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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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they are found a Witch yea or no. Answere hereto is that simply and alone such markes doe not prooue a Witch at all but with some limitations and considerations they doe absolutely and infallibly demonstrate a Witch Those limitations are these First that those markes certainely detected to be supernaturall bee by circumstances presumptions on necessary inference of reason prooued to be knowne by the party in whom they are found that they are of the Diuell or by the Diuell there placed Secondly that they are there continued mainteined or preserued with the liking and allowance of that partie The reason of these limitations is manifest for that the Diuell is able to impose diuers diseases as also such like supernaturall markes or excrescencies as are before mentioned vpon men without their liking or consent where God doth so permit him This is euident by the Historie of Iob vpon whom the Diuell brought extraordinary and more then vsuall botches biles and sores beyond the common course and nature of those diseases and this he did full sore against the will and liking of righteous Iob. No man can iustly be accused or suspected in that act wherein hee is no agent but an vnwilling Patient nor can bee accessary vnto concurrence or consent with any author in his act if that author bee not knowne vnto him or not conceiued by him to be author Indeed if any man be found with such markes who may be conuinced to know them to bee of the Deuill and then to like or to be contented with them assuredly by manifest demonstration that man is a Witch if not by an expresse and open yet by an occult allowance of the Diuels possession and power of that part or portion in him Whosoeuer giueth any possession of himselfe vnto the Diuell either in part or in whole doeth thereby renounce his Creator by this combination with the Diuell is a Witch or Sorcerer There remaineth as yet a doubt or question Whether simply the affirmation of a supposed Witch which is vulgarly but not properly called and deemed her confession that the Diuell doth sucke him or her as also whether the affirmation of a supposed Witch affirming her selfe to be a Witch doe infallibly conuince that supposed Witch to be a Witch indeede and whether that affirmation be sufficient as commonly deemed her owne confession to condemne her The answer is negatiue The reason is for that many affirmations in themselues and at first view doe seeme true serious and sufficient which better and more consideratly examined are oft times euen senselesse and ridiculous and therefore iustly are denied credit And for this cause no accusations whether against any man himselfe or against another wherein is no probabilitie or likelihood no colour or possibilitie of being either are or ought to be admitted or heard in iustice in any Courts of Iustice And for this cause the testimonies accusations or confessions which by fooles or madmen are auouched are by all nations through the world in law not valued and reiected The same regard is had of the affirmations and testimonies of children and of melancholy people and likewise of men with yeeres and age doting or by diseases or cares manifestly decrepite in their wittes and senses That such decrepits there are vsually walking among men not noted nor knowne vnto most or many except sometimes vpon especiall occasion or triall of them made is no wonder I did my selfe know some lately liuing who formerly haue beene very vnderstanding yet diuers yeeres before their end were with age in their inward senses so worne and wasted that although as reasonable creatures vnto the common view they talked conuersed conferred spake many times and in many things with very good reason and sensibly yet oft-times by sodaine enterchanges they neither knew reason nor themselues nor their owne names nor children I now know a man neere an hundreth yeere old who hauing in my late remembrance beene an excellent pen-man doth neither now know a word nor can write nor name so much as one letter among the foure and twentie yet hath he his sight good as by his discerning and vpon his view thereof giuing right name and title vnto other as small formes and characters is apparent His memory sometimes euen of the same things is altogether gone by fits and by fits sometimes returneth in many things but not in all nor in any alway or certainly Other some I haue knowne in their memory and phansie by age so worne that they could not hold or retaine in the one so much as that which very lately was in their eye in the other so much as that which was in the same instant almost conceiued affirming things in this confusion which neuer were nor euer could be and denying their sight of those things which from their sight thereof they had truely before named of their owne accord one while constantly beleeuing and avouching whatsoeuer was said or informed them though