commit other
abominations. Therefore it is necessary that he should himself be present,
placing himself actually in sight in an assumed body. For, as S. Thomas says,
Where the Angel's power is, there he operates.
And it may be asked, if the devil by
himself and without any witch takes away anyone's virile member, whether there
is any difference between one sort of deprivation and the other. In addition to
what has been said in the First Part of this work on the question, Whether
witches can take away a member, he does actually take it away, and it is
actually restored when it has to be restored. Secondly, as it is not taken away
without injury, so it is not without pain. Thirdly, that he never does this
unless compelled by a good Angel, for by so doing he cuts off a great source of
profit to him; for he knows that he can work more witchcraft on that act than on
other human acts. For God permits him to do more injury to that than to other
human acts, as has been said. But none of the above points apply when he works
through the agency of a witch, with God's permission.
And if it is asked whether the devil
is more apt to injure men and creatures by himself than through a witch, it can
be said that there is no comparison between the two cases. For he is infinitely
more apt to do harm through the agency of witches. First, because he thus gives
greater offence to God, by usurping to himself a creature dedicated to Him.
Secondly, because when God is the more offended, He allows him the more power of
injuring men. And thirdly, for his own gains, which he places in the perdition
of souls.
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