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Question II - Chapter I
The Remedies prescribed by the Holy Church against Incubus and Succubus
Devils.
In the foregoing chapters on the
First Question we have treated of the methods of bewitching men, animals and the
fruits of the earth, and especially of the behaviour of witches in their own
persons; how they seduce young girls in order to increase their numbers; what is
their method of profession and of offering homage; how they offer to devils
their own children and the children of others; and how they are transported from
place to place. Now I say that there is no remedy for such practises, unless
witches be entirely eradicated by the judges, or at least punished as an example
to all who may wish to imitate them; but we are not immediately treating of this
point, which will be dealt with in the last Part of this work, where we set
forth the twenty ways of proceeding against and sentencing witches.
For the present we are concerned only
with the remedies against the injuries which they inflict; and first how men who
are bewitched can be cured; secondly, beasts, and thirdly, how the fruits of the
earth may be secured from blight or phylloxera.
With regard to the bewitchment of
human beings by means of Incubus and Succubus devils, it is to be noted that
this can happen in three ways. First, when women voluntarily prostitute
themselves to Incubus devils. Secondly, when men have connexion with Succubus
devils; yet it does not appear that men thus devilishly fornicate with the same
full degree of culpability; for men, being by nature intellectually stronger
than women, are more apt to abhor such practises.
There is in the town of Coblenz a
poor man who is bewitched in this way. In the presence of his wife he is in the
habit of acting after the manner of men with women, that is to say, of
practising coition, as it were, and he continues to do this repeatedly, nor have
the cries and urgent appeals of his wife any effect in making him desist. And
after he has fornicated thus two or three times, he bawls out, "We are
going to start all over again"; when actually there is no person visible to
mortal sight lying with him. And after an incredible number of such bouts, the
poor man at last sinks to the floor utterly exhausted. When he has recovered his
strength a little and is asked how this happened to him, and whether he has had
any women with him, he answers that he saw nothing, but his mind is in some way
possessed so that he can by no means refrain from such priapism. And indeed he
harbours a great suspicion that a certain woman bewitched him in this way,
because he had offended her, and she had cursed him with threatening words,
telling him what she would like to happen to him.
But there are no laws or ministers of
justice which can proceed to the avenging of so great a crime with no other
warrant than a vague charge or a grave suspicion; for it is held that no one
ought to be condemned unless he has been convicted by his own confession, or by
the evidence of three trustworthy witnesses, since the mere fact of the crime
coupled with even the gravest suspicions against some person is not sufficient
to warrant the punishment of that person. But this matter will be dealt with
later.
As for instances where young maidens
are molested by Incubus devils in this way, it would take too long to mention
even those that have been known to happen in our own time, for there are very
many well-attested stories of such bewitchments. But the great difficulty of
finding a remedy for such afflictions can be illustrated from a story told by
Thomas of Brabant in his Book on Bees.
I saw, he writes, and heard the
confession of a virgin in a religious habit, who said at first that she had
never been a consenting party to fornication, but at the same time have been
known in this way. This I could not believe, but narrowly charged and exhorted
her, with the most solemn adjurations, to speak the truth on peril of her very
soul. At last, weeping bitterly, she acknowledged that she had been corrupted
rather in mind than in body; and that though she had afterwards grieved almost
to death, and had daily confessed with tears, yet by no device or study or art
could she be delivered from an Incubus devil, nor yet by the sign of the Cross,
nor by Holy Water, which are specially ordained for the expulsion of devils, nor
even by the Sacrament of the Body of Our Lord, which even the Angels fear. But
at last after many years of prayer and fasting she was delivered.
It may be believed (saving a better
judgement) that, after she repented and confessed her sin, the Incubus devil
should be regarded rather in the light of a punishment for sin than as a sin in
itself.
A devout nun, named Christina, in the
Low Country of the Duchy of Brabant, told me the following concerning this same
woman. On the vigil of one Pentacost the woman came to her complaining that she
dared not take the Sacrament because of the importunate molestation of a devil.