neuer so dissonant from sense or reason another while as confidently denying whatsoeuer truth was said or vrged though neuer so manifest vnto their sight or sense This is not strange in age since in diseases it is vsuall for men sometimes for a time to lose their memory alone sometimes their reason alone sometimes imagination sometimes part of one and part of another sometimes all sometimes perfectly none and yet imperfect in euery one It sometimes also is seene as Galen saith that a man inioying absolutely and accurately all his inward senses of right reason memory and imagination in all other things beside yet in some one particular alone and in no other whatsoeuer is euer constantly and without change void of sense or reason and as a very mad man or foole Thus much is also writren by others of many wise and learned men who notwithstanding in some one particular alone haue discouered them selues to be very fooles or mad men constantly affirming themselues to be doggs horses glasses and for that one follie neuer reclaimed in all other things being iudicious learned discreete and solid Neither is every vulgar man nor euery man vulgarly learned not accurately iudging able to discerne these defects at first or alwaies much lesse where they are hardly and difficultly espied or by fits onely doe shew themselues How possible is it for these sorts of people either to be perswaded by others or from their owne guide and vnstable conceite to affirme any thing whatsoeuer concerning themselues or others and for that cause how necessary is it in matter of weight and iudgments especially of life to take heede of their rash admittance vnto accusations or testimonies concerning themselues or any others Vnto a confession so properly and truely called doe necessarily concurre three things First in a confession is properly implied vnderstood the partie confessing to be capable of reason because without reason he can neither know nor iudge of himselfe nor of his guilt Secondly in a confession is requisite and necessary
and dewly weighed may infallibly prooue their guilt thus He that vndertaketh reuelations or workes which are truly found supernaturall and cannot either prooue them to be of God nor to be imposture nor to be imposed vpon him by the Diuell without his will allowance and liking thereof that man by certaine Demonstration is a Witch or Sorcerer What Witchcraft is manifestly described CHAP. VIII 1. The diuers kinds and manners wherein Witches receiue knowledge from spirits as Astrologers as Wizards as Phisitions That the Diuell can both inflict diseases and cure where God permitteth CHAP. IX That since Imposters doe counterfeit Witches and vnder colour of imposture Witches may hide their discouery it is fit that diligently the Magistrate inquire into Imposters CHAP. X. 1. Whether the diseased are bewitched when and how it is certainely to be knowne when not and when men ought to rest satisfied in desiring satisfaction therein 2. The markes of Witches vulgarly reported and by oath deposed to be found in their bodies how to be tried and knowne from all naturall diseases among which many are very like vnto them 3. The necessitie of consulting with the Physition not only therein but in all diseases supposed to be inflicted by the Diuell 4. How farre the vulgarly esteemed confession of a supposed Witch is of validitie to prooue her a Witch CHAP. XI That Witches may be produced vnto the barre of Iustice two waies first for manifest workes of Sorcery witnessed by the sense secondly for reuelations aboue the possibility and power of man CHAP. XII 1. Presumption and probabilities against suspected Witches 2. That Witchcraft is a sinne or crime which ought to be detected by testimony and by manifestation thereof to sense or reason CHAP. XIII That men ought not to seeke the discouery of Witches by vnwarranted meanes voide of reason or superstitious CHAP. XIV Casting Witches into the water scratching beating whether any allowed triall of a Witch CHAP. XV. 1. That reuelations by the bewitched in their fits or traunces are no sufficient proofe against a Witch 2. That the declaration by the bewitched of secret markes in the bodies of suspected Witches are not iustifiable to be admitted as any true or allowable conuictions 3. That the healing of the bewitched by the compelled touch or action of the supposed Witch is no reasonable accusation against any man as therefore a Witch 4. That there is no more necessitie of a miraculous detection of Witchcraft then of any other as hideous and abominable sinne 5. That the miracles and detections of crying and hideous sinnes by visions and apparitions cannot certainly or assuredly be manifested to be of God and therefore simply in themselues though reuealing truth they are not to be trusted or credited alone but so farre forth as they doe point vnto or occasion iust and reasonable inquisition The conclusion of the whole Treatise inferring the two sorts of manifest Witches generally thorow the whole worke intended and by