LETTER VIII.
The Effects of the Witch Superstition are to be traced in the Laws of a
Kingdom Usually punished in England as a Crime connected with Politics
Attempt at Murder for Witchcraft not in itself Capital Trials of Persons
of Rank for Witchcraft, connected with State Crimes Statutes of Henry
VIII. How Witchcraft was regarded by the three Leading Sects of Religion
in the Sixteenth Century; first, by the Catholics ; second, by the
Calvinists ; third, by the Church of England and Lutherans Impostures
unwarily countenanced by individual Catholic Priests, and also by some
Puritanic Clergymen Statute of 1562, and some cases upon it Case of
Dugdale Case of the Witches of Warbois, and the execution of the Family
of Samuel That of Jane Wenham, in which some Church of England Clergymen
insisted on the Prosecution Hutchison's Rebuke to them James the
First's Opinion of Witchcraft His celebrated Statute, I Jac. I Canon
passed by the Convocation against Possession Case of Mr. Fairfax's
Children Lancashire Witches in 1613 Another Discovery in 1634
Webster's Account of the manner in which the Imposture was managed
Superiority of the Calvinists is followed by a severe Prosecution of
Witches Executions in Suffolk, &c. to a dreadful extent Hopkins, the
pretended Witchfinder, the cause of these Cruelties His Brutal Practices
His Letter Execution of Mr. Lowis Hopkins Punished Restoration of
Charles Trial of Coxe Of Dunny and Callendar before Lord Hales Royal
Society and Progress of Knowledge Somersetshire Witches Opinions of
the Populace A Woman Swum for Witchcraft at Oakly Murder at Tring
Act against Witchcraft abolished, and the belief in the Crime becomes
forgotten Witch Trials in New England Dame Glover's Trial Affliction
of the Parvises, and frightful Increase of the Prosecutions Suddenly put
a stop to The Penitence of those concerned in them.
OUR account of Demonology in England must naturally, as in every other
country, depend chiefly on the instances which history contains of the
laws and prosecutions against witchcraft. Other superstitions arose and
decayed, were dreaded or despised, without greater embarrassment, in the
provinces in which they have a temporary currency, than that cowards and
children go out more seldom at night, while the reports of ghosts and
fairies are peculiarly current. But when the alarm of witchcraft arises,
Superstition dips her hand in the blood of the persons accused, and
records in the annals of jurisprudence their trials and the causes alleged
in vindication of their execution. Respecting other fantastic allegations,
the proof is necessarily transient and doubtful, depending upon the
inaccurate testimony of vague report and of doting tradition. But in cases
of witchcraft we have before us the recorded evidence upon which judge and
jury acted, and can form an opinion with some degree of certainty of the
grounds, real or fanciful, on which they acquitted or condemned. It is,
therefore, in tracing this part of Demonology, with its accompanying
circumstances, that we have the best chance of obtaining an accurate view
of our subject.
The existence of witchcraft was, no doubt, received and credited in
England, as in the countries on the Continent, and originally punished
accordingly. But after the fourteenth century the practices which fell
under such a description were thought unworthy of any peculiar
animadversion, unless they were connected with something which would have
been of itself a capital crime, by whatever means it had been either
essayed or accomplished. Thus the supposed paction between a witch and the
demon was perhaps deemed in itself to have terrors enough to prevent its
becoming an ordinary crime, and was not, therefore, visited with any
statutory penalty. But to attempt or execute bodily harm to others through
means of evil spirits, or, in a word, by the black art, was actionable at
common law as much as if the party accused had done the same harm with an
arrow or pistol-shot. The destruction or abstraction of goods by the like
instruments, supposing the charge proved, would, in like manner, be
punishable. A fortiori , the consulting soothsayers, familiar
spirits, or the like, and the obtaining and circulating pretended
prophecies to the unsettlement o the State and the endangering of the
King's title, is yet a higher degree of guilt. And it may be remarked that
the inquiry into the date of the King's life bears a close affinity with
the desiring or compassing the death of the Sovereign, which is the
essence of high treason. Upon such charges repeated trials took place in
the courts of the English, and condemnations were pronounced, with
sufficient justice, no doubt, where the connexion between the resort to
sorcerers and the design to perpetrate a felony could be clearly proved.
We would not, indeed, be disposed to go the length of so high an authority
as Selden, who pronounces (in his Table-Talk") that if a man heartily
believed that lie could take the life of another by waving his hat three
times and crying Buzz ! and should, under this fixed opinion, wave his hat
and cry Buzz! accordingly, he ought to be executed as a murderer. But a
false prophecy of the King's death is not to be dealt with exactly on the
usual principle; because, however idle in itself, the promulgation of such
a prediction has, in times such as we are speaking of, a strong tendency
to work its completion.
Many persons, and some of great celebrity, suffered for the charge of
trafficking with witches, to the prejudice of those in authority. We have
already mentioned the instance of the Duchess of Gloucester, in Henry the
Sixth's reign, and that of the Queen Dowager's kinsmen, in the
Protectorate of Richard, afterwards the Third. In 1521, the Duke of
Buckingham was beheaded, owing much to his having listened to the
predictions of one Friar Hopkins. In the same reign, the Maid of Kent, who
had been esteemed a prophetess, was put to death as a cheat. She suffered
with seven persons who had managed her fits for the support of the
Catholic religion, and confessed her fraud upon the scaffold. About seven
years after this, Lord Hungerford was beheaded for consulting certain
soothsayers concerning the length of Henry the Eighth's life. But these
cases rather relate to the purpose for which the sorcery was employed,
than to the fact of using it.
Two remarkable statutes were passed in the Year 1541; one against false
prophecies, the other against the act of conjuration, witchcraft, and
sorcery, and at the same time against breaking and destroying crosses. The
former enactment was certainly made to ease the suspicious and wayward
fears of the tetchy King Henry. The prohibition against witchcraft might
be also dictated by the king's jealous doubts of hazard to the succession.
The enactment against breaking crosses was obviously designed to check the
ravages of the Reformers, who in England as well as elsewhere desired to
sweep away Popery with the besom of destruction. This latter statute was
abrogated in the first year of Edward VI., perhaps as placing an undue
restraint on the zeal of good Protestants against idolatry.
At length, in 1562, a formal statute against sorcery, as penal in
itself, was actually passed; but as the penalty was limited to the pillory
for the first transgression, the legislature probably regarded those who
might be brought to trial as impostors rather than wizards. There are
instances of individuals tried and convicted as impostors and cheats, and
who acknowledged themselves such before the court and people; but in their
articles of visitation the prelates directed enquiry to be made after
those who should use enchantments, witchcraft, sorcery, or any like craft,
invented by the devil.
But it is here proper to make a pause for the purpose of enquiring in
what manner the religious disputes which occupied all Europe about this
time influenced the proceedings of the rival sects in relation to
Demonology.
The Papal Church had long reigned by the proud and absolute humour
which she had assumed, of maintaining every doctrine which her rulers had
adopted in dark ages; but this pertinacity at length made her citadel too
large to be defended at every point by a garrison whom prudence would have
required to abandon positions which had been taken in times of darkness,
and were unsuited to the warfare of a more enlightened age. The sacred
motto of the Vatican was, Vestigia nulla retrorsum; and this
rendered it impossible to comply with the more wise and moderate of her
own party, who would otherwise have desired to make liberal concessions to
the Protestants, and thus prevent, in its commencement, a formidable
schism in the Christian world.
To the system of Rome the Calvinists offered the most determined
opposition, affecting upon every occasion and on all points to observe an
order of church-government, as well as of worship, expressly in the teeth
of its enactments; in a word, to be a good Protestant, they held it
almost essential to be in all things diametrically opposite to the
Catholic form and faith. As the foundation of this sect was laid in
republican states, as its clerical discipline was settled on a democratic
basis, and as the countries which adopted that form of government were
chiefly poor, the preachers having lost the Tank and opulence enjoyed by
the Roman Church, were gradually thrown on the support of the people.
Insensibly they became occupied with the ideas and tenets natural to the
common people, which, if they have usually the merit of being, honestly
conceived and boldly expressed, are not the less often adopted with
credulity and precipitation, and carried into effect with unhesitating,
harshness and severity.
Betwixt these extremes the Churchmen of England endeavoured to steer a
middle course retaining a portion of the ritual and forms of Rome, as in
themselves admirable, and at any rate too greatly venerated by the people
to be changed merely for opposition's sake. Their comparatively
undilapidated revenue, the connexion of their system with the state, with
views of ambition as ample as the station of a churchman ought to command,
Tendered them independent of the necessity of courting their flocks by any
means save regular discharge of their duty; and the excellent provisions
made for their education afforded them learning to confute ignorance and
enlighten prejudice.
Such being the general character of the three Churches, their belief in
and persecution of such crimes as witchcraft and sorcery were necessarily
modelled upon the peculiar tenets which each system professed, and. gave
rise to various results in the countries where they were severally
received.
The Church of Rome, as we have seen, was unwilling, in of undisputed
power, to call in the secular arm men for witchcraft a crime which fell
especially under ecclesiastical cognizance, and could, according to her
belief, be subdued by the spiritual arm alone. The learned men at the head
of the establishment might safely despise the attempt at those hidden arts
as impossible; or, even if they were of a more credulous disposition, they
might be unwilling to make laws by which their own enquiries in the
mathematics, algebra, chemistry, and other pursuits vulgarly supposed to
approach the confines of magic art, might be inconveniently restricted.
