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A19408 The infallible true and assured vvitch: or, The second edition, of The tryall of witch-craft Shewing the right and true methode of the discouerie: with a confutation of erroneous vvayes, carefully reuiewed and more fully cleared and augmented. By Iohn Cotta, Doctor in Physicke.; Triall of witch-craft Cotta, John, 1575?-1650? 1624 (1624) STC 5837; ESTC S108833 113,969 176

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force of these reasons to euince the presidence of the Diuell in the manner and motion of the fore-named disease the Diuell himselfe did shortly after iustifie declaring and professing himselfe the Author thereof in plainly expressed words In the sore-named booke and chapter there is another report or relation of a man sudainly surprised with an extraordinarie fashion or shape of madnesse or phrensie wherein he vttered and reuealed things hidden and of profound Science and reuelation not onely aboue the pitch and power of naturall capacitie and the stimulation thereof in diseases contingent and the forgerie of fained extasie but really in true and vpright iudgement and vnpartiall discerning of a Physition beyond all question and exception supernatuall The sequele after made it good These examples are sufficient vnto men that are wise and with whom reason hath authoritie I doe not affect vnaduised multiplication herein suspecting many histories and reports of diuers Authors The possibilitie of those which are here produced beside the vnstained credit of the Author is apertly confirmed by the holy Scripture where in the Lunatike the Diuell manifested himselfe by actions onely proper and appropriate vnto the power of a Spirit such was his casting the Lunatike into the fire and into the water his violent rending and tearing him which were things by the Physition iudiciously distinguished in most part impossible vnto the power and nature of the Lunatike himselfe or of his disease alone though not all The man possessed among the Gadarens Matth. 8. Mark 5. Luke 8. likewise doth establish the same who was knowne and seene euidently by the Physition how farre simply or solely diseased and how farre possessed beyond diseased extasies by those vndoubted workes and that finger of the Diuell when he easily brake in peeces those yron chaines wherewith the Lunatike was bound so that no force thereof whatsoeuer could hold or binde him as also when he vttered and spake that more then humane vnderstanding and reuelation of Iesus Christ to be the Sonne of God a knowledge as yet vncommunicated vnto mankinde and vnto reason impossible Concerning the second way of detection subiect vnto the Physition alone namely when naturall remedies aptly applyed are attended with supernaturall consequences contrary to their nature or aboue the same out of the former Author and fore-named place there is an example also without farther straggling of vnquestioned estimation A certaine man there mentioned vehemently burning and thirsting and by intolerable heate compelled to seeke any mitigation or extinction of his heate and thirst in want of drinke or other fitting liquor happened to finde an Apple in the moisture and naturall iuice whereof hoping the vsuall short refreshing of the tongue he after the first tasting thereof immediately found not onely that which was contrary to the nature of an Apple greater burning and thirst then before but had instantly his mouth and iawes so fast closed and sealed vp thereby that he hardly escaped strangling The reasonable doubt of the latitation of the Diuell in this faire harmelesse and vsuall remedie of the tongues thirst and drines was afterward made more euident and manifest by the sudaine and swift obsession of his minde with frightfull visions whereof as in the disposition temper substance or qualitie of his braine or body there was no ground or cause so in the Apple it selfe was no other pernicious mixture but that the Diuell as with Iudas Sop though wholesome and sauing in it selfe so in this medicinall fruit entred and possessed where God permitted The like may be said of other both outward and inward remedies which by a Magicke power are and may be oft interrupted turned and bent vnto a vse contrary to their nature For this cause Hippocrates himselfe in his booke de Sacro morbo de Natura muliebri doeth acknowledge many accidents as also diseases and remedies themselues to be diuine as hauing their cause and being aboue the course of nature When therefore fitting vnto any cause matter or humour in the body according to true Art and Reason discouered apt and fit remedies are aptly and fitly by the iudicious Physition applyed notwithstanding contrary to the nature and custome of such remedies they haue vnusuall and iustly wondered effects is there not iust matter of doubt concerning an vnusuall and extraordinary cause answereable thereto The deepe and mysticall contengents in this kinde and their hidden reason and cause the vnlearned man or he that is not exercised in difficult discoueries cannot discerne nor can the intricate and perplexed implications therein of doubts and ambiguites possibly become intelligible in euery ordinary apprehension yet by the former easie and familiar example euery man may gesse and coniecture at the most abstruse The subtiltie of the Diuell doeth easily deceiue a vulgar thought and in the clouds and mists of doubts and difficulties beguileth vsually the dimme sight and disquisition The learned Physition notwithstanding possessing true iudgement and learning who doeth and can warily obserue and distinguish first the wonders of nature vnknowne vnto euery mediocrity of knowing secondly the true wonders aboue nature in due collation with nature to be knowne doth not easily or rashly with vulgars erre or runne mad in the confusion of vaine and idle scruples The wonders of nature are such naturall diseases as are seene in their wondred and admired shapes or mixture to haue a great likenesse or deceiuing identitie with such maladies as are inflicted by the Diuell The wonders aboue nature are such diseases as are truely and vndoubtedly knowne