Demonstration made euident to be the same against whom the Law of God was directed as also that there is no other triall of those Witches but the meanes and waies in this Treatise before mentioned THE TRIALL OF WITCH-CRAFT Shewing the true and right Methode of the Discouerie CHAP. I. Of naturall knowledge and how it is solely acquired either by Sense or Reason or by artificiall and prudent coniectation AS there is one onely Infinite which hath created all things finite so is there one onely finite most neerely like vnto that Infinite which is wisedome and knowledge in men Angels The knowledge which is giuen to Angels is only known to God Angels The knowledge which is giuen to man is knowne by man limited measured and confined It is therefore by the most wise Philosophers and fathers of former times the Sages of later times and ages agreed by a generall consent harmony of the same truth that all things which are allotted man to know or vnderstand are by two waies or instruments solely to be atchiued or hoped The first of these is the inward vnderstanding the second is the outward sense The vnderstanding hath knowledge diuers waies First immediatly by an inbred Idea vn derstanding of certaine generall notions common vnto all men and in them and with them borne This though intellectuall may bee in some sort assimulated vnto that naturall instinct in bruit creatures by which when they come first into the world yet immediately by the direction of Nature they refuse and flie from that which is euill and harmefull and seeke and know that which is needfull vnto their life and preseruation Secondly the vnderstanding hath knowledge by ratiociation by the discourse and vse of reason By this ratiocination we doe in many things gaine a certainety of knowledge in other some a probability and likelihood onely of certainety yet oft-times in a very great neerenesse and affinitie with certaintie Knowledge likewise commeth by the outward senses which doe certainely and vndoubtedly informe the vnderstanding concerning their seuerall proper obiects where the facultie is sound and the instruments of sense and the outward meanes of conueyance are rightly disposed Among these fiue senses the sight and hearing the eye and eare are the most excellent and chiefe wayes of multiplication and increase of naturall knowledge Besides these waves of knowledge namely the inward and the outward sense there neuer was nor euer can be enumeration of any other For this cause the Philosophers haue diuided all things that are incident vnto mankinde to know or vnderstand either vnto such things as immediatly in their very first thought or mention do proue themselues at the first consideration or sight are euident vnto all men or such as are directly inferred and necessarily proued by other propositions or such as by prudent ghesse onely and likely coniecture giue a faire probability of truth and certainty Such things as immediatly proue themselues and are vndoubted in their first view are subiect either to the sense onely or vnto the vnderstanding onely Such things as are only proper to the sense and thereto immediatly and properly subiect are things seene heard touched tasted smelt as colours figures lineaments sounds musike hardnesse softnes drines moisture roughnesse smoothnesse sowre sweete diuersity of odours and the like in which without the vse of the fiue senses men cannot be sensible or know any thing in this inferiour world vnder the heauens Such things as are subiect vnto the vnderstanding onely and not vnto the sense and immediatly proue themselues are generall notions and receptions inseparably fixed in the vnderstanding of all men Of this kind are these positions in Philosophie All things that are made haue their matter out of which they were made haue their speciall formes and difference by which they are a part that they are and lastly to that being which they are are risen from that which they were not Likewise these positions in Logicke
Euery proposition is true or false affirmatiue or negatiue and extendeth generally vnto all vnder the same kinde or to some particulars or to a singular or is indefinite Likewise in Arithmaticke these One is no number one cannot be diuided or is indiuisible foure is more then two Likewise in Physike these Euery man is sicke or healthfull or a neuter Contraries are cured by contraries as heat by cooling cold by heating moysture by drying drynesse by moysting As in these named Sciences so in all other there are the like generall notions immediatly at the first view proouing themselues vnto the vnderstanding and euery man in common sense and reason immediatly consenteth vnto their truth and he that denieth it or seeketh proofe therof is esteemed iustly madde or voyd of reason There are other things also subiect vnto the vnderstanding onely which do not immediatly vpon the first view or consideration as the former proue themselues but are proued by others more cleere and euident then themselues as this proposition The motion of the