| THAUMATURGIA, OR ELUCIDATIONS OF THE
MARVELLOUS |
| BY AN OXONIAN.1835 |
"Bombastes kept the devil's bird, Shut
in the pommel of his sword, And taught him
all the cunning pranks, Of past and future
mountebanks." Hudibras.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
Demonology--The Devil, a most unaccountable
personage--Who is he?--His predilection for
old women--Traditions concerning evil spirits
&c.
CHAPTER II.
Magic and Magical rites.
Jewish magi.
CHAPTER III.
On the several kinds of magic.
Augury, or divinations drawn from the flight
and feeding of birds.
Aruspices, or divinations drawn from brute
or human sacrifices.
Divisions of divination by the ancients--prodigies,
etc.
CHAPTER IV.
History of Oracles--The principal oracles
of antiquity.
The oracle of Jupiter Hammon. The oracle
of Delphos, or Pythian Apollo.
Ceremonies practised on consulting oracles.
Oracles often equivocal and obscure.
Urim and Thummim.
Reputation of oracles, how lost.
Cessation of oracles.
Had demons any share in the oracles?
Of oracles, the artifices of priests of false
divinities.
CHAPTER V.
The British Druids, or magi--Origin of fairies--Ancient
superstitions--Their skill in medicine, etc.
The British magi.
CHAPTER VI.
Aesculapian mysteries, etc.
CHAPTER VII.
Inferior deities attending mankind from their
birth to their decease.
CHAPTER VIII.
Judicial astrology--Its chemical application
to the prolongation of life and health--Alchymical
delusions.
CHAPTER IX
Alchymical and astrological chimera.
The Horoscope, a tale of the stars.
The Fated Parricide; an oriental tale of
the stars.
Application of astrology to the prolongation
of life, etc.
Advertisement.
Spring. \ Summer. _ influences of, Autumn.
the winter quarter. /
CHAPTER X.
Oneirocritical presentiment, illustrating
the cause, effects, principal phenomena,
and definition of dreams, etc.
Cause of Dreams.
Poetical illustrations of the effects of
the imagination in dreams.
Principal phenomena in dreaming.
Definition of dreams.
CHAPTER XI.
On Incubation, or the art of healing by visionary
divination.
CHAPTER XII.
On amulets, charms, talismans--Philters,
their origin and imaginary efficacy, etc.
Amulets used by the common people.
Eccentricities, caprices, and effects, of
the imagination.
Doctrine of Effluvia--Miraculous cures by
means of charms, amulets, etc.
CHAPTER XIII.
On talismans--some curious natural ones,
etc.
CHAPTER XIV.
On the medicinal powers attributed to music
by the ancients.
CHAPTER XV.
Presages, prodigies, presentiments, etc.
CHAPTER XVI.
Phenomena of meteors, optic delusions, spectra,
etc.
CHAPTER XVII.
Elucidation of some ancient prodigies.
Magical pretensions of certain herbs, etc.
CHAPTER XVIII.
The practice of Obeah, or negro witchcraft--charms--their
knowledge of vegetable poison--secret poisoning.
CHAPTER XIX.
On the origin and superstitious influence
of rings.
CHAPTER XX.
Celestial influences--omens--climacterics--predominations.--Lucky
and unlucky days.--Empirics, etc.
Absurdities of Paracelsus, and Van Helmont.
CHAPTER XXI.
Modern empiricism.
CHAPTER XXII.
The Rosicrucians or Theosophists.
THAUMATURGIA,
OR
ELUCIDATIONS OF THE MARVELLOUS.
CHAPTER I.
DEMONOLOGY--THE DEVIL, A MOST UNACCOUNTABLE
PERSONAGE--WHO IS HE?--HIS PREDILECTION FOR
OLD WOMEN--TRADITIONS CONCERNING EVIL SPIRITS,
&C.
Children and old women have been accustomed
to hear so many frightful things of the cloven-footed
potentate, and have formed such diabolical
ideas of his satanic majesty, exhibiting
him in so many horrible and monstrous shapes,
that really it were enough to frighten Beelzebub
himself, were he by any accident to meet
his prototype in the dark, dressed up in
the several figures in which imagination
has embodied him. And as regards men themselves,
it might be presumed that the devil could
not by any means terrify them half so much,
were they actually to meet and converse with
him face to face: so true it is that his
satanic majesty is not near so black as he
is painted.
However useful the undertaking might prove,
to give a true history of this "tyrant
of the air," this "God of the world,"
this "terror and overseer of mankind,"
it is not our intention to become the devil's
biographer, notwithstanding the facility
with which the materials might be collected.
Of the devil's origin, and the first rise
of his family, we have sufficient authority
on record; and, as regards his dealings,
he has certainly always acted in the dark;
though many of his doings both moral, political,
ecclesiastical, and empirical, have left
such strong impressions behind them, as to
mark their importance in some transactions,
even at the present period of the christian
world. These discussions, however, we shall
leave in the hands of their respective champions,
in order to take, as we proceed, a cursory
view of some of the _diableries_ with which
mankind, in imitation of this great master,
has been infected, from the first ages of
the world.
The Greeks, and after them the Romans, conferred
the appellation of Demon upon certain _genii_,
or spirits, who made themselves visible to
men with the intention of either serving
them as friends, or doing them an injury
as enemies. The followers of Plato distinguished
between their gods--or _Dei Majorum Gentium_;
their demons, or those beings which were
not dissimilar in their general character
to the good and bad angels of Christian belief,--and
their heroes. The Jews and the early christians
restricted the name of Demon to beings of
a malignant nature, or to devils properly
so called; and it is to the early notions
entertained by this people, that the outlines
of later systems of demonology are to be
traced.
It is a question, we believe, not yet set
at rest by the learned in these sort of matters,
whether the word _devil_ be singular or plural,
that is to say, whether it be the name of
a personage so called, standing by himself,
or a noun of multitude. If it be singular,
and used only personal as a proper name,
it consequently implies one imperial devil,
monarch or king of the whole clan of hell,
justly distinguished by the term DEVIL, or
as our northern neighbours call him "the
muckle horned deil," and poetically,
after Burns "auld Clootie, Nick, or
Hornie," or, according to others, in
a broader set form of speech, "the devil
in hell," that is, the "devil of
a devil," or in scriptural phraseology,
the "great red dragon," the "Devil
or Satan." But we shall not cavil on
this mighty potentate's name; much less dispute
his identity, notwithstanding the doubt that
has been broached, whether the said devil
be a real or an imaginary personage, in the
shape, form, and with the faculties that
have been so miraculously ascribed to him;
for
If it should so fall out, as who can tell,
But there may be a God, a heav'n and hell?
Mankind had best consider well,--for fear
It be too late when their mistakes appear.
The devil has always, it would seem, been
particularly partial to old women; the most
ugly and hideous of whom he has invariably
selected to do his bidding. Mother Shipton,
for instance, our famous old English witch,
of whom so many funny stories are still told,
is evidently very much wronged in her picture,
if she was not of the most terrible aspect
imaginable; and, if it be true, Merlin, the
famous Welch fortune-teller, was a most frightful
figure. If we credit another story, he was
begotten by "_old nick_" himself.
To return, however, to the devil's agents
being so infernally ugly, it need merely
be remarked, that from time immemorial, he
has invariably preferred such _rational_
creatures as most belied the "human
form divine."
The sybils, of whom so many strange prophetic
things are recorded, are all, if the Italian
poets are to be credited, represented as
very old women; and as if ugliness were the
_ne plus ultra_ of beauty in old age, they
have given them all the hideousness of the
devil himself. It will be seen, despite of
all that has been said to the disadvantage
of the devil, that he has very much improved
in his management of worldly affairs; so
much so, that, instead of an administration
of witches, wizzards, magicians, diviners,
astrologers, quack doctors, pettifogging
lawyers, and boroughmongers, he has selected
some of the wisest men as well as greatest
fools of the day to carry his plans into
effect. His satanic majesty seems also to
have considerably improved in his taste;
owing, no doubt, to the present improving
state of society, and the universal diffusion
of useful knowledge. Indeed, we no longer
hear of cloven-footed devils, only in a metaphorical
sense--fire and brimstone are extinct or
nearly so; the embers of hell and eternal
damnation are chiefly kept alive and blown
up by ultras among the sectaries who are
invariably the promoters of religious fanaticism.
Beauty, wit, address, with the less shackled
in mind, have superseded all that was frightful,
and terrible, odious, ugly, and deformed.
This subject is poetically and more beautifully
illustrated in the following demonological
stanzas, which are so appropriate to the
occasion, that we cannot resist quoting them
as a further prelude to our subjects:
When the devil for weighty despatches Wanted
messengers cunning and bold, He pass'd by
the beautiful faces And picked out the ugly
and old.
Of these he made warlocks and witches To
run of his errands by night, Till the over-wrought
hag-ridden wretches Were as fit as the devil
to fright.
But whoever has been his adviser, As his
kingdom increases in growth, He now takes
his measures much wiser, And trafics with
beauty and youth.
Disguis'd in the wanton and witty, He haunts
both the church and the court; And sometimes
he visits the city, Where all the best christians
resort.
Thus dress'd up in full masquerade, He the
bolder can range up and down For he better
can drive on his trade, In any one's name
than his own.
To be brief, the devil, it appears, is by
far too cunning still for mankind, and continues
to manage things in his own way, in spite
of bishops, priests, laymen, and new churches.
He governs the vices and propensities of
men by methods peculiarly his own; though
every crime or extortion, subterfuge or design,
whether it be upon the purse or the person,
will not make a man a devil; it must nevertheless
be confessed, that every crime, be its magnitude
or complexion what it may, puts the criminal,
in some measure, into the devil's power,
and gives him an ascendancy and even a title
to the delinquent, whom he ever afterwards
treats in a very magisterial manner.
We are told that every man has his attendant
evil genius, or tutelary spirit, to execute
the orders of the master demon--that the
attending evil angel sees every move we make
upon the board; witnesses all our actions,
and permits us to do mischief, and every
thing that is pernicious to ourselves;--that,
on the contrary, our good spirit, actuated
by more benevolent motives, is always accessary
to our good actions, and reluctant to those
that are bad. If this be the case, it may
be fairly asked, how does it happen that
those two contending spirits do not quarrel
and give each other black eyes and broken
heads during their rivalship for pre-eminence?
And why does the evil tempting spirit so
often prevail?
Instead of literally answering these difficult
questions, it may be resolved into a good
argument, as an excellent allegory to represent
the struggle in the mind of man between good
and evil inclinations. But to take them as
they actually are, and merely to talk by
way of natural consequence--for to argue
from nature is certainly the best way to
get to the bottom of the devil's story,--if
there are good and evil spirits attending
us, that is to say, a good angel and a devil,
then it is no unjust reproach to say, when
people follow the dictates of the latter,
that _the devil's in them_, or that _they
are devils_! or, to carry the simile a point
farther, that as the generality, and by far
the greatest number of people follow and
obey the evil spirit and not the good one,
and that the power predominating is allowed
to be the nominating power, it must then
of course be allowed that the greater part
of mankind have the devil in them, which
brings us to the conclusion of our argument;
and in support of which the following stanzas
come happily to our recollection.
To persons and places he sends his disguises,
And dresses up all his banditti, Who, as
pickpockets flock to country assizes, Crowd
up to the court and the city.
They're at every elbow, and every ear, And
ready at every call, Sir; The vigilant scout,
plants his agents about, And has something
to do with us all, Sir.
In some he has part, and some he has whole,
And of some, (like the Vicar of _Baddow_)
It can neither be said they have body or
soul; And only are devils in shadow.
The pretty and witty are devils in masque;
The beauties are mere apparitions; The homely
alone by their faces are known, And the good
by their ugly conditions.
The beaux walk about like the shadows of
men, And wherever he leads them they follow;
But tak'em, and shak'em, there's not one
in ten But's as light as a feather, and hollow.
Thus all his affairs he drives on in disguise,
And he tickles mankind with a feather, Creeps
in at one's ear, and looks out at our eyes,
And jumbles our senses together.
He raises the vapours and prompts the desires,
And to ev'ry dark deed holds the candle;
The passions inflames and the appetite fires,
And takes every thing by the handle.
Thus he walks up and down in complete masquerade
And with every company mixes; Sells in every
shop, works at every trade, And ev'ry thing
doubtful perplexes.
The Jewish traditions concerning evil spirits
are various, some of which are founded on
Scripture, some borrowed from the opinions
of the Pagans, some are fables of their own
invention, and some are allegorical.
The demons of the Jews were considered either
as the distant progeny of Adam or Eve, resulting
from an improper intercourse with supernatural
beings, or of Cain. As the doctrine, however,
was extremely revolting to some few of the
early Christians, they maintained that demons
were the souls of departed human beings,
who were still permitted to interfere in
the affairs of the Earth, either to assist
their friends or to persecute their enemies.
But this doctrine did not obtain.
About two centuries and a half ago an attempt,
in a condensed form, was made, to give the
various opinions entertained of demons at
an early date of the christian era; and it
was not until a much later period of Christianity,
that a more decided doctrine relative to
their origin and nature was established.
These tenets involved certain very knotty
points respecting the fall of those angels,
who, for disobedience, had forfeited their
high abode in Heaven. The gnostics of early
christian times, in imitation of a classification
of the different orders of spirits by Plato,
had attempted a similar arrangement with
respect to an hierarchy of angels, the gradation
of which stood as follows.
