Chapter III. How they are Transported from Place to Place.
And now we must consider their ceremonies and in what manner
they proceed in their operations, first in respect of their actions
towards themselves and in their own persons. And among their chief
operations are being bodily transported from place to place, and to
practise carnal connexion with Incubus devils, which we shall treat of
separately, beginning with their bodily vectification. But here it must be
noted that this transvection offers a difficulty, which has often been
mentioned, arising from one single authority, where it is said: It cannot
be admitted as true that certain wicked women, perverted by Satan and
seduced by the illusions and phantasms of devils, do actually, as they
believe and profess, ride in the night-time on certain beasts with Diana,
a goddess of the Pagans, or with Herodias and an innumerable multitude of
women, and in the untimely silence of night pass over immense tracts of
land, and have to obey her in all things as their Mistress, etc. Wherefore
the priest of God ought to preach to the people that this is altogether
false, and that such phantasms are sent not by God, but by an evil Spirit
to confuse the minds of the faithful. For Satan himself transforms himself
into various shapes and forms; and by deluding in dreams the mind which he
holds captive, leads it through devious ways, etc.
And there are those who, taking their example from S. Germain and a
certain other man who kept watch over his daughter to determine this
matter, sometimes preach that this is an altogether impossible thing; and
that it is indiscreet to ascribe to witches and their operations such
levitations, as well as the injuries which happen to men, animals, and the
fruits of the earth; since just as they are the victims of phantasy in
their transvections, so also are they deluded in the matter of the harm
they wreak on living creatures.
But this opinion was refuted as heretical in the First Question; for it
leaves out of account the Divine permission with regard to the devil's
power, which extends to even greater things than this: and it is contrary
to the meaning of Sacred Scripture, and has caused intolerable damage to
Holy Church, since now for many years, thanks to this pestiferous
doctrine, witches have remained unpunished, because the secular courts
have lost their power to punish them. Therefore the diligent reader will
consider what was there set down for the stamping out of that opinion, and
will for the present note how they are transported, and in what ways this
is possible, of which some examples will be adduced.
It is shown in various ways that they can be bodily transported; and
first, from the operations of other Magicians. For if they could not be
transported, it would either be because God does not permit it, or because
the devil cannot do this since it is contrary to nature. It cannot be for
the first reason, for both greater and less things can be done by the
permission of God; and greater things are often done both to children and
men, even to just men confirmed in grace.
For when it is asked whether substitutions of children can be affected
by the work of devils, and whether the devil can carry a man from place to
place even against his will; to the first question the answer is, Yes. For
William of Paris says in the last part of his De Uniuerso:
Substitutions of children are, with God's permission, possible, so that
the devil can affect a change of the child or even a transformation. For
such children are always miserable and crying; and although four or five
mothers could hardly support enough milk for them, they never grow fat,
yet are heavy beyond the ordinary. But this should neither be affirmed nor
denied to women, on account of the great fear which it may cause them, but
they should be instructed to ask the opinion of learned men. For God
permits this on account of the sins of the parents, in that sometimes men
curse their pregnant wives, saying, May you be carrying a devil! or some
such thing. In the same way impatient women often say something of the
sort. And many examples have been given by other men, some of them pious
men.
For Vincent of Beauvais (Spec. Hist., XXVI, 43) related a story
told by S. Peter Damian of a five-year-old son of a nobleman, who was for
the time living in a monastery; and one night he was carried out of the
monastery into a locked mill, where he was found in the morning. And when
he was questioned, he said that he had been carried by some men to a great
feast and bidden to eat; and afterwards he was put into the mill through
the roof.
And what of those Magicians whom we generally call Necromancers, who
are often carried through the air by devils for long distances? And
sometimes they even persuade others to go with them on a horse, which is
not really a horse but a devil in that form, and, as they say, thus warn
their companions not to make the sign of the Cross.
And though we are two who write this book, one of us has very often
seen and known such men. For there is a man who was once a scholar, and is
now believed to be a priest in the diocese of Freising, who used to say
that at one time he had been bodily carried through the air by a devil,
and taken to the most remote parts.