heauens is not infinite This is not manifest vnto euery man at first view but requireth another more manifest then it selfe to make it manifest thus That which hath a certaine limitted course circumuolution and motion cannot be infinite but Astronomie for many thousands of yeares hath discouered the courses periods reuolutions and set perambulations of the heauens and therefore the motions of the heauens cannot be infinite It may here easily be obserued how the first position being vnable to proue it selfe another more manifest doth giue it light and doth deduce it vnto that which doth so immediately proue it selfe vnto common sense and reason and obseruation of all ages and times that no idiot can be ignorant or will deny it Thus hath bin manifested how some things are immediatly vnderstood in the very first consideration view some are proued by themselues some not proued by themselues but made euident by others As many things are in the former kinds seuerall maners manifested and euidently proued vnto reason sense or vnderstanding so are there many things neither by themselues nor by other euident neither to the vnderstanding and reason or to the outward sense at the first apparent but remaine ambiguous and doubtfull In these things certainty of knowledge by manifest proofe failing there remaineth no other refuge but prudent and artificial coniecture narrowly looking searching thorow probabilities vnto the neerest possibilitie of truth certainty Fom hence doe arise excellent vses and benefits vnto vnderstanding though not so farre forth ofttimes gained as is desired vnto all priuate ends yet so farre forth as maketh wise and vnderstanding men excell and shine before others Hence it commeth to passe that in doubtfull cases counsels and attempts one man is seene and knowne to ouershine an other as much as the glorious Sunne doth his ecclipsed sister the Moone Hence haue issued so many noble and heroike Vertues Sagacitie exquisitnesse of iudgement Prudence Art in the administration of high affaires For although in probabilities are no euident certainties yet doe they so farre forth oft-times aduantage and aduance vnto the knowledge of certainety that it is almost equall vnto certainty and doth perswade and settle discreete resolution and disposition in all affaires In this consisteth the height the tope the som of Art and the perfection of all humane knowledge aboue or beyond which no man could euer soar or leuell By this light onely the former mentioned meanes failing is oft times gained much excellence of natural knowledge to man beyond and without which the eye and sight of knowledge in man is sealed vp his vnderstanding darkned and cannot know many hidden things And thus to him that rightly doth meditate and consider it is vndoubtedly cleere and certaine how the Creator and infinite Prince of all principles hath founded the beginning end the power and posse of all knowledge vpon one of the former waies of inuestigation beside which there is no naturall knowledge to be expected Philosophie as yet neuer found other waies vnto that infinite number of all Arts and Sciences so admirably flourishing thorow so many ages of the world For this cause the most excellent prime Philosopher Aristotle reiecteth whatsoeuer cānot be found by Sense or proued by reason as spurious Likewise Ptolomie hath bounded the true Art of Astronomie within fatum Physicum within a necessitie in Nature and to distinguish it from superstition wherwith curiositie vsually defileth or intangleth it doth limit it intra conuenientem naturae modum that is within proportion and measure answerable to Reason and Nature For this cause also all true Philosophers haue determined the two onely instruments of all true Arts to bee Reason and experience which Galen doth call the two legges whereupon the Art of Physike doth consist And therefore in the second chapter of his Finitiones medicae he saith Optimus is est Medicus qui omnia in Medicina recta agit ratione that is hee who doth all things in his subiect of Physike according to right rule of reason is the most excellent Physicion From hence also all true Artists haue defined Art to bee Habitus cum ratione factiuus that is a settled habilitie and promptnesse of action and operation according to reason Vpon this ground others haue built other true rules and obseruations concerning true and lawfull Arts. Therefore saith Galen ars non est ex ijs quorum neutiquam est potestas Isagog chap. 5. that is Art is not of such things as cannot be accomplished Which is worthy noting to distinguish prestigious and supposed Arts from true Art To this others likewise haue added another obseruation that is that Art is imployed about such things as are in reason profitable and not vaine So saith Scaliger exercit 37 Sect. 31. Ars non est de rebus inutilibus It is yet further obserued vpon the same ground that true Art doeth not confound or cloud it selfe in mists but reduceth vnto order light and reason things dissipate confused and out of order and