The first, and highest order, was named SERAPHINS;
the second, CHERUBINS; the third was the
order of THRONES; the fourth, of DOMINIONS;
the fifth, of VIRTUES; the sixth, of POWERS;
the seventh, of PRINCIPALITIES; the eighth,
of ARCHANGELS; the ninth, and lowest, of
ANGELS. This fable was, in a pointed manner,
censured by the Apostles: yet strange to
say, it almost outlived the pneumatologists
of the middle ages. These schoolmen, in reference
to the account that Lucifer rebelled against
heaven, and that Michael the archangel warred
against him, long agitated the momentous
question, what order of angels fell on the
occasion. At length it became the prevailing
opinion that Lucifer was of the order of
Seraphins. It was also proved after infinite
research, that Agares, Belial, and Barbatos,
each of them deposed angels of great rank,
had been of the order of Virtues; that Beleth,
Focalor, and Phoenix, had been of the order
of Thrones; that Gaap had been of the order
of Powers, and Virtues; and Murmur of Thrones
and Angels. The pretensions of many noble
devils were, likewise, canvassed, and, in
an equally satisfactory manner, determined;
a multiplicity of incidents connected therewith
were arranged, which previously had been
matter of considerable doubt and debate.
These sovereign devils, to each of whom was
assigned a certain district, had many noble
spirits subordinate to them whose various
ranks and precedence were settled with all
the preciseness of heraldic distinction:--there
were, for instance, devil-dukes; devil-marquises;
devil-earls; devil-knights; devil-presidents,
devil-archbishops, and bishops; prelates;
and, without question, devil-physicians,
and apothecaries.
In the middle ages, when conjuration had
attained a certain pitch of perfection, and
was regularly practised in Europe, devils
of distinction were supposed to make their
appearance under decided forms, by which
they were as well recognised, as the head
of any ancient family would be by his crest
and armorial bearings. The shapes they were
accustomed to adopt were registered among
their names and characters.
Although the leading tenets of Demonology
may be traced to the Jews and early Christians,
yet they were matured by our early communications
with the Moors of Spain, who were the chief
philosophers of the dark ages, and between
whom and the natives of France and Italy,
a great communication existed. Toledo, Seville
and Salamanca, became the greatest schools
of magic. At the latter city predilections
on the black art from a consistent regard
to the solemnity of the subject were delivered
within the walls of a vast and gloomy cavern.
The schoolmen taught that all knowledge might
be obtained from the assistance of the fallen
angels. They were skilled in the abstract
sciences, in the knowledge of precious stones,
in alchymy, in the various languages of mankind
and of the lower animals; in the Belles-Lettres,
Moral Philosophy, Pneumatology, Divinity,
Magic, History, and Prophecy. They could
controul the winds and waters, and the stellar
influences. They could cause earthquakes,
induce diseases or cure them, accomplish
all vast mechanical undertakings, and release
souls out of Purgatory. They could influence
the passions of the mind, procure the reconciliation
of friends or of foes, engender mutual discord,
induce mania, melancholy, or direct the force
and objects of human affection. Such was
the Demonology taught by its orthodox professors.
Yet other systems of it were devised, which
had their origin in the causes attending
the propagation of christianity; for it must
have been a work of much time to eradicate
the almost universal belief in the pagan
deities, which had become so numerous as
to fill every creek and corner of the universe
with fabulous beings. Many learned men, indeed,
were induced to side with the popular opinion
on the subject, and did nothing more than
endeavour to unite it with their acknowledged
systems of Demonology. They taught that the
objects of heathen reverence were fallen
angels in league with the Prince of Darkness,
who, until the appearance of our Saviour,
had been allowed to range on the earth uncontrolled,
and to involve the world in spiritual darkness
and delusion.
According to the various ranks which these
spirits held in the vast kingdom of Lucifer,
they were suffered, in their degraded state,
to take up their abode in the air, in mountains,
in springs, or in seas. But although the
various attributes ascribed to the Greek
and Roman deities, were, by the early teachers
of christianity, considered in the humble
light of demoniacal delusions, yet, for many
centuries they possessed great influence
over the minds of the vulgar. The notion
of every man being attended by an evil genius
was abandoned much earlier than the far more
agreeable part of the same doctrine which
taught that, as an antidote to their influence,
each individual was also accompanied by a
benignant spirit. "The ministration
of angels," says a writer in the Athenian
Oracle, "is certain; but the manner
_how_, is the knot to be untied." It
was an opinion of the early philosophers
that not only kingdoms[1] had their tutelary
guardians, but that every person had his
particular genius or good spirit, to protect
and admonish him through the medium of dreams
and visions. Such were the objects of superstitious
reverence derived from the Pantheons of Greece
and Rome, the whole synod of which was supposed
to consist of demons, who were still actively
bestirring themselves to delude mankind.
But in the west of Europe, a host of other
demons, far more formidable, were brought
into play, who had their origin in Celtic,
Teutonic, and even in Eastern fables; and
as their existence, as well as influence,
was boldly asserted, not only by the early
christians, but even by the reformers, it
was long before the rites to which they were
accustomed were totally eradicated.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] Thus the Penates, or household gods presided
over new-born infants. Every thing had its
guardian or peculiar genius: cities, groves,
fountains, hills, were all provided with
keepers of this kind, and to each man was
allotted no less than two--one good, the
other bad (Hor. Lib. II. Epist. 2.) who attended
him from the cradle to the grave. The Greeks
called them _demons_. They were named _Praenestites_,
from their superintending human affairs.
CHAPTER II.
MAGIC AND MAGICAL RITES, &C.
Few subjects present to a philosophic eye
more matter of curious, important and instructive
research than the natural history of religion.
Some sort of religious service has been found
to prevail in all ages and nations, from
the most rude and barbarous periods of human
society, to those of cultivation and refinement.
In these periods are to be traced specimens
strongly marked with exertions of the feelings,
and faculties of men in every situation almost
that can be supposed. It is from the contemplation
of these exertions that we learn what sort
of creature man is; that we discover the
extent of his powers, and the tendency of
his desires: and that we become acquainted
with the force of culture and civilization
upon him, by comparing the degrees of improvement
he has attained in the various stages of
society through which he has passed.
It seems to be a principle established by
experience, that mankind in general have
at no time been able, by the operation of
their own mutual powers, to ascend in their
inquiries to the great comprehensive foundation
of true religion,--the knowledge of a first
cause. This idea is too grand, too distinct,
or too refined for the generality of the
human race. They are surrounded by sensible
objects, and strongly attached to them; they
are in a great measure unaccustomed to the
most simple and obvious degrees of abstraction,
and they can scarcely conceive anything to
have a real existence that may not become
an object of their senses. Possessed of such
sentiments and views, they are fully prepared
in embracing all the follies and absurdities
of superstition. They worship every thing
they either love or fear, in order to procure
the continuance of favours enjoyed, or to
avert that resentment they may have reason
to dread. As their knowledge of nature is
altogether imperfect, and as many events
every moment present themselves, upon which
they can form no theoretical conclusion,
they fly for satisfaction to the most simple,
but most ineffectual of all solutions--the
agency of invisible beings, with which, in
their opinion, all nature is filled. Hence
the rise of Polytheism and local deities,
which have overspread the face of the earth,
under the different titles of guardian gods
or tutelary saints. Hence magnificent temples
and splendid statues have been erected to
aid the imagination of votaries, and to realize
objects of worship, which, though supposed
to be always hovering around, seldom condescend
to become visible.
After obtaining some information concerning
present objects, the next cause of solicitude
and inquiry to the mind of man, is to penetrate
a little into the secrets of futurity. The
same tutelary gods who bestowed their care,
and exerted their powers to procure present
pleasure and happiness for mankind, were
supposed not averse to grant them, in this
respect also, a little indulgence. Hence
the famous oracular responses of antiquity;
hence the long train of conjurers, fortune-tellers,
astrologers, necromancers, magicians, wizards,
and witches, that have been found in all
places and at all times; nor have superior
knowledge and civilization been sufficient
to extirpate such characters, by demonstrating
the futility and absurdity of their views.
Among the ancients, this superstition was
a great engine of state. The respect paid
to omens, auguries and oracles, was profound
and universal; and the persons in power monopolized
the privilege of consulting and interpreting
them. They joined the people in expressing
their veneration; but there is little reason
to doubt that they conducted the responses
in such a manner as best suited the purposes
of government. On this account, it would
not be difficult for the oracle to emit predictions,
which, to all those unacquainted with the
secret, would appear altogether astonishing
and unaccountable. It would seem that this
principle alone is sufficient to explain
all the phenomena of ancient oracles.
Though devination has long ceased to be an
instrument of government, abundance of designing
persons have not been wanting in latter ages,
who found much interest in taking advantage
of the weakness or credulity of their fellow
creatures. Against this pestilent and abandoned
race of men, most civilized countries have
enacted penal laws. But what rendered such
persons peculiarly detestable in modern times,
was the communication which they were supposed
to hold with the devil, to whom they sold
themselves, and from whom, in return, they
derived their information. And by this principle
the penal statutes, instead of extirpating,
inflamed the evil. They alarmed the imaginations
of the people; they tempted them to impute
the cause of their misfortunes and disappointment
to the malice or resentment of their neighbours;
they induced them to trust to their suspicions,
much more than to their reason; and they
multiplied witches and wizards, by putting
into possession of every foolish informer
the means of punishment. In several countries
of Europe, these statutes still subsist;
they were not abolished in Britain till a
period still at no great distance. Since
the abolition of persecution, the faith of
witchcraft has disappeared even among the
vulgar. It was long found inconsistent with
any considerable progress in philosophy.
For these reasons we read, with some degree
of astonishment, a treatise on this exploded
subject, by a philosopher, an eminent physician,
a privy counseller of the then Empress Queen,
and a professor in the university of Vienna.
It was long doubted whether the professor
was in earnest, but the world was at length
forced to admit, that the great Antonius
de Haen certainly believed in witchcraft,
and reckoned the knowledge of it, in treating
a disease, of great importance to a physician--to
the acquisition of which useful knowledge,
he dedicated a great part of his time. In
the year 1758, three old women, condemned
to death for witchcraft, were brought by
order of the Empress from Croatia to Vienna,
to undergo an examination, with regard to
the equity of the sentence pronounced against
them. The question was not whether the crime
existed; the only object of inquiry respected
the justice of its application. The author,
and the illustrious van Swieten, were appointed
to make the investigation. After reading
over the depositions, produced on the trials
with the greatest care, and interrogating
the culprits themselves _most vigorously_
by means of a Croatian interpreter, these
great physicians discovered that the _three
old_ women were not witches, and prevailed
with the Empress to send them home in safety.
It was this circumstance that induced de
Haen to write on magic.
That some judgment may be formed of de Haen's
very extraordinary and curious production
written in the latter part of the eighteenth
century, we shall here furnish our readers
with an abstract of its principles and reasoning,
to which we shall subjoin some remarks.
By the crime of magic, the author informs
us, he means any improper communication between
men and evil spirits, whether it be called
theurgy, soothsaying, necromancy, chiromancy,
incantation or witchcraft. He proposes to
prove, in the first place, that such a communication
does actually exist. He quotes the Egyptian
magicians, the witch of Endor, the possessions
mentioned in the New Testament, and many
more exceptionable authorities from the fathers,
and canons of the church. He is positive
the incantations of the Egyptian magicians
were real operations of infernal agents,
and that the accounts of them, delivered
by Moses, can admit no other construction.
May not the sincere believer in the divine
authority of the scriptures reasonably hesitate
concerning this conclusion? Or rather, does
not such an interpretation justly expose
revelation to reproach? The plain dictates
of the best philosophy are, that nothing
is more simple, regular, and uniform than
the ordinary course of nature; and that this
course can neither be suspended nor altered,
but by its author, nor can by him be permitted
to be interrupted by any inferior being,
unless for the most important reasons. It
does not appear what good end could be gained,
on the part of Providence, by the permission
of these magical enchantments, supposing
them supernatural; and if we imagine the
Devil to have acted spontaneously, with a
view to support his power and influence,
he most manifestly erred in his design. Nothing
could be more impolitic than his appearance
in a field of combat, where he well knew
he must sustain an ignominious defeat. Or
if he worked effectually to support the power
and influence of his servants the magicians,
he should have counteracted, not repeated,
the miraculous exhibitions of Moses. That
the magicians possessed no power sufficient
for this purpose is obvious, from their not
exerting it. That Pharoah expected no such
exertion from them is evident from his never
requesting it, and from his application to
Moses and Aaron. The truth seems to be, that
Pharoah conceived Moses and Aaron to be magicians
like his own. He wished to support the character
of the latter; and he concluded this would
be effectually done, if they could only furnish
a pretence for affirming that they had performed
every wonder accomplished by the former.
Without some such supposition of collusion,
two of the miracles attempted by the magicians
are perfectly absurd and contradictory. They
pretended to turn water into blood, when
there was not one drop of water in all the
land of Egypt, which Aaron had not previously
converted into that substance. They pretended
to send frogs over the land of Egypt, when
every corner of it was swarming with that
loathsome reptile. It is further remarkable
that, with the three first only of Moses's
miracles they proposed to vie; on the appearance
of the fourth, they fairly resigned the contest,
and acknowledged very honestly that the hand
of God was visible in the miracles of Moses;--a
plain confession that no supernatural power
operated in their own.
