LETTER VI.
Immediate Effect of Christianity on Articles of Popular Superstition —
Chaucer's Account of the Roman Catholic Priests banishing the Fairies —
Bishop Corbett imputes the same Effect to the Reformation — His Verses on
that Subject — His Iter Septentrionale — Robin Goodfellow and other
Superstitions mentioned by Reginald Scot — Character of the English
Fairies — The Tradition had become obsolete in that Author's Time — That
of Witches remained in vigour — But impugned by various Authors after the
Reformation, as Wierus, Naudæus, Scot, and others — Demonology defended by
Bodinus, Remigius, &c. — Their mutual Abuse of each other — Imperfection
of Physical Science at this Period, and the Predominance of Mysticism in
that Department.
ALTHOUGH the influence of the Christian religion was not introduced to
the nations of Europe with such radiance as to dispel at once those clouds
of superstition which continued to obscure the understanding of hasty and
ill-instructed converts, there can be no doubt that its immediate
operation went to modify the erroneous and extravagant articles of
credulity which lingered behind the old pagan faith, and which gave way
before it, in proportion as its light became more pure and refined from
the devices of men.
The poet Chaucer, indeed, pays the Church of Rome, with its monks and
preaching friars, the compliment of having, at an early period, expelled
from the land all spirits of an inferior and less holy character. The
verses are curious as well as picturesque, and may go some length to
establish the existence of doubts concerning the general belief in fairies
among the well-instructed in the time of Edward III.
The fairies of whom the bard of Woodstock talks are, it will be
observed, the ancient Celtic breed, and he seems to refer for the
authorities of his tale to Bretagne, or Armorica, genuine Celtic colony: —
“In old time of the King
Artour, Of which that Bretons speken great honour, All was this land
fulfilled of faerie; The Elf queen, with her joly company, Danced full oft
in many a grene mead. This was the old opinion, as I rede I speake of many
hundred years ago, But now can no man see no elves mo. For now the great
charity and prayers Of limitours,*
and other holy freres, That searchen every land and every stream, As thick
as motes in the sunne-beam, Blessing halls, chambers, kitchenes, and
boures, Cities and burghes, castles high and towers, Thropes and barnes,
sheep-pens and dairies, This maketh that there ben no fairies. For there
as wont to walken was an elf, There walketh now the limitour himself, In
under nichtes and in morwenings, And saith his mattins; and his holy
things, As he goeth in his limitation. Women may now go safely up and doun
In every bush, and under every tree, There is no other incubus than he,
And he ne will don them no dishonour.”
When we see the opinion which Chaucer has expressed of the regular
clergy of his time, in some of his other tales, we are tempted to suspect
some mixture of irony in the compliment which ascribes the exile of the
fairies, with which the land was “fulfilled” in King Arthur's time, to the
warmth and zeal of the devotion of the limitary friars. Individual
instances of scepticism there might exist among scholars, but a more
modern poet, with a vein of humour not unworthy of Geoffrey himself, has
with greater probability delayed the final banishment of the fairies from
England, that is, from popular faith, till the reign of Queen Elizabeth,
and has represented their expulsion as a consequence of the change of
religion. Two or three verses of this lively satire may be very well worth
the reader's notice, who must, at the same time, be informed that the
author, Dr. Corbett, was nothing less than the Bishop of Oxford and
Norwich in the beginning of the seventeenth century. The poem is named “A
proper new Ballad, entitled the Fairies' Farewell, to be sung or whistle,
to the tune of the Meadow Brow by the learned; by the unlearned to the
tune of Fortune:” —
Farewell, rewards and
fairies, Good housewives now may say, For now foul slats in dairies Do
fare as well as they; And though they sweep their hearths no less Than
maids were wont to do, Yet who of late for cleanliness Finds sixpence in
her shoe? Lament, lament, old abbies, The fairies' lost command; They did
but change priests' babies, But some have changed your land And all your
children sprung from hence Are now grown Puritans, Who live as changelings
ever since For love of your domains. At morning and at evening both, You
merry were and glad, So little care of sleep and sloth Those pretty ladies
had. When Tom came home from labour, Or Cis to milking rose, Then merrily,
merrily went their tabor, And merrily went their toes. Witness those rings
and roundelays Of theirs, which yet remain, Were footed, in Queen Mary's
days, On many a graspy plain; But since of late Elizabeth, And later James
came in, They never danced on any heath As when the time hath bin. “By
which we note, the fairies Were of the old profession, Their songs were
Ave Maries, Their dances were procession. But now, alas ! they all are
dead, Or gone beyond the seas Or farther for religion fled, Or else they
take their ease.”