There lives another priest in Oberdorf, a town near Landshut, who was
at that time a friend of that one of us, who saw with his own eyes such a
transportation, and tells how the man was borne on high with arms
stretched out, shouting but not whimpering. And the cause, as he tells it,
was as follows. A number of scholars had met together to drink beer, and
they all agreed that the one who fetched the beer should not have to pay
anything. And so one of them was going to fetch the beer, and on opening
the door saw a thick cloud before the grunsel, and returning in terror
told his companions why he would not go for the drink. Then that one of
them who was carried away said angrily: "Even if the devil were there, I
shall fetch the drink." And, going out, he was carried through the air in
the sight of all the others.
And indeed it must be confessed that such things can happen not only to
those who are awake, but also to men who are asleep; namely, they can be
bodily transported through the air while they are fast asleep.
This is clear in the case of certain men who walk in their sleep on the
roofs of houses and over the highest buildings, and no one can oppose
their progress either on high or below. And if they are called by their
own names by the other bystanders, they immediately fall crashing to the
ground.
Many think, and not without reason, that this is devils' work. For
devils are of many different kinds, and some, who fell from the lower
choir of Angels, are tortured as if for smaller sins with lighter
punishments as well as the punishment of damnation which they must suffer
eternally. And these cannot hurt anybody, at least not seriously, but for
the most part carry out only practical jokes. And others are Incubi or
Succubi, who punish men in the night, defiling them in the sin of lechery.
It is not wonderful if they are given also to horse-play such as this.
The truth can be deduced from the words of Cassian, Collationes
I, where he says that there is no doubt that there are as many different
unclean spirits as there are different desires in men. For it is manifest
that some of them, which the common people call Fauns, and we call Trolls,
which abound in Norway, are such buffoons and jokers that they haunt
certain places and roads and, without being able to do any hurt to those
who pass by, are content with mocking and deluding them, and try to weary
them rather than hurt them. And some of them only visit men with harmless
nightmares. But others are so furious and truculent that they are not
content to afflict with an atrocious dilation the bodies of those whom
they inflate, but even come rushing from on high and hasten to strike them
with the most savage blows. Our author means that they do not only possess
men, but torture them horribly, as did those which are described in S.
Matthew viii.
From this we can conclude, first that it must not be said that witches
cannot be locally transported because God does not permit it. For if He
permits it in the case of the just and innocent, and of other Magicians,
how should He not in the case of those who are totally dedicated to the
devil? And we say with all reverence: Did not the devil take up Our
Saviour, and carry Him up to a high place, as the Gospel testifies?
Neither can the second argument of our opponents be conceded, that the
devil cannot do this thing. For it has already been shown that he has so
great natural power, exceeding all corporeal power, that there is no
earthly power that can be compared with him; as it is said: "There is no
power on earth that can be compared with him," etc. Indeed the natural
power or virtue which is in Lucifer is so great that there is none greater
among the good Angels in Heaven. For just as he excelled all the Angels in
his nature, and not his nature, but only his grace, was diminished by his
Fall, so that nature still remains in him, although it is darkened and
bound. Wherefore the gloss on that "There is no power on earth" says:
Although he excels all things, yet he is subject to the merits of the
Saints.
Two objections which someone may bring forward are not valid. First,
that man's soul could resist him, and that the text seems to speak of one
devil in particular, since it speaks in the singular, namely Lucifer. And
because it was he who tempted Christ in the wilderness, and seduced the
first man, he is now bound in chains. And the other Angels are not so
powerful, since he excels them all. Therefore the other spirits cannot
transport wicked men through the air from place to place.
These arguments have no force. For, to consider the Angels first, even
the least Angel is incomparably superior to all human power, as can be
proved in many ways. First, a spiritual is stronger than a corporeal
power, and so is the power of an Angel, or even of the soul, greater than
that of the body. Secondly, as to the soul; every bodily shape owes its
individuality to matter, and, in the case of human beings, to the fact
that a soul informs it; but immaterial forms are absolute intelligences,
and therefore have an absolute and more universal power. For this reason,
the soul when joined to the body cannot in this way suddenly transfer its
body locally or raise it up in the air; although it could easily do so,
with God's permission, if it were separate from its body. Much more, then,
is this possible to an entirely immaterial spirit, such as a good or bad
Angel. For a good Angel transported Habacuc in a moment from Judaea to
Chaldaea. And for this reason it is concluded that those who by night are
carried in their sleep over high buildings are not carried by their own
souls, nor by the influence of the stars, but by some mightier power, as
was shown above.