De Haen considers the case of the witch of
Endor as an authority still more direct.
He maintains that Samuel was actually called
up, either under corporeal or fantastic form,
and foretold Saul the fate of his engagements
with the Philistines. Let us attend to the
circumstances of the story, and examine whether
it is absolutely necessary to have recourse
to this supernatural hypothesis. The mind
of Saul was distracted and agitated beyond
measure by the most critical and alarming
situation of his affairs; his distress was
so great that, forgetting his dignity and
safety, he dismissed his attendants, laid
aside his royal robes, was unable to eat
bread, and, dressed like the meanest of his
people, he took his journey to the abode
of the conjurer. In this state of mind, prepared
for imposition, he arrives during the night
at her residence. He prevails with her, by
much solicitation, and probably by ample
rewards, to call up Samuel. To discompose
still further the disordered mind of Saul,
she announces the pretended approach of the
apparition by a loud acclamation, tells the
king she knew him, which till now she affected
not to do, and describes the resurrection
of the prophet, under the awful semblance
of God's rising out of the earth.
During all this time the king had seen nothing
extraordinary, either because he was not
allowed light sufficient for that purpose,
or was not admitted within the sphere of
vision. He entreats an account of the personage
who approached, and the conjurer describes
the well-known appearance of Samuel. The
prophet sternly challenges the king for disturbing
his repose, tells him that David was intended
to be King of Israel, that himself would
be defeated by the Philistines, and that
he and his sons would fall in battle. The
king enters into no conversation with the
apparition; but unable any longer to support
his agitation, drops lifeless on the ground.
The conjurer returns to Saul, presses him
to take some food which she had prepared.
He at last complies; and having finished
his repast, departs with his servants before
the morning. The whole of this scene, it
is evident, passed in darkness. It does not
appear that Saul ever saw the prophet; and
it surely required no supernatural intelligence
to communicate all the information he obtained.
This would readily be suggested by the despondency
of the king, the strength of his enemies,
and the disposition of the whole people of
the Jews alienated from him, and inclined
towards his successor. The witch of Endor,
therefore, might be a common fortune-teller,
and her case exhibits no direct proof of
supernatural possession.
We do not pretend to account so easily for
many of the possessions recorded in the New
Testament, though few of these only are applicable
to the case of sorcery. We are well aware,
that several writers of eminence, who cannot
be supposed to entertain the least unfavourable
sentiments of revelation, have undertaken
to explain these possessions, without having
recourse to any thing supernatural, by representing
them as figurative descriptions of particular
and local diseases.
We mean not to adopt, or defend the views
of such authors, though we may perhaps be
allowed to observe that, were their opinions
supported in a satisfactory manner, christianity
would lose nothing by the attempt. It would
be exempted, by this means, from a little
cavilling and ridicule, to which some of
its enemies reckon it at present exposed,
and the design could not in the least derogate
from its divinity, as the instantaneous cure
of a distemper cannot be considered less
miraculous than the expulsion of the devil.
At any rate, these possessions are all extraordinary;
appeared on some most extraordinary occasion;
and from them, therefore, no general conclusion
can be drawn to the ordinary cases of common
life.
We shall now translate a specimen of de Haen's[2]
authorities, extracted from the fathers.
The following from Jerome will need no comment.
This father, in his life of St. Hilario the
hermit, relates that a young man of the town
of Gaza in Syria, fell deeply in love with
a pious virgin in the neighbourhood. He attacked
her with looks, whispers, professions, caresses,
and all those arguments which usually conquer
yielding virginity; but finding them all
ineffectual, he resolved to repair to Memphis,
the residence of many eminent conjurers,
and implore their magic aid. He remained
there for a year, till he was fully instructed
in the art. He then returned home, exulting
in his acquisitions, and feasting his imagination
with the luscious scenes he was now confident
of realizing. All he had to do was to lodge
secretly some hard words and uncouth figures,
engraved on a plate of brass, below the threshold
of the door of the house in which the lady
lived. She became perfectly furious, she
tore her hair, gnashed her teeth, and repeated
incessantly the name of the youth, who had
been drawn from her presence by the violence
of her despairing passion. In this situation
she was conducted by her relations to the
cell of old Hilario. The devil that possessed
her, in consequence of the charm, began immediately
to howl, and to confess the truth. "I
have suffered violence," said he; "I
have been forced hither against my inclination.
How happy was I at Memphis, amusing my friends
with visions! O the pains, the tortures which
I suffer! You command me to dislodge, and
I am detained fast by the charm below the
threshold. I cannot depart, unless the young
man dismiss me." So cautious, however,
was the saint, that he would not permit the
magic figures to be searched for, till he
had released the virgin, for fear he should
seem to have intercourse with incantations
in performing the cure or to believe that
a devil could even speak truth. He observed
only that demons are always liars, and cunning
to deceive.
De Haen imputes to the power of magic the
miracles,[3] as they are called, of the famous
Apollonius Thyanaeus. He seems to entertain
no scruple about their authority. As several
of the enemies of revelation have held forth
Thyanaeus as a rival of Jesus Christ, a specimen
of his performances may amuse our readers.
During an assembly of the people at Ephesus,
a great flight of birds approached from a
neighbouring wood; one bird led all the rest.
"There is nothing wonderful," says
Thyanaeus, to the astonished people, "in
this appearance. A boy passing along a particular
street has carelessly scattered in it some
corn which he carried; one bird has tasted
the food, and generously calls the rest to
partake the repast." The hearers repaired
to the spot, and found the information true.
Being called to allay a pestilence which
raged at Ephesus, he ordered an old beggar
to be burned under the stones near the temple
of Hercules, as an enemy to the gods. He
commanded the people again to remove the
stones, that they might see what sort of
animal had been put to death. They found
not a man, but a dog. The plague, however,
ceased.
A married woman of rank being dead, was carried
out to be burned in an open litter, followed
by her husband dissolved in tears. Apollonius
approaching, requests him to stop the procession,
and he would put an end to his grief. He
asked the name of the woman, touched her,
and muttered over her some words. She immediately
revived, began to speak, and returned again
to her own house. Fleury, who relates the
miracle, remarks that some people doubted
whether the woman had been really dead, as
they had observed something like breath issue
from her mouth. Others imagined she had been
seized only with a tedious faint, and that
the operation of the cold dews and damps
upon her body might naturally recover her.
On Fleury's remark de Haen most sagely observes,
that the persons who observed the woman breathing
could not surely have suppressed the joyful
news, and would certainly have stopped the
procession before the philosopher arrived.
De Haen's second attempt is to recite all
the objections that have been made against
sorcery, and to subjoin to each a distinct
refutation. There is nothing in this part
of the work that merits any attention. He
concludes in these words: "I may then
with confidence affirm, that the art of magic
most certainly exists. History, sacred and
prophane; authority human and divine; experiments
the most unquestionable and unexceptionable,
all concur to demonstrate its reality."
The last part of de Haen's work relates to
the discovering and treating of magical diseases,
to explain which seems to have been the chief
purpose of the author in composing his book.
Much caution, he observes, and attention
are necessary on this head; and the physician
should not readily admit the imputation of
witchcraft. No absence of the ordinary symptoms,
no uncommon alteration of the course of the
distemper, are sufficient to infer this conclusion,
because these may arise from unknown natural
causes. What then are the marks of certain
incantations? De Haen holds the following
to be indisputable: "if, in any uncommon
disease, there shall be found, in the stuffing
of the cushions, or cielings of the room
in which the patient lies, in the feather
or the chaff of his bed, about the door,
or under the threshold of his house, any
strange characters, images, bones, hair,
seeds, or roots of plants; and if upon the
removal of these, or upon conveying the patient
into another apartment, he shall suddenly
recover; or if the patient himself, or his
friends, shall be so wicked as to call a
wizzard to their aid, by whom the malady
shall be removed; or if insects and animals
which do not lodge in the human body; if
stones, metals, glass, knives, plaited hair,
pieces of pitch, be ejected from particular
parts of the body, of greater size, and weight
and figure, than could be supposed to make
their way through these parts, without much
greater demolition and delaceration of the
passages; in all these cases, the disease
is unquestionably magical."
The author proceeds to enquire whether the
physician may presume to remove the instruments
of incantation in order to relieve the patient
without incurring the accusation of impiety
by interfering with the implements and furniture
of the devil; and concludes very formally
that, after approaching them with all due
ceremony and respect, after imploring with
suitable devotion and ardour, the protection
and direction of heaven in such a perilous
undertaking, he may attempt to intermeddle,
and may occasionally expect a successful
issue.
Such are the views, reasonings, and conclusions
of, at the time, one of the first physicians
and philosophers of Germany;--views and reasonings
which would have been received with eagerness
and applause two hundred years ago, but which
the philosophy and improvements of later
times seem to have banished to the abodes
of ignorance and barbarity.
The origin of almost all our knowledge may
be traced to the earlier periods of antiquity.
This is peculiarly the case with respect
to the arts denominated magical. There were
few ancient nations, however barbarous, which
could not furnish many individuals to whose
spells and enchantments the power of nature
and the material world were supposed to be
subjected. The Chaldeans, the Egyptians,
and indeed all the oriental nations were
accustomed to refer all natural effects,
for which they could not account to the agency
of demons, who were believed to preside over
herbs, trees, rivers, mountains, and animals.
Every member of the human body was under
their power, and all corporeal diseases were
produced by their malignity. For instance,
if any happened to be affected with a fever,
little anxiety was manifested to discover
its cause, or to adopt rational measures
for its cure; it must no doubt have been
occasioned by some evil spirit residing in
the body, or influencing, in some mysterious
way, the fortunes of the sufferer. That influence
could be counteracted only by certain magical
rites; hence the observance of those rites
soon obtained a permanent establishment in
the East. Even at the present day, many uncivilized
people hold that all nature is filled with
genii, of which some exercise a beneficent,
and others a destructive power. All evils
with which man is afflicted, are considered
the work of these imaginary beings, whose
favour must he propitiated by sacrifices,
incantations, and songs. If the Greenlander
be unsuccessful in fishing, the Huron in
hunting, or in war; if even the scarcely
half reasoning Hottentot finds every thing
is not right in his mind, body, or fortune,
no time must be lost before the spirit be
invoked. After the removal of some present
evil, the next strongest desire in the human
mind is the attainment of some future good.
This good is often beyond the power, and
still oftener beyond the inclination of man
to bestow; it must therefore be sought from
beings which are supposed to possess considerable
influence over human affairs, and which being
elevated above the baser passions of our
nature, were thought to regard with peculiar
favour all who acknowledged their power,
or invoked their aid: hence the numerous
rites which have, in all ages and countries,
been observed in consulting superior intelligences,
and the equally numerous modes in which their
pleasure has been communicated to mortals.
The Chaldean magi were chiefly founded on
astrology, and were much conversant with
certain animals, metals and plants, which
they employed in all their incantations;
the virtue of which was derived from stellar
influence. Great attention was always paid
to the positions and the configurations presented
by the celestial sphere; and it was only
at favourable seasons that the solemn rites
were celebrated. Those rites were accompanied
with many peculiar and fantastic gestures,
by leaping, clapping of hands, prostrations,
loud cries, and not unfrequently with unintelligible
exclamations. Sacrifices, and burnt offerings
were used to propitiate superior powers;
but our knowledge of the magical rites exercised
by certain oriental nations, the Jews only
excepted, is extremely limited. All the books
professedly written on the subject, have
been, swept away by the torrent of time.
We learn, however, that the professors among
the Chaldeans were generally divided into
three classes; the _Ascaphim_, or charmers,
whose office it was to remove present, and
to avert future contingent evils; to construct
talismans, etc. The _Mecaschephim_, or magicians,
properly so called, who were conversant with
the occult powers of nature, and the supernatural
world; and the _chasdim_, or astrologers,
who constituted by far the most numerous
and respectable class. And from the assembly
of the wise men on the occasion of the extraordinary
dream of Nebuchadnezzar, it would appear
that Babylon had also her oneirocritici,
or interpreters of dreams--a species of diviners
indeed, to which almost every nation of antiquity
gave birth.
Like the Chaldean astrologers, the Persian
magi, from whom our word magic is derived,
belong to the priesthood. But the worship
of the gods was not their chief occupation;
they were also great proficients in the arts.
They joined to the worship of the gods, and
to the profession of medicine and natural
magic, a pretended familiarity with superior
powers, from which they boasted of deriving
all their knowledge. Like Plato, who probably
imbibed many of their notions, they taught
that demons hold a middle rank between gods
and men; that they (the demons) presided
not only over divinations, auguries, conjurations,
oracles, and every species of magic, but
also over sacrifices, and prayer, which in
behalf of men is thus presented, and rendered
acceptable to the gods. Indeed, the austerity
of their lives[4] was well calculated to
strengthen the impression which their cunning
had already made on the multitude, and to
prepare the way for whatever impostures they
might afterwards practise.