and prooued to haue no consistence or power of consistence or cause in sublunary nature For illustation hereof I will giue one materiall instance fitting our present time that shall apertly without exception manifest the distinction of both these kinds there with declaring the great oddes and difference betweene true knowledge and vnderstanding in the learned Physition and the amazed wonderments of vulgars and ignorant men There are vulgarly reported among our English vulgers to bee in the bodies of many Witches certaine markes or excrescencies which are vsually deemed the randevowe of the Diuell where by couenant hee doeth sucke the blood of Witches These excrescencies are vsually described to beare sometimes the shape of Wartes and Teates or some other such like tumours They are most commonly found in the priuie parts They are found sudainely after their appearance sometimes to vanish They doe oft bleed and therefore are vulgarly deemed the remaining dropping of the Diuels sucking There are diseases likewise like vnto these by Physitions many hundreth of yeeres published both by ancient Physitions and Chirurgions as also by those of later times oft cured That this be not esteemed as a wonder or a fable I will produce some of their seuerall shapes described by seuerall Authors and will cite them according to their vsuall names which are these Thymion Nymphe Cleitoris Cercosis Morum Alhasce Ficus Mariscae Of the first thus saith Paulus Aegineta in
discerned and discouered otherwise then the very same that they were in dreame likewise beleeued From hence it doth also follow very necessarily that what man soeuer shall vndertake these supernaturall iuglings which are onely possible in the power of Spirits of the Diuell alone is thereby as truely conuinced to bee a Witch or-Sorcerer as he that vndertaketh any of the former reall supernaturall workes or any other of the like kinde because they are both and all alike proper onely to the diuell and wherein man can haue no property or power but by and through him Let vs now then againe returne vnto the Diuels reall supernaturnall performances and workes vnto Sorcerers from whence by the way of answer vnto the former doubt concerning Pythagoras his supposed realty of being at once in two places we haue hitherto onely digressed It is written as a thing vsuall vnto many famous Magicians Sorcerers and Witches vnto the view and sight of some admitted spectators to raise resemblances of the dead which seemeth a thing vndoubted by the Witch of Endor raising Samuel the Prophet vnto Saul the King before mentioned In this kinde those famous and renowned Witches Medea and Circe in old and ancient times are reported to excell Hence among the Heathen had Necromancie the reason of the name and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is diuination by calling vp or raising the dead Later times haue not been behinde former times in the record of the like but to adde reason to inforce the truth of report herein I will answer an obiection which may bee made Whether in these apparitions there be onely illusion and imagination or some thing truely and really visible vnto the outward sense As touching the reall raising of the dead it is impossible vnto the limited power of the Diuell either in the substance of body or soule to reduce or bring the dead back into this world or life or sense againe because in death by the vnchangeable and vnalterable decree of God in his holy Writ the body returneth into dust from whence it came and the Soule to God who gaue it Notwithstanding since the outward shape and figure and proportion of any substance and not the substance it selfe or creature is the true and naturall obiect of the eye according to the Philosopher who truely saith Res non videntur sed rerum species that is the substances or things themselues are not offered nor come vnto the sight but only their shape and outward figure as also for that common sense and experience doe teach vs that it is a thing absurd and impossible that all those bodies and substances which in infinite number wee dayly see and behold really and materially in their corporall substances and dimensions should be contained in the small body of the eye for these causes I say it is possible according to reason that the Diuell in these supposed apparitions of the bodies and substances of dead men may present true reall and naturall obiects certaine and assured vnto the eye and sight if hee can onely present thereto the outward liuely pourtraitures and shapes of the substances or bodies though the bodies themselues be away That the Diuell can doe this is no doubt For if man by Art can vsually diuide the outward shapes and figures of creatures and substances from the substances and creatures themselues as is apparent by the looking glasse and the cunning Painter can in another borrowed substance separated from their true right and proper substance represent perfectly the true and liuely shape of men other creatures euen when they are not onely absent and remoued in farre distant places but when oft-times they haue many yeares beene swallowed of the graue why should it be thought impossible vnto the Diuell who certainely is more then exquisite Apelles excellent to offer and present vnto the eye likewise any true shape whatsoeuer If he can offer the true shape as is not to be doubted he doth offer a true and perfect obiect and therefore that which is truely and certainely manifest to sense although speech and the motion thereof without another visible bodie to sustaine it being impossible vnto shapes and pourtraitures drawne by men be things supernaturall and truely spirituall which doe therefore make it a worke proper vnto the Diuell And thus it is apparent that the supposed apparitions which the Diuell doth offer of dead men may be esteemed and reckoned among such supernaturall workes of diuels and Sorcerers as manifestly are brought to outward sense Now let vs turne to view some other kinds of the same workes of the same Authors It is reported by some Writers of worthy credit that the bodies of Sorcerers Witches haue bin really carried and locally remooued