Thirdly, it is the nature of the body to be moved, as to place,
directly by a spiritual nature; and, as Aristotle says, Physics ,
VIII, local motion is the first of bodily motions; and he proves this by
saying that local motion is not intrinsically in the power of any body as
such, but is due to some exterior force.
Wherefore it is concluded, not so much from the holy Doctors as from
the Philosophers, that the highest bodies, that is, the stars, are moved
by spiritual essences, and by separate Intelligences which are good both
by nature and in intention. For we see that the soul is the prime and
chief cause of local motion in the body.
It must be said, therefore, that neither in its physical capacity nor
in that of its soul can the human body resist being suddenly transported
from place to place, with God's permission, by a spiritual essence good
both in intention and by nature, when the good, who are confirmed in
grace, are transported; or by an essence good by nature, but not good in
intention, when the wicked are transported. Any who wish may refer to S.
Thomas in three articles in Part I, question 90, and again in his question
concerning Sin, and also in the Second Book of Sentences, dist. 7,
on the power of devils over bodily effects.
Now the following is their method of being transported. They take the
unguent which, as we have said, they make at the devil's instruction from
the limbs of children, particularly of those whom they have killed before
baptism, and anoint with it a chair or a broomstick; whereupon they are
immediately carried up into the air, either by day or by night, and either
visibly or, if they wish, invisibly; for the devil can conceal a body by
the interposition of some other substance, as was shown in the First Part
of the treatise where we spoke of the glamours and illusions caused by the
devil. And although the devil for the most part performs this by means of
this unguent, to the end that children should be deprived of the grace of
baptism and of salvation, yet he often seems to affect the same
transvection without its use. For at times he transports the witches on
animals, which are not true animals but devils in that form; and sometimes
even without any exterior help they are visibly carried solely by the
operation of the devil's power.
Here is an instance of a visible transportation in the day-time. In the
town of Waldshut on the Rhine, in the diocese of Constance, there was a
certain witch who was so detested by the townsfolk that she was not
invited to the celebration of a wedding which, however, nearly all the
other townsfolk were present. Being indignant because of this, and wishing
to be revenged, she summoned a devil and, telling him the cause of her
vexation, asked him to raise a hailstorm and drive all the wedding guests
from their dancing; and the devil agreed, and raising her up, carried her
through the air to a hill near the town, in the sight of some shepherds.
And since, as she afterwards confessed, she had no water to pour into the
trench (for this, as we shall show, is the method they use to raise
hailstorms), she made a small trench and filled it with her urine instead
of water, and stirred it with her finger, after their custom, with the
devil standing by. Then the devil suddenly raised that liquid up and sent
a violent storm of hailstones which fell only on the dancers and
townsfolk. And when they had dispersed and were discussing among
themselves the cause of that storm, the witch shortly afterwards entered
the town; and this greatly aroused their suspicions. But when the
shepherds had told what they had seen, their suspicions became almost a
certainty. So she was arrested, and confessed that she had done this thing
because she had not been invited to the wedding: and for this, and for
many other witchcrafts which she had perpetrated, she was burned.
Chapter IV. Here follows the Way whereby Witches copulate with those
Devils known as Incubi.
As to the method in which witches copulate with Incubus
devils, six points are to be noted. First, as to the devil and the body
which he assumes, of what element it is formed. Second, as to the act,
whether it is always accompanied with the injection of semen received from
some other man. Third, as to the time and place, whether one time is more
favourable than another for this practice. Fourth, whether the act is
visible to the women, and whether only those who were begotten in this way
are so visited by devils. Fifth, whether it applies only to those who were
offered to the devil at birth by midwives. Sixth, whether the actual
venereal pleasure is greater or less in this act. And we will speak first
of the matter and quality of the body which the devil assumes.
It must be said that he assumes an aerial body, and that it is in some
respects terrestrial, in so far as it has an earthly property through
condensation; and this is explained as follows. The air cannot of itself
take definite shape, except the shape of some other body in which it is
included. And in that case it is not bound by its own limits, but by those
of something else; and one part of the air continues into the next part.
Therefore he cannot simply assume an aerial body as such.
Know, moreover, that the air is in every way a most changeable and
fluid matter: and a sign of this is the fact that when any have tried to
cut or pierce with a sword the body assumed by a devil, they have not been
able to; for the divided parts of the air at once join together again.