Christina, pitying her, said: "Go, and rest assured that you will receive
the Body of Our Lord to-morrow; for I will take your punishment upon
myself." So she went away joyfully, and after praying the night slept in
peace, and rose up in the morning and communicated in all tranquility of the
soul. But Christina, not thinking of the punishment she had taken upon herself,
went to her rest in the evening, and as she lay in bed hear, as it were, a
violent attack being made upon her; and, seizing whatever it was by the throat,
tried to throw it off. She lay down again, but was again molested, and rose up
in terror; and this happened many times, whilst all the straw of her bed was
turned over and thrown about everywhere, so at length she perceived that she was
being persecuted by the malice of a devil. Thereupon she left her pallet, and
passed a sleepless night; and when she wished to pray, she was so tormented by
the devil that she said she had never suffered so much before. In the morning,
therefore, saying to the other woman, "I renounce your punishment, and I am
hardly alive to renounce it," she escaped from the violence of that wicked
tempter. From this it can be seen how difficult it is to cure this sort of evil,
whether or not it is due to witchcraft.
However, there are still some means
by which these devils may be driven away, of which Nider writes in his Formicarius.
He says that there are five ways by which girls or men can be delivered: first,
by Sacramental Confession; second, by the Sacred Sign of the Cross, or by the
recital of the Angelic Salutation; third, by the use of exorcisms; fourth, by
moving to another place; and fifth, by means of excommunication prudently
employed by holy men. It is evident from what has been said that the first two
methods did not avail the nun; but they are not on that account to be neglected,
for that which cures one person does not necessarily cure another, and
conversely. And it is a recorded fact that Incubus devils have often been driven
away by the Lord's Prayer, or by the sprinkling of Holy Water, and also
especially by the Angelic Salutation.
For S. Caesarius tells in his Dialogue
that, after a certain priest had hanged himself, his concubine entered a
convent, where she was carnally solicited by an Incubus. She drove him away by
crossing herself and using Holy Water, yet he immediately returned. But when she
recited the Angelic Salutation, he vanished like an arrow shot from a bow; still
he came back, although he did not dare to come near her, because of the Ave
MARIA.
S. Caesarius also refers to the
remedy of Sacramental Confession. For he says that the aforesaid concubine was
entirely abandoned by the Incubus after she was clean confessed. He tells also
of a man in Leyden who was plagued by a Succubus, and was entirely delivered
after Sacramental Confession.
He adds yet another example, of an
enclosed nun, a contemplative, whom an Incubus would not leave in spite of
prayers and confession and other religious exercises. For he persisted in
forcing his way to her bed. But when, acting on the advice of a certain
religious man, she uttered the word Benedicite, the devil at once left her.
Of the fourth method, that of moving
to another place, he says that a certain priest's daughter had been defiled by
an Incubus and driven frantic with grief; but when she went away across the
Rhine, she was left in peace by the Incubus. Her father, however, because he had
sent her away, was so afflicted by the devil that he died within three days.
He also maintains a woman who was
often molested by an Incubus in her own bed, and asked a devout friend of hers
to come and sleep with her. She did so, and was troubled all night with the
utmost uneasiness and disquiet, and then the first woman was left in peace.
William of Paris notes also that Incubus seem chiefly to molest women and girls
with beautiful hair; either because they devote themselves too much to the care
and adornment of their hair, or because they are boastfully vain about it, or
because God in His goodness permits this so that women may be afraid to entice
men by the very means by which the devils wish them to entice men.
The fifth method, that of
excommunication, which is perhaps the same as exorcism, is exemplified in a
history of S. Bernard. In Aquitaine a woman had for six years been molested by
an Incubus with incredible carnal abuse and lechery; and she heard the Incubus
threaten her that she must not go near the holy man, who was coming that way,
saying: "It will avail you nothing: for when he was gone away, I, who have
till now been your lover, will become the cruellest of tyrants to you."