reason as Cicero affirmeth Ars res diuulsas dissolutasque conglutinat ratione quadam constringit Vpon the same grounds diuers renowmed common weales haue expelled all false and forged Arts as Necromancy Aeromancy Geomancy with other sortiligous Diuinations Vpon the same reasons diuers Emperors Kings Kingdomes and Lawes haue exploded censured and condemned all such as vnder pretext of the wholesome Arts of Astronomy Mathematikes and the like haue runne into foolish curiosities impostures and deceitfull practises Iustinian the Roman Law-giuer and Emperour his lawes are extant to this purpose Likewise Tiberius his Decrees for the expulsion of counterfeit Mathematicians and Magicians And Vlpian in his booke de Mathematicis Maleficis testifieth the publication of their goods and their inhibition by the Emperours from communion with other Citizens so much as in fire or water And as Reason good Lawes Kingdomes Nations and Common-weales haue
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
circumstances doe truely and really occurre or most of them or the most materiall amongst them with an apparant vncontrouled precedent euidence of an vndoubted act of Sorcery and are not indirectly wrested or guilefully extorted but directly proued fairely produced and vrged what man inioying his common sense or reason can be ignorant what a large scope and faire fielde they doe yeeld to sent to trace and chace the most hidden and secret guilt of Witches whatsoeuer out of their vtmost shifting most close couerts and subtill concealements I doe not affirme circumstances and presumptions simply in themselues sufficient to prooue or condemne a Witch but what reasonable man will or can doubt or deny where first a manifest worke of Sorcery is with true iudgement discerned and knowne certainely perpetrate that the former circumstances and presumptions pointing vnto a particular doe giue sufficient warrant reason and matter of calling that particular into question of inioyning and vrging him vnto his purgation and iustification from those euill apparances whereby through the differencies iarres contrarieties and contradictions of the false faces and vizards of seeming truth because identity and vnity is properly and solely found with truth it selfe inuiolable and the sa●e guiltinesse is oft vnable to finde a couert to hid it selfe but rubbed or galled vnto the quicke doth breake out and issue forth in his owne perfect and vndeceiuing liknesse It may be obiected that it doth commonly fall out and is so oft scene that the hearts of Witches are by the Diuell so possessed so hardned and sealed vp against all touch either of any conscience or the least sparke of the affections of men left in them that there is no possibility or hope of any preualence by the pressing of any presumptions or circumstances which they for the most part will answere with wilfull and peruerse silence This is and may be sometimes true yet is no sufficient reason why due proofe and tryall should not alwayes diligently be made herein since first experience it selfe doth witnesse a manifest benefite thereby secondly the like reasonable course and practice is knowne both vsuall fruitfull and effectuall in all other disquisitions and inquisitions whatsoeuer and thirdly the Diuell himselfe the Witches and Sorcerers great and graund Master though of farre fewer words then Witches as seldome speaking at all and abounding with farre more subtiltie and cunning yet is he not able by all his art of cunning alwayes to hide his owne workes but by presumptions and circumstances wise and vnderstanding hearts doe oft discerne and discouer them as is by dayly experience seene and testified and is confirmed by the proofe which all holy and godly men haue euer had thereof And to this purpose and for this cause the holy Scripture doth require Gods chosen children to sift and try the Spirits whether they be of God or no that is whether they be of his holy spirit or of the euill spirit which is the Diuell Although therefore God for his owne secret decree or purpose doe permit the Diuell sometimes to hide and shadow the guilt of his associates Witches and Sorcerers from the sight or deprehension of man and thereby sometimes frustrate mans iust endeuour and duty of their discouery yet doth he not totally or altogether herein subiect or captiuate or abridge mans power or possibility of preualence euen against all the power and force of Diuels as oft-times our dullest senses cannot choose but witnesse Could the Diuell or their owne craft whatsoeuer deliuer the Sorcerers from destruction out of the hands of Saul who iustly destroyed them all out of the land of Israel 1. Sam. 18. verse 9. or out of the hands of Iosias who according to lawe tooke away or abolished all that had familiar Spirits and Southsayers 2. Kings chap. 23. verse 24 The extirpation of these Southsayers by those Princes was commended of God and by his Lawe commanded Leuit. 20. 