From this it follows that air is in itself a very competent matter, but
because it cannot take shape unless some other terrestrial matter is
joined with it, therefore it is necessary that the air which forms the
devil's assumed body should be in some way inspissated, and approach the
property of the earth, while still retaining its true property as air. And
devils and disembodied spirits can effect this condensation by means of
gross vapours raised from the earth, and by collecting them together into
shapes in which they abide, not as defilers of them, but only as their
motive power which give to that body the formal appearance of life, in
very much the same way as the soul informs the body to which it is joined.
They are, moreover, in these assumed and shaped bodies like a sailor in a
ship which the wind moves.
So when it is asked of what sort is the body assumed by the devil, it
is to be said that with regard to its material, it is one thing to speak
of the beginning of its assumption, and another thing to speak of its end.
For in the beginning it is just air; but in the end it is inspisated air,
partaking of some of the properties of the earth. And all this the devils,
with God's permission, can do of their own nature; for the spiritual
nature is superior to the bodily. Therefore the bodily nature must obey
the devils in respect of local motion, though not in respect of the
assumption of natural shapes, either accidental or substantial, except in
the case of some small creatures (and then only with the help of some
other agent, as has been hinted before). But as to local motion, no shape
is beyond their power; thus they can move them as they wish, in such
circumstances as they will.
From this there may arise an incidental question as to what should be
thought when a good or bad Angel performs some of the functions of life by
means of true natural bodies, and not in aerial bodies; as in the case of
Balaam's ass, through which the Angel spoke, and when the devils take
possession of bodies. It is to be said that those bodies are not called
assumed, but occupied. See S. Thomas, II. 8, Whether Angels assume bodies.
But let us keep strictly to our argument.
In what way is it to be understood that devils talk with witches, see
them, hear them, eat with them, and copulate with them? And this is the
second part of this first difficulty.
For the first, it is to be said that three things are required for true
conversation: namely, lungs to draw in the air; and this is not only for
the sake of producing sound, but also to cool the heart; and even mutes
have this necessary quality.
Secondly, it is necessary that some percussion be made of a body in the
air, as a greater or less sound is made when one beats wood in the airs,
or rings a bell. For when a substance that is susceptible to sound is
struck by a sound-producing instrument, it gives out a sound according to
its size, which is received in the air and multiplied to the ears of the
hearer, to whom, if he is far off, it seems to come through space.
Thirdly, a voice is required; and it may be said that what is called
Sound in inanimate bodies is called Voice in living bodies. And here the
tongue strikes the respirations of air against an instrument or living
natural organ provided by God. And this is not a bell, which is called a
sound, whereas this is a voice. And this third requisite may clearly be
exemplified by the second; and I have set this down that preachers may
have a method of teaching the people.
And fourthly, it is necessary that he who forms the voice should mean
to express by means of that voice some concept of the mind to someone
else, and that he should himself understand what he is saying; and so
manage his voice by successively striking his teeth with his tongue in his
mouth, by opening and shutting his lips, and by sending the air struck in
his mouth into the outer air, that in this way the sound is reproduced in
order in the ears of the hearer, who then understands his meaning.
To return to the point. Devils have no lungs or tongue, though they can
show the latter, as well as teeth and lips, artificially made according to
the condition of their body; therefore they cannot truly and properly
speak. But since they have understanding, and when they wish to express
their meaning, then, by some disturbance of the air included in their
assumed body, not of air breathed in and out as in the case of men, they
produce, not voices, but sounds which have some likeness to voices, and
send them articulately through the outside air to the ears of the hearer.
And that the likeness of a voice can be made without respiration of air is
clear from the case of other animals which do not breathe, but are said to
made a sound, as do also certain other instruments, as Aristotle says in
the de Anima. For certain fishes, when they are caught, suddenly
utter a cry outside the water, and die.
All this is applicable to what follows, so far as the point where we
treat of the generative function, but not as regards good Angels. If
anyone wishes to inquire further into the matter of devils speaking in
possessed bodies, he may refer to S. Thomas in the Second Book of
Sentences, dist. 8, art. 5. For in that case they use the bodily
organs of the possessed body; since they occupy those bodies in respect of
the limits of their corporeal quantity, but not in respect of the limits
of their essence, either of the body or of the soul. Observe a distinction
between substance and quantity, or accident. But this is impertinent.