from on place into another by the diuell And of later times as Bartholomaeus de Spina doth witnesse the inquisitions haue condemned vnto perpetuall prison and their detained Witches who by their owne confession and others proofe haue by the Diuell been transported into so farre distant places in few houres that afterward it hath bin a trauell of many dayes by their owne naturall power to returne againe from whence they were manifestly by the diuell carried It is a thing likewise written and vulgarly receiued that Witches are oft-times seene bodily to haunt places fields houses graues and sepulchers in an vnusuall and miraculous manner and wondred fashion These things and infinite more whether true or no cannot be knowne but to him that doth himselfe behold and can from his owne sight auouch them really true and not imaginarie To performe some manner of asportation and locall translation of the bodies of Witches and Sorcerers it seemeth in reason a thing whereunto the Diuell is not vnable First for that it appeareth within the power of a Spirit by the history of the Prophet Habacuc whom the Angel carried by the hayre of the head out of Iudea into Babylon The naturall faculties and properties of a Spirit giuen in their creation and by their essentiall formes vnited vnto them the Diuell doth participate with all other Spirits whatsoever though in his fall from heauen he lost their true happinesse and perfect fruition in the face and fauour of God his Creator Secondly for that there are vndoubted examples in holy Scripture of the diuels power in the locall translation not onely of bodies inanimate as fire windes tempests houses as is apparent in the history of Iob and of animate bodies also or bodies of brute creatures as is euident in the heards of swine which he carried head long into the Sea but likewise of the bodies of men as is cleere in the Gospel where it is said that the Diuell did cast the bodies of the possessed into the middest of the people If the Diuel could cast or carry their bodies the distance there expressed whatsoeuer or how little so euer it was it doth manifestly prooue his power in the locall motion of mens bodies although the full extent of
his power therein be not necessarily thence collected Concerning the taking the body of our Sauiour and setting it vpon a pinacle of the Temple I will not vrge but do conclude vpon my former reasons sufficiently and necessarily that the Diuell where God himselfe doth not countermaund or prohibite him hath power to dispose and transport our naturall ●odies I will not cite a multitude of Authors herein and from them borrow needlesse examples As some may bee true so I doe not beleeue all and very few I wish trusted where the proofe doth not manifestly exceede all exception I conclude that it is possible that sometimes the supernaturall power of the Diuell in this kinde as in other before mentioned may appeare vnto outward sense manifest and the Witch or Sorcerer be found a voluntarie with him And as is said of this kinde so may be said of many more besides those before mentioned Concerning the manifest supernaturall workes done by Charmers who is ignorant To omit the histories of Medea and Circe those old famous Hags who were seene by charmes immediately to cause graine to wither vpon the ground the current of waters to stand still the streame to runne backe against the course ten pests raine thunder windes to rise and fall at their word and command for an assured testimonie of the true and reall harmes which Charmers manifestly vnto outward view and sense did vnto the ancient world is as yet extant so many hundreths of yeares the Law of the twelue Romane Tables wherein was a Decree and Statute made to preuent and restraine the manifest wrongs and iniuries of Charmers Alienas Segetes ne incantato saith the Law Alienas Segetes in-cantando ne pellexeris that is Let no man charme his neighbours graine Let no man by charmes and incantations carry away or transport anothers graine There are many other true reports and records of other wonderfull works and supernaturall feates all alike offered vnto the outward sence There inumeration or citation is not further needfull It is sufficient whatsoeuer or how many soeuer they be that they are workes supernaturall that they are manifest to sense that they are of the Diuell and that the Witch or Sorcerer doth manifest his guilt therein by voluntary presenting himselfe therein by manifest vndertaking any part or office in the performance or by promising and according to promise causing to come to passe The reason is infallible He that doth vndertake voluntarily doth present himselfe and doth promise and according to promise cause to be performed that which is in anothers power and impossible vnto himselfe doth thereby necessarily and vnanswerably prooue himselfe to haue an interest a power a contract with that other which for any may to haue with the Diuell is society with Diuels which is Witch craft and Sorcerie And thus hath beene declared how the supernatuall workes of the Diuell and Sorcerers may be manifest to the outward sense and the true testimony thereof An obiection here may be made that many of the former workes may seeme manifest to the sense which indeed and truth are deceits of the imagination and illusion and therefore there can be no such certainty vnto the outward sense It is truely answered He that wanteth so much true iudgement as to distinguish when he doth see a certaine true obiect offered vnto his sight from without and when he is incountred onely with a resemblance there of from within his fancie and imagination is diseased in body or minde or both and therefore is no competent Iudge or witnesse in these or any other weighty affaires For that is in health of body and in the outward organes and instruments of sense and sound in his reason iudgement and vnderstanding though sometime the fogge and mist of deceiued sense or fancy ouershadow the brightnesse of true and vndeceiued reason for a short time in him yet it cannot so perpetually eclipse it but it wil recouer his light and true splendor againe and truth will shine more excellently in the end out of that darknesse This is very liuely seene in the example of S. Peter Acts 12. verse 10. 