27. The same Lawe of God commaundeth that no man be iudged or put to death but by the mouth of two witnesses from whence it is necessarily collected that the workes of Sorcery are not alwayes hidden but oft-times so open that they may be manifestly noted otherwise how could they be testified which vnto their condemnation the Lawe doth euer presuppose and necessarily commaund Neither is this Lawe of God any thing discrepant from the common equity of all lawes or from reason it selfe first for that many workes of Sorcery doe immediately in their first view manifest themselues to the sense as is euident by the miraculous workes of the Enchaunters of Egypt practised in the sight of Pharaoh King of Egypt Secondly for that many workes are apparent manifestly to Reason in which though the sense cannot immediately discerne or take notice of their quality and authour yet by necessary inference and euidence of reason they are certainly and demonstratiuely prooued to issue from the power and force of Spirits and Diuels as hath beene formerly declared concerning both workes and also diuinations prophecies and reuelations hidden from all curiosity and possibility of man Thirdly for that circumstances and presumptions doe with good and likely reason call into question and iustly charge with suspicion as hath beene instanced concerning the performers and practisers of ceremonious rites superstitious gestures actions and manners vsuall vnto Witches and Sorcerers Since then as is before prooued Almighty God doth inioyne a necessity of testimonies vnto all condemnations and iudgements of death whatsoeuer and testimony doth alwaies necessarily include a manifestation of whatsoeuer is testified either to sense or reason or both it followeth as a necessary conclusion vnto all that hath bin said that from things either manifest to sense or euident to reason issueth wholly and solely not onely the reasonable and likely way of detection of Witches but the very true way by God himselfe in all true reason intended and commanded And from this way it is both by multitudes of examples by experience and reason manifest that neither Witches nor the Diuell himselfe is altogether able to hide or defend their guilt Diligence therefore herein duely and carefully exercising it selfe certainely shall not not can prooue the Lawe of God vaine nor the owne endeuour frustrate or voide although haply difficulties and impediments may somtimes interrupt as in all other cases and affaires is vsuall Thus hath beene made manifest how Witch-craft is discouerable by sense and euident by reason likewise that it is no more inscrutable or hidden from detection in the inquisition thereof by signes of presumption probable and likely coniecture or suspicion then all other intricate or hidden subiects or obiects of the vnderstanding whatsoeuer For although presumptions are alone no sufficient proofe yet doe they yeeld matter and occasion of diligent and iudicious inquisition which is the reasonable way and due method of vpright proceeding and the common hopefull and warranted path vnto all detections in all other cases of doubt and difficulty
whatsoeuer wherein I see no cause or reason why iudicious wary and wise practise and proofe weighing and pressing circumstances into the bone and marrow should not equally in case of Witch-craft as in all other cases of iudgement and inquisitions though not euer because that exceedes the nature of presumption equally I say and as oft should not confound the guilty and chase and winde out as faire an issue Certainely if men would more industriously exercise their sharper wits exquisite sense and awaked iudgements according vnto the former reasonable religious and iudicious wayes exempt from the burthen and incumbrance of blinde superstitions traditionary and imaginary inuentions and customes no doubt but experience would yeeld and bring forth in short time a much more rich increase of satisfaction and more happy detection in iudiciall proceedings It is true that in the case of Witch-craft many things are very difficult hidden and infolded in mists and clouds ouershadowing our reason and best vnderstanding Notwithstanding why should men be more impatient or deiected that in matters of Witch-craft many things are oft hidden from our knowledge and discouery when the same darkenesse obscurity difficulty and doubtfulnesse is a thing ordinary in many other subiects beside as necessary vnto vs and concerning which it may be no lesse truely said that in this life of mortality much more is that which is vnknowne then that which is knowne and reuealed vnto vs. Hence is that ancient saying of the Philosopher Hoc tantum scio quòd nihil scio that is so few are those things which are demonstratiuely truely and certainely knowne that they are nothing in comparison of the infinite number and multitude of such things as are either onely probable or obscure or inscrutable For to deny that God hath giuen vnto man a great measure of knowledge in many things were not onely grosse darknesse and blindnesse but great ingratitude yea impiety Neuerthelesse