For now we must say in what manner they see and hear. Now sight is of
two kinds, spiritual and corporeal, and the former infinitely excels the
latter; for it can penetrate, and is not hindered by distance, owing to
the faculty of light of which it makes use. Therefore it must be said that
in no way does an Angel, either good or bad, see with the eyes of its
assumed body, nor does it use any bodily property as it does in speaking,
when it uses the air and the vibration of the air to produce sound which
becomes reproduced in the ears of the hearer. Wherefore their eyes are
painted eyes. And they freely appear to men in these likenesses that they
may manifest to them their natural properties and converse with them
spiritually by these means.
For with this purpose the holy Angels have often appeared to the
Fathers at the command of God and with His permission. And the bad angels
manifest themselves to wicked men in order that men, recognizing their
qualities, may associate themselves with them, here in sin, and elsewhere
in punishment.
S. Dionysius, at the end of his Celestial Hierarchy, says: In
all parts of the human body the Angel teaches us to consider their
properties: concluding that since corporeal vision is an operation of the
living body through a bodily organ, which devils lack, therefore in their
assumed bodies, just as they have the likeness of limbs, so that have the
likeness of their functions.
And we can speak in the same way of their hearing, which is far finer
than that of the body; for it can know the concept of the mind and the
conversation of the soul more subtly than can a man by hearing the mental
concept through the medium of spoken words. See S. Thomas, the Second
Book of Sentences, dist. 8. For if the secret wishes of a man are read
in his face, and physicians can tell the thoughts of the heart from the
heart-beats and the state of the pulse, all the more can such things be
known by devils.
And we may say as to eating, that in the complete act of eating there
are four processes. Mastication in the mouth, swallowing into the stomach,
digestion in the stomach, and fourthly, metabolism of the necessary
nutriment and ejection of what is superflous. All Angels can perform the
first two processes fo eating in their assumed bodies, but not the third
and fourth; but instead of digesting and ejecting they have another power
by which the food is suddenly dissolved in the surrounding matter. In
Christ the process of eating was in all respects complete, since He had
the nutritive and metabolistic powers; not, be it said, for the purpose of
converting food into His own body, for those power were, like His body,
glorified; so that the food was suddenly dissolved in His body, as when
one throws water on to fire.
How in Modern Time
Witches perform the Carnal Act with Incubus Devils,
and how they are Multiplied by this Means.
But no difficulty arises out of what has been said, with
regard to our principal subject, which is the carnal act which Incubi in
an assumed body perform with witches: unless perhaps anyone doubts whether
modern witches practise such abominable coitus; and whether witches had
their origin in this abomination.
In answering these two doubts we shall say, as to the former of them,
something of the activities of the witches who lived in olden times, about
1400 years before the Incarnation of Our Lord. It is, for example, unknown
whether they were addicted to these filthy practises as modern witches
have been since that time; for so far as we know history tells us nothing
on this subject. But no one who reads the histories can doubt that there
have always been witches, and that by their evil works much harm has been
done to men, animals, and the fruits of the earth, and that Incubus and
Succubus devils have always existed; for the traditions of the Canons and
the holy Doctors have left and handed down to posterity many things
concerning them through many hundreds of years. Yet there is this
difference, that in times long past the Incubus devils used to infest
women against their wills, as is often shown by Nider in his
Formicarius, and by Thomas of Brabant in his book on the Universal
Good, or on Bees.
But the theory that modern witches are tainted with this sort of
diabolic filthiness is not substantiated only in our opinion, since the
expert testimony of the witches themselves has made all these things
credible; and that they do not now, as in times past, subject themselves
unwillingly, but willingly embrace this most foul and miserable servitude.
For how many women have be left to be punished by secular law in various
dioceses, especially in Constance and the town of Ratisbon, who have been
for many years addicted to these abominations, some from their twentieth
and some from their twelfth or thirteenth year, and always with a total or
partial abnegation of the Faith? All the inhabitants of those places are
witnesses of it. For without reckoning those who secretly repented, and
those who returned to the Faith, no less than forty-eight have been burned
in five years. And there was no question of credulity in accepting their
stories because they turned to free repentance; for they all agreed in
this, namely, that there were bound to indulge in these lewd practices in
order that the ranks of their perfidy might be increased. But we shall
treat of these individually in the Second Part of this work, where their
particular deeds are described; omitting those which came under the notice
of our colleague the Inquisitor of Como in the County of Burbia, who in
the space of one year, which was the year of grace 1485, caused forty-one
witches to be burned; who all publicly affirmed, as it is said, that they
had practised these abominations with devils. Therefore this matter is
fully substantiated by eye-witnesses, by hearsay, and the testimony of
credible witnesses.