We are less acquainted with Indian magic
than with that practised by any other Eastern
nations. It may, however, be reasonably enough
inferred that it was very similar to that
for which the magi in general were held in
such high estimation: although they were
excluded, as beings of too sacred a nature,
from the ordinary occurrences of life. Their
Brahmins, or Gymnosophists, were regarded
with as much reverence as the magi, and probably
were more worthy of it. Some of them dwelt
in woods, and others in the immediate vicinity
of cities. Their skill in medicine was great;
the care which they took in educating youth,
in familiarizing it with generous and virtuous
sentiments, did them peculiar honour; and
their maxims and discourses, as recorded
by historians, prove that they were much
accustomed to profound reflection on the
principles of civil polity, morality, religion
and philosophy.
JEWISH MAGI.
Of the magi of the Jews, it is proved by
Lightfoot,[5] that after their return from
Babylon, having entirely forsaken idolatry,
and being no longer favoured with the gift
of prophecy, they gradually abandoned themselves,
before the coming of our Saviour, to sorcery
and divination. The Talmud, still regarded
with a reverence bordering on idolatry, abounds
with instructions for the due observance
of superstitious rites. After their city
and temple were destroyed, many Jewish impostors
were highly esteemed for their pretended
skill in magic; and under pretence of interpreting
dreams, they met with daily opportunities
of practising the most shameful frauds. Many
Rabbins were quite as well versed in the
school of Zoroaster, as in that of Moses.
They prescribed all kinds of conjuration,
some for the cure of wounds, some against
the dreaded bite of serpents, and others
against thefts and enchantments. Their divinations
were founded on the influence of the stars,
and on the operations of spirits, they did
not, indeed, like the Chaldean magi, regard
the heavenly bodies as gods and genii, but
they ascribed to them a great power over
the actions and opinions of men.
The magical rites of the Jews were, and indeed
are still, chiefly performed on various important
occasions, as on the birth of a child, marriages,
etc. On such occasions the evil spirits are
supposed to be more than usually active in
their malignity, which can only be counteracted
by certain enchantments.[6] They believe
that Lilis will cause all their male children
to die on the eighth day after their birth;
girls on the twenty-first.[7] The following
are the means adopted by the German Jews
to avert this calamity. They draw arrows
in circular lines with chalk or charcoal
on the four walls of the room in which the
accouchement takes place, and write upon
each arrow: _Adam, Eve! make Lilis go away!_
They write also on certain parts of the room
the name of the three angels who preside
over medicine, _Senai, Sansenai and Sanmangelof_,
after the manner taught them by Lilis herself
when she entertained the hope of causing
all the Jews to be drowned in the Red Sea.
Josephus, the historian of the Jews, does
not allow to magic so ancient an origin among
them, as many Jewish writers do. He makes
Solomon the first who practised an art which
is so powerful against demons; and the knowledge
of which, he asserts, was communicated to
that prince by immediate inspiration. The
latter, continues this historian, invented
and transmitted to posterity in his writings,
certain incantations for the cure of diseases,
and for the expulsion and perpetual banishment
of wicked spirits from the bodies of the
possessed. It consisted, according to his
description, in the use of a certain root,
which was sealed up, and held under the nose
of the person possessed; the name of Solomon,
with the words prescribed by him, was then
pronounced, and the demon forced immediately
to retire. He does not even hesitate to assert,
that he himself has been an eye witness of
such an effect produced on a person named
Eleazer, in the presence of the Emperor Vespasian
and his sons. Nor will this relation surprise
us, when we consider the rooted malignity
entertained by the Jews to the christian
religion, and this writer's attempt to appreciate
the miracles of our Saviour, by ascribing
them to magical influence, and by representing
them as easy of accomplishment to all acquainted
with the occult sciences.
Innumerable are the devices contained in
the Cabala for averting possible evils, as
the plague, disease, and sudden death. It
directs how to select and combine some passages
of scripture, which are believed both to
render supernatural beings visible, and to
produce many wonderful and surprising effects.
The most famous wonders have been accomplished
by means of the name of God. The sacred word
Jehovah is, when read with points, multiplied
by the Jewish doctors into twelve, forty-two,
and seventy-two letters, of which words are
composed that are thought to possess miraculous
energy. By these, say they, Moses slew the
Egyptians; by these Israel was preserved
from the destroying angel of the wilderness;
by these Elijah separated the waters of the
river, to open a passage for himself and
Elisha, and by these it has been as daringly
and impudently asserted, that our blessed
Saviour, the eternal Son of God, cast out
evil spirits. The name of the devil is likewise
used in their magical devices. The five Hebrew
letters of which that name[8] is composed,
exactly constitute the number 364, one less
than the days of the whole year. They pretended
that, owing to the wonderful virtue of the
number comprised in the name of Satan, he
is prevented from accusing them for an equal
number of days: hence the stratagem before
alluded to, for depriving the devil of the
power of doing them any harm on the only
day on which that power is granted to him.
In allusion to the cabalists, Pliny says,
"There is another sect of magicians
of which Moses and Latopea, Jews, were the
first authors." It was the prevailing
opinion among the Hebrews, that the Cabala
was delivered by God to Moses, and thence
through a succession of ages, even to the
times of Ezra, preserved by tradition only,
without the help of writing, in the same
manner as the doctrine of Pythagoras was
delivered by Archippus and Lysiades, who
kept schools at Thebes in Greece, where the
scholars learned all their master's precepts
by heart, and employed their memories instead
of books. So certain Jews, despising letters,
placed all their learning in memory, observation,
and verbal tradition; whence it was called
by them Cabala, that is, a receiving from
one to another by the ear an art said to
be very ancient and only known to the christians
in later times.
The Jews divided the Cabala into three parts;
the first containing the knowledge of _Bresith_,
which they call also cosmology, the object
of which is to teach and explain the force
and efficacy of things created, natural or
celestial; expounding also the laws and mysteries
of the Bible according to philosophical reasons,
which on that account differs little from
natural magic, a science in which King Solomon
is said to have excelled. We find, therefore,
in the sacred histories of the Jews, that
he was wont to discourse from the cedar of
the forests of Lebanon to the low hyssop
of the valley; as also of cattle, birds,
reptiles, and fish, all which contain within
themselves a kind of magical virtue. Moses
also, in his expositions upon the Pentateuch,
and most of the Talmudists, have followed
the rules of the same art.
The other division of the Cabala contains
the knowledge of things more sublime, as
of divine and angelical powers, the contemplation
of sacred names and characters; being a certain
kind of symbolical theology, in which the
letters, figures, numbers, names, points,
lines, accents, etc. are esteemed to contain
the significations of most profound things
and wonderful mysteries. This part again
is twofold--_Authmantick_, handling the nature
of angels, the powers, names, characters
of spirits and souls departed--and _Theomantick_,
which searches into the mysteries of the
Divine Majesty, his emanations, his names,
and _Pentacula_, which he who attains to
is supposed to be endowed with most wonderful
power. It was, they say, by virtue of this
art, that Moses wrought so many miracles;
that Joshua commanded the sun to stand still;
that Elias called down fire from heaven;
that Daniel the prophet muzzled the lions'
mouths; and that the three children sang
in the fiery furnace. And, what is more,
the perfidious and unbelieving Jews, did
not stick to aver, that our Saviour himself
wrought all his miracles by virtue of this
art, and that he discovered several of its
secrets, containing a variety of charms against
devils, and also, as Josephus writes, against
diseases. "As for my part," says
Cornelius Agrippa, in allusion to this subject,
"I do not doubt but that God revealed
many things to Moses and the prophets, which
were contained under the covert of the words
of the law, which were not to be communicated
to the profane vulgar: so for this art, which
the Jews so much boast of, which I have with
great labour and diligence searched into,
I must acknowledge it to be a mere rhapsody
of superstition, and nothing but a kind of
theurgic magic before spoken of. For if,
as the Jews contend, coming from God, it
did any way conduce to perfection of life,
salvation of men, truth of understanding,
certainly that spirit of truth, which having
forsaken the synagogue, is now come to teach
us all truth, had never concealed it all
this while from the church, which certainly
knows all those things that are of God; whose
grace, baptism, and other sacraments of salvation,
are perfectly revealed in all languages;--for
every language is alike, so that there be
the same piety; neither is there any other
name in heaven or on earth, by which we can
be saved, but only the name of Jesus. Therefore
the Jews, most skilful in divine names, after
the coming of Christ, were able to do nothing,
in comparison of their forefathers:--the
Cabala of the Jews, therefore, is nothing
else, but a most pernicious superstition,
the which by collecting, dividing, and changing
several names, words, and letters, dispersed
up and down in the bible, at their own good
will and pleasure, and making one thing out
of another, they dissolve the members of
truth, raising up sentences, inductions,
and parables of their own, apply thereto
the oracles of divine scripture to them,
defaming the scriptures, and affirming their
fragments to consist of them, blaspheme the
word of God by their wrested suppositions
of words, syllables, letters and numbers;
endeavouring to prop up their villainous
inventions, by arguments drawn from their
own delusions."
FOOTNOTES:
[2] Antonio de Haen, S. C. R. A. Majestate
a consiliis anticis, et Archiatri, medicinae
in alma et antiquissimo universitate professoris
primarij, plurium eruditorium societatem
socii, de magia liber. 8vo. Vienna.
[3] Many significations have been attached
to the word miracle, both by the ancients
and moderns. With us a miracle is the suspension
or violation of the laws of nature; and a
miracle, which can be explained upon physical
principles, ceases to be such. Whatever surpassed
their comprehension was regarded by the ancients
as a miracle, and every extraordinary degree
of information attained by an individual,
as well as any unlooked-for occurrence, was
referred to some peculiar interposition of
the deity. Hence among the ancients, the
followers of different divinities, far from
denying the miracles performed by their opponents,
admitted their reality, but endeavoured to
surpass them; and thus in the "life
of Zoroaster," we find that able innovator
frequently entering the lists with hostile
enchanters, admitting but exceeding the wonderful
works they performed; and thus also when
the thirst of power, or of distinction, divided
the sacerdotal colleges, similar trials of
skill would ensue, the successful combatant
being considered to derive his knowledge
from the more powerful god. That the science
on which each party depended was derived
from experimental physics, may be proved.
1. by the conduct of the Thaumaturgists,
or wonder-workers: 2. from what they themselves
had said concerning magic; the genii invoked
by the magicians, sometimes denoting physical
or chemical agents employed, sometimes men
who cultivated the science.
[4] All the three orders of Magi enumerated
by Porphyry, abstained from wine and women,
and the first of these orders from animal
food.
[5] Vol. ii. p. 287.
[6] See Tobit. chap. viii. v. 2 and 2.
[7] Elias, as quoted by Becker.
[8] There is no mention made of the word
_Devil_ in the Old Testament, but only of
_Satan_: nor do we meet with it in any of
the heathen authors who say anything about
the devil in the signification attached to
it among christians; that is, as a creature
revolted from God. Their theology went no
farther than to evil genii, or demons, who
harassed and persecuted mankind, though we
are still aware that many curious _nick_-names
are given to the prince of darkness both
by ancient and modern writers.
CHAPTER III.
ON THE SEVERAL KINDS OF MAGIC.
The pretended art of producing, by the assistance
of words and ceremonies, such events as are
above the natural power of men, was of several
kinds, and chiefly consisted in invoking
the good and benevolent, or the wicked and
malignant spirits. The first, which was called
Theurgia, was adopted by the wisest of the
Pagan world, who esteemed this as much as
they despised the latter, which they called
Goetia.
Theurgia was by the philosophers accounted
a divine art, which only served to raise
the mind to higher perfection, and to exalt
the soul to a greater degree of purity; and
they who by means of this kind of magic,
were imagined to arrive at what is called
intuition, wherein they enjoyed an intimate
intercourse with the deity, were believed
to be invested with divine power; so that
it was imagined nothing was impossible for
them to perform; all who made profession
of this kind of magic aspired to this state
of perfection. The priest, who was of this
order, was to be a man of unblemished morals,
and all who joined with him were bound to
a strict purity of life. They were to abstain
from women, and from animal food; and were
forbid to defile themselves by the touch
of a dead body. Nothing was to be forgotten
in their rites and ceremonies; the least
omission or mistake, rendered all their art
ineffectual: so that this was a constant
excuse for their not performing all that
was required of them, though as their sole
employment (after having arrived to a certain
degree of perfection, by fasting, prayer,
and other methods of purification) was the
study of universal nature, they might gain
such an insight into physical causes, as
would enable them to perform actions, that
should fill the vulgar with astonishment;
and it is hardly to be doubted, but this
was all the knowledge that many of them aspired
to. In this sort of magic, Hermes Tresmegistus
and Zoroaster excelled, and indeed it gained
great reputation among the Egyptians, Chaldeans,
Persians, Indians and Jews. In times of ignorance,
a piece of clock-work, or some other curious
machine, was sufficient to entitle the inventor
to the works of magic; and some have even
asserted, that the Egyptian magic, rendered
so famous by the writings of the ancients,
consisted only in discoveries drawn from
the mathematics, and natural philosophy,
since those Greek philosophers who travelled
into Egypt, in order to obtain a knowledge
of the Egyptian sciences, returned with only
a knowledge of nature and religion, and some
rational ideas of their ancient symbols.