it were also as great fatuity not to see or acknowledge that God hath mixed this knowledge with much intricate difficulty and ambiguity which notwithstanding he doth in his wisedome more or lesse reueale distribute and dispense in seuerall measures vnto seuerall men according to their seuerall cares studies indefatigable paines and more industrious indeauour in seeking and inquiring it in defect whereof more commonly then either in Gods decreed restraint or natures abnuence mens desires and labours are so often annihilate CHAP. XIII The confutation of diuers erroneous wayes vnto the discouery of Witches vnlgarly receiued and approoued AS true religion doth truely teach the true worship of God in that true manner which he requireth and commandeth so superstition in an vnapt measure or manner doth offer vp and sacrifice her vaine foolish zeale or feare Vnto her therefore her sacrifice thus doth Almighty God reply Who required this at your hands I hate and abhorre your Sabboths and your new Moones Isa 12. 13. The heathen Oratour could say Religio continetur cultu pio Deorum True religion consisteth in the holy and true worship of God Vnto the aduancing of the worship of the true God the extirpation of Witches and Witch-craft because it is the most abominable kinde of Idolatry is a speciall seruice and acceptable duty vnto God expressely commanded by himselfe Deut. 17. 3 4. 5. In the performance therefore of this worship as it is solely and truely religious to seeke their extermination by those meanes and in that manner which Almightie God doth approue and allow so with misgouerned zeale or feare in the ignorance or neglect of the right manner or way inconsiderately to follow vnwarranted pathes thereto is plaine Superstition Iulius Scaliger in his third booke of Poetrie thus describeth very liuely the nature of Superstition Superstitio satisfacit ad notandum eum habitum quo metuimus aut Deum sine ratione aut ei opera attribuimus quae opera ne cogitauit quidem vnquam ille that is this word Superstition doth serue to set forth such an habit or disposition of minde wherein wee worship or so feare God as is voide of cause or reason or vnto our owne hurt or damage we attribute vnto God as of God those workes or things which Almighty God himselfe neuer thought or intended The word which the Greekes vse for Superstition is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inconsulta absurda diuinae potentiae formido that is an absurd and ill-aduised feare or worship of God which certainely is there where he neither requireth it nor is true cause or reason either of such worship or in such sort or manner In this speciall part therefore of the worship and feare of God namely in the discouery of Witch-craft and Sorcery as wee haue before laboured to finde out those waies which are lawfull iustifiable and allowed so let vs now briefely display the folly and vanity of erroneous and blind pathes pointing deceitfully thereto that we seeke not superstitiously to serue God in our inioyned and commanded duties of the discoueries of Witches with our owne vanities or follies rash inuentions or deuices but in reasonable iust discreete and religious proceeding which is onely and solely acceptable with God In former ages and times haue been published by diuers writers many ridiculous traditions herein so vai●e and so farre vnworthy any serious confutation that they scarce deserue so much as bare mention Of this sort are the imagined profligations of the fits of the bewitched by beholding the face of a Priest by being touched by hallowed ointments or liniments by the vertue of exorcisation of incense of odours of certaine mumbled sacred or misticall words I will therefore omit these as by time it selfe worne exolete found worthlesse and almost of later writers left namelesse and will onely oppose and examine such later experiments as doe in our time and country most preuaile in esteeme CHAP. XIIII The casting of Witches into the water Scratching Beating Pinching and drawing of blood of Witches IT is vulgarly credited that the casting of supposed Witches bound into the water and the water refusing or not suffering them to sinke within her bosome or bowels is an infallible detection that such are Witches If this experiment be true then must it necessarily so be either as a thing ordinary or as a thing extraordinary because nothing can happen or fall out that is not limited within this circuit or compasse That which is ordinary is naturall as likewise that which is natural is ordinary Aristotle in the second of his Ethickes saith of that which is naturall quod aliter non assurscit that is ordinarily it is not otherwise then euer the same From whence it doth follow by good consequent that whatsoeuer is ordinary must be naturall because it keepeth the same course and order which is the property of nature For this cause Scaliger in his booke de subtilitate saith Natura est ordinaria Dei potestas that is nature is the ordinary power of God in the ordinary course