As for the second doubt, whether witches had their origin from these
abominations, we may say with S. Augustine that it is true that all the
superstitious arts had their origin in a pestilent association of men with
devils. For he says so in his work On the Christian Doctrine: All
this sort of practices, whether of trifling or of noxious superstition,
arose from some pestilent association of men with devils, as though some
pact of infidel and guileful friendship had been formed, and they are all
utterly to be repudiated. Notice here that it is manifest that, as there
are various kinds of superstition or magic arts, and various societies of
those who practise them; and as among the fourteen kinds of that art the
species of witches is the worst, since they have not a tacit but an overt
and expressed pact with the devil, and more than this, have to acknowledge
a form of devil-worship through abjuring the Faith; therefore it follows
that witches hold the worst kind of association with devils, with especial
reference to the behaviour of women, who always delight in vain things.
Chapter V. Witches commonly perform their Spells through the
Sacraments of the Church. And how they Impair the Powers of Generation,
and how they may Cause other Ills to happen to God's Creatures of all
kinds. But herein we except the Question of the Influence of the Stars.
But now there are several things to be noted concerning their
methods of bringing injury upon other creatures of both sexes, and upon
the fruits of the earth: first with regard to men, then with regard to
beasts, and thirdly with regard to the fruits of the earth. And as to men,
first, how they can cast an obstructive spell on the procreant forces, and
even on the venereal act, so that a woman cannot conceive, or a man cannot
perform the act. Secondly, how that act is obstructed sometimes with
regard to one woman but not another. Thirdly, how they take away the
virile member as though it were altogether torn away from the body.
Fourthly, if it is possible to distinguish whether any of the above
injuries have been caused by a devil on his own account, or if it has been
through the agency of a witch. Fifthly, how witches change men and women
into beasts by some prestige or glamour. Sixthly, how witch midwives in
various ways kill that which has been conceived in the mother's womb; and
when they do not do this, offer the children to devils. And lest these
things should seem incredible, they have been proved in the First Part of
this work by questions and answers to arguments; to which, if necessary,
the doubtful reader may turn back for the purpose of investigating the
truth.
For the present our object is only to adduce actual facts and examples
which have been found by us, or have been written by others in detestation
of so great a crime, to substantiate those former arguments in case they
should be difficult for anyone to understand; and, by those things that
are related in this Second Part, to bring back to the Faith and away from
their error those who think there are no witches, and that no witchcraft
can be done in the world.
And with regard to the first class of injuries with which they afflict
the human race, it is to be noted that, apart from the methods by which
they injure other creatures, they have six ways of injuring humanity. And
one is, to induce an evil love in a man for a woman, or in a woman for a
man. The second is to plant hatred or jealousy in anyone. The third is to
bewitch them so that a man cannot perform the genital act with a woman, or
conversely a woman with a man; or by various means to procure an abortion,
as has been said before. The fourth is to cause some disease in any of the
human organs. The fifth, to take away life. The sixth, to deprive them of
reason.
In this connexion it should be said that, saving the influence of the
stars, the devils can by their natural power in every way cause real
defects and infirmities, and this by their natural spiritual power, which
is superior to any bodily power. For no one infirmity is quite like
another, and this is equally true of natural defects in which there is no
physical infirmity. Therefore they proceed by different methods to cause
each different infirmity or defect. And of those we shall give instances
in the body of this work as the necessity arises.
But first, lest the reader's mind should be kept in any doubt as to why
they have no power to alter the influence of the stars, we shall say that
there is a threefold reason. First, the stars are above them even in the
region of punishment, which is the region of the lower mists; and this by
reason of the duty which is assigned to them. See the First Part, Question
II, where we dealt with Incubus and Succubus devils.
The second reason is that the stars are governed by the good Angels.
See many places concerning the Powers which move the stars, and especially
S. Thomas, part I, quest. 90. And in this matter the Philosophers agree
with the Theologians.
Thirdly, it is on account of the general order and common good of the
Universe. which would suffer general detriment if evil spirits were
allowed to cause any alteration in the influence of the stars. Wherefore
those changes which were miraculously caused in the Old or New Testament
were done by God through the good Angels; as, for example, when the sun
stood still for Joshua, or when it went backward for Hezekiah, or when it
was supernaturally darkened at the Passion of Christ. But in all other
matters, with God's permission, they can work their spells, either the
devils themselves, or devils through the agency of witches; and, in fact,
it is evident that they do so.