But it can hardly be doubted, that magic
in its grossest and most ridiculous sense
was practised in Egypt, at least among some
of the vulgar, long before Pythagoras or
Empedocles travelled into that country. The
Egyptians had been very early accustomed
to vary the signification of their symbols,
by adding to them several plants, ears of
corn, or blades of grass, to express the
different employments of husbandry; but understanding
no longer their meaning nor the words that
had been made use of on these occasions,
which were equally unintelligible, the vulgar
might mistake these for so many mysterious
practices observed by their fathers; and
hence they might conceive the notion, that
a conjunction of plants, even without being
made use of as a remedy, might be of efficacy
to preserve or procure health. "Of these,"
adds the Abbe Pluche, "they made a collection,
and an art by which they pretended to procure
the blessings, and provide against the evils
of life." By the assistance of these,
men even attempted to hurt their enemies;
and indeed the knowledge of poisonous or
useful simples, might on particular occasions
give sufficient weight to their empty curses
and innovations. But these magic incantations,
so contrary to humanity, were detested, and
punished by almost all nations; nor could
they be tolerated in any.
Pliny, after mentioning an herb, the throwing
of which into an army, it was said, was sufficient
to put it to the route, asks, where was this
herb when Rome was so distressed by the Cambri
and Teutones? Why did not the Persians make
use of it when Lucullus cut their troops
to pieces?
But amongst all the incantations of magic,
the most solemn, as well as the most frequent,
was that of calling up the spirits of the
dead; this indeed was the very acme of their
art; and the reader cannot be displeased
with having this mystery here elucidated.
An affection for the body of a person, who
in his life time was beloved, induced the
first natives to inter the dead in a decent
manner, and to add to this melancholy instance
of esteem, those wishes which had a particular
regard to their new state of existence. The
place of burial, conformable to the custom
of characterising all beloved places, or
those distinguished by a memorable event,
was pointed out by a large stone or pillar
raised upon it. To this place families, and
when the concern was general, multitudes
repaired every year, when, upon this stone,
were made libations of wine, oil, honey,
and flour; and here they sacrificed and ate
in common, having first made a trench in
which they burnt the entrails of the victim
into which the libation and the blood were
made to flow. They began with thanking God
with having given them life, and providing
them necessary food; and then praised him
for the good examples they had been favoured
with. From these melancholy rites were banished
all licentiousness and levity, and while
other customs changed, these continued the
same. They roasted the flesh of the victim
they had offered, and eat it in common, discoursing
on the virtues of him they came to lament.
All other feasts were distinguished by names
suitable to the ceremonies that attended
them. These funeral meetings were simply
called the manes, that is, the assembly.
Thus the manes and the dead were words that
became synonimous. In these meetings, they
imagined that they renewed their alliance
with the deceased, who, they supposed, had
still a regard for the concerns of their
country and family, and who, as affectionate
spirits, could do no less than inform them
of whatever was necessary for them to know.
Thus, the funerals of the dead were at last
converted into methods of divination, and
an innocent institution of one of the grossest
pieces of folly and superstition. But they
did not stop here; they became so extravagantly
credulous, as to believe that the phantom
drank the libations that had been poured
forth, while the relations were feasting
on the rest of the sacrifice round the pit:
and from hence they became apprehensive lest
the rest of the dead should promiscuously
throng about this spot to get a share of
the repast they were supposed to be so fond
of, and leave nothing for the dear spirit
for whom the feast was intended. They then
made two pits or ditches, into one of which
they put wine, honey, water, and flour, to
employ the generality of the dead; and in
the other they poured the blood of the victim;
when sitting down on the brink, they kept
off, by the sight of their swords, the crowd
of dead who had no concern in their affairs,
while they called him by name, whom they
had a mind to cheer and consult, and desired
him to draw near.[9]
The questions made by the living were very
intelligible; but the answers of the dead
were not so easily understood; the priests,
therefore, and the magicians made it their
business to explain them. They retired into
deep caves, where the darkness and silence
resembled the state of death, and there fasted,
and lay upon the skins of the beasts they
had sacrificed, and then gave for answer
the dreams which most affected them; or opened
a certain book appointed for that purpose,
and gave the first sentence that offered.[10]
At other times the priest, or any person
who came to consult, took care at his going
out of the cave, to listen to the first words
he should hear, and these were to be his
answer. And though they had not the most
remote relation to the mutter in question,
they were twisted so many ways, and their
sense so violently wrested, that they made
them signify almost anything they pleased.
At other times they had recourse to a number
of tickets, on which were some words or verses,
and these being thrown into an urn, the first
that was taken out was delivered to the family.[11]
Health, prosperity in worldly affairs, and
all that was intermixed in the good or evil
of this world were regulated by the responses
or signs which these equivocal, not to say
less than absurd, means afforded, of prying
into the womb of future events.
AUGURY, OR DIVINATIONS DRAWN FROM THE FLIGHT
AND FEEDING OP BIRDS.
The superstitious fondness of mankind for
searching into futurity has given rise to
an infinite variety of extravagant follies.
The Romans, who were remarkably fertile in
these sorts of demonological inventions,
suggested numerous ways of divination. With
them all Nature had a voice, and the most
senseless beings, and most trivial things,
the most trifling incidents, became presages
of future events; which introduced ceremonies
founded on a mistaken knowledge of antiquity,
the most childish and ridiculous, and which
were performed with all the air of solemnity
and sanctity of devotion. Augury, or divinations
founded on the flight of birds, were not
only considered by the Egyptians as the symbols
of the winds, but good and bad omens of every
kind were founded or rather derived from
the flying of the feathered tribe. The birds
at this time had become wonderfully wise;
and an owl, to whom, for reasons not precisely
known, light is not so agreeable as darkness,
could not pass by the windows of a sick person
in the night, where the creature was not
offended by the glimmerings of a light or
candle, but his hooting must be considered
as prophesying, that the life of the poor
man was nearly wound up.
Amongst the Romans, these auguries were taken
usually upon an eminence: after the month
of March they were prohibited in consequence
of the moulting season having commenced;
nor were they permitted at the waning of
the moon, nor at any time in the afternoon,
or when the air was the least ruffled by
winds or clouds. The feeding of the sacred
chickens, and the manner of their taking
the corn that was offered to them, was the
most common method of taking the augury.
Observations were also made on the chattering
or singing of birds, the hooting of crows,
pies, owls, etc., and from the running of
beasts, as heifers, asses, rams, hares, wolves,
foxes, weasels and mice, when these appeared
in uncommon places, crossed the way, or ran
to the right or left. They also pretended
to draw a good or bad omen from the most
trifling actions or occurrences of life,
as sneezing, stumbling, starting, numbness
of the little finger, the tingling of the
ear, the spilling of salt upon the table,
or the wine upon one's clothes, the accidental
meeting of a bitch with whelp, etc. It was
also the business of the augur to interpret
dreams, oracles, and prodigies.
Nothing can be so surprising than to find
so wise and valorous a people as the Romans
addicted to such childish fooleries. Scipio,
Augustus, and many others, without any fatal
consequences, despised the _sacred_ chickens,
and other arts of divination: but when the
generals had miscarried in any enterprise,
the people laid the whole blame on the negligence
with which these oracles had been consulted:
and if an unfortunate general had neglected
to consult them, the blame of miscarriage
was thrown upon him who had preferred his
own forecast to that of the fowls; while
those who made these kinds of predictions
a subject of raillery, were accounted impious
and profane. Thus they construed, as a punishment
of the gods, the defeat of Claudius Pulcher;
who, when the sacred chickens refused to
eat what was set before them, ordered them
to be thrown into the sea; "If they
won't eat," said he, "they shall
drink."
ARUSPICES, OR DIVINATIONS DRAWN FROM BRUTE,
OR HUMAN SACRIFICES.
In the earliest ages of the world, a sense
of piety and a regard to decency had introduced
the custom of never sacrificing to Him, whence
all blessings emanated, any but the soundest,
the most healthy, fat and beautiful animals;
which were always examined with the closest
and most exact attention. This ceremonial,
which doubtless had its origin in gratitude,
or in some ideas of fitness and propriety,
at length, degenerated into trifling niceties
and superstitious ceremonies. And it having
been once imagined that no favour was to
be looked for from the gods, when the victim
was imperfect, the idea of perfection was
united with abundance of trivial circumstances.
The entrails were examined with peculiar
care, and if the whole was without blemish,
their duties were fulfilled; under an assurance
that they had engaged the gods to be on their
side, they engaged in war, and in the most
hazardous undertakings, with such a confidence
of success, as had the greatest tendency
to procure it. All the motions of the victims
that were led to the altar, were considered
as so many prophecies. If the victim advanced
with an easy and natural air, in a straight
line, and without offering any resistance,--if
he made no extraordinary bellowing when he
received the blow,--if he did not get loose
from the person who led him to the sacrifice,
it was deemed a certain prognostic of an
easy and flowing success.
The victim was knocked down, but before its
belly was ripped open, one of the lobes of
the liver was allotted to those who offered
the sacrifice, and the other to the enemies
of the state. That which was neither blemished
nor withered, of a bright red, and neither
smaller nor larger than it ought to be, prognosticated
great prosperity to those for whom it was
set apart; that which was livid, small or
corrupted, presaged the most fatal mischiefs.
The next thing to be considered was the heart,
which was also examined with the utmost care,
as was the spleen, the gall, and the lungs;
and if any of these were let fall, if they
smelt rank or were bloated, livid or withered,
it presaged nothing but misfortunes.
After the examination of the entrails was
over, the fire was kindled, and from this
also they drew several presages. If the flame
was clear, if it mounted up without dividing,
and went not out till the victim was entirely
consumed, this was a proof that the sacrifice
was accepted; but if they found it difficult
to kindle the fire, if the flame divided,
if it played around instead of taking bold
of the victim, if it burnt ill, or went out,
it was a bad omen. The business, however,
of the Aruspices was not confined to the
altars and sacrifices, they had an equal
right to explain all other portents. The
Senate frequently consulted them on the most
extraordinary prodigies. The college of the
Aruspices, as well as those of the other
religious orders, had their registers and
records, such as memorials of thunder and
lightning,[12] the Tuscan histories,[13]
etc.
DIVISIONS OP DIVINATION BY THE ANCIENTS--PRODIGIES,
ETC.
Divination was divided by the ancients into
artificial and natural. The first is conducted
by reasoning upon certain external signs,
considered as indications of futurity; the
other consists in that which presages things
from a mere internal sense, and persuasion
of the mind, without any assistance of signs;
and is of two kinds, the one from nature,
and the other by influx. The first supposes
that the soul, collected within itself, and
not diffused or divided among the organs
of the body, has from its own nature and
essence, some fore-knowledge of future things;
witness, for instance, what is seen in dreams,
ecstasies, and on the confines of death.
The second supposes the soul after the manner
of a mirror to receive some secondary illumination
from the presence of God and other spirits.
Artificial divination is also of two kinds:
the one argues from natural causes, as in
the predictions of physicians relative to
the event of diseases, from the tongue, pulse,
etc. The second the consequence of experiments
and observations arbitrarily instituted,
and is mostly superstitious. The systems
of divination reduceable under these heads
are almost incalculable. Among these were
the Augurs or those who drew their knowledge
of futurity from the flight, and various
other actions of birds; the Aruspices, from
the entrails of beasts; palmestry or the
lines of the hands; points marked at random;
numbers, names, the motions of a scene, the
air, fire, the Praenestine, Homerian, and
Virgilian lots, dreams, etc.
Whoever reads the Roman historians[14] must
be surprised at the number of prodigies which
are constantly recorded, and which frequently
filled the people with the most dreadful
apprehensions. It must be confessed, that
some of these seem altogether supernatural;
while much the greater part only consist
of some of the uncommon productions of nature,
which superstition always attributed to a
superior cause, and represented as the prognostication
of some impending misfortunes. Of this class
may be reckoned the appearance of two suns,
the nights illuminated by rays of light,
the views of fighting armies, swords, and
spears, darting through the air; showers
of milk, of blood, of stones, of ashes, of
frogs, beasts with two heads, or infants
who had some feature resembling those of
the brute creation. These were all dreadful
prodigies, which filled the people with inexpressible
astonishment, and the Roman Empire with an
extreme perplexity; and whatever unhappy
circumstance followed upon these, was sure
to be either caused or predicted by them.[15]
FOOTNOTES:
[9] Homer gives the same account of those
ceremonies, when Ulysses raised the soul
of Tiresias; and the same usages are found
in the poem of Silius Italicus. And to these
ceremonies the scriptures frequently allude,
when the Israelites are forbid to assemble
upon high places.
[10] The magical slumbers produced in the
cave of Trophonius are justly ascribed to
medicated beverages. Here, the votary if
he escaped with life, had his health irreparably
injured, and the whole class of artificial
dreams and visions, the effect of some powerful
narcotic acting upon the body after the mind
had been predisposed for a certain train
of ideas.
[11] The _sortes praenestinae_ were famous
among the Greeks. The method by which these
lots were conducted was to put so many letters
or even whole words, into an urn; to shake
them together, and throw them out; and whatever
should chance to be made out in the arrangement
of these letters or words, composed the answer
of the oracle. The ancients also made use
of dice, drawing tickets, etc., in casting
or deciding results. In the Old Testament
we meet with many standing and perpetual
laws, and a number of particular commands,
prescribing and regulating the use of them.