The remaining part of the poem is dedicated to the praise d glory of
old William Chourne of Staffordshire, who remained a true and stanch
evidence in behalf of the departed elves, and kept, much it would seem to
the amusement of the witty bishop, an inexhaustible record of their pranks
and feats, whence the concluding verse —
“To William all give
audience, And pray ye for his noddle, For all the fairies' evidence Were
lost if that were addle.”*
This William Chourne appears to have attended Dr. Corbett's party on
the iter septentrionale, “two of which were, and two desired to be,
doctors;” but whether William was guide, friend, or domestic seems
uncertain. The travellers lose themselves in the mazes of Chorley Forest
on their way to Bosworth, and their route becomes so confused that they
return on their steps and labour —
As in a conjuror's circle
— William found A mean for our deliverance, — 'Turn your cloaks,' Quoth
he, 'for Puck is busy in these oaks; If ever you at Bosworth would be
found, Then turn your cloaks, for this is fairy ground.' But ere this
witchcraft was performed, we meet A very man who had no cloven feet.
Though William, still of little faith, has doubt, 'Tis Robin, or some
sprite that walks about. 'Strike him,' quoth he, 'and it will turn to air
— Cross yourselves thrice and strike it.' — 'Strike that dare,' Thought I,
'for sure this massy forester, In strokes will prove the better conjuror.'
But 'twas a gentle keeper, one that knew Humanity and manners, where they
grew, And rode along so far. tili he could say, 'See, yonder Bosworth
stands, and this your way.”'
*
In this passage the bishop plainly shows the fairies maintained their
influence in William's imagination, since the courteous keeper was
mistaken by their associate champion for Puck or Robin Goodfellow. The
spells resorted to to get rid of his supposed delusions are alternative
that of turning the cloak — (recommended in visions of the second-sight or
similar illusions as a means of obtaining a certainty concerning the being
which is before imperfectly seen ) — and that of exorcising the spirit with a cudgel which last,
Corbett prudently thinks, ought not to be resorted to unless under an
absolute conviction that the exorcist is the stronger party. Chaucer,
therefore, could not be serious in averring that the fairy superstitions
were obsolete in his day, since they were found current three centuries
afterwards.
It is not the less certain that, as knowledge and religion became more
widely and brightly displayed over any country, the superstitious fancies
of the people sunk gradually in esteem and influence ; and in the time of
Queen Elizabeth the unceasing labour of many and popular preachers, who
declaimed against the “splendid miracles” of the Church of Rome, produced
also its natural effect upon the other stock of superstitions.
“Certainly,” said Reginald Scot, talking of times before his own, “some
one
knave in a white sheet hath cozened and abused many thousands,
specially when Robin Goodfellow kept such a coil in the country. In our
childhood our mothers' maids have so terrified us with an ugly devil
having horns on his head, fire in his mouth, and a tail at his breech ;
eyes like a basin, fangs like a dog, claws like a bear, a skin like a
negro, and a voice roaring like a lion, whereby we start and are afraid
when we hear one cry, Boh ! and they have so frayd us with bull-beggars,
spirits, witches, urchins, elves, hags, fairies, satyrs, Pans, faunes,
sylvans, Kitt-with-the-candlestick, tritons, centaurs, dwarfs, giants,
imps, calcars, conjurers, nymphs, changelings, incubus, Robin Goodfellow,
the spoorn, the man-in-the-oak, the hellwain, the fire-drake, the puckle,
Tom Thumb, Hobgoblin, Tom Tumbler, Boneless, and such other bugbears, that
we are afraid of our own shadows, insomuch that some never fear the devil
but on a dark night ; and then a polled sheep is a perilous beast, and
many times is taken for our father's soul, specially in a churchyard,
where a right hardy man heretofore durst not to have passed by night but
his hair would stand upright. Well, thanks be to God, this wretched and
cowardly infidelity, since the preaching of the Gospel, is in part
forgotten, and doubtless the rest of these illusions will in a short time,
by God's grace, be detected and vanish away.”*
It would require a better demonologist than I am to explain the various
obsolete superstitions which Reginald Scot has introduced as articles of
the old English faith, into the preceding passage. I might indeed say the
Phuca is a Celtic superstition, from which the word Pook or Puckle was
doubtless derived; and I might conjecture that the man-in-the-oak was the
same with the Erl-König of the Germans; and that the hellwain were a kind
of wandering spirits, the descendants of a champion named Hellequin, who
are introduced into the romance of Richard sans Peur. But
most antiquaries will be at fault concerning the spoorn,
Kitt-with-the-candlestick, Boneless, and some others. The catalogue,
however, serves to show what progress the English have made in two
centuries, in forgetting the very names of objects which had been the
sources of terror to their ancestors of the Elizabethan age.
Before leaving the subject of fairy superstition in England we may
remark that it was of a more playful and gentle, less wild and necromantic
character, than that received among the sister people. The amusements of
the southern, fairies were light and sportive; their resentments were
satisfied with pinching or scratching the objects of their displeasure ;
their peculiar sense of cleanliness rewarded the housewives with the
silver token in the shoe; their nicety was extreme concerning any
coarseness or negligence which could offend their delicacy; and I cannot
discern, except, perhaps, from the insinuations of some scrupulous
divines, that they were vassals to or in close alliance with the
infernals, as there is too much reason to believe was the case with their
North British sisterhood.*
The common nursery story cannot be forgotten, how, shortly after the death
of what is called a nice tidy housewife, the Elfin band was shocked to see
that a person of different character, with whom the widower had filled his
deserted arms, instead of the nicely arranged little loaf of the whitest
bread, and a basin of sweet cream, duly placed for their refreshment by
the deceased, had substituted a brown loaf and a cobb of herrings.
Incensed at such a coarse regale, the elves dragged the peccant housewife
out of bed, and pulled her down the wooden stairs by the heels, repeating,
at the same time, in scorn of her churlish hospitality —
“Brown bread and herring
cobb ! Thy fat sides shall have many a bob!”
But beyond such playful malice they had no desire to extend their
resentment.
The constant attendant upon the English Fairy court was the celebrated
Puck, or Robin Goodfellow, who to the elves acted in some measure as the
jester or clown of the company — (a character then to be found in the
establishment of every person of quality) — or to use a more modern
comparison, resembled the Pierrot of the pantomime. His jests were of the
most simple and at the same time the broadest comic character — to mislead
a clown on his path homeward, to disguise himself like a stool, in order
to induce an old gossip to commit the egregious mistake of sitting down on
the floor when she expected to repose on a chair, were his special
enjoyments. If he condescended to do some work for the sleeping family, in
which he had some resemblance to the Scottish household spirit called a
Brownie, the selfish Puck was far from practising this labour on the
disinterested principle of the northern goblin, who, if raiment or food
was left in his way and for his use, departed from the family in
displeasure. Robin Goodfellow, on the contrary, must have both his food
and his rest, as Milton informs us, amid his other notices of country
superstitions, in the poem of L'Allegro. And it is to be noticed that lie
represents these tales of the fairies, told round the cottage hearth, as
of a cheerful rather than a serious cast ; which illustrates what I have
said concerning the milder character of the southern superstitions, as
compared with those of the same class in Scotland — the stories of which
are for the most part of a frightful and not seldom of a disgusting
quality.