12. who at first did thinke he had onely seene the Angell which God sent vnto him to deliuer him out of bonds in a dreame or vision but when afterward he was come to himselfe and his true sense and reason hee then perfectly discerned and knew that he was really deliuered out of prison by an Angel of God If men could not certainly discerne betweene that which they doe really see and that they falsely imagine in visions dreames and fancie then were the life of man most miserable there could be no certainty of truth no excelling in knowledge or vnderstanding All men should be a like vnable to distinguish whether we liue in dreames onely or in wakeful deed But the certaine knowledge which God hath giuen vnto mankinde in so infinite kindes and measures doth prooue the eminence of reason and vnderstanding aboue the intanglements and depression of sense and fancie There remaineth as yet another doubt which is how those things which before were mentioned to be spirituall and supernaturall can be subiect in reason vnto outward sense or be knowne thereby howsoeuer by the former examples it doth so seeme It is true that a Spirit and a Spirituall worke simply in it selfe in the owne nature and substance cannot be seene by any bodily eyes or be deprehended by any outward sense Notwithstanding as they doe mixe themselues with bodily substances which are subiect to sense by accident Spirits and spirituall operations are certainly tryed and discouered euen vnto sense For how is it possible that a Spirit should mixe it selfe in corporall things but the discrepant nature thereof and mighty difference must produce and beget some great apparent alteration which alteration being beyond the wonted nature of the one doth prooue another superiour nature in the other For illustration hereof let vs borrow an instance from one of the forenamed manifest Sorceries Water is turned into blood by a Spirituall power The eye doth manifestly see the water and as apparently after see the blood and is a true and vndeceined witnesse of both Reason and common sense doe know the transmutation to proceede from an inuisible power which appearing in visible bodies is by them apart seene and doth detect an inuifible Author because an immediate effect manifested to sense doth necessarily in nature prooue the immediate cause though hidden and vnknowne to sense That inuifible and spirituall things may by those things which are visible and bodily be conceiued and discerned the holy Scripture doth witnesse in these words of Saint Paul Rom. 1. 20 The inuisible things of God saith he are seene by the visible things or by his workes in the creation of the world which are visible It may be here demanded since it is the propertie of the Diuell in his seeming miraculous contriuements and actions though a limited and finite obiect
therefore onely propose one Let vs suppose a sicke man doubtfully and diuersly with these accidents afflicted namely a continuall feuer a cough spitting of blood shortnesse of winde head-ache deliration want of sleepe drinesse thirst paines in diuers parts sides ribbes backe and belly What disease or diseases here are can neither be manifest to sense distracted in this confusion multitude and concurrence of accidents nor yet be euident to reason at the first view because it requireth so different consideration and deuided contemplation of so many seuerals apart Here then it remaineth that searned iudicious prudent and discreete artificiall coniecture proceed exactly to distinguish analise as followeth All the forenamed paines distempers and accidents may indifferently arise eyther from the Lungs inflamed or the Liuer or the Midriffe or the Pleura because any one of these by it selfe doth vsually bring forth all or most part of them Heere then prudent artificiall and exquisite perpension doth exactly valew and esteeme all the different manners quantities qualities positions and situations of paines likewise accidents motions times manners of motion caracters orders and all other both substantiall and circumstantiall considerations And first as touching the feuer head-ache thirst idlenes of braine because they are common to many other diseases besides these and require no curious but a more carelesse and common respect prudent and circumspect coniectation doth leaue their needlesse confusion of more vsefull and needfull perpension and doth more narrowly search about those accidents which are more inseparable proper and peculiar vnto the diseases named and by exact disquisition in their differencies doth notwithstanding sift out their hidden and secretly couched differencies by which in exact view they are found and distinguished sufficiently differing The inseparable accidents which doe peculiarly or for the most part accompany the diseases before named that is the inflammation of the Lungs the Liuer the Midriffe and the Pleura are cough shortnesse of winde spitting of blood paines about the ribbes sides belly which in all these named diseases more or lesse are present either primarily or by consent of one part with another These though seldome absent from most of the foure former diseases and therefore not easily distinguished when they proceede from th' one or th' other yet rightly weighed and accurately considered in their seuerall manners measures and right positions in euery one when apart and single they doe likewise in their confused mixture one with another yeeld distinct and seuerall difference to him that in a iudicious and discerning thought doth beare their iust distinctions apart For illustration spitting of blood is vsually a companion to all or most of the foure named diseases but in one in lesse quantity in another more in one after one manner in another after another in one by vomiting in another by expectoration and in another by coughing in one with much expuition in another with little in one with danger of strangulation and suffocation in another without in one with thicknesse blacknesse and small quantity of bloud in another with thinnesse brightnesse of colour and