None the less she went to S. Bernard, and he said to her: "Take my staff
and set it in your bed, and may the devil do what he can." When she had
done this, the devil did not dare to enter the woman's room, but threatened her
terribly from outside, saying that he would persecute her when S. Bernard had
gone away. When S. Bernard heard this from the woman, he called the people
together, bidding them carry lighted candles in their hands, and, with the whole
assembly which was gathered, excommunicated the devil, forbidding him evermore
to approach that woman or any other. And so she was delivered from that
punishment.
Here it is to be noted that the power
of the Keys granted to S. Peter and his successors, which resounds on the earth,
is really a power of healing granted to the Church on behalf of travellers who
are subject to the jurisdiction of the Papal power; therefore is seems wonderful
that even the Powers of the air can be warded off by this virtue. But it must be
remembered that persons who are molested by devils are under the jurisdiction of
the Pope and his Keys; and therefore it is not surprising if such Powers are
indirectly kept at bay by the virtue of the Keys, just as by the same virtue the
souls in purgatory can indirectly by delivered from the pains of fire; insasmuch
as this Power availeth upon the earth, ay, and to the relief of souls that are
under the earth.
But it is not seemly to discuss the
Power of the Keys granted to the Head of the Church as Christ's Vicar; since it
is know that, for the use of the Church, Christ granted to the Church and His
Vicar as much power as it is possible for God to grant to mere man.
And it is piously to be believed
that, when infirmities inflicted by witches through the power of devils,
together with the witches and devils themselves, are excommunicated, those who
were afflicted will no longer be tormented; and that they will be delivered all
the sooner by the use of other lawful exorcisms in addition.
There is a common report current in
the districts of the river Etsch, as also in other places, that by the
permission of God a swarm of locusts came and devoured all the vines, green
leaves and crops; and that they were suddenly put to flight and dispersed by
means of this kind of excommunication and cursing. Now it any wish that this
should ascribed to some holy man, and not to the virtue of the Keys, let ie be
so, in the name of the Lord; but of one thing we are certain, that both the
power to perform miracles and the power of the Keys necessarily presuppose a
condition of grace in him who performs that act of grace, since both these
powers proceed from grace granted to men who are in a state of grace.
Again, it is to be noted that, if
none of the aforesaid remedies are of any avail, then recourse must be had to
the usual exorcisms, of which we shall treat later. And if even these are not
sufficient to banish the iniquity of the devil, then that affliction must be
considered to be an expiatory punishment for sin, which should be borne in all
meekness, as are other ills of this sort which oppress us that they may, as it
were, drive us to seek God.
But it must also be remarked that
sometimes persons only think they are molested by an Incubus when they are not
so actually; and this is more apt to be the case with women than with men, for
they are more timid and liable to imagine extraordinary things.
In this connexion William of Paris is
often quoted. He says: Many phantastical apparitions occur to person suffering
fro a melancholy disease, especially to women, as is shown by their dreams and
visions. And the reason for this, as physicians know, is that women's souls are
by nature far more easily and lightly impressionable than men's souls. And he
adds: I know that I have seen a woman who thought that a devil copulated with
her from inside, and said she was physically conscious of such incredible
things.
At time also women think they have
been made pregnant by an Incubus, and their bellies grow to an enormous size;
but when the time of parturition comes, their swelling is relieved by no more
than the expulsion of a great quantity of wind. For by taking ants' eggs in
drink, or the seeds of spurge or of the black pine, an incredible amount of wind
and flatulence is generated in the human stomach. And it is very easy for the
devil to cause these and even greater disorders in the stomach. This has been
set down in order that too easy credence should not be given to women, but only
to those whom experience has shown to be trustworthy, and to those who, by
sleeping in their beds or near them, know for a fact that such things as we have
spoken of are true.
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