Secondly, it is to be noted that in all their methods of working injury
they nearly always instruct witches to make their instruments of
witchcraft by means of the Sacraments or sacramental things of the Church,
or some holy thing consecrated to God: as when they sometimes place a
waxen image under the Altar-cloth, or draw a thread through the Holy
Chrism, or use some other consecrated thing in such a way. And there are
three reasons for this.
For a similar reason they are wont to practise their witchcraft at the
more sacred time of the year, especially at the Advent of Our Lord, and at
Christmas. First, that by such means they may make men guilty of not only
perfidy, but also sacrilege, by contaminating whatever is divine in them;
and that so they may the more deeply offend God their Creator, damn their
own souls, and cause many more to rush into sin.
Secondly, that God, being so heavily offended by men, may grant the
devil greater power of tormenting them. For so says S. Gregory, that in
His anger He sometimes grants the wicked their prayers and petitions,
which He mercifully denies to others. And the third reason is that, by the
seeming appearance of good, he may more easily deceive certain simple men,
who think that they have performed some pious act and obtained the grace
from God, whereas they have only sinned the more heavily.
A fourth reason also can be added touching the more sacred seasons and
the New Year. For, according to S. Augustine, there are other mortal sins
besides adultery by which the observance of the Festivals may be
infringed. Superstition, moreover, and witchcraft arising from the most
servile operations of the devil are contrary to the reverence that is due
to God. Therefore, as has been said, he causes a man to fall more deeply,
and the Creator is the more offended.
And of the New Year we may say, according to S. Isidore, Etym.
VIII. 2, that Janus, from whom the month of January is named, which also
begins on the Day of Circumcision, was an idol with two faces, as if one
were the end of the old year and the other the beginning of the new, and,
as it were, the protector and auspicious author of the coming year. And in
honour of him, or rather of the devil in the form of that idol, the Pagans
made much boisterous revelry, and were very merry among themselves,
holding various dances and feasts. And concerning these Blessed Augustine
makes mention in many places, and gives a very ample description of them
in his Twenty-sixth Book.
And now bad Christians imitate these corruptions, turning them to
lasciviousness when the run about at the time of Carnival with masks and
jests and other superstitions. Similarly witches use these revelries of
the devil for their own advantage, and work their spells about the time of
the New Year in respect of the Divine Offices and Worship; as on S.
Andrew's Day and at Christmas.
And now, as to how they work their witchcraft, first by means of the
Sacraments, and then by means of sacramental objects, we will refer to a
few known facts, discovered by us in the Inquisition.
In a town which it is better not to names, for the sake of charity and
expediency, when a certain witch received the Body of Our Lord, she
suddenly lowered her head, as is the detestable habit of women, placed her
garment near her mouth, and taking the Body of the Lord out of her mouth,
wrapped it in a handkerchief; and afterwards, at the suggestion of the
devil, placed it in a pot in which there was a toad, and hid it in the
ground near her house by the storehouse, together with several other
things, by means of which she had to work her witchcraft. But with the
help of God's mercy this great crime was detected and brought to light.
For on the following day a workman was going on his business near that
house, and heard a sound like a child crying; and when he had come near to
the stone under which the pot had been hidden, he heard it much more
clearly, and thinking that some child have been buried there by the woman,
went to the Mayor or chief magistrate, and told him what had been done, as
he thought, by the infanticide. And the Mayor quickly send his servants
and found it to be as he had said. But they were unwilling to exhume the
child, thinking it wiser to place a watch and wait to see if any woman
came near the place; for they did not know that it was the Lord's Body
that was hidden there. And so it happened that the same witch came to the
place, and secretly hid to pot under her garment before their eyes. And
when she was taken and questioned, she discovered her crime, saying that
the Lord's Body had been hidden in the pot with a toad, so that by means
of their dust she might be able to cause injuries at her will to men and
other creatures.
It is also to be noted that when witches communicate they observe this
custom, that, when they can do so without being noticed, they receive the
Lord's Body under their tongue instead of on the top. And as far as can be
seen, the reason is that they never wish to receive any remedy that might
counteract their abjuration of the Faith, either by Confession or by
receiving the Sacrament of the Eucharist; and secondly, because in this
way it is easier for them to take the Lord's Body out of their mouths so
that they can apply it, as has been said, to their own uses, to the
greater offence of the Creator.