more quantity and in one of these also with lesse and in another with more difficulty and labour Shortnesse of winde or difficulty of breathing is a common companion to all the named diseases but in one with frequent expuition in another without and where with expuition in one with more facility in another with difficulty in one with one manner of distension of the instruments of respiration in another with another in one kinde of difficulty of respiration more frequent in another lesse in one more grieuous in another tolerable The like may be said of coughing and paines Coughing in one of the forenamed diseases is with much in another with little and in another with no expuition at all in one continuall in another with intermission in one with intension in another with remission in one loud in another still and where with expectoration in one of one colour and quantity in another of another and in another of none at all in one easie gentle free and without paine in another grieuous and painfull yea suffocatory and neere to strangle Paine likewise is a common companion to all the mentioned diseases but distinguished in the one and the other by the manner nature and situation of the seuerall parts which apart ineuery one it possesseth and also by the different oddes fashions and kindes of paine some being sharp some dull some quicke some slowe some with distension some with punction some with heauinesse and sensible weight some more grieuous to the Patient lying some to him sitting or standing some more calme in one position of the body and some in another And thus prudent an skilfull coniecture by due and diligent perpension comparing together oddes and exactly referring vnto true discerning the seuerall properties and differences of accidents their manner proportions and other due circumstances doth in the end reduce euery accident to his right disease and euery disease to his right cause whereby the prudent and iudicious Physicion doth cleerly vnderstand directly and timely to apply proper and pertinent remedies And thus in doubtfull cases which are neither euident to Reason nor manifest to Sense in the Art and exercise of Physike it is manifest how solert and accurate coniectation through the clouds and mists of ambiguities doth in the end so cleerely send forth and giue so faire a light that doubt it selfe doth become out of doubt and is little inferiour vnto certaine and plaine demonstration As a short summe of all that hath been said whatsoeuer hath beene declared of diseases the same may bee propounded concerning their issues very briefely The issues of all diseases are either informed from Sense or euident by reason or scrutable by artificiall coniecture Examples of the first kinde are manifest when with our eyes we behold the motion and Sense externall and other outward functions of the body either abolished or in an high degree depriued of their power and naturall vse This certaine testimony of our sight doth certainely informe the vnderstanding concerning the dangerous issue Examples of the second kinde are manifest likewise we finde either the causes of diseases vnremoueably fixed or the disease it selfe rooted in the substance of any of the principall parts or accidents in malignitie vehemence and fury irresistable In these cases a doubtfull and hard issue is euident to Reason by iust consequent Examples of the latter kind are also apparent when in diseases good and euill signes are so doubtfully mixed that some promise Life others as much threaten Death some in number discourage other some in worth as much as incourage We doe oft see and know in the middest of this mist and darknes where there appeareth not to a common sense so much as the least shew of any indication of certaine issue yet through the exquisitenesse of prudent artificiall perpension and due exact distinction in the forementioned seeming inscrutable
oddes the learned Physicion euen in the first scarce sensible budding of indication and in the first most imperfect and scarce-being thereof doth oft discouer that true euent which vsually and for the most part is seene and obserued to come to passe If any man not rightly apprehending reason make a doubt or question of any such possible exquisitnes let him consider and behold it by an easie example In an inequalitie of one and the same Vermiculant pulse where the beginning of the same distension is quicker the next continuation or middle part is slower and the beginning of the and thereof ending almost before it begin it must needes be very difficult nay almost impossible vnto the first view of Sense or Reason or to a common iudgement or learning to diuide really and distinguish this one short small motion into two or three distinct times and parts of motion the space so very short the faculty of mouing so low and weake and the mouing it selfe almost altogether in an insensible exiguitie and an indiuisible degree of lownesse Wee see oft-times a common vulgar cannot in his reason conceiue it much lesse by his sense at all perceiue it Neither is it found easie to euery man though learned therein yea or educate thereto either perfectly to apprehend the generall Idea of such a motion or at all in the first proofes and tryals of his sense or hand to deprehend any particular Notwithstanding the Physicion that exquisitely discerneth and iudgeth doth both in reason see that euery single smallest motion hath his diuers distinct diuision of parts also by his discerning wary iudicious and exercised touch doth apartly detect and discouer it And thus hath been proued by seueral instances taken in the art of Physicke insteade of al other Arts and Sciences for auoiding tediousnesse and confusion that all knowledge all Art all Science whatsoeuer giuen vnto man hath no other entrance meanes or wayes thereto but thorow Sense or Reason or prudent and artificiall coniecture sagacitie and exquisitenesse of iudging and discerning thereby And that it may the better appeare that beyond these waies and lights the Physicion cannot finde any knowledge or discouery of Diseases let vs view some particular examples of some Diseases for this cause vndiscouerable