We are informed by the Scripture that when
a successor to Judas in the apostolate was
to be chosen, the lot fell on St. Mathias.
And the garment or coat without a seam of
our Saviour was lotted for by the Jews. In
Cicero's time this mode of divination was
at a very low ebb. The _sortes Homericae_
and _sortes Virgilianae_ which succeeded
the _sortes Praenestinae_, gave rise to the
same means used among christians of casually
opening the sacred books for directions in
important circumstances; to learn the consequence
of events and what they had to fear among
their rulers.
[12] Kennet's Roman Antiquities, Lib. XI,
C. 4.
[13] Romulus, who founded the institution
of the Aruspices, borrowed it from the Tuscans,
to whom the Senate afterwards sent twelve
of the sons of the principal nobility to
be instructed in these mysteries, and the
other ceremonies of their religion. The origin
of this act among the people of Tuscany,
is related by Cicero in the following manner:
"A peasant," says he, "ploughing
in the field, his ploughshare running pretty
deep in the earth, turned up a clod, from
whence sprung a child, who taught him and
the other Tuscans the art of divination."
(Cicero, De Divinat. l. 2.) This fable, undoubtedly
means no more, than that this child, said
to spring from the clod of earth, was a youth
of a very mean and obscure birth, but it
is not known whether he was the author of
it, or whether he learnt it of the Greeks
or any other nations.
[14] Particularly Livy, Dionysius of Halicarnassus,
Pliny, and Valerius Maximus.
[15] Nothing is more easy than to account
for these productions, which have no relation
to any events that may happen to follow them.
The appearance of two suns has frequently
happened in England, as well as in other
places, and is only caused by the clouds
being placed in such a situation, as to reflect
the image of that luminary; nocturnal fires,
enflamed spears, fighting armies, were no
more than what we call the Aurora Borealis
or northern lights, or ignited vapours floating
in the air; showers of stones, of ashes,
or of fire, were no other than the effects
of the eruptions of some volcano at a considerable
distance; showers of milk were caused by
some quality in the air, condensing, and
giving a whitish colour to the water; and
those of blood are now well known to be only
the red spots left upon the earth, on stones
and leaves of trees, by the butterflies which
hatch in hot and stormy weather.
CHAPTER IV.
HISTORY OF ORACLES--THE PRINCIPAL ORACLES
OF ANTIQUITY.
Few superstitions have been so famous, and
so seductive to the minds of men during a
number of ages, as oracles. In treaties of
peace or truces, the Greeks never forgot
to stipulate for the liberty of resorting
to oracles. No colony undertook new settlements,
no war was declared, no important affair
begun, without first consulting the oracles.
The most renowned oracles were those of Delphos,
Dodona, Trophonius, Jupiter Hammon, and the
Clarian Apollo. Some have attributed the
oracles of Dodona to oaks, others to pigeons.
The opinion of those pigeon-prophetesses
was introduced by the equivocation of a Thessalian
word, which signified both a pigeon and a
woman; and gave room to the fable, that two
pigeons having taken wing from Thebes, one
of them fled into Lybia, where it occasioned
the establishing of the oracle of Jupiter
Hammon; and the other, having stopped in
the oaks of the forest of Dodona, informed
the inhabitants of the neighbouring parts,
that it was Jupiter's intention there should
be an oracle in that place. Herodotus has
thus explained the fable: there were formerly
two Priestesses of Thebes, who were carried
off by Phenecian merchants. She that was
sold into Greece, settled in the forest of
Dodona, where great numbers of the ancient
inhabitants of Greece went to gather acorns.
She there erected a little chapel at the
foot of an oak, in honour of the same Jupiter,
whose priestess she had been; and here it
was this ancient oracle was established,
which in after times became so famous. The
manner of delivering the oracles of Dodona
was very singular. There were a great number
of kettles suspended from trees near a copper
statue, which was also suspended with a hunch
of rods in its hand. When the wind happened
to put it in motion, it struck the first
kettle, which communicating its motion to
the next, all of them tingled, and produced
a certain sound which continued for a long
time; after which the oracle spoke.
THE ORACLE OP JUPITER HAMMON.
This oracle, which was in the desert, in
the midst of the burning sands of Africa,
declared to Alexander that Jupiter was his
father. After several questions, having asked
if the death of his father was suddenly revenged,
the oracle answered, that the death of Philip
was revenged, but that the father of Alexander
was immortal. This oracle gave occasion to
Lucan to put great sentiments in the mouth
of Cato. After the battle of Pharsalia, when
Cesar began to be master of the world. Labrenus
said to Cato: "As we have now so good
an opportunity of consulting so celebrated
an oracle, let us know from it how to regulate
our conduct during this war. The gods will
not declare themselves more willingly for
any one than Cato. You have always been befriended
by the gods, and may therefore have the confidence
to converse with Jupiter. Inform yourselves
of the destiny of the tyrant and the fate
of our country; whether we are to preserve
our liberty, or to lose the fruit of the
war; and you may learn too what that virtue
is to which you have been elevated, and what
its reward."
Cato, full of the divinity that was within
him, returned to Labrenus an answer worthy
of an oracle: "On what account, Labrenus,
would you have me consult Jupiter? Shall
I ask him whether it be better to lose life
than liberty? Whether life be a real good?
We have within us, Labrenus, an oracle that
can answer all these questions. Nothing happens
but by the order of God. Let us not require
of him to repeat to us what he has sufficiently
engraved in our hearts. Truth has not withdrawn
into those deserts; it is not graved on those
sands. The abode of God is in heaven, in
the earth, in the sea, and in virtuous hearts.
God speaks to us by all that we see, by all
that surrounds us. Let the inconstant and
those that are subject to waver, according
to events, have recourse to oracles. For
my part, I find in nature every thing that
can inspire the most constant resolution.
The dastard, as well as the brave, cannot
avoid death. Jupiter cannot tell us more."
Cato thus spoke, and quitted the country
without consulting the oracle.
THE ORACLE OF DELPHOS, OR PYTHIAN APOLLO.
Diodorus Siculus, Plutarch, and several other
authors relate, that a herd of goats discovered
the oracle of Delphos, or of the Pythian
Apollo. When a goat happened to come near
enough the cavern to breathe air that passed
out of it, she returned skipping and bounding
about, and her voice articulated some extraordinary
sounds; which having been observed by the
keepers, they went to look in, and were seized
with a fury which made them jump about, and
foretel future events. Coretas, as Plutarch
tells, was the name of the goat-herd who
discovered the oracle. One of the guardians
of Demetrius, coming too near the mouth of
the cavern, was suffocated by the force of
the exhalations, and died suddenly. The orifice
or vent-hole of the cave was covered with
a tripod consecrated to Apollo, on which
the priestesses, called Pythonesses,[16]
sat, to fill themselves with the prophetic
vapour, and to conceive the spirit of divination,
with the fervor that made them know futurity,
and foretel it in Greek hexameters. Plutarch
says, that, on the cessation of oracles,
a Pythoness was so excessively tormented
by the vapour, and suffered such violent
convulsions, that all the priests ran away,
and she died soon after.
CEREMONIES PRACTISED ON CONSULTING ORACLES.
Pausanias describes the ceremonies that were
practiced for consulting the oracle of Trophonius.
Every man that went down into his cave, never
laughed his whole life after. This gave occasion
to the proverbial saying concerning those
of a melancholy air: "He has consulted
Trophonius." Plato relates, that the
two brothers, Agamedes and Trophonius, having
built the temple of Apollo, and asked the
god for a reward what he thought of most
advantage to men, both died in the night
that succeeded their prayer. Pausanias gives
us a quite different account. In the palace
there built for the King Hyrieus, they so
laid a stone, that it might be taken away,
and in the night they crept in through the
hole they had thus contrived, to steal the
king's treasures. The king observing the
quantity of his gold diminished, though no
locks nor seals had been broken open, fixed
traps about his coffers, and Agamedes being
caught in one of them, Trophonius cut off
his head to prevent his discovering him.
Trophonius having disappeared that moment,
it was given out that the earth had swallowed
him on the same spot; and impious superstition
went so far as to place this wicked wretch
in the rank of the gods, and to consult his
oracle with ceremonies equally painful and
mysterious.
Tacitus thus speaks of the oracle of the
Clarian Apollo: Germanicus went to consult
the oracle of Claros. It is not a woman that
delivers the oracle there, as at Delphos,
but a man chosen out of certain families,
and always of Miletum. It is sufficient to
tell him the number and names of those who
come to consult him; whereupon he retires
into a grot, and having taken some water
out of a well that lies hid in it, he answers
you in verses to whatever you have thought
of, though this man is often very ignorant.
Dion Cassius explains the manner in which
the oracle of Nymphoea, in Epirus, delivered
its responses. The party that consulted took
incense, and having prayed, threw the incense
into the fire, the flame pursued and consumed
it. But if the affair was not to succeed,
the incense did not come near the fire, or
if it fell into the flame, it started out
and fled. It so happened for prognosticating
futurity, in regard to every thing that was
asked, except death and marriage, about which
it was not allowed to ask any questions.
Those who consulted the oracle of Amphiarus,
lay on the skins of victims, and received
the answer of the oracle in a dream. Virgil
attests the same thing of the oracle of Faunus
in Italy.
A governor of Cilicia, who gave little credit
to oracles, and who was always surrounded
by unbelieving Epicureans sent a letter sealed
with his signet to the oracle of Mopsus,
requiring one of those answers that were
received in a dream. The messenger charged
with the letter brought it back in the same
condition, not having been opened; and informed
him, that he had seen in a dream a very well
made man, who said to him 'Black' without
the addition of even another word. Then the
governor opening the letter, assured the
company, that he wanted to know of the divinity,
whether he should sacrifice a white or black
bull.
In the temple of the goddess of Syria, when
the statue of Apollo was inclined to deliver
oracles, it deviated, moved, and was full
of agitations on its pedestals. Then the
priests carrying it on their shoulders, it
pushed and turned them on all sides, and
the high-priest, interrogating it on all
sorts of affairs, if it refused its consent,
it drove the priests back; if otherwise,
it made them advance.
Suetonius says, that, some months before
the birth of Augustus, an oracle was current,
importing, that nature was labouring at the
production of a king, who would be master
of the Roman Empire; that the Senate in great
consternation, had forbid the rearing of
any male children who should be born that
year, but that the senators whose wives were
pregnant, found means to hinder the inscribing
of the decree in the public registers. It
seems that the prediction, of which Augustus
was only the type, regarded the birth of
Jesus Christ, the spiritual king of the whole
world; or that the wicked spirit was willing,
by suggesting this rigorous decree to the
Senate, to depose Herod; and by this example,
to involve the Messiah in the massacre that
was made by his orders of all the children
of two years and under. The whole world was
then full of the coming of the Messiah. We
see by Virgil's fourth eclogue, that he applies
to the son of the Consul Asinius Pollio the
prophecies which, from the Jews, had then
passed into foreign nations. This child the
object of Virgil's flattery, died the ninth
day after he was born. Tacitus, Suetonius,
and Josephus, applied to Vespasian the prophecies
that regarded the Messiah.
ORACLES OFTEN EQUIVOCAL AND OBSCURE.
The oracles, were often very equivocal, or
so obscure that their signification was not
understood but after the event. A few examples,
out of a great many, will be sufficient.
Croesus, having received from the Pythoness,
this answer, that by passing the river Halys,
he would destroy a great empire, he understood
it to be the empire of his enemy, whereas
he destroyed his own. The oracle consulted
by Pyrrhus, gave him an answer, which might
be equally understood of the victory of Pyrrhus,
and the victory of the Romans his enemies.
Aio te Aeacida, Romanos vincere posse.
The equivocation lies in the construction
of the Latin tongue, which cannot be rendered
in English. The Pythoness advises Croesus
to guard against the mule.[17] The king of
Lydia understood nothing of the oracle, which
denoted Cyrus descended from two different
nations, from the Medes by Mandana his mother,
the daughter of Astyages; and by the Persians
by his father Cambyses, whose race was by
far less grand and illustrious. Nero had
for answer from the oracle of Delphos, that
seventy-three might prove fatal to him, he
believed he was safe from all danger till
age, but, finding himself deserted by every
one, and hearing Galba proclaimed emperor,
who was seventy-three years of age, he was
sensible of the deceit of the oracle.
St. Jerome observes, that, if the devils
speak any truth, by whatever accident they
always join lies to it and use such ambiguous
expressions, that they may be equally applied
to contrary events.
URIM AND THUMMIM.
Whilst the false oracles of demons deceived
the idolatrous nations, truth had retired
from among the chosen people of God. The
septuagint have interpreted _Urim_ and _Thummim_,
manifestation and truth, [Greek: daelosin
is alaetheian]; which expresses how different
those divine oracles were from the false
and equivocal demons. It is said, in the
Book of Numbers, that Eleazar, the successor
of Aaron, shall interrogate Urim in form,
and that a resolution shall be taken according
to the answer given.
The Ephod applied to the chest of the sacerdotal
vestments of the high-priest, was a piece
of stuff covered with twelve precious stones,
on which the names of the twelve tribes were
engraved. It was not allowed to consult the
Lord by Urim and Thummim, but for the king,
the president of the sanhedrim, the general
of the army, and other public persons, and
on affairs that regarded the general interest
of the nation. If the affair was to succeed,
the stones of the ephod emitted a sparkling
light, or the high-priest inspired predicted
the success. Josephus, who was born thirty-nine
years after Christ, says that it was then
two hundred years since the stones of the
ephod had given an answer to consultations
by their extraordinary lustre.