For this reason all rectors of the Church and those who communicate the
people are enjoined to take the utmost care when they communicate women
that the mouth shall be well open and the tongue thrust well out, and
their garments be kept quite clear. And the more care is taken in this
respect, the more witches become known by this means.
Numberless other superstitions they practise by means of sacramental
objects. Sometimes they place a waxen image or some aromatic substance
under the altar cloth, as we said before, and then hide it under the
threshold of a house, so that the person for whom it is placed there may
be bewitched on crossing over it. Countless instances could be brought
forward, but these minor sorts of spells are proved by the greater.
Chapter VI. How Witches Impede and Prevent the Power of Procreation.
Concerning the method by which they obstruct the procreant
function both in men and animals, and in both sexes, the reader my consult
that which has been written already on the question, Whether devils can
through witches turn the minds of men to love or hatred. There, after the
solutions of the arguments, a specific declaration is made relating to the
method by which, with God's permission, they can obstruct the procreant
function.
But it must be noted that such obstruction is caused both intrinsically
and extrinsically. Intrinsically they cause it in two ways. First, when
they directly prevent the erection of the member which is accomodated to
fructification. And this need not seem impossible, when it is considered
that they are able to vitiate the natural use of any member. Secondly,
when they prevent the flow of the vital essences to the members in which
resides the motive force, closing up the seminal ducts so that it does not
reach the generative vessels, or so that it cannot be ejaculated, or is
fruitlessly spilled.
Extrinsically they cause it at times by means of images, or by the
eating of herbs; sometimes by other external means, such as cocks'
testicles. But it must not be thought that it is by the virtue of these
things that a man is made impotent, but by the occult power of devils'
illusions witches by this means procure such impotence, namely, that they
cause man to be unable to copulate, or a woman to conceive.
And the reason for this is that God allows them more power over this
act, by which the first sin was disseminated, than over other human
actions. Similarly they have more power over serpents, which are the most
subject to the influence of incantations, than over other animals.
Wherefore it has often been found by us and other Inquisitors that they
have caused this obstruction by means of serpents or some such things.
For a certain wizard who had been arrested confessed that for many
years he had by witchcraft brought sterility upon all the men and animals
which inhabited a certain house. Moreover, Nider tells of a wizard named
Stadlin who was taken in the diocese of Lausanne, and confessed that in a
certain house where a man and his wife were loving, he had by his
witchcraft successively killed in the woman's womb seven children, so that
for many years the woman always miscarried. And that, in the same way, he
had caused that all the pregnant cattle and animals of the house were
during those years unable to give birth to any live issue. And when he was
questioned as to how he had done this, and what manner of charge should be
preferred against him, he discovered his crime, saying: I put a serpent
under the threshold of the outer door of the house; and if this is
removed, fecundity will be restored to the inhabitants. And it was as he
said; for though the serpent was not found, having been reduced to dust,
the whole piece of ground was removed, and in the same year fecundity was
restored to the wife and to all the animals.
Another instance occurred hardly four years ago in Reichshofen. There
was a most notorious witch, who could at all times and by a mere touch
bewitch women and cause an abortion. Now the wife of a certain nobleman in
that place had become pregnant and had engaged a midwife to take care of
her, and had been warned by the midwife not to go out of the castle, and
above all to be careful not to hold any speech or conversation with that
witch. After some weeks, unmindful of that warning, she went out of the
castle to visit some women who were met together on some festive occasion;
and when she had sat down for a little, the witch came, and, as if for the
purpose of saluting her, placed both her hands on her stomach; and
suddenly she felt the child moving in pain. Frightened by this, she
returned home and told the midwife what had happened. Then the midwife
exclaimed: "Alas! you have already lost your child." And so it proved when
her time came; for she gave birth, not to an entire abortion, but little
by little to separate fragments of its head and feet and hands. And the
great affliction was permitted by God to punish her husband, whose duty it
was to bring witches to justice and avenge their injuries to the Creator.
And there was in the town of Mersburg in the diocese of Constance a
certain young man who was bewitched in such a way that he could never
perform the carnal act with any woman except one. And many have heard him
tell that he had often wished to refuse that woman, and take flight to
other lands; but that hitherto he had been compelled to rise up in the
night and to come very quickly back, sometimes over land, and sometimes
through the air as if he were flying. |