and not to be detected and therewith consider the impossibilitie of discouery to consist solely herein namely for that they are remoued from any capacitie of Sense or Reason and from the reach of all artificiall search scrutiny accurate insight deriued from both which is the highest straine of humane Vnderstanding In the generall it cannot be denied except of such whose vnderstandings are extremely blinde that it is impossible that those diseases should or can bee at all so much as suspected and therefore much lesse knowne which yeeld no shew no signe no indication of themselues There needeth hereof no other nor better proofe then the enumeration of some particular diseases of this kinde Are not diuers secret and hidden Apostemations and other inward collections of vicious matter in the body dayly Seminaries of vnexpected and wondred shapes of corruption and putrifaction which lying long hidden in the body and by an insensible growth taking deepe roote in the end sodainely breake forth beyond all possible expectation or thought of the most excellent exquisite and subtill circumspection and disquisition For a briefe confirmation hereof Hollerius doth mention a man the cause of whose disease while he liued being vnknowne to Physicions and Art after his decease his guts were sound gangrened and perished and therein things viewed like vnto Water-snakes and his Liuer full of schirrose knots There happened vnto my selfe this yeare last past a Patient a very worthy Gentleman who being extremely vexed with the Strangury Disurie and Ischurie together with pissing of blood in great abundance and the stone by the vse and accommodation of remedies found much ease mitigation of paines and qualification of the extremitie of all the former accidents Notwithstanding for that there were certaine indications of an Vlcer in the body or capacitie of the Bladder his recouerie was not expected but after his decease in the dissection of his body his Bladder was found rotten broken and black without any manifest matter therein as cause thereof or so much as one stone although hee had formerly and immediately before auoided many stones at seuerall times This I produce being fresh in memory as an instance of impossibilitie of knowledge vnto a Physicion in many and frequent cases For how could the fracture or colour of his Bladder while the Patient was liuing by any exquisitenesse of Art or vnderstanding be knowne in any possibilitie meanes or power of man although all the other accidents aboue mentioned were vndoubtedly by certaine indications and signes discouered I might here deliuer many other like Examples out of mine owne knowledge I will onely call to remembrance one more I was of late yeares Physicion vnto a right Noble Lady the cause of whose apparent dangerous estate diuers learned and famous Physicions conioyned with my selfe could neuer discouer In the dissection of her body after her decease her heart was found in closed with a shining rotten gelly and the very substance of the heart of the same colour In the same Lady an intolerable paine about the bottome of her stomack by fits depriued her of all ease by day and of rest by night and could neuer be either knowne in the cause or remooued in the accident by any meane or remedy but after death in the dissection of her body before mentioned a black round gelly as bigge as a Tenice ball did manifest it selfe in that place where in her life the intolerable paine was seated and fixed Of this euill discoloration of her heart of the matter and euill colour of that matter wherewith her heart was inuironed as also of that collected gelly in her stomacke what possible knowledge thinke you or exquisite vnderstanding or art of man could euer in her life time giue any notice or information Like vnto this is that which Hollerius in the 21. of his rare obseruations doth mention In a sicke man perplexed in a strange manner from an vnknowne cause in his life after his death his liuer and epiploon did appeare corrupted and putrified his stomacke toward the bottome bruised and full of blacke iuice or humour Christophorus Schillincus opening the body of a childe after death reporteth that hee saw in the small veines running thorow the substance of the liuer many small scrauling wormes then liuing Beniuenius doth make mention of a woman tormented grieuously by a needle in her stomack which was impossible by any art or exquisitnesse of vnderstanding to bee conceiued or suspected if nature it selfe working it out thorow the body and substance of the stomacke vnto the outward view and Sense had not so discouered it I will not here mention the generation of wormes stones and the like in the guts gall heart longs
haue beene cured by enchaunted Spels and words and Magicke skill doeth plentifully witnesse The most ancient father of all Physicke and Physicions the incomparable worthy founder of Method and Art Hippocrates Dioscorides Theophrastus with other succeeding Ancients doe generally all acknowledge the force and power of Magicall curation Galen in his younger time gaue no credit thereto but in the more aged experience of right obseruation he doeth acknowledge it I will not stuffe this small Treatise with the particular citation of euery Author Later Physicians also of the best and most choise note doe herein with former ages consent and concurre and experience doeth confirme trueth in both Whosoeuer is acquainted with bookes and reading shall euery where meete a world of the wonders of cures by wordes by lookes by signes by figures by characters and ceremonious rites As what the practise of former ages hath beene is manifest so what our age and later time doeth herein afford is almost no where in this kingdome obscure The neerest vnto that impudence which herein this our time doeth produce and set foorth is that history of a Germane Witch reported in the Malleus Maleficarum There was as the Author of that worke saith sometime a Sorceresse in Germany who vsually cured not onely all that were bewitched but all kinde of diseased people so farre beyond all power or course of Art and Nature and with such facility that all vse of the Art of