The Scriptures only inform us, that Urim
and Thummim were something that Moses had
put in the high-priest's breast-plate. Some
Rabbins by rash conjectures, have believed
that they were two small statues hidden within
the breast-plate; others, the ineffable name
of God, graved in a mysterious-manner. Without
designing to discern what has not been explained
to us, we should understand by _Urim_ and
_Thummim_, the divine inspiration annexed
to the consecrated breast-plate.
Several passages of Scripture leave room
to believe, that an articulate voice came
forth from the propitiatory, or holy of holies,
beyond the veil of the tabernacle, and that
this voice was heard by the high-priest.
If the Urim and Thummim did not make answer,
it was a sign of God's anger. Saul abandoned
by the spirit of the Lord, consulted it in
vain, and obtained no sort of answer. It
appears by some passages of St. John's Gospel,
that in the time of Christ, the exercise
of the chief-priesthood, was still attended
with the gift of prophecy.
REPUTATION OF ORACLES, HOW LOST.
When men began to be better instructed by
the lights philosophy had
introduced into the world, the false oracles
insensibly lost their credit. Chrysippus
filled an entire volume with false or doubtful
oracles. Oenomanus,[18] to be revenged of
some oracle that had deceived him, made a
compilation of oracles, to shew their absurdity
and vanity. But Oenomanus is still more out
of humour with the oracle for the answer
which Apollo gave the Athenians, when Xerxes
was about to attack Greece with all the strength
of Asia. The Pythian declared, that Minerva,
the protectress of Athens, had endeavoured
in vain to appease the wrath of Jupiter;
yet that Jupiter, in complaisance with his
daughter, was willing the Athenians should
secure themselves within wooden walls; and
that Salamis should behold the loss of a
great many children, dead to their mothers,
either when Ceres was spread abroad, or gathered
together. At this Oenomanus loses all patience
with the Delphian God: "This contest,"
exclaims he, "between father and daughter,
is very becoming the deities! It is excellent
that there should be contrary inclinations
and interests in heaven! Poor wizzard, thou
art ignorant who the children are that shall
see Salamis perish; whether Greeks or Persians.
It is certain they must either be one or
the other; but thou needest not have told
so openly that thou knowest not what. Thou
concealest the time of the battle under these
fine poetical expressions '_either when Ceres
is spread abroad, or gathered together_:'
and thou wouldst cajole us with such pompous
language! who knows not that if there be
a sea-fight, it must either be in seed-time
or harvest? It is certain it cannot be in
winter. Let things go how they will, thou
wilt secure thyself by this Jupiter whom
Minerva is endeavouring to appease. If the
Greeks lose the battle, Jupiter proved inexorable
to the last; if they gain it, why then Minerva
at length prevailed."[19]
Eusebius has preserved some fragments of
this criticism on oracles by Oenomanus. "I
might," says Origen, "have recourse
to the authority of Aristotle, and the Peripatetics,
to make the Pythoness much suspected. I might
extract from the writings of Epicurus and
his sectators an abundance of things to discredit
oracles; and I might shew that the Greeks
themselves made no great account of them."
The reputation of oracles was greatly lessened
when they became an artifice of politics.
Themistocles, with a design of engaging the
Athenians to quit Athens, in order to be
in a better condition to resist Xerxes, made
the Pythoness deliver an oracle, commanding
them to take refuge in wooden walls. Demosthenes
said, that the Pythoness philippised, to
signify that she was gained over by Philip's
presents.
CESSATION OF ORACLES.
The cessation of oracles is attested by several
prophane authors, as Strabo, Juvenal, Lucien.
Lucan, and others, Plutarch accounts for
the cause of it, either that the benefits
of the gods are not eternal, as themselves
are; or that the genii who presided over
oracles, are subject to death; or that the
exhalations of the earth had been exhausted.
It appears that the last reason had been
alleged in the time of Cicero, who ridicules
it in his second book of Divination, as if
the spirit of prophecy, supposed to be excited
by subterranean effluvia, had evaporated
by length of time, as wine or pickle by being
kept is lost.
Suidas, Nicephorus, and Cedrenus relate,
that Augustus having consulted the oracle
of Delphos, could obtain no other answer
but this: 'the Hebrew child whom all the
gods obey, drives me hence, and sends me
back to hell: get out of this temple without
speaking one word.' Suidas adds, that Augustus
dedicated an altar in the Capitol, with the
following inscription:
"_To the eldest Son of God_."
Notwithstanding these testimonies, the answer
of the oracle of Delphos to Augustus seems
very suspicious. Cedrenus cites Eusebius
for this oracle, which is not now found in
his works; and Augustus' peregrination into
Greece was eighteen years before the birth
of Christ.
Suidas and Cedrenus give an account also
of an ancient oracle delivered to Thules,
a king of Egypt, which they say is well authenticated.
This king having consulted the oracle of
Seraphis, to know if there ever was, or would
be, one so great as himself, received this
answer:--"First, God, next the word,
and the spirit with them. They are equally
eternal, and make but one whose power will
never end. But thou, mortal, go hence, and
think that the end of man's life is uncertain."
Van Dale, in his Treatise of oracles, does
not believe that they ceased at the coming
of Christ. He relates several examples of
oracles consulted till the death of Theodosius
the Great. He quotes the laws of the Emperors
Theodosius, Gratian, and Valentinian, against
those who consulted oracles, as a certain
proof that the superstition of oracles still
existed in the time of those emperors.
HAD DEMONS ANY SHARE IN THE ORACLES?
The opinion of those who believe that the
demons had no share in the oracles, and that
the coming of the Messiah made no change
in them: and the contrary opinion of those
who pretend that the incarnation of the word
imposed a general silence on oracles, should
be equally rejected. The reasons appear from
what has been said, and therefore two sorts
of oracles ought to be distinguished, the
one dictated by the spirits of darkness,
who deceived men by their obscure and doubtful
answers, the other the pure artifice and
deceit of the priests of false divinities.[20]
As to the oracles given out by demons, the
reign of Satan was destroyed by the coming
of the Saviour; truth shut the mouth of falsehood;
but Satan continued his old craft among idolaters.
All the devils were not forced to silence
at the same time by the coming of the Messiah;
it was on particular occasions that the truth
of christianity, and the virtue of Christians
imposed silence on the devils. St. Athanasius
tells the pagans, they have been witnesses
themselves that the sign of the cross puts
the devils to flight, silences oracles, and
dissipates enchantments.
This power of silencing oracles, and putting
the devils to flight, is also attested by
Arnobius, Lactantius, Prudentius, Minutius,
Felix, and several others. Their testimony
is a certain proof that the coming of the
Messiah had not imposed a general silence
on oracles.
The Emperor Julian, called the Apostate,
consulting the oracle of Apollo, in the suburbs
of Antioch, the devil could make him no other
answer, than that the body of St. Babylas,
buried in the neighbourhood, imposed silence
on him. The Emperor, transported with rage
and vexation, resolved to revenge his gods,
by eluding a solemn prediction of Christ.
He ordered the Jews to rebuild the temple
of Jerusalem; but in beginning to dig the
foundations, balls of fire burst out, and
consumed the artificers, their tools and
materials. These facts are attested by Ammianus
Marcellinus, a pagan, and the emperor's historian;
and by St. Chrysostom, St. Gregory Nazianzen,
and Theodoret, Sozomen and Socrates, in their
ecclesiastical histories. The sophist Libanius,
who was an enemy of the Christians, confessed
also that St. Babylas had silenced the oracle
of Apollo, in the suburbs of Antioch.
Plutarch relates that the pilot Thamus heard
a voice in the air, crying out:--"The
great Pan is dead:" whereupon Eusebius
observes, that the deaths of the demons were
frequent in the reign of Tiberius, when Christ
drove out the wicked spirits. The same judgments
may be passed on oracles as on possessions.
It was on particular occasions, by the divine
permission, that the Christians cast out
devils, or silenced oracles, in the presence
and even by the confession of the pagans
themselves. And thus it is we should, it
seems, understand the passages of St. Jerom,
Eusebius, Cyril, Theodoret, Prudentius, and
other authors, who said, that the coming
of Christ had imposed silence on the oracles.
OF ORACLES, THE ARTIFICES OP PRIESTS OP FALSE
DIVINITIES.
As regards the second sort of oracles, which
were pure artifices and cheats of the priests
of false divinities, and which probably exceeded
the numbers of those that immediately proceed
from demons, they did not cease till idolatry
was abolished, though they had lost their
credit for a considerable time before the
coming of Christ. It was concerning this
more common and general sort of oracles that
Minutius Felix said, they began to discontinue
their responses, according as men began to
be more polite. But, howsoever decried oracles
were, impostors always found dupes; the grossest
cheats having never failed.
Daniel discovered the imposture of the priests
of Bel, who had a private way of getting
into the temple, to take away the offered
meats, and made the king believe that the
idol consumed them. Mundus, being in love
with Paulina, the eldest of the priestesses
of Isis, went and told her that the god Anubis,
being passionately fond of her, commanded
her to give him a meeting. She was afterwards
shut up in a dark room, where her lover Mundus
(whom she believed to be the god Anubis,)
was concealed. This imposture having been
discovered, Tiberius ordered those detestable
priests and priestesses to be crucified,
and with them Iolea Mundus's free woman,
who had conducted the whole intrigue. He
also commanded the temple of Isis to be levelled
with the ground, her statue to be thrown
into the Tiber, and, as to Mundus, he contented
himself with sending him into banishment.
Theophilus, Bishop of Alexandria, not only
destroyed the temples of the gods, but discovered
the cheats of the priests, by shewing that
the statues, some of which were of brass,
and others of wood, were hollow within, and
led into dark passages made in the wall.
Lucius in discovering the impostures of the
false prophet Alexander, says, that the oracles
were chiefly afraid of the subtilties of
the Epicureans and Christians. The false
prophet Alexander sometimes feigned himself
seized with a divine fury, and by means of
the herb sopewort, which he chewed, frothed
at the mouth in so extraordinary a manner,
that the ignorant people attributed it to
the power of the god he was possessed by.
He had long before prepared the head of a
dragon made of linen, which opened and shut
its mouth by means of a horses hair. He went
by night to a place where the foundations
of a temple were digging, and having found
water, either of a spring or rain that had
settled there, he hid in it a goose egg,
in which he had inclosed a little serpent
that had just been hatched. The next day,
very early in the morning, he came quite
naked into the street, having only a scarf
about his middle, holding in his hand a scythe,
and tossing about his hair as the priests
of Cybele; then getting on the top of a high
altar, he said that the place was happy to
be honoured by the birth of a god. Afterwards
running down to the place where he had hid
the goose egg, and going into the water,
he began to sing the praises of Apollo and
Aesculapius, and to invite the latter to
come and shew himself to men; with these
words he dips a bowl into the water and takes
out a mysterious egg, which had a god enclosed
in it, and when he held it in his hand, he
began to say that he held Aesculapius, whilst
all were eager to have a sight of this fine
mystery, he broke the egg, and the little
serpent starting out, twisted itself about
his fingers.
These examples shew clearly, that both Christians
and pagans were so far agreed as to treat
the greater number of oracles as purely human
impostures.
From the very nature of things, much that
now serves for amusement must formerly have
been appropriated to a higher destination.
Ventriloquism may be quoted as a case in
point, affording a ready and plausible solution
of the oracular stones and oaks, of the reply
which the seer Nessus addressed to Pythagoras,
(Jamblichus, Vit. Pyth. xxxiii.) and of the
tree which at the command of the Gymnosophists,
of upper Egypt, spoke to Apollonius, "The
voice," says Philostratus (Vit. Ap.
xi. 5) "was distinct but weak, and similar
to the voice of a woman." But the oracles,
at least if we ascend to their origin, were
not altogether impostures. The pretended
interpreters of the decrees of destiny were
frequently plunged into a sort of delirium,
and when inhaling the fumes of some intoxicating
drug or powerful gas or vapour, or drinking
some beverage which produced a temporary
suspension of the reason, the mind of the
enquirer was predisposed to feverish dreams:[21]
if priestcraft were concerned in the interpretation
of such dreams, or eliciting senses from
the wild effusions of the disordered brain
of the Pythoness, Science presided over the
investigation of the causes of this phrenzy,
and the advantages which the Thaumaturgists
might derive from it. Jamblicus states (de
Mysterius C. xxix) that for obtaining a revelation
from the Deity in a dream, the youngest and
most simple creatures were the most proper
for succeeding: they were prepared for it
by magical invocations and fumigations of
particular perfumes. Porphyry declares that
these proceedings had an influence on the
imagination; Jamblicus that they rendered
them more worthy of the inspiration of the
Deity.
FOOTNOTES:
[16] The responses here were delivered by
a young priestess called Pythia or Phoebas,
placed on a tripos, or stool with three feet,
called also cortina, from the skin of the
serpent Python with which it was covered,
it is uncertain after what manner these oracles
were delivered, though Cicero supposes the
Pythoness was inspired, or rather intoxicated
by certain vapours which ascended from the
cave. Some say that the Pythoness being once
debauched, the oracles were afterwards delivered
by an old woman in the dress of a young maid.