The more selfish part of the priesthood might think that a general belief
in the existence of witches should be permitted to remain, as a source
both of power and of revenue that if there were no possessions, there
could be no exorcism-fees and, in short, that a wholesome faith in all
the absurdities of the vulgar creed as to supernatural influences was
necessary to maintain the influence of Diana of Ephesus. They suffered
spells to be manufactured, since every friar had the power of reversing
them; they permitted poison to be distilled, because every convent had the
antidote which was disposed of to all who chose to demand it. It was not
till the universal progress of heresy, in the end of the fifteenth
century, that the bull of Pope Innocent VIII., already quoted, called to
convict, imprison, and condemn the sorcerers, chiefly because it was the
object to transfer the odium of these crimes to the Waldenses, and excite
and direct the public hatred against the new sect by confounding their
doctrines with the influence of the devil and his fiends. The bull of Pope
Innocent was afterwards, in the year 1523, enforced by Adrian VI. with a
new one, in which excommunication was directed against sorcerers and
heretics.
While Rome thus positively declared herself against witches and
sorcerers, the Calvinists, in whose numbers must be included the greater
part of the English Puritans, who, though they had not finally severed
from the communion of the Anglican Church, yet disapproved of her ritual
and ceremonies as retaining too much of the Papal stamp, ranked
themselves, in accordance with their usual policy, in diametrical
opposition to the doctrine of the Mother Church. They assumed in the
opposite sense whatever Rome pretended to as a proof of her omnipotent
authority. The exorcisms, forms, and rites, by which good Catholics
believed that incarnate fiends could be expelled and evil spirits of every
kind rebuked these, like the holy water, the robes of the priest, and
the sign of the cross, the Calvinists considered either with scorn and
contempt as the tools of deliberate quackery and imposture, or with horror
and loathing, as the fit emblems and instruments of an idolatrous system.
Such of them as did not absolutely deny the supernatural powers of
which the Romanists made boast, regarded the success of the exorcising
priest, to whatever extent they admitted it, as at best a casting out of
devils by the power of Beelzebub, the King of the Devils. They saw also,
and resented bitterly, the attempt to confound any dissent from the
doctrines of Rome with the proneness to an encouragement of rites of
sorcery. On the whole, the Calvinists, generally speaking, were of all the
contending sects the most suspicions of sorcery, the most undoubting
believers in its existence, and the most eager to follow it up with what
they conceived to be the due punishment of the most fearful of crimes. The
leading divines of the Church of England were, without doubt,
fundamentally as much opposed to the doctrines of Rome as those who
altogether disclaimed opinions and ceremonies merely because she had
entertained them. But their position in society tended strongly to keep
them from adopting, on such subjects as we are now discussing, either the
eager credulity of the Vulgar mind or the fanatic ferocity of their
Calvinistic rivals. We have no purpose to discuss the matter in detail
enough has probably been said to show generally why the Romanist should
have cried out a miracle respecting an incident which the Anglican would
have contemptuously termed an imposture; while the Calvinist, inspired
with a darker zeal, and, above all, with the unceasing desire of open
controversy with the Catholics, would have styled the same event an
operation of the devil.
It followed that, while the divines of the Church of England possessed
the upper hand in the kingdom, witchcraft, though trials and even
condemnations for that offence occasionally occurred, did not create that
epidemic terror which the very suspicion of the offence carried with it
elsewhere; so that Reginald Scot and others alleged it was the vain
pretences and empty forms of the Church of Rome, by the faith reposed in
them, which had led to the belief of witchcraft or sorcery in general. Nor
did prosecutions on account of such charges frequently involve a capital
punishment, while learned judges were jealous of the imperfection of the
evidence to support the charge, and entertained a strong and growing
suspicion that legitimate grounds for such trials seldom actually existed.
On the other hand, it usually happened that wherever the Calvinist
interest became predominant in Britain, a general persecution of sorcerers
and witches seemed to take place of consequence. Fearing and hating
sorcery more than other Protestants, connecting its ceremonies and usages
with those of the detested Catholic Church, the Calvinists were more eager
than other sects in searching after the traces this crime, and, of course,
unusually successful, as they might suppose, in making discoveries of
guilt, and pursuing it to the expiation of the fagot. In a word, a
principle already referred to by Dr. Francis Hutchison will be found to
rule the tide and the reflux of such cases in the different churches. The
numbers of witches, and their supposed dealings with Satan, will increase
or decrease according as such doings are accounted probable or impossible.
Under the former supposition, charges and convictions will be found
augmented in a terrific degree. When the accusations are disbelieved and
dismissed as not worthy of attention, the crime becomes unfrequent, ceases
to occupy the public mind, and affords little trouble to the judges.
The passing of Elizabeth's statute against witchcraft in 1562 does not
seem to have been intended to increase the number of trials, or cases of
conviction at least ; and the fact is, it did neither the one nor the
other. Two children were tried in 1574 for counterfeiting possession, and
stood in the pillory for impostors. Mildred Norrington, called the Maid of
Westwell, furnished another instance of possession; but she also confessed
her imposture, and publicly showed her fits and tricks of mimicry. The
strong influence already possessed by the Puritans may probably be
sufficient to account for the darker issue of certain cases, in which both
juries and judges in Elizabeth's time must be admitted to have shown
fearful severity.
These cases of possession were in some respects sore snares to the
priests of the Church of Rome, who, while they were too sagacious not to
be aware that the pretended fits, contortions, strange sounds, and other
extravagances, produced as evidence of the demon's influence on the
possessed person, were nothing else than marks of imposture by some idle
vagabond, were nevertheless often tempted to admit them as real, and take
the credit of curing them. The period was one when the Catholic Church had
much occasion to rally around her all the respect that remained to her in
a schismatic and heretical kingdom; and when her fathers and doctors
announced the existence of such a dreadful disease, and of the power of
the church's prayers, relics, and ceremonies, to cure it, it was difficult
for a priest, supposing him more tender of the interest of his order than
that of truth, to avoid such a tempting opportunity as a supposed case of
possession offered for displaying the high privilege in which his
profession made him a partaker, or to abstain from conniving at the
imposture, in order to obtain for his church the credit of expelling the
demon. It was hardly to be wondered at, if the ecclesiastic was sometimes
induced to aid the fraud of which such motives forbade him to be the
detector. At this he might hesitate the less, as he was not obliged to
adopt the suspected and degrading course of holding an immediate
communication in limine with the impostor, since a hint or two,
dropped in the supposed sufferer's presence, mightgive him the necessary
information what was the most exact mode of performing his part, and if
the patient was possessed by a devil of any acuteness or dexterity, he
wanted no further instruction how to play it. Such combinations were
sometimes detected, and brought more discredit on the Church of Rome than
was counterbalanced by any which might be more cunningly managed. On this
subject the reader may turn to Dr. Harsnett's celebrated book on Popish
Impostures, wherein he gives the history of several notorious cases of
detected fraud, in which Roman ecclesiastics had not hesitated to mingle
themselves. That of Grace Sowerbutts, instructed by a Catholic priest to
impeach her grandmother of witchcraft, was a very gross fraud.
Such cases were not, however, limited to the ecclesiastics of Rome. We
have already stated that, as extremes usually approach each other, the
Dissenters, in their violent opposition to the Papists, adopted some of
their ideas respecting demoniacs; and we have now to add that they also
claimed, by the vehemence of prayer and the authority o their own sacred
commission, that power of expelling devils which the Church of Rome
pretended to exercise by rites, ceremonies, and relics. The memorable case
of Richard Dugdale, called the Surrey Impostor, was one of the most
remarkable which the Dissenters brought forward. This youth was supposed
to have sold his soul to the devil, on condition of being made the best
dancer in Lancashire, and during his possession played a number of
fantastic tricks, not much different from those exhibited by expert
posture-masters of the present day. This person threw himself into the
hands of the Dissenters, who, in their eagerness, caught at an opportunity
to relieve an afflicted person, whose case the regular clergy appeared to
have neglected. They fixed a committee of their number, who weekly
attended the supposed sufferer, and exercised themselves in appointed days
of humiliation and fasting during the course of a whole year. All respect
for the demon seems to have abandoned the reverend gentlemen, after they
had relieved guard in this manner for some little time, and they got so
regardless of Satan as to taunt him with the mode in which he executed his
promise to teach his vassal dancing. The following specimen of raillery is
worth commemoration: What, Satan! is this the dancing that Richard gave
himself to thee for? &c. Canst thou dance no better? &c. Ransack the old
records of all past times and places in thy memory; canst thou not there
find out some better way of trampling? Pump thine invention dry; cannot
the universal seed-plot of subtile wiles and stratagems spring up one new
method of cutting capers? 'Is this the top of skill and pride, to shuffle
feet and brandish knees thus, and to trip like a doe and skip like a
squirrel? And wherein differ thy leapings from the hoppings of a frog, or
the bouncings of a goat, or friskings of a dog, or gesticulations of a
monkey? And cannot a palsy shake such a loose lea as that ? Dost thou not
twirl like a calf that hath the turn, and twitch up thy houghs just like a
springhault tit?*
One might almost conceive the demon replying to this raillery in the words
of Dr. Johnson, This merriment of parsons is extremely offensive.
The dissenters were probably too honest, however simple, to achieve a
complete cure on Dugdale by an amicable understanding; so, after their
year of vigil, they relinquished their task by degrees. Dugdale, weary of
his illness, which now attracted little notice, attended a regular
physician, and was cured of that part of his disease which was not
affected in a regular way par ordonnance du mιdecin. But the
reverend gentlemen who had taken his case in hand still assumed the credit
of curing him, and if anything could have induced them to sing Te Deum,
it would have been this occasion. They said that the effect of their
public prayers had been for a time suspended, until seconded by the
continued earnestness of their private devotions!