Physicke or of Physicions was altogether for a time neglected and forsaken while people from all Countries both neere and remote in such numbers and frequence resorted vnto her that the Gouernour of that Countrey imposing vpon euery man one penny that resorted vnto her thereby raised himselfe a mighty treasure What others among the most ancient Authors that are not Physicians doe publish concerning the power of incantations in the curing of diseases is needlesse to write Hee that hath read any few lines of old Homer or of diuers other aged Poets shall finde plentifull record hereof Herodotus is not silent herein But to omit all their needlesse testimonies Physicians of these last times of the most eminent note and worth whose pennes are yet scarce drie doe witnesse the trueth hereof from their owne knowledge sight and experience Aboue the rest Fernelius de Abditis rerum causis is worthy any mans paines or view Let vs now lastly see what may bee collected out of the booke of God concerning the power of the Diuell in curing diseases from whom all these inferiour Agents Witches and Sorcerers doe deriue their power and skill If it bee in his power where God doeth permit to induce diseases it must needes bee in his power to cease or calme diseases because both causing and curing consist in the vertue and force of the same meanes Hee therefore that knoweth how and by what cause the disease is induced doeth necessarily vnderstand that by the remouall of that cause it is cured and according to that rule can equally as well by remouall of that cause cure as by the induction of the cause bring sickenesse For this reason it is a maxime in Physicke infallible that he is the most excellent Physician who knoweth best the causes of diseases and who vpon the knowledge of their true causes doeth found the right method of their curation That the Diuell doeth both know the causes of diseases and also how by them to procure and produce diseases is manifest by the History of Iob vpon whom he brought that grieuous generall botch and byle ouer all his body Iob chap. 2. verse 7. That hee did this by the force of causes in nature must needes bee euident First because hee is a creature and subiect and limited by nature vnto and within her lists and therefore is not able absolutely and simply without causes and meanes in nature to produce any effects in nature although our ignorance of his power and knowledge because it so farre excelleth our power or nature doeth call all his workes iustly supernaturall Secondly for that byles and botches are knowne naturall diseases and therefore had naturall causes although haply vnknowne to any man and beyond the nature of knowledge or skill in man These reasons of the Diuels impossibilitie to worke those effects without nature are thus yet more briefly and cleerely made infallible Of nothing simply to produce any thing vnto a true being and existence is the sole and proper worke of any infinite Creator and impossible vnto any creature Therefore the Diuell being a creature could not bring those diseases vpon Job but by created meanes preexisting in created nature in which he is contained and limited And thus much concerning that kinde of Witch and Sorcerer which is enquired at concerning the curing and issue of diseases which we will conclude with this note that all learned men of the best experience haue obserued that in those cures by Witches and Sorcerers the Diuell hath neuer perfectly healed but for a time or else where hee hath seemed most perfectly to cure it hath beene for a reseruation of the body by him cured vnto a greater and further mischiefe in time to succeede Besides this kinde of Witch by meanes vnknowne to man or by a supernaturall vertue in knowne meanes aboue and beyond their nature vndertaking to cure the sicke or to foretell the euent and issues of diseases there is also another kind which doeth vndertake to bee enquired at for extraordinary reuelation of such diseased persons as are bewitched or possessed by the Diuell This kinde is not obscure at this day swarming in the Kingdome whereof no man can bee ignorant who lusteth to obserue the vncontrouled libertie and license of open and ordinary resort in all places vnto wise-men and wise-women so vulgarly termed for their reputed knowledge concerning such diseased persons as are supposed to be bewitched But it may bee obiected that many of these two last mentioned sorts are rather deceiuers and Impostors onely who by an opinion of this power and not by any reall power herein doe deceiue seduce and beguile the people This cannot in some be denied notwithstanding least impious imposture bee still tolerated to bee a couert to hide the manifest diuellish practise of Witches vnder pretense thereof whereby it shall euer continue in this shape neglected or vnspied I will both briefely giue satisfaction how the one may bee distinguished from the other and also declare how men ceasing to enquire at Diuels and Witches or Impostors may learne to enquire of their God alone and by the light of nature and reason which hee hath giuen vnto them in his feare with his allowance and approbation more truely and certainely informe themselues CHAP. IX Of Wizards and Impostors how they differ from Witches HOw Witch craft in diuers kinds may according to euidence of reason be detected hath beene before made manifest How imposture may be discouered sense there is so good vse
his sixt booke and 71. chapter It is an excrescence or eminence standing out from the rest of the flesh sometimes red sometimes white for the most part without paine the bignesse of an Aegyptian beane and of the colours of the flowers of Thyme They are found saith he in the priuie part of women and are cured by cutting them away Ioannes Hucherus of the Citie of Beuois in France sometimes one of the Kings counsell and Physition vnto his person in his second booke concerning barrennesse doth testifie that the former excrescence doth sometimes grow in some length sometimes in the hands sometimes in the feete sometimes in the thighes sometimes in the thighes sometimes in the face but saith that they are most troublesome in the priuie parts both of man and woman Celsus saith in his first booke chap. 28. that these excrescencies doe sometimes open and bleed send out blood Thymion inquit facile finditur cruentatur nonnunquam aliquantum sanguinis fundit Antonius Musa vpon the 26. Aph. of Hippocrates the third booke testifieth by his obseruation in diuers particulars that the former disease or excrescence doth oft-times weare and vanish away without helpe or remedie The second disease or excrescence called Nymphe Paulu-Aegineta in his 6. booke 8. chap. doeth describe to be a swelling or growing out of a peece of flesh in the secret part of a woman rising oft-times vnto an vndecent fashion and a great bignesse Auicenne deliuereth the same description Tom 1. Fen. 21. Tract 4. and Albucasis Chirurg Part. 2. Chap. 72 73 74. The third excrescence called Cleitoris is little different from the former by the description of the same Authors Auicen lib. 3. Fen. 28. Paulus Aegineta in the fore-mentioned place The fourth excrescence called Cerrosis the same Author in the same place compareth vnto a long taile and saith that it hangeth downe and issueth out of the part before mentioned in women and is cured by being cut away The fift excrescence called Morum hath that name from his likenesse vnto a Mulberrie The sixt called Alhasce from his likenesse vnto a Bramble leafe Auicenne Tom. 1. lib. 3. Fen. 21. Tract 4. cap. 20. As for the seuenth and eight Excrescences growing likewise as the rest about the secret parts they haue beene so commonly in auncient times knowne that Martiall the Poet out of his owne acquaintance with them hath made sport thereof in wittie verse Dicemus ficus quas scimus in arbore nasci Dicemus ficus Caeciliane tuos Of the Mariscae thus also writeth Iuvenal Coeduntur tumidae medico ridente Mariscae Of these Mariscae thus saith Antonius Musa vpon the Aph. 30. lib. 3. Wee call them saith hee crests or combes from their likenesse vnto the combe of a Cocke which saith he if they bee not in time cut away and cured by actuall cauteries they are neuer cured at all Thus much concerning 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 out of learned Authors Let vs now consider these naturall diseases which are called wonders in nature because not ordinarily or vulgarly seene with those markes of Witches or diseases and excrescencies effected and caused by the Diuell in Witches which therefore must needes be wonders aboue nature Let vs I say compare them together the one with the other Their exceeding neere neighbour-hood and likenesse no common vnderstanding as they are described truely and liuely can chuse but acknowledge To confound or mistake the one for the other is very easie but yet dangerous and pernicious I will not denie against due testimonies and the free confessions of the Witches themselues that such markes may bee by the Diuell vpon couenant made in way of an hellish sacrament betweene the Diuell and the Witch but where the confession of the Witch her selfe being free from iust exception doeth not appeare nor the Diuell to any spectatours doeth shew himselfe in the act of sucking which hee neuer doeth as my incredulous thoughts perswade my selfe where I say these appeare not to be manifest without fraude there it is requisite and necessary that either wee discharge the Diuell and acquit him of the slander or else discouer it by some other signe or note which may iustly be appropriated vnto the Diuell that his finger or guilt hath beene therein This is reason without which ought bee no perswasion Euery tree is to be knowen by his owne fruit saith our Sauiour Therefore the diuell is to be knowne by the workes and fruites of a Diuell proper and belonging vnto him Trie and discerne the Spirits saith the Scripture whether they be of God or no. And how can they bee discerned if there were not some notes or properties knowne vnto holy discerning mindes whereby they may be discerned It is madnesse therefore to suppose it possible to know that which is done by a Spirit wherein is no euidence impression signe shew or propertie of a Spirit For as a naturall cause cannot bee knowne but by his naturall effect so is it impossible that a spirituall cause should be knowne but by some supernaturall effect For this cause in all places of Scripture where are set forth the outward workes or actions of the Diuell they doe there likewise all appeare to be his in some extraordinary supernaturall note or maner The casting the bodies of the possessed in the Gospel into the middest of the people was a thing extraordinary impossible and vnusuall vnto the voluntary motion of men alone The bringing of fire from Heauen to deuoure so many of Iobs sheepe was in the manner beyond the nature vsuall and ordinary force or custome of fire The carriage of the heards of Swine headlong into the Sea was manifestly beyond the nature of their naturall motion yea against their nature Here may be obiected that the Diuell doeth ordinarily worke and produce things of seeming wonder and strange consequence wherein notwithstanding doeth not appeare any signe or impression of any supernaturall cause or authour as is seene in many things produced in men and issuing from his vsuall tentations of men The answere is that the Diuell doeth worke vpon man two wayes The first is immediately by the temptings and soliciting only of man vnto workes which properly are effected by man himselfe in the vsuall course and power of mans nature The second is immediately by his owne proper action as hee is a Spirit and immediately worketh in himselfe the worke of a Spirit In the first the Diuell is not properly said to worke in himselfe but rather to giue and offer occasion vnto the disposition and affections of man thereby exciting and tempting man vnto that worke which therefore onely carrieth the stampe of a worke proper vnto a man In the second the Diuell worketh immediately himselfe as he is a Spirit and in that worke therefore must necessarily likewise bee seene and appeare the stampe of a Spirit since in the course and order of all things created whatsoeuer the true and immediate cause his immediate true and proper effect is the