Poor Robin, however, between whom and King Oberon Shakespeare contrives
to keep a degree of distinct subordination, which for a moment deceives us
by its appearance of reality, notwithstanding his turn for wit and humour,
had been obscured by oblivion even in the days of Queen Bess. We have
already seen, in a passage quoted from Reginald Scot, that the belief was
fallen into abeyance; that which follows from the same author affirms more
positively that Robin's date was over: —
“Know ye this, by the way, that heretofore Robin Goodfellow and
Hobgoblin were as terrible, and also as credible, to the people as hags
and witches be now ; and in time to come a witch will be as much derided
and condemned, and as clearly perceived, as the illusion and knavery of
Robin Goodfellow, upon whom there have gone as many and as credible tales
as witchcraft, saving that it hath not pleased the translators of tile
Bible to call spirits by the name of Robin Goodfellow, as they have
diviners, soothsayers, poisoners, and cozeners by the name of witches.”*
In the same tone Reginald Scot addresses the reader in the preface: — “To
make a solemn suit to you that are partial readers to set aside
partiality, to take in good part my writings, and with indifferent eyes to
look upon my book, were labour lost and time ill-employed; for I should no
more prevail herein than if, a hundred years since, I should have
entreated your predecessors to believe that Robin Goodfellow, that great
and ancient bull-beggar, had been but a cozening, merchant, and no devil
indeed. But Robin Goodfellow ceaseth now to be much feared, and Popery is
sufficiently discovered; nevertheless, witches' charms and conjurers'
cozenage are yet effectual.” This passage seems clearly to prove that the
belief in Robin Goodfellow and his fairy companions was now out of date;
while that as to witchcraft, as was afterwards but too well shown, kept
its ground against argument and controversy, and survived “to shed more
blood.”
We are then to take leave of this fascinating article of the popular
creed, having in it so much of interest to the imagination that we almost
envy the credulity of those who, in the gentle moonlight of a summer night
in England, amid
the tangled glades of a deep forest, or the turfy swell of her romantic
commons, could fancy they saw the fairies tracing their sportive ring. But
it is in vain to regret illusions which, however engaging, must of
necessity yield their place before the increase of knowledge, like shadows
at the advance of morn. These superstitions have already survived their
best and most useful purpose, having been embalmed in the poetry of Milton
and of Shakespeare, as I well as writers only inferior to these great
names. Of Spenser we must say nothing, because in his “Faery Queen” the
title is the only circumstance which connects his splendid allegory with
the popular superstition, and, as he uses it, means nothing more than an
Utopia or nameless country.
With the fairy popular creed fell, doubtless, many subordinate articles
of credulity in England, but the belief in witches kept its ground. It was
rooted in the minds of the common people, as well by the easy solution it
afforded of much which they found otherwise bard to explain, as in
reverence to the Holy Scriptures, in which the word witch , being
used in several places, conveyed to those who did not trouble themselves
about the nicety of the translation from the Eastern tongues, the
inference that the same species of witches were meant as those against
whom modern legislation had, in most European nations, directed the
'punishment of death. These two circumstances furnished the numerous
believers in witchcraft with arguments in divinity and law which they
conceived irrefragable. They might say to the theologist, Will you not
believe in witches? the Scriptures aver their existence; — to the
jurisconsult, Will you dispute the existence of a crime against which our
own statute-book, and the code of almost all civilized countries, have
attested, by laws upon which hundreds and thousands have been convicted,
many or even most of whom have, by their judicial confessions,
acknowledged their guilt and the justice of their punishment? It is a
strange scepticism, they might add, which rejects the evidence of
Scripture, of human legislature, and of the accused persons themselves.
Notwithstanding these specious reasons, the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries were periods when the revival o learning, the invention of
printing, the fearless investigations of the Reformers into subjects
thought formerly too sacred for consideration of any save the clergy, had
introduced a system of doubt, enquiry, disregard of authority, when
unsupported by argument, and unhesitating exercise of the private
judgment, on subjects which had occupied the bulls of popes and decrees of
councils. In short, the spirit of the age was little disposed to spare
error, however venerable, or countenance imposture, however sanctioned by
length of time and universal acquiescence. Learned writers arose in
different countries to challenge the very existence of this imaginary
crime, to rescue the reputation of the great men whose knowledge, superior
to that of their age, had caused them to be suspected of magic, and to put
a stop to the horrid superstition whose victims were the aged, ignorant,
and defenceless, and which could only be compared to that which sent
victims of old through the fire to Moloch.
The courageous interposition of those philosophers who opposed science
and experience to the prejudices of superstition and ignorance, and in
doing so incurred much mis-representation, and perhaps no little ill-will,
in the cause of truth and humanity, claim for them some distinction in a
work on Demonology. The pursuers of exact science to its coy retreats,
were sure to be the first to discover that the most remarkable phenomena
in Nature are regulated by certain fixed laws, and cannot rationally be
referred to supernatural agency, the sufficing cause to which superstition
attributes all that is beyond her own narrow power of explanation. Each
advance in natural knowledge teaches us that it is the pleasure of 'the
Creator to govern the world by the laws which he has imposed, and which
are not in our times interrupted or suspended.
The learned Wier, or Wierus, was a man of great research in physical
science, and studied under the celebrated Cornelius Agrippa, against whom
the charge of sorcery was repeatedly alleged by Paulus Jovius and other
authors, while he suffered, on the other hand, from the persecution of the
inquisitors of the Church, whose accusation against this celebrated man
was, that he denied the existence of spirits, a charge very inconsistent
with that of sorcery, which consists in corresponding with them. Wierus,
after taking his degree as a doctor of medicine, became physician to the
Duke of Cleves, at whose court he practised for thirty years with the
highest reputation. This learned man, disregarding the scandal which, by
so doing, he was likely to bring upon himself, was one of the first who
attacked the vulgar belief, and boldly assailed, both by serious arguments
and by ridicule, the vulgar credulity on the subject of wizards and
witches.
Gabriel Naudé, or Naudæus, as he termed himself, was a perfect scholar
and man of letters, busied during his whole life with assembling books
together, and enjoying the office of librarian to several persons of high
rank, amongst others, to Queen Christina of Sweden. He was, besides, a
beneficed clergyman, leading a most unblemished life, and so temperate as
never to taste any liquor stronger than water; yet did he not escape the
scandal which is usually flung by their prejudiced contemporaries upon
those disputants whom it is found. more easy to defame than to answer. He
wrote an interesting work, entitled “Apologie pour les Grands Hommes
Accusés de Magie;” and as he exhibited a good deal of vivacity of talent,
and an earnestness in pleading his cause, which did not always spare some
of the superstitions of Rome herself, he was charged by his contemporaries
as guilty of heresy and scepticism, when justice could only accuse him of
an incautious eagerness to make good his argument. Among persons who, upon
this subject, purged their eye with rue and euphrasie, besides the Rev.
Dr. Harsnet and many others (who wrote rather on special cases of
Demonology than on the general question), Reginald Scot ought to be
distinguished. Webster assures us that he was a “person of competent
learning, pious, and of a good family.” He seems to have been a zealous
Protestant, and much his book, as well as that of Harsnet, is designed to
throw upon the Papists in particular those tricks in which, by confederacy
and imposture, the popular ideas concerning witchcraft, possession, and
other supernatural fancies, were maintained and kept in exercise; but he
also writes on the general question with some force and talent,
considering that his subject is incapable of being reduced into a regular
form, and is of a nature particularly seductive to an excursive tale He
appears to have studied legerdemain for the purpose of showing how much
that is apparently unaccountable can nevertheless be performed without the
intervention of supernatural assistance, even when it is impossible to
persuade the vulgar that the devil has not been consulted on the occasion.
Scot also had intercourse with some of the celebrated fortune-tellers, or
Philomaths, of the time ; one of whom he brings forward to declare the
vanity of the science which he himself had once professed.
To defend the popular belief of witchcraft there arose a number of
advocates, of whom Bodin and some others neither wanted knowledge nor
powers of reasoning. They pressed the incredulous party with the charge
that they denied the existence of a crime against which the haw had
denounced a capital punishment. As that law was under he stood to emanate
from James himself, who Was reigning monarch during the hottest part of
the controversy, the English authors who defended the opposite side were
obliged to entrench themselves under an evasion, to avoid maintaining an
argument unpalatable to a degree to those in power, and which might
perchance have proved unsafe to those who used it. With a certain degree
of sophistry they answered that they did not doubt the possibility of
witches, t: only demurred to what is their nature, and how they me to be
such — according to the scholastic jargon, that e question in respect to
witches was not de existentia, but only de modo existendi.
By resorting to so subtle an argument those who impugned the popular
belief were obliged, with some inconsistency, to grant that witchcraft had
existed, and might exist, only insisting that it was a species of
witchcraft consisting of they knew not what, but certainly of something
different from that which legislators, judges, and juries had hitherto
considered the statute as designed to repress.
In the meantime (the rather that the debate was on a subject
particularly difficult of comprehension) the debating parties grew warm,
and began to call names. Bodin, a lively Frenchman of an irritable habit,
explained the zeal of Wierus to protect the tribe of sorcerers from
punishment, by stating that he himself was a conjurer and the scholar of
Cornelius Agrippa, and might therefore well desire to the lives of those
accused of the same, league with an. Hence they threw on their antagonists
the offensive names of witch-patrons and witch-advocates, as if it were
impossible for any to hold the opinion of Naudæus, Wierus, Scot, &c.,
without patronizing the devil and the witches against their brethren of
mortality. Assailed by such heavy charges, the philosophers themselves
lost patience, and retorted abuse in their turn, calling Bodin, Delrio,
and others who used their arguments, witch-advocates, and the like, as the
affirming and defending the existence of the rime seemed to increase the
number of witches, and assuredly augmented the list of executions. But for
a certain time the preponderance of the argument lay on the side of the
Demonologists, and we may briefly observe the causes which gave their
opinions, for a period, greater influence than their opponents on the
public mind. It is first to be observed that Wierus, for what reason
cannot well be conjectured, except to show the extent of his cabalistical
knowledge, had introduced into his work against witchcraft the whole
Stenographia of Trithemius, which he had copied from the original in the
library of Cornelius Agrippa; and which, suspicious from the place where
found it, and from the long catalogue of fiends which it contained, with
the charms for raising and for binding to the service of mortals, was
considered by Bodin as containing proof that Wierus himself was a
sorcerer; not one the wisest, certainly, since he thus unnecessarily
placed the disposal of any who might buy the book the whole secrets which
formed his stock-in-trade.
Secondly, we may notice that, from the state of physic science at the
period when Van Helmont, Paracelsus, an others began to penetrate into its
recesses it was an unknown, obscure, and ill-defined region, and did not
permit those who laboured in it to give that precise and accurate account
of their discoveries which the progress of reason experimentally and from
analysis has enabled the late discoverers to do with success. Natural
magic — a phrase use to express those phenomena which could be produced
knowledge of the properties of matter — had so much in it that was
apparently uncombined and uncertain, that the art of chemistry was
accounted mystical, and an opinion prevailed that the results now known to
be the consequence their various laws of matter, could not be traced
through combinations even by those who knew the effects them selves.
Physical science, in a word, was cumbered by a number of fanciful and
incorrect opinions, chiefly of a mystical character. If, for instance, it
was observed that a flag and a fern never grew near each other, the
circumstance, was imputed to some antipathy between these vegetables nor
was it for some time resolved by the natural rule, that the flag has its
nourishment in marshy ground, whereas the fern loves a deep dryish soil.
The attributes of the divining-rod were fully credited; the discovery of
the philosopher's stone was daily hoped for; and electricity, magnetism,
and their remarkable and misconceived phenomena were appealed to as proof
of the reasonableness of their expectations. until such phenomena were
traced to their sources, imaginary often mystical causes were assigned to
them, for the same reason that, in the wilds of a partially discovered
country, according to the satirist,
“Geographers on pathless
downs Place elephants for want of towns.”
This substitution of mystical fancies for experimental reasoning gave,
in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, a doubtful and twilight
appearance to the various branches physical philosophy. The learned and
sensible Dr.Webster, for instance, writing in detection of supposed
witchcraft, assumes, as a string of undeniable facts, opinions which our
more experienced age would reject as frivolous fancies; “for example, the
effects of healing by the weapon-salve, the sympathetic powder, the curing
of various diseases by apprehensions, amulets, or by transplantation.” All
of which undoubted wonders he accuses the age of desiring to throw on the
devil's back — an unnecessary load certainly, since such things do not
exist, and it is therefore in vain to seek to account for them. It
followed that, while the opposers of the ordinary theory might have struck
the 'deepest blows at the witch hypothesis by an appeal to common sense,
they were themselves hampered by articles of philosophical belief which
they must have been sensible contained nearly as deep draughts upon human
credulity as were made by the Demonologists, against whose doctrine they
protested. This error had a doubly bad effect, both as degrading the
immediate department in which it occurred, and as affording a protection
for falsehood in other branches of science. The champions who, in their
own province, were obliged by the imperfect knowledge of the times to
admit much that was mystical and inexplicable — those who opined, with
Bacon, that warts could be cured by sympathy — who thought, with Napier,
that hidden treasures could be discovered by the mathematics — who salved
the weapon instead of the wound, and detected murders as well a springs of
water by the divining-rod, could not consistently use, to confute the
believers in witches, an argument turning on the impossible or the
incredible.
Such were the obstacles arising from the vanity of philosophers and the
imperfection of their science, which suspended the strength of their
appeal to reason and common sense against the condemning of wretches to a
cruel death on account of crimes which the nature of things rendered in
modern times totally impossible We cannot doubt that they suffered
considerably in the contest, which was carried on with much anger and
malevolence; but the good seed which they had sown remained uncorrupted in
the soil, to bear fruit so soon as the circumstances should be altered
which at first impeded its growth. In the next letter I shall take a view
of the causes which helped to remove these impediments, in addition, it
must always be remembered, to the general increase of knowledge and
improvement of experimental philosophy.
* Friars
limited to beg within a certain district.
“Wife of Bath's Tale.” * Corbett's Poems, edited by Octavius Gilchrist, p.
213. * Corbett's Poems, p. 191. A common instance is that of a person
haunted with a resemblance whose face he cannot see. If he turn his cloak
or plaid, he will obtain the full sight which lie desires, and may
probably find it to be his own fetch, or wraith, or double-ganger. * Reginald Scot's “Discovery of Witchcraft,” book vii. chap.
15. * Dr. Jackson,
in his ” Treatise on Unbelief,” opines for the severe opinion, “Thus are
the Fayries, from difference of events ascribed to them, divided into good
and bad, when as it is but one and the same malignant fiend that meddles
in both; seeking sometimes to be feared, otherwhiles to he loued as God,
for the bodily harmes or good turncs supposed to be in his power.” —
Jackson on Unbelief, p. 178, edit. 1625. * Reginald Scot's “Discovery of
Witchcraft,” book, vii. chap. ii. |