The ministers of the Church of England, though, from education,
intercourse with the world, and other advantages, they were less prone to
prejudice than those of other sects, are yet far from being entirely free
of the charge of encouraging in particular instances the witch
superstition. Even while Dr. Hutchison pleads that the Church of England
has the least to answer for in that matter, he is under the necessity of
acknowledging that some regular country clergymen so far shared the rooted
prejudices of congregations, and of the government which established laws
against it, as to be active in the persecution of the suspected, and even
in countenancing the superstitious signs by which in that period the
vulgar thought it possible to ascertain the existence of the afflictions
by witchcraft, and obtain the knowledge of the perpetrator. A singular
case is mentioned of three women, called the Witches of Warbois. Indeed,
their story is a matter of solemn enough record; for Sir Samuel Cromwell,
having received the sum of forty pounds as lord of the manor, out of the
estate of the poor persons
who suffered, turned it into a rent-charge of forty shillings yearly,
for the endowment of an annual lecture on the subject of witchcraft, to be
preached by a doctor or bachelor of divinity of Queen's College,
Cambridge. The accused, one Samuel and his wife were old and very poor
persons, and their daughter a young woman. The daughter of a Mr.
Throgmorton, seeing the poor old woman in a black knitted cap, at a time
when she was not very well, took a whim that she had bewitched her, and
was ever after exclaiming against her. The other children of this fanciful
family caught up the same cry, and the eldest of them at last got up a
vastly pretty drama, in which she herself furnished all the scenes and
played all the parts.
Such imaginary scenes, or make-believe stories, are the common
amusement of lively children ; and most readers may remember having had
some Utopia of their own. But the nursery drama of Miss Throgmorton had a
horrible conclusion. This young lady and her sisters were supposed to be
haunted by nine spirits, dispatched by the wicked Mother Samuel for that
purpose. The sapient parents heard one part of the dialogue, when the
children in their fits returned answers, as was supposed, to the spirits
who afflicted them; and when the patients from time to time recovered,
they furnished the counterpart by telling what the spirits had said to
them. The names of the spirits were Pluck, Hardname, Catch, Blue, and
three Smacks, who were cousins. Mrs. Joan Throgmorton, the eldest (who,
like other young women of her age, about fifteen, had some disease on her
nerves, and whose fancy ran apparently on love and gallantry), supposed
that one of the Smacks was her lover, did battle for her with the less
friendly spirits, and promised to protect her against Mother Samuel
herself; and the following curious extract will show on what a footing of
familiarity the damsel stood with her spiritual gallant : From whence
come you, Mr. Smack? says the afflicted young lady ; and what news do
you bring? Smack, nothing abashed, informed her he came from fighting
with Pluck: the weapons, great cowl-staves; the scene, a ruinous bakehouse
in Dame Samuel's yard. And who got the mastery, I pray you? said the
damsel. Smack answered, be had broken Pluck's head. I would, said the
damsel, he had broken your neck also. Is that the thanks I am to have
for my labour? said the disappointed Smack. Look you for thanks at my
hand? said the distressed maiden. I would you were all hanged up against
each other, with your dame for company, for yon are all naught. On this
repulse, exit Smack, and enter Pluck, Blue, and Catch, the first with his
head broken, the other limping, and the third with his arm in a sling, all
trophies of Smack's victory. They disappeared after having threatened
vengeance upon the conquering Smack. However, he soon afterwards appeared
with his laurels. He told her of his various conflicts. I wonder, said
Mrs. Joan, or Jane, that you are able to beat them; you are little, and
they very big. He cared not for that, he replied; he would beat the
best two of them, and his cousins Smacks would beat the other two. This
most pitiful mirth, for such it certainly is, was mixed with tragedy
enough. Miss Throgmorton and her sisters railed against Dame Samuel; and
when Mr. Throgmorton brought her to his house by force, the little fiends
longed to draw blood of her, scratch her, and torture her, as the
witch-creed of that period recommended; yet the poor woman incurred deeper
suspicion when she expressed a wish to leave a house where she was so
coarsely treated and lay under such odious suspicions.
It was in vain that this unhappy creature endeavoured to avert their
resentment by submitting to all the ill-usage they chose to put upon her;
in vain that she underwent unresistingly the worst usage at the hand of
Lady Cromwell, her landlady, who, abusing her with the worst epithets,
tore her cap from her head, clipped out some of her hair, and gave it to
Mrs. Throgmorton to burn it for a counter-charm. Nay, Mother Samuel's
complaisance in the latter case only led to a new charge. It happened that
the Lady Cromwell, on her return home, dreamed of her day's work, and
especially of the old dame and her cat; and, as her ladyship died in a
year and quarter from that very day, it was sagaciously concluded that
she must have fallen a victim to the witcheries of the terrible Dame
Samuel. Mr. Throgmorton also compelled the old woman and her daughter to
use expressions which put their lives in the Power of these malignant
children, who had carried on the farce so long that they could not well
escape from their own web of deceit but by the death of these helpless
creatures. For example, the prisoner, Dame Samuel, was induced to say to
the supposed spirit, As I am a witch, and a causer of Lady Cromwell's
death, I charge thee to come out of the maiden. The girl lay still; and
this was accounted a proof that the poor woman, who, only subdued and
crushed by terror and tyranny, did as she was bidden, was a witch. One is
ashamed of an English judge and jury when it must be repeated that the
evidence of these enthusiastic and giddy-pated girls was deemed sufficient
to the condemnation of three innocent persons. Goody Samuel, indeed, was
at length worried into a confession of her guilt by the various vexations
which were practised on her. But her husband and daughter continued to
maintain their innocence. The last showed a high spirit and proud value
for her character. She was advised by some, who pitied her youth, to gain
at least a respite by pleading pregnancy; to which she answered
disdainfully, No, I will not be both held witch and strumpet! The
mother, to show her sanity of mind and the real value of her confession,
caught at the advice recommended to her daughter. As her years put such a
plea out of the question, there was a laugh among the unfeeling audience,
in which the poor old victim joined loudly and heartily. Some there were
who thought it no joking matter, and were inclined to think they had a
Joanna Southcote before them, and that the devil must be the father. These
unfortunate Samuels were condemned at Huntingdon, before Mr. justice
Fenner, 4th April, 1593. It was a singular case to be commemorated by an
annual lecture, as provided by Sir Samuel Cromwell, for the purposes of
justice were never so perverted, nor her sword turned to a more flagrant
murder.
We may here mention, though mainly for the sake of contrast, the
much-disputed case of Jane Wenham, the Witch of Walkerne, as she was
termed, which was of a much later date. Some of the country clergy were
carried away by the land-flood of superstition in this instance also, and
not only encouraged the charge, but gave their countenance to some of the
ridiculous and indecent tricks resorted to as proofs of witchcraft by the
lowest vulgar. But the good sense of the judge, seconded by that of other
reflecting and sensible persons, saved the country from the ultimate
disgrace attendant on too many of these unhallowed trials. The usual sort
of evidence was brought against this poor woman, by pretences of bewitched
persons vomiting fire a trick very easy to those who chose to exhibit
such a piece of jugglery amongst such as rather desire to be taken in by
it than to detect the imposture. The witchfinder practised upon her the
most vulgar and ridiculous tricks or charms; and out of a perverted
examination they drew what they called a confession, though of a forced
and mutilated character. Under such proof the jury brought her in guilty,
and she was necessarily condemned to die. More fortunate, however, than
many persons placed in the like circumstances, Jane Wenham was tried
before a sensible and philosophic judge, who could not understand that the
life of an English-woman, however mean, should be taken away by a set of
barbarous tricks and experiments, the efficacy of which depended on
popular credulity. He reprieved the witch before be left the assize-town.
The rest of the history is equally a contrast to some we have told and
others we shall have to recount. A humane and high-spirited gentleman,
Colonel Plummer of Gilston, putting at defiance popular calumny, placed
the poor old woman in a small house near his own and under his immediate
protection. Here she lived and died, in honest and fair reputation,
edifying her visitors by her accuracy and attention in repeating her
devotions; and, removed from her brutal and malignant neighbours, never
afterwards gave the slightest cause of suspicion or offence till her dying
day. As this was one of the last cases of conviction in England, Dr
Hutchison has been led to dilate upon it with some strength of eloquence
as well as argument.
He thus expostulates with some of the better class who were eager for
the prosecution: (1) What single fact of sorcery did this Jane Wenham
do? What charm did she use, or what act of witchcraft could you prove upon
her? Laws are against evil actions that can be proved to be of the
person's doing. What single fact that was against the statute could you
fix upon her? I ask (2) Did she so much as speak an imprudent word, or do
an immoral action, that you could put into the narrative of her case? When
she was denied a few turnips, she laid them down very submissively; when
she was called witch and bitch, she only took the proper means for the
vindication of her good name ; when she saw this storm coming upon her she
locked herself in her own house and tried to keep herself out of your
cruel hands; when her door was broken open, and you gave way to that
barbarous usage that she met with, she protested her innocence, fell upon
her knees, and begged she might pot go to gaol, and, in her innocent
simplicity, would have let you swim her; and at her trial she declared
herself a clear woman. This was her behaviour. And what could any of us
have done better, excepting in that case where she complied with you too
much, and offered to let you swim her ?
(3) When you used the meanest of paganish and popish superstitions
when you scratched and mangled and ran pins into her flesh, and used that
ridiculous trial of the bottle, &c. whom did you consult, and from whom
did you expect your answers? Who was your father? and into whose hands did
you put yourselves? and (if the true sense of the statute had been turned
upon you) which way would you have defended yourselves? (4) Durst you have
used her in this manner if she had been rich? and doth not her poverty
increase rather than lessen your guilt in what you did ?
And therefore, instead of closing your book with a liberavimus
animas nostras and reflecting upon the court, I ask you (5) Whether
you have not more reason to give God thanks that you met with a wise
judge, and a sensible gentleman, who kept you from shedding innocent
blood, and reviving the meanest and cruelest of all superstitions amongst
us?*
But although individuals of the English Church might on some occasions
be justly accused of falling into lamentable errors on a subject where
error was so general, it was not an usual point of their professional
character; and it must be admitted that the most severe of the laws
against witchcraft originated with a Scottish King of England, and that
the only extensive persecution following that statute occurred during the
time of the Civil Wars, when the Calvinists obtained for a short period a
predominating influence in the councils of Parliament.
James succeeded to Elizabeth amidst the highest expectations on the
part of his new people, who, besides their general satisfaction at coming
once more under the rule of a king, were also proud of his supposed
abilities and real knowledge of books and languages, and were naturally,
though imprudently, disposed to gratify him by deferring to his judgment
in matters wherein his studies were supposed to have rendered him a
special proficient. Unfortunately,
besides the more harmless freak of becoming a prentice in the art of
poetry, by which words and numbers were the only sufferers, the monarch
had composed a deep work upon Demonology, embracing in their fullest
extent the most absurd and gross of the popular errors on this subject. He
considered his crown and life as habitually aimed at by the sworn slaves
of Satan. Several had been executed for an attempt to poison him by
magical arts; and the turbulent Francis Stewart, Earl of Bothwell, whese
repeated attempts on his person had long been James's terror, had begun
his Course of rebellion by a consultation with the weird sisters and
soothsayers. Thus the king, who had proved with his pert the supposed
sorcerers to be the direct enemies of the Deity, and who conceived he knew
them from experience to be his own who, moreover, had upon much lighter
occasions (as in the case of Vorstius) showed no hesitation at throwing
his royal authority into the scale to aid his arguments very naturally
used his influence, when it was at the highest, to extend and enforce the
laws against a crime which he both hated and feared.
The English statute against witchcraft, passed in the very first year
of that reign, is therefore of a most special nature, describing
witchcraft by all the various modes and ceremonies in which, according to
King James's fancy, that crime could be perpetrated; each of which was
declared felony, without benefit of clergy.
This gave much wider scope I o prosecution on the statute than had
existed under the milder acts of Elizabeth. Men might now be punished for
the practice of witchcraft, as itself a crime, without necessary reference
to the ulterior objects of the perpetrator. It is remarkable that in the
same year, when the legislature rather adopted the passions and fears of
the king than expressed their own by this fatal enactment, the Convocation
of the Church evinced a very different spirit; for, seeing the ridicule
brought on their sacred profession by forward and presumptuous men, in the
attempt to relieve demoniacs from a disease which was commonly occasioned
by natural causes, if not the mere creature of imposture, they passed a
canon, establishing that no minister or ministers should in future attempt
to expel any devil or, devils, without the license of his bishop ; thereby
virtually putting a stop to a fertile source of knavery among the people,
and disgraceful folly among the inferior church-men.
The new statute of James does not, however, appear to have led at first
to many prosecutions. One of the most remarkable was (proh pudor! )
instigated by a gentleman, a scholar of classical taste, and a beautiful
poet, being no other than Edward Fairfax of Fayston, in Knaresborough
Forest, the translator of Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered. In allusion to
his credulity on such subjects, Collins has introduced the following
elegant lines:
How have I sate while
piped the pensive wind, To hear thy harp, by British Fairfax strung;
Prevailing poet, whose undoubting mind Believed the magic wonders which he
sung!
Like Mr. Throgmorton in the Warbois case, Mr. Fairfax accused six of
his neighbours of tormenting his children by fits of an extraordinary
kind, by imps, and by appearing before the afflicted in their own shape
during the crisis of these operations. The admitting this last
circumstance to be a legitimate mode of proof, gave a most cruel advantage
against the accused, for it could not, according to the ideas of the
demonologists, be confuted even by the most distinct alibi . To a
defence of that sort it was replied that the afflicted person did not see
the actual witch, whose corporeal presence must indeed have been obvious
to every one in the room as well as to the afflicted, but that the
evidence of the sufferers related to the appearance of their spectre
, or apparition; and this was accounted a sure sign of guilt in those
whose forms were so manifested during the fits of the afflicted, and who
were complained of and cried out upon by the victim. The obvious tendency
of this doctrine, as to visionary or spectral evidence, as it was called,
was to place the life and fame of the accused in the power of any
hypochondriac patient or malignant impostor, who might either seem to see,
or aver she saw, the spectrum of the accused old man or old woman, as if
enjoying and urging on the afflictions which she complained of; and,
strange to tell, the fatal sentence was to rest, not upon the truth of the
witnesses' eyes, but that of their imagination. It happened fortunately
for Fairfax's memory, that the objects of his prosecution were persons of
good character, and that the judge was a man of sense, and made so wise
and skilful a charge to the jury, that they brought in a verdict of not
guilty.
The celebrated case of the Lancashire witches (whose name was and
will be long remembered, partly from Shadwell's play, but more from the
ingenious and well-merited compliment to the beauty of the females of that
province which it was held to contain), followed soon after. Whether the
first notice of this sorcery sprung from the idle head of a mischievous
boy, is uncertain; but there is no doubt that it was speedily caught up
and fostered for the purpose of gain. The original story ran thus:
These Lancaster trials were at two periods, the one in 1613, before Sir
James Altham and Sir Edward Bromley, Barons of Exchequer, when nineteen
witches were tried at once at Lancaster, and another of the name of
Preston at York. The report against these people is drawn up by Thomas
Potts. An obliging correspondent sent me a sight of a copy of this curious
and rare book. The chief person age in the drama is Elizabeth Southam, a
witch redoubted under the name of Dembdike, an account of whom may be seen
in Mr. Roby's Antiquities of Lancaster, as well as a description of
Manikins' Tower, the witches' place of meeting. It appears that this
remote county was full of Popish recusants, travelling priests, and so
forth; and some of their spells are given in which the holy names and
things alluded to form a strange contrast with the purpose to which they
were applied, as to secure a good brewing of ale or the like. The public
imputed to the accused parties a long train of murders, conspiracies,
charms, mis-chances, hellish and damnable practices, apparent, says the
editor, on their own examinations and confessions, and, to speak the
truth, visible nowhere else. Mother Dembdike had the good luck to die
before conviction. Among other tales, we have one of two female
devils, called Fancy and Tib. It is remarkable that some of the
unfortunate women endeavoured to transfer the guilt from themselves to
others with whom they had old quarrels, which confessions were held good
evidence against those who made them, and against the alleged accomplice
also. Several of the unhappy women were found not guilty, to the great
displeasure of the ignorant people of the county. Such was the first
edition of the Lancashire witches. In that which follows the accusation
can be more clearly traced to the most villanous conspiracy.
About 1634 a boy called Edmund Robinson, whose father, a very poor man,
dwelt in Pendle Forest, the scene of the alleged witching, declared that
while gathering bullees (wild plums, perhaps) in one of the glades
of the forest, he saw two greyhounds, which he imagined to belong to
gentlemen in that neighbourhood. The boy reported that, seeing nobody
following them, he proposed to have a course; but though a hare was
started, the dogs refused to run. On this, young Robinson was about to
punish them with a switch, when one Dame Dickenson, a neighbour's wife,
started up instead of the one greyhound; a little boy instead of the
other. The witness averred that Mother Dickenson offered him money to
conceal what he had seen, which he refused, saying Nay, thou art a
witch. Apparently she was determined he should have full evidence of the
truth of what he said, for, like the Magician Queen in the Arabian Tales,
she pulled out of her pocket a bridle and shook it over the head of the
boy who had so lately represented the other greyhound. He was directly
changed into a horse; Mother Dickenson mounted, and took Robinson before
her. They then rode to a large house or barn called Hourstoun, into which
Edmund Robinson entered with others. He there saw six or seven persons
pulling at halters, from which, as they pulled them, meat ready dressed
came flying in quantities, together with lumps of butter, porringers of
milk, and whatever else might, in the boy's fancy, complete a rustic
feast. He declared that while engaged in the charm they made such ugly
faces and looked so fiendish that he was frightened. There was more to the
same purpose as the boy's having seen one of these haps sitting half-way
up his father's chimney, and some such goodly matter. But it ended in near
a score of persons being committed to prison; and the consequence was that
young Robinson was carried from church to church in the neighbourhood,
that he might recognise the faces of any persons he had seen at the
rendezvous of witches. Old Robinson, who had been an evidence against the
former witches in 1613, went along with his son, and knew, doubtless, how
to make his journey profitable; and his son probably took care to
recognise none who might make a handsome consideration. This boy, says
Webster, was brought into the church at Kildwick, a parish church, where
I, being then curate there, was preaching at the time, to look about him,
which made some little disturbance for the time. After prayers Mr.
Webster sought and found the boy, and two very unlikely persons, who, says
he, did conduct him and manage the business: I did desire some discourse
with the boy in private, but that they utterly denied. In the presence of
a great many many people I took the boy near me and said, ' Good boy, tell
me truly and in earnest, didst thou hear and see such strange things of
the motions of the witches as many do report that thou didst relate, or
did not some person teach thee to say such things of thyself?' But the two
men did pluck the boy from me, and said be had been examined by two able
justices of peace, and they never asked him such a question. To whom I
replied, ' The persons accused had the more wrong.' The boy afterwards
acknowledged, in his more advanced years, that he was instructed and
suborned to swear these things against the accused persons by his father
and others, and was heard often to confess that on the day which be
pretended to see the said witches at the house or barn, he was gathering
plums in a neighbour's orchard.*
There was now approaching a time when the law against witchcraft,
sufficiently bloody in itself, was to be pushed to more violent
extremities than the quiet scepticism of the Church of England clergy gave
way to. The great Civil War had been preceded and anticipated by the
fierce disputes of the ecclesiastical parties. The rash and ill-judged
attempt to enforce upon the Scottish a compliance with the government and
ceremonies of the High Church divines, and the severe prosecutions in the
Star Chamber and Prerogative Courts, had given the Presbyterian system,
for a season a great degree of popularity in England; and as the King's
party declined during the Civil War, and the state of church-government
was altered, the influence of the Calvinistic divines increased. With much
strict morality and pure practice of religion, it is to be regretted these
were still marked by unhesitating belief in the existence of sorcery, and
a keen desire to extend and enforce the legal penalties against it. Wier
has considered the clergy of every sect as being too eager in this species
of persecution: Ad gravem hanc impietatem, connivent theologi plerique
omnes . But it is not to be denied that the Presbyterian ecclesiastics
who, in Scotland, were often appointed by the Privy Council Commissioners
for the trial of witchcraft, evinced a very extraordinary degree of
credulity in such cases, and that the temporary superiority of the same
sect in England was
marked by enormous cruelties of this kind. To this general error must
impute the misfortune that good men, such as Calamy and Baxter, should
have countenanced or defended such proceedings as those of the impudent
and cruel wretch called Matthew Hopkins, who, in those unsettled times,
when men did what seemed good in their own eyes, assumed the title of
Witchfinder General, and, travelling through the counties of Essex,
Sussex, Norfolk, and Huntingdon, pretended to discover witches,
superintending their examination by the most unheard-of tortures, and
compelling forlorn and miserable wretches to admit and confess matters
equally absurd and impossible; the issue of which was the forfeiture of
their lives. Before examining these cases more minutely, I will quote
Baxter's own words; for no one can have less desire to wrong a devout and
conscientious man, such as that divine most unquestionably was, though
borne aside on this occasion by prejudice and credulity.
The hanging of a great number of witches in 1645 and 1646 is famously
known. Mr. Calamy went along with the judges on the circuit to hear their
confessions, and see there was no fraud or wrong done them. I spoke with
many understanding, pious, learned, and credible persons that lived in the
counties, and some that went to them in the prisons, and heard their sad
confessions. Among the rest an old reading.parson , named Lowis,
not far from Framlingham, was one that was hanged, who confessed that he
had two imps, and that one of them was always putting him upon doing
mischief; and he, being near the sea, as he saw a ship under sail, it
moved him to send it to sink the ship; and be consented, and saw the ship
sink before them. Mr. Baxter passes on to another story of a mother who
gave her child an imp like a mole, and told her to keep it in a can near
the fire, and she would never want; and more such stuff as nursery-maids
tell froward children to keep them quiet.
It is remarkable that in this passage Baxter names the Witchfinder
General rather slightly as one Hopkins, and without doing him the
justice due to one who had discovered more than one hundred witches, and
brought them to confessions, which that good man received as indubitable.
Perhaps the learned divine was one of those who believed that the
Witchfinder General had cheated the devil out of a certain
memorandum-book, in which Satan, for the benefit of his memory certainly,
had entered all the witches' names in England, and that Hopkins availed
himself of this record.*
It may be noticed that times of misrule and violence seem to create
individuals fatted to take advantage from them, and having a character
suited to the seasons which raise them into notice and action; just as a
blight on any tree or vegetable calls to life a peculiar insect to feed
upon and enjoy the decay which it has produced. A monster like Hopkins
could only have existed during the confusion of civil dissension. He was
perhaps a native of Manningtree, in Essex; at any rate, he resided there
in the year 1644, when an epidemic outcry of witchcraft arose in that
town. Upon this occasion he had made himself busy, and, affecting more
zeal and knowledge than other men, learned his trade of a witchfinder, as
he pretends, from experiment. He was afterwards permitted to perform it as
a legal profession, and moved from one place to another, with an assistant
named Sterne, and a female. In his defence against an accusation of
fleecing the country, he declares his regular charge was twenty shillings
a town, including charges of living and journeying thither and back again
with his assistants. He also affirms that he went nowhere unless called
and invited. His principal mode of discovery was
to strip the accused persons naked, and thrust pins into various parts
of their body, to discover the witch's mark, which was supposed to be
inflicted by the devil as a sign of his sovereignty, and at which she was
also said to suckle her imps. He also practised and stoutly defended the
trial by swimming, when the suspected person was wrapped in a sheet,
having the great toes and thumbs tied together, and so dragged through a
pond or river. If she sank, it was received in favour of the accused; but
if the body floated (which must have occurred ten times for once, if it
was placed with care on the surface of the water), the accused was
condemned, on the principle of King James, who, in treating of this mode
of trial, lays down that, as witches have renounced their baptism, so it
is just that the element through which the holy rite is enforced should
reject them, which is a figure of speech, and no argument. It was
Hopkins's custom to keep the poor wretches waking, in order to prevent
them from having encouragement from the devil, and, doubtless, to put
infirm, terrified, overwatched persons in the next state to absolute
madness; and for the same purpose they were dragged about by their keepers
till extreme weariness and the pain of blistered feet might form
additional inducements to confession. Hopkins confesses these last
practices of keeping the accused persons waking and forcing them to walk
for the same purpose had been originally used by him. But as his tract is
a professed answer to charges of cruelty and oppression, lie affirms that
both practices were then disused, and that they had not of late been
resorted to.
The boast of the English nation is a manly independence and
common-sense, which will not long permit the license of tyranny or
oppression on the meanest and most obscure sufferers. Many clergymen and
gentlemen made head against the practices of this cruel oppressor of the
defence-less, and it required courage to do so when such an unscrupulous
villain had so much interest. Mr. Gaul, a clergyman, of Houghton, in
Huntingdonshire, had the courage to appear in print on the weaker side;
and Hopkins, in consequence, assumed the assurance to write to some
functionaries of the place the following letter, which is an admirable
medley of impudence, bullying, and cowardice:-
My service to your worship presented.-I have this day received a
letter to come to a town called Great Houghton to search for evil-disposed
person's called witches (though I hear your minister is far against us,
through ignorance). I intend to come, God willing, the sooner to hear his
singular judgment in the behalf of such parties. I have known a minister
in Suffolk as much against this discovery in a pulpit, and forced to
recant it by the Committee*
in the same place. I much marvel such evil men should have any (much more
any of the clergy, who should daily speak terror to convince such
offenders) stand up to take their parts against such as are complainants
for the king, and sufferers themselves, with their families and estates. I
intend to give your town a visit suddenly. I will come to Kimbolton this
week, and it will be ten to one but I will come to your town first; but I
would certainly know before whether your town affords many sticklers for
such cattle, or is willing to give and allow us good welcome and
entertainment, as others where I have been, else I shall waive your shire
(not as yet beginning in any part of it myself), and betake me to such
places where I do and may punish (not only) without control, but with
thanks and recompense. So I humbly take my leave, and rest your servant to
be commanded,
Matthew Hopkins.
The sensible and courageous Mr. Gaul describes the tortures employed by
this fellow as equal to any practised in the Inquisition. Having taken
the suspected witch, she is placed in the middle of a room, upon a stool
or table,
cross-legged, or in some other uneasy posture, to which, if she submits
not, she is then bound with cords; there she is watched and kept without
meat or sleep for four-and-twenty hours, for, they say, they shall within
that time see her imp come and suck. A little hole is likewise made in the
door for the imps to come in at; and lest they should come in some less
discernible shape, they that watch are taught to be ever and anon sweeping
the room, and if they see any spiders or flies, to kill them; and if they
cannot kill them, they may be sure they are their imps.
If torture of this kind was applied to the Reverend Mr. Lewis, whose
death is too slightly announced by Mr. Baxter, we can conceive him, or any
man, to have indeed become so weary of his life as to acknowledge that, by
means of his imps, he sunk a vessel, without any purpose of gratification
to be procured to himself by such iniquity. But in another cause a judge
would have demanded some proof of the corpus delecti, some evidence
of a vessel being lost at the period, whence coming and whither bound; in
short, something to establish that the whole story was not the idle
imagination of a man who might have been entirely deranged, and certainly
was so at the time he made the admission. John Lewis was presented to the
vicarage of Brandiston, near Framlington in Suffolk, 6th May, 1596, where
he lived about fifty years, till executed as a wizard on such evidence as
we have seen. Notwithstanding the story of his alleged confession, be
defended himself courageously at his trial, and was probably condemned
rather as a royalist and malignant than for any other cause. He showed at
the execution considerable energy, and to secure that the funeral service
of the church should be said over his body, he read it aloud for himself
while on the road to the gibbet.
We have seen that in 1647 Hopkins's tone became lowered, and he began
to disavow some of the cruelties he had formerly practised. About the same
time a miserable old woman had fallen into the cruel hands of this
miscreant near Hoxne, a village in Suffolk, and had confessed all the
usual enormities, after being without food or rest a sufficient time.
Her imp, she said, was called Nan. A gentleman in the neighbourhood,
whose widow survived to authenticate the story, was so indignant that he
went to the house, took the woman out of such inhuman bands, dismissed the
witchfinders, and after due food and rest the poor old woman could
recollect nothing of the confession, but that she gave a favourite pullet
the name of Nan. For this Dr. Hutchison may be referred to, who quotes a
letter from the relict of the humane gentleman.
In the year 1645 a Commission of Parliament was sent down,
comprehending two clergymen in esteem with the leading party, one of whom,
Mr. Fairclough of Kellar, preached before the rest on the subject of
witchcraft; and after this appearance of enquiry the inquisitions and
executions went on as before. But the popular indignation was so strongly
excited against Hopkins, that some gentlemen seized on him, and put him to
his own favourite experiment of swimming, on which, as he happened to
float, he stood convicted of witchcraft and so the country was rid of him.
Whether he was drowned outright or not does not exactly appear, but he has
had the honour to be commemorated by the author of Hudibras:
Hath not this present
Parliament A leiger to the devil sent, Fully empower'd to treat about
Finding revolted witches out? And has he not within a year Hang'd
threescore of them in one shire? Some only for not being drown'd, And some
for sitting above ground Whole days and nights upon their breeches, And
feeling pain, were hang'd for witches. And some for putting knavish tricks
Upon green geese or turkey chicks; Or pigs that suddenly deceased Of
griefs unnatural, as he guess'd, Who proved himself at length a witch, And
made a rod for his own breech.
*
The understanding reader will easily conceive that this alteration of
the current in favour of those who disapproved of witch-prosecutions, must
have received encouragement from some quarter of weight and influence yet
it may sound strangely enough that this spirit of lenity should have been
the result of the peculiar principles of those sectarians of all
denominations, classed in general as Independents, who, though they had
originally courted the Presbyterians as the more numerous and prevailing
party, had at length shaken themselves loose of that connexion, and
finally combated with and overcome them. The Independents were
distinguished by the wildest license in their religious tenets, mixed with
much that was nonsensical and mystical. They disowned even the title of a
regular clergy, and allowed the preaching of any one who could draw
together a congregation that would support him, or who was willing,
without recompense, to minister to the spiritual necessities of his
bearers. Although such laxity of discipline afforded scope to the wildest
enthusiasm, and room for all possible varieties of doctrine, it had, on
the other hand, this inestimable recommendation, that it contributed to a
degree of general toleration which was at that time unknown to any other
Christian establishment. The very genius of a religion which admitted of
the subdivision of sects ad infinitum , excluded a legal
prosecution of any one of these for heresy or apostasy. If there had even
existed a sect of Manichζans, who made it their practice to adore the Evil
Principle, it may be doubted whether the other sectaries would have
accounted them absolute outcasts from the pale of the church; and,
fortunately, the same sentiment induced them to regard with horror the
prosecutions against witchcraft. Thus the Independents, when, under
Cromwell, they attained a supremacy over the Presbyterians, who to a
certain point
had been their allies, were disposed to counteract the violence of such
proceedings under pretence of witchcraft, as had been driven forward by
the wretched Hopkins, in Essex, Norfolk, and Suffolk, for three or four
years previous to 1647.
The return of Charles II. to his crown and kingdom, served in some
measure to restrain the general and wholesale manner in which the laws
against witchcraft had been administered during the warmth of the Civil
War. The statute of the 1st of King James, nevertheless, yet subsisted;
nor is it in the least likely, considering the character of the prince,
that he, to save the lives of a few old men or women, would have ran the
risk of incurring the odium of encouraging or sparing a crime still held
in horror by a great part of his subjects. The statute, however, was
generally administered by wise and skilful judges, and the accused had
such a chance of escape as the rigour of the absurd law permitted.
Nonsense, it is too obvious, remained in some cases predominant. In the
year 1663 an old dame, named Julian Coxe, was convicted chiefly on the
evidence of a huntsman, who declared on his oath, that he laid his
greyhounds on a hare, and coming up to the spot where he saw them mouth
her, there he found, on the other side of a bush, Julian Coxe lying
panting and breathless, in such a manner as to convince him that she had
been the creature which afforded him the course. The unhappy woman was
executed on this evidence.
Two years afterwards (1664), it is with regret we must quote the
venerable and devout Sir Matthew Hales, as presiding at a trial, in
consequence of which Amy Dunny and Rose Callender were hanged at Saint
Edmondsbury. But no man, unless very peculiarly circumstanced, can
extricate himself from the prejudices of his nation and age. The evidence
against the accused was laid, 1st, on the effect of spells used by
ignorant persons to counteract the supposed witchcraft; the use of which
was, under the statute of James I., as criminal as the act of sorcery
which such counter-charms were meant to neutralize. 2ndly, The two old
women, refused even the privilege of purchasing some herrings, having
expressed themselves with angry impatience, a child of the
herring-merchant fell ill in conseqence. 3rdly, A cart was driven against
the miserable cottage of Amy Dunny. She scolded, of course; and shortly
after the cart (what a good driver will scarce comprehend) stuck fast
in a gate, where its wheels touched neither of the posts, and yet was
moved easily forward on one of the posts (by which it was not impeded)
being cut down. 4thly, One of the afflicted girls being closely muffled,
went suddenly into a fit upon being touched by one of the supposed
witches. But upon another trial it was found that the person so
blindfolded fell into the same rage at the touch of an unsuspected person.
What perhaps sealed the fate of the accused was the evidence of the
celebrated Sir Thomas Browne, that the fits were natural, but heightened
by the power of the devil co-operating with the malice of witches; a
strange opinion, certainly, from the author of a treatise on Vulgar
Errors !*
But the torch of science was now fairly lighted, and gleamed in more
than one kingdom of the world, shooting its rays on every side, and
catching at all means which were calculated to increase the illumination.
The Royal Society, which had taken its rise at Oxford from a private
association who met in Dr. Wilkin's chambers about the year 1652, was, the
year after the Restoration, incorporated by royal charter, and began to
publish their Transactions, and give a new and more rational character to
the pursuits of philosophy.
In France, where the mere will of the government could accomplish
greater changes, the consequence of an enlarged
spirit of scientific discovery was, that a decisive stop was put to the
witch-prosecutions which had heretofore been as common in that kingdom as
in England. About the year 1672 there was a general arrest of very many
shepherds and others in Normandy, and the Parliament of Rouen prepared to
proceed in the investigation with the usual severity. But an order, or
arret , from the king (Louis XIV.), with advice of his council,
commanding all these unfortunate persons to be set at liberty and
protected, had the most salutary effects all over the kingdom. The French
Academy of Sciences was also founded; and, in imitation, a society of
learned Germans established a similar institution at Leipsic. Prejudices,
however old, were overawed and controlled much was accounted for on
natural principles that had hitherto been imputed to spiritual agency
everything seemed to promise that farther access to the secrets of nature
might be opened to those who should prosecute their studies experimentally
and by analysis and the mass of ancient opinions which overwhelmed the
dark subject of which we treat began to be derided and rejected by men of
sense and education.
In many cases the prey was now snatched from the spoiler. A pragmatical
justice of peace in Somersetshire commenced a course of enquiry after
offenders against the statute of James I., and had he been allowed to
proceed, Mr. Hunt might have gained a name as renowned for witch-finding
as that of Mr. Hopkins; but his researches were stopped from higher
authority the lives of the poor people arrested (twelve in number) were
saved, and the country remained at quiet, though the supposed witches were
suffered to live. The examinations attest some curious particulars, which
may be found in Sadducismus Triumphalus : for among the usual
string of froward, fanciful, or, as they were called, afflicted children,
brought forward to club their startings, starings, and screamings, there
appeared also certain remarkable confessions of the accused, from which we
learn that the Somerset Satan enlisted his witches, like a wily recruiting
sergeant, with one shilling in hand and twelve in promises ; that when the
party of weird-sisters passed to the witch-meeting they used the magic
words, Thout, tout, throughout, and about ; and that when they
departed they exclaimed, Rentum, Tormentum ! We are further
informed that his Infernal Highness, on his departure, leaves a smell and
that (in nursery-maid's phrase) not a pretty one, behind him. Concerning
this fact we have a curious exposition by Mr. Glanville. This,
according to that respectable authority, seems to imply the reality of
the business, those ascititious particles which he held together in his
sensible shape being loosened at the vanishing, and so offending the
nostrils by their floating and diffusing themselves in the open air.*
How much are we bound to regret that Mr. Justice Hunt's discovery of
this hellish kind of witches, in itself so clear and plain, and
containing such valuable information, should have been smothered by
meeting with opposition and discouragement from some then in authority !
Lord Keeper Guildford was also a stifler of the proceedings against
witches. Indeed, we may generally remark, during the latter part of the
seventeenth century, that where the judges were men of education and
courage, sharing in the information of the times, they were careful to
check the precipitate ignorance and prejudice of the juries, by giving
them a more precise idea of the indifferent value of confessions by the
accused themselves, and of testimony derived from the pretended visions of
those supposed to be bewitched. Where, on the contrary, judges shared with
the vulgar in their ideas of such fascination, or were contented to leave
the evidence with the jury, fearful to withstand the general cry too
common on such occasions, a verdict of guilty often followed.
We are informed by Roger North that a case of this kind happened at the
assizes in Exeter, where his brother,
the Lord Chief justice, did not interfere with the crown trials, and
the other. judge left for execution a poor old woman, condemned, as usual,
on her own confession, and on the testimony of a neighbour, who deponed
that he saw a cat jump into the accused person's cottage window at
twilight, one evening, and that he verily believed the said cat to be the
devil; on which precious testimony the poor wretch was accordingly hanged.
On another occasion, about the same time, the passions of the great and
little vulgar were so much excited by the aquittal of an aged village
dame, whom the judge had taken some pains to rescue, that Sir John Long, a
man of rank and fortune, came to the judge in the greatest perplexity,
requesting that the hag might not be permitted to return to her miserable
cottage on his estates, since all his tenants had in that case threatened
to leave him. In compassion to a gentleman who apprehended ruin from a
cause so whimsical, the dangerous old woman was appointed to be kept by
the town where she was acquitted, at the rate of half-a-crown a week, paid
by the parish to which she belonged. But behold! in the period betwixt the
two assizes Sir John Long and his farmers had mustered courage enough to
petition that this witch should be sent back to them in all her terrors,
because they could support her among them at a shilling a week cheaper
than they were obliged to pay to the town for her maintenance. In a
subsequent trial before Lord Chief justice North himself, that judge
detected one of those practices which, it is to be feared, were too common
at the time, when witnesses found their advantage in feigning themselves
bewitched. A woman, supposed to be the victim of the male sorcerer at the
bar, vomited pins in quantities, and those straight, differing from the
crooked pins usually produced at such times, and less easily concealed in
the mouth. The judge, however, discovered, by cross-examining a candid
witness, that in counterfeiting her fits of convulsion the woman sunk her
head on her breast, so as to take up with her lips the pins which she had
placed ready in her stomacher. The man was acquitted, of course. A
frightful old hag, who was present, distinguished herself so much by her
benedictions on the judge, that he asked the cause of the peculiar
interest which she took in the acquittal. Twenty years ago, said the
poor woman, they would have hanged me for a witch, but could not; and
now, but for your lordship, they would have murdered my innocent son.\
*
Such scenes happened frequently on the assizes, while country
gentlemen, like the excellent Sir Roger de Coverley, retained a private
share in the terror with which their tenants, servants, and retainers
regarded some old Moll White, who put the hounds at fault and ravaged the
fields with hail and hurricanes. Sir John Reresby, after an account of a
poor woman tried for a witch at York in 1686 and acquitted, as he thought,
very properly, proceeds to tell us that, notwithstanding, the sentinel
upon the jail where she was confined avowed that he saw a scroll of
paper creep from under the prison-door, and then change itself first into
a monkey and then into a turkey, which the under-keeper confirmed. This,
says Sir John, I have heard from the mouth of both, and now leave it to
be believed or disbelieved as the reader may be inclined. We may see that Reresby, a statesman and a soldier, had not as yet
plucked the old woman out of his heart. Even Addison himself ventured no
farther in his incredulity respecting this crime than to contend that
although witchcraft might and did exist, there was no such thing as a
modern instance competently proved.
As late as 1682 three unhappy women named Susan Edwards, Mary Trembles,
and Temperance Lloyd were hanged at Exeter for witchcraft, and, as usual,
on their own confession. This is believed to be the last execution of
the kind in England under form of judicial sentence. But the ancient
superstition, so interesting to vulgar credulity, like sediment clearing
itself from water, sunk down in a deeper shade upon the ignorant and
lowest classes of society in proportion as the higher regions were
purified from its influence. The populace, including the ignorant of every
class, were more enraged against witches when their passions were once
excited in proportion to the lenity exercised towards the objects of their
indignation by those who administered the laws. Several cases occurred in
which the mob, impressed with a conviction of the guilt of some destitute
old creatures, took the law into their own hands, and proceeding upon such
evidence as Hopkins would have had recourse to, at once, in their own
apprehension, ascertained their criminality and administered the deserved
punishment.
The following instance of such illegal and inhuman proceedings occurred
at Oakly, near Bedford, on 12th July, 1707. There was one woman, upwards
of sixty years of age, who, being under an imputation of witchcraft, was
desirous to escape from so foul a suspicion, and to conciliate the
good-will of her neighbours, by allowing them to duck her. The parish
officers so far consented to their humane experiment as to promise the
poor woman a guinea if she should clear herself by sinking. The
unfortunate object was tied up in a wet sheet, her thumbs and great toes
were bound together, her cap torn off, and all her apparel searched for
pins; for there is an idea that a single pin spoils the operation of the
charm. She was then dragged through the river Ouse by a rope tied round
her middle. Unhappily for the poor woman, her body floated, though her
head remained under water. The experiment was made three times with the
same effect. The cry to hang or drown the witch then became general, and
as she lay half-dead on the bank they loaded the wretch with reproaches,
and hardly forbore blows. A single humane bystander took her part, and
exposed himself to rough usage for doing so. Luckily one of the mob
themselves at length suggested the additional experiment of weighing the
witch against the church Bible. The friend of humanity caught at this
means of escape, supporting the proposal by the staggering argument that
the Scripture, being the work of God himself, must outweigh necessarily
all the operations or vassals of the devil. The reasoning was received as
conclusive, the more readily as it promised a new species of amusement.
The woman was then weighed against a church Bible of twelve pounds jockey
weight, and as she was considerably preponderant, was dismissed with
honour. But many of the mob counted her acquittal irregular, and would
have had the poor dame drowned or hanged on the result of her ducking, as
the more authentic species of trial.
At length a similar piece of inhumanity, which had a very different
conclusion, led to the final abolition of the statute of James I. as
affording countenance for such brutal proceedings. An aged pauper, named
Osborne, and his wife, who resided near Tring, in Staffordshire, fell
under the suspicion of the mob on account of supposed witchcraft. The
overseers of the poor, understanding that the rabble entertained a purpose
of swimming these infirm creatures, which indeed they had expressed in a
sort of proclamation, endeavoured to oppose their purpose by securing the
unhappy couple in the vestry-room, which they barricaded. They were
unable, however, to protect them in the manner they intended. The mob
forced the door, seized the accused, and, with ineffable brutality,
continued dragging the wretches through a pool of water till the woman
lost her life. A brute in human form, who had superintended the murder,
went among the spectators, and requested money for the sport he had shown
them ! The life of the other victim was with great difficulty saved. Three
men were tried for their share in this inhuman action. Only one of them,
named Colley, was condemned and hanged. When he came to execution, the
rabble, instead of crowding round the gallows as usual, stood at a
distance, and abused those who were putting. to death, they said, an
honest fellow for ridding the parish of an accursed witch. This abominable
murder was committed July 30, 1751
The repetitition of such horrors, the proneness of the people to so
cruel and heart-searing a superstition, was traced by the legislature to
its source, namely, the yet un-abolished statute of James I Accordingly,
by the 9th George II. cap. 5, that odious law, so long the object of
horror to all ancient and poverty-stricken females in the kingdom, was
abrogated, and all criminal procedure on the subject of sorcery or
witchcraft discharged in future through-out Great Britain; reserving for
such as should pretend to the skill of fortune-tellers, discoverers of
stolen goods, or the like, the punishment of the correction-house, as due
to rogues and vagabonds. Since that period witchcraft has been little
heard of in England, and although the belief in its existence has in
remote places survived the law that recognised the evidence of the crime,
and assigned its punishment yet such faith is gradually becoming
forgotten since the rabble have been deprived of all pretext to awaken it
by their own riotous proceedings. Some rare instances have occurred of
attempts similar to that for which Colley suffered; and I observe one is
preserved in that curious register of knowledge, Mr. Hone's Popular
Amusements, from which it appears that as late as the end of last century
this brutality was practised, though happily without loss of life.
The Irish statute against witchcraft still exists, as it would seem.
Nothing occurred in that kingdom which recommended its being formally
annulled; but it is considered as obsolete, and should so wild a thing be
attempted in the present day, no procedure, it is certain, would now be
permitted to lie upon it.
If anything were wanted to confirm the general proposition that the
epidemic terror of witchcraft increases and becomes general in proportion
to the increase of prosecutions against witches, it would be sufficient to
quote certain extraordinary occurrences in New England. Only a brief
account can be here given of the dreadful hallucination under wich
colonists of that province were for a time deluded and oppressed by a
strange contagious terror, and how suddenly and singularly it was cured,
even by its own excess; but is too strong evidence of the imaginary
character of this hideous disorder to be altogether suppressed.
New England, as is well known, was peopled mainly by emigrants who had
been disgusted with the government of Charles I. in church and state,
previous to the great Civil War. Many of the more wealthy settlers were
Presbyterians and Calvinists; others, fewer in number and less influential
from their fortune, were Quakers, Anabaptists, or members of the other
sects who were included under the general name of Independents. The
Calvinists brought with them the same zeal for religion and strict
morality which everywhere distinguished them. Unfortunately, they were not
wise according to their zeal, but entertained a proneness to believe in
supernatural and direct personal intercourse between the devil and his
vassals, an error to which, as we have endeavoured to show, their brethren
in Europe had from the beginning been peculiarly subject. In a country
imperfectly cultivated, and where the partially improved spots were
embosomed in inaccessible forests, inhabited by numerous tribes of
savages, it was natural that a disposition to superstition should rather
gain than lose ground, and that to other dangers and horrors with which
they were surrounded, the colonists should have added fears of the devil,
not merely as the Evil Principle tempting human nature to sin, and thus
endangering our salvation, but as combined with sorcerers and witches to
inflict death and torture upon children and others.
The first case which I observe was that of four children of a person
called John Goodwin, a mason. The eldest, a girl, had quarrelled with the
laundress of the family about some linen which was amissing. The mother of
the laundress, an ignorant, testy, and choleric old Irishwoman, scolded
the accuser; and shortly after, the elder Goodwin, her sister and two
brothers, were seized with such strange diseases that all their neighbours
concluded they were bewitched. They conducted themselves as those supposed
to suffer under maladies created by such influence were accustomed to do.
They stiffened their necks so hard at one time that the joints could not
be moved; at another time their necks were so flexible and supple that it
seemed the bone was dissolved. They had violent convulsions, in which
their jaws snapped with the force of a spring-trap set for vermin. Their
limbs were curiously contorted, and to those who had a taste for the
marvellous, seemed entirely dislocated and displaced. Amid these
distortions, they cried out against the poor old woman, whose name was
Glover, alleging that she was in presence with them adding to their
torments. The miserable Irishwoman, who hardly could speak the English
language, repeated her Pater Noster and Ave Maria like a good Catholic;
but there were some words which she had forgotten. She was therefore
supposed to be unable to pronounce the whole consistently and correctly,
and condemned and executed accordingly.
But the children of Goodwin found the trade they were engaged in to be
too profitable to be laid aside, and the eldest in particular continued
all the external signs of witchcraft and possession. Some of these were
excellently calculated to flatter the self-opinion and prejudices of the
Calvinist ministers by whom she was attended, and accordingly bear in
their very front the character of studied and voluntary imposture. The
young woman, acting, as was supposed, under the influence of the devil,
read a Quaker treatise with ease and apparent satisfaction; but a book
written against the poor inoffensive Friends the devil would not allow his
victim to touch. She could look on a Church of England Prayer-book, and
read the portions of Scripture which it contains without difficulty or
impediment; but the which possessed her threw her into fits if she
attempted to read the same Scriptures from the Bible, as if the awe which
it is supposed the fiends entertain for Holy Writ depended, not on the
meaning of the words, but the arrangement of the page, and the type in
which they were printed. This singular species of flattery was designed to
captivate the clergyman through his professional opinions; others were
more strictly personal. The afflicted damsel seems to have been somewhat
of the humour of the Inamorata of Messrs. Smack, Pluck, Catch, and
Company, and had, like her, merry as well as melancholy fits. She often
imagined that her attendant spirits brought her a handsome pony to ride
off with them to their rendezvous. On such occasions she made a spring
upwards, as if to mount her horse, and then, still seated on her chair,
mimicked with dexterity and agility the motions of the animal pacing,
trotting, and galloping, like a child on the nurse's knee; but when she
cantered in this manner upstairs, she affected inability to enter the
clergyman's study, and when she was pulled into it by force, used to
become quite well, and stand up as a rational being. Reasons were given
for this, says the simple minister, that seem more kind than true.
Shortly after this, she appears to have treated the poor divine with a
species of sweetness and attention, which gave him greater embarrassment
than her former violence. She used to break in upon him at his studies to
importune him to come downstairs, and thus advantaged doubtless the
kingdom of Satan by the interruption of his pursuits. At length the
Goodwins were, or appeared to be, cured. But the example bad been given
and caught, and the blood of poor Dame Glover, which had been the
introduction to this tale of a hobby-horse, was to be the forerunner of
new atrocities and fearfully more general follies.
This scene opened by the illness of two girls, a daughter and niece of
Mr. Parvis, the minister of Salem, who fell under an affliction similar to
that of the Goodwins. Their mouths were stopped, their throats choked,
their limbs racked, thorns were stuck into their flesh, and pins were
ejected from their stomachs. An Indian and his wife, servants of the
family, endeavouring, by some spell of their own, to discover by whom the
fatal charm had been imposed on their master's children, drew themselves
under suspicion, and were hanged. The judges and juries persevered,
encouraged by the discovery of these poor Indians' guilt, and hoping they
might thus expel from the colony the authors of such practices. They
acted, says Mather, the historian, under a conscientious wish to do
justly; but the cases of witchcraft and possession increased as if they
were transmitted by contagion, and the same sort of spectral evidence
being received which had occasioned the condemnation of the Indian woman
Titu, became generally fatal. The afflicted persons failed not to see the
spectres, as they were termed, of the persons by whom they were tormented.
Against this species of evidence no alibi could be offered, because
it was admitted, as we have said elsewhere, that the real persons of the
accused were not there present; and everything rested upon the assumption
that the afflicted persons were telling the truth, since their evidence
could not be redargued. These spectres were generally represented as
offering their victims a book, on signing which they would be freed from
their torments. Sometimes the devil appeared in person, and added his own
eloquence to move the afflicted persons to consent.
At first, as seems natural enough, the poor and miserable alone were
involved; but presently, when such evidence was admitted as
incontrovertible, the afflicted began to see the spectral appearances of
persons of higher condition and of irreproachable lives, some of whom were
arrested, some made their escape, while several were executed. The more
that suffered the greater became the number of afflicted persons, and the
wider and the more numerous were the denunciations against supposed
witches. The accused were of all ages. A child of five years old was
indicted by some of tile afflicted, who imagined they saw this juvenile
wizard active in tormenting them, and appealed to the mark of little teeth
on their bodies, where they stated it had bitten them. A poor dog was also
hanged as having been alleged to be busy in this infernal persecution.
These gross insults on common reason occasioned a revulsion in public
feeling, but not till many lives had been sacrificed. By this means
nineteen men and women were executed, besides a stout-hearted man named
Cory, who refused to plead, and was accordingly pressed to death according
to the old law. On this horrible occasion a circumstance took place
disgusting to humanity, which must yet be told, to show how superstition
can steel the heart of a man against the misery of his fellow-creature.
The dying man, in the mortal agony, thrust out his tongue, which the
sheriff crammed with his cane back again into his mouth. Eight persons
were condemned besides those who had actually suffered, and no less than
two hundred were in prison and under examination.
Men began then to ask whether the devil might not artfully deceive the
afflicted into the accusation of good and innocent persons by presenting
witches and fiends in the resemblance of blameless persons, as engaged in
the tormenting of their diseased country-folk. This argument was by no
means inconsistent with the belief in witchcraft, and was the more readily
listened to on that account. Besides, men found that no rank or condition
could save them from the danger of this horrible accusation if they
continued to encourage the witnesses in such an unlimited course as had
hitherto been granted to them. Influenced by these reflections, the
settlers awoke as from a dream, and the voice of the public, which had so
lately demanded vengeance on all who were suspected of sorcery, began now,
on the other hand, to lament the effusion of blood, under the strong
suspicion that part of it at least had been innocently and unjustly
sacrificed. In Mather's own language, which we use as that of a man deeply
convinced of the reality of the crime, experience showed that the more
were apprehended the more were still afflicted by Satan, and the number of
confessions increasing did but increase the number of the accused, and the
execution of some made way to the apprehension of others. For still the
afflicted complained of being tormented by new objects as the former were
removed, so that some of those that were concerned grew amazed at the
number and condition of those that were accused, and feared that Satan, by
his wiles, had enwrapped innocent persons under the imputation of that
crime; and at last, as was evidently seen, there must be a stop put, or
the generation of the kingdom of God would fall under condemnation.*
The prosecutions were therefore suddenly stopped, the prisoners
dismissed, the condemned pardoned, and even those who had confessed, the
number of whom was very extraordinary, were pardoned amongst others; and
the author we have just quoted thus records the result : When this
prosecution ceased, the Lord so chained up Satan that the afflicted grew
presently well. The accused were generally quiet, and for five years there
was no such molestation among us.
To this it must be added that the congregation of Salem compelled Mr.
Parvis, in whose family the disturbance had began and who, they alleged,
was the person by whom it was most fiercely driven on in the commencement,
to leave his settlement amongst them. Such of the accused as had
confessed the acts of witchcraft imputed to them generally denied and
retracted their confessions, asserting them to have been made under fear
of torture, influence of persuasion, or other circumstances exclusive of
their free will. Several of the judges and jurors concerned in the
sentence of those who were executed published their penitence for their
rashness in convicting these unfortunate persons; and one of the judges, a
man of the most importance in the colony, observed, during the rest of his
life, the anniversary of the first execution as a day of solemn fast and
humiliation for his own share in the transaction. Even the barbarous
Indians were struck with wonder at the infatuation of the English
colonists on this occasion, and drew disadvantageous comparisons between
them and the French, among whom, as they remarked, the Great Spirit
sends no witches.
The system of witchcraft, as believed in Scotland, must next claim our
attention, as it is different in some respects from that of England, and
subsisted to a later period, and was prosecuted with much more severity.
* Hutchison
on Witchcraft, p. 162.
* Hutchison's Essay on Witchcraft, p. 166. *Webster on Witchcraft,
edition 1677, p. 278. * This reproach is noticed in a very rare tract,
which was bought at Mr. Lort's sale, by the celebrated collector Mr.
Bindley, and is now in the author's possession. Its full title is, The
Discovery of Witches, in Answer to several Queries lately delivered to the
judge of Assize for the County of Norfolk; and now published by Matthew
Hopkins, Witchfinder, for the Benefit of the whole Kingdom. Printed for R,
Royston, at the Angel, in Inn Lane. 1647. * Of Parliament. * Hudibras,
part ii. canto 3. * See the account of Sir T. Browne in No. XIV. of the
Family Library ( Lives of British Physicians"), p. 60. * Glanville's
Collection of Relations. * Roger North's Life of Lord-Keeper
Guilford. Memoirs of Sir John Reresby, p. 237. * Mather's Magnalia,
book vi. chap. lxxxii. The zealous author, however, regrets the general
gaol-delivery on the score of sorcery, and thinks, had the times been
calm, the case might have required a farther investigation, and that, on
the whole, the matter was ended too abruptly. But, the temper of the times
considered, he admits candidly that it is better to act moderately in
matters capital, and to let the guilty escape, than run the risk of
destroying the innocent. |