[17] This answer of the oracle brings to
our recollection the equally remarkable injunction
of a modern seer to Sir William Windham,
which is related in the memoirs of Bishop
Newton. "In his younger years, when
Sir William was abroad upon his travels,
and was at Venice, there was a noted fortune-teller,
to whom great numbers resorted, and he among
the rest; and the fortune-teller told him,
that he must beware of a white horse. After
his return to England, as he was walking
by Charing-Cross, he saw a crowd of people
coming out and going in to a house, and inquired
what was the meaning of it, was informed
that Duncan Campbell, the dumb fortune-teller
lived there. His curiosity also led him in,
and Duncan Campbell likewise told him that
he must beware of a white horse. It was somewhat
extraordinary that two fortune-tellers, one
at Venice and the other in London, without
any communication, and at some distance of
time, should both happen to hit upon the
same thing, and to give the very same warning.
Some years afterwards, when he was taken
up in 1715, and committed to the Tower upon
suspicion of treasonable practices, which
never appeared, his friends said to him that
his fortune wan now fulfilled, the Hanover
House was the white horse whereof he was
admonished to beware. But some time after
this, he had a fall from a white horse, and
received a blow by which he lost the sight
of one of his eyes."
[18] "When we come to consult thee,"
says he to Apollo, "if thou seest what
is in the womb of futurity, why dost thou
use expressions which will not be understood?
If thou dost, thou takest pleasure in abusing
us: if thou dost not, be informed of us,
and learn to speak more clearly. I tell thee,
that if thou intendest an equivoque, the
Greek word whereby thou affirmest that Croesus
should overthrow a great empire, was ill-chosen;
and that it could signify nothing but Croesus
conquering Cyrus. If things must necessarily
come to pass, why dost thou amuse us with
thy ambiguities? What dost thou, wretch as
thou art, at Delphi, employed in muttering
idle prophecies!"--See "_Demonologia,
or Natural Knowledge revealed_" p. 162.
[19] See _Demonologia_, p, 163.
[20] "Among the more learned, it is
a pretty general opinion that all the oracles
were mere cheats and impostures; calculated
either to serve the avaricious ends of the
heathenish priests, or the political views
of the princes. Bayle positively asserts,
that they were mere human artifices, in which
the devil had no hand. In this opinion he
is strongly supported by Van Dale, a Dutch
physician, and M. Fontenelle, who have expressly
written on the subject."--_Vide Demonologia_,
op. citat. p. 159.
[21] We learn from Herodotus (iv. 75) that
the Scythians and Tartars intoxicated themselves
by inhaling the vapour of a species of hemp
thrown upon red hot stones. And the odour
of the seeds of henbane alone, when its power
is augmented by heat, produces a choleric
and quarrelsome disposition, in those who
inhale the vapour arising from them in this
state. And in the "Dictionnaire de Medecine,"
(de l'Encyclopedie Methodique, vii, art.
Jusquiaume) instances are quoted, the most
remarkable of which is, that if a married
pair who, though living in perfect harmony
every where else, could never remain for
a few hours in the room where they worked
without quarrelling. The apartment of course
was thought to be bewitched, until it was
discovered that a considerable quantity of
seeds of henbane were deposited near the
stove, which was the cause of their daily
dissensions, the removal of which put an
end to their bickerings. The same effects
that were produced by draughts and fumigations
would follow from the application of liniments,
of "Magical Unctions," acting through
the absorbent system, as if they had been
introduced into the stomach: allusions to
these ointments are constantly recurring
in ancient authors. Philostratus, in his
life of Apollonius
(iii. 5) states that the bodies of his companions,
before being admitted to the mysteries of
the Indian sages, were rubbed over with so
active an oil, that it appeared as if they
were bathed with fire.
CHAPTER V.
THE BRITISH DRUIDS, OR MAGI--ORIGIN OF FAIRIES--ANCIENT
SUPERSTITIONS----THEIR SKILL IN MEDECINE,
&C.
The British Druids, like the Indian Gymnosophists,
or the Persian Magi, had two sets of doctrines;
the first for the initiated; the second for
the people. That there is one God the creator
of heaven and earth, was a secret doctrine
of the Brachmans. And the nature and perfection
of the deity were among the druidical arcana.
Among the sublimer tenets of the druidical
priesthood, we have every where apparent
proofs of their polytheism: and the grossness
of their religious ideas, as represented
by some writers, is very inconsistent with
that divine philosophy which has been considered
as a part of their character. These, however,
were popular divinities which the Druids
ostensibly worshipped, and popular notions
which they ostensibly adopted, in conformity
with the prejudices of the vulgar. The Druids
well knew that the common people were no
philosophers. There is reason also, to think
that a great part of the idolatries were
not sanctioned by the Druids, but afterwards
introduced by the Phoenician colony. But
it would be impossible to say how far the
primitive Druids accommodated themselves
to vulgar superstition, or to separate their
exterior doctrines and ceremonies from the
fables and absurd rites of subsequent times.
It would be vain to attempt to enumerate
their gods: in the eye of the vulgar they
defied everything around them. They worshipped
the spirits of the mountains, the vallies,
and the rivers. Every rock and every spring
were either the instruments or the objects
of admiration. The moonlight vallies of Danmonium
were filled with the fairy people, and its
numerous rivers were the resort of genii.
The fiction of fairies is supposed to have
been brought, with other extravagancies of
a like nature from the Eastern nations, whilst
the Europeans and Christians were engaged
in the holy war: such at least is the notion
of an ingenious writer, who thus expresses
himself: "Nor were the monstrous embellishments
of enchantments the invention of romancers,
but formed upon Eastern tales, brought thence
by travellers from their crusades and pilgrimages,
which indeed, have a cast peculiar to the
wild imagination of the Eastern people."[22]
That fairies, in particular, came from the
East, we are assured by that learned orientalist,
M. Herbelot, who tells us that the Persians
called the fairies _Peri_, and the Arabs
_Genies_, that according: to the Eastern
fiction, there is a certain country inhabited
by fairies, called Gennistan, which answers
to our _fairy-land_.[23] Mr. Martin, in his
observations on Spencer's Fairy Queen, is
decided in his opinion, that the fairies
came from the East; but he justly remarks,
that they were introduced into the country
long before the period of the crusades. The
race of fairies, he informs us, was established
in Europe in very early times, but, "_not
universally_." The fairies were confined
to the north of Europe--to the _ultima Thule_--to
the _British isles_--to the _divisis orbe
Britannis_. They were unknown at this remote
era to the Gauls or the Germans: and they
were probably familiar to the vallies of
Scotland and Danmonium, when Gaul and Germany
were yet unpeopled either by real or imaginary
beings. The belief indeed, of such invisible
agents assigned to different parts of nature,
prevails at this very day in Scotland, Devonshire
and Cornwall, regularly transmitted from
the remotest antiquity to the present times,
and totally unconnected with the spurious
romance of the crusader or the pilgrim. Hence
those superstitious notions now existing
in our western villages, where the spriggian[24]
are still believed to delude benighted travellers,
to discover hidden treasures, to influence
the weather, and to raise the winds. "This,"
says Warton, "strengthens the hypotheses
of the northern, parts of Europe being peopled
by colonies from the east!"
The inhabitants of Shetland and the Isles
pour libations of milk or beer through a
holed-stone, in honour of the spirit Brownie;
and it is probable the Danmonii were accustomed
to sacrifice to the same spirit, since the
Cornish and the Devonians on the border of
Cornwall, invoke to this day the spirit Brownie,
on the swarming of their bees.
With respect to rivers, it is a certain fact
that the primitive Britons paid them divine
honours; even now, in many parts of Devonshire
and Cornwall, the vulgar may be said to worship
brooks and wells, to which they resort at
stated periods, performing various ceremonies
in honour of those consecrated waters: and
the Highlanders, to this day, talk with great
respect of the genius of the sea; never bathe
in a fountain, lest the elegant spirit that
resides in it should be offended and remove;
and mention not the water of rivers without
prefixing to it the name of _excellent_;
and in one of the western islands the inhabitants
retained the custom, to the close of the
last century, of making an annual sacrifice
to the genius of the ocean. That at this
day the inhabitants of India deify their
principal rivers is a well known fact; the
waters of the Ganges possess an uncommon
sanctity; and the modern Arabians, like the
Ishmaelites of old, concur with the Danmonii
in their reverence of springs and fountains.
Even the names of the Arabian and Danmonian
wells have a striking correspondence. We
have the _singing-well_; or the _white-fountain_,
and there are springs with similar names
in the deserts of Arabia. Perhaps the veneration
of the Danmonii for fountains and rivers
may be accepted as no trivial proof, to be
thrown into the mass of circumstantial evidence,
in favour of their Eastern original. That
the Arabs in their thirsty deserts, should
even adore their wells of "springing
water," need not excite our surprise,
but we may justly wonder at the inhabitants
of Devonshire and Cornwall thus worshipping
the gods of numerous rivers, and never failing
brooks, familiar to every part of Danmonium.
The principal times of devotion among the
Druids were either mid-day or midnight. The
officiating Druid was cloathed in a white
garment that swept the ground; on his head,
he wore the tiara; he had the _anguinum_
or serpent's egg, as the ensign of his order;
his temples were encircled with a wreath
of oak-leaves, and he waved in his hand the
magic rod. As regards the Druid sacrifice
there are vague and contradictory representations.
It is certain, however, that they offered
human victims to their gods. They taught
that the punishment of the wicked might be
obliterated by sacrifices to Baal.[25] The
sacrifice of the black sheep, therefore,
was offered up for the souls of the departed,
and various species of charms exhibited.
Traces of the holy fires, and fire worship
of the Druids[26] may be observed in several
customs, both of the Devonians and the Cornish;
but in Ireland may still be seen the holy
fires in all their solemnity. The Irish call
the month of May _Bel-tine_, or fire of Belus;
and the first of May Lubel-tine, or the day
of Belus's fire. In an old Irish glossary,
it is mentioned that the Druids of Ireland
used to light two solemn fires every year,
through which all four-footed beasts were
driven, as a preservative against contagious
distempers. The Irish have this custom at
the present moment, they kindle the fire
in the milking yards; men, women, and children
pass through or leap over it, and their cattle
are driven through the flames of the burning
straw, on the _first of May_; and in the
month of November, they have also their fire
feasts when, according to the custom of the
Danmonians, as well as the Irish Druids,
the hills were enveloped in flame. Previously
to this solemnity (on the eve of November)
the fire in every private house was extinguished;
hither, then, the people were obliged to
resort, in order to rekindle it. The ancient
Persians named the month of November, _Adur
or fire_ Adur, according to Richardson was
the angel presiding over that element, in
consequence of which, on the ninth, his name-day,
the country blazed all around with flaming
piles, whilst the magi, by the injunction
of Zoroaster, visited with great solemnity
all the temples of fire throughout the empire;
which, on this occasion, were adorned and
illuminated in a most splendid manner. Hence
our British illuminations in November had
probably their origin. It was at this season
that _Baal Samham_ called the souls to judgment,
which, according to their deserts, were assigned
to re-enter the bodies of men or brutes,
and to be happy or miserable during their
next abode on the earth.
The primitive Christians, attached to their
pagan ceremonies, placed the feast of All-Souls
on the la Samon, or the second of November.
Even now the peasants in Ireland assemble
on the vigil of la Samon with sticks and
clubs, going from house to house, collecting
money, bread-cake, butter, cheese, eggs,
etc., for the feast; repeating verses in
honour of the solemnity, and calling for
the black sheep. Candles are sent from house
to house and lighted up on the Samon. (The
next day.) Every house abounds in the best
viands the master can afford; apples and
nuts are eaten in great plenty; the nutshells
are burnt, and from the ashes many things
are foretold. Hempseed is sown by the maidens,
who believe that, if they look back, they
shall see the apparition of their intended
husbands. The girls make various efforts
to read their destiny; they hang a smock
before the fire at the close of the feast,
and sit up all night concealed in one corner
of the room, expecting the apparition of
the lover to come down the chimney and turn
the _shimee_: they throw a ball of yarn out
of the window, and wind it on the reel within,
convinced that if they repeat the Paternoster
backwards, and look at the ball of yarn without,
they shall then also see his apparition.
Those who celebrate this feast have numerous
other rites derived from the Pagans. They
dip for apples in a tub of water, and endeavour
to bring up one with their mouths; they catch
at an apple when stuck on at one of the end
of a kind of hanging beam, at the other extremity
of which is fixed a lighted candle, and that
with their mouths only, whilst it is in a
circular motion, having their hands tied
behind their backs.[27]
THE BRITISH MAGI.
The Druids, who were the magi of the Britons,
had an infinite number of rites in common
with the Persians. One of the chief functions
of the Eastern magi, was divination; and
Pomponius Mela tells us, that our Druids
possessed the same art. There was a solemn
rite of divination among the Druids from
the fall of the victim and convulsions of
his limbs, or the nature and position of
his entrails. But the British priests had
various kinds of divination. By the number
of criminal causes, and by the increase or
diminution of their own order, they predicted
fertility or scarcity. From the neighing
or prancing of white horses, harnessed to
a consecrated chariot--from the turnings
and windings of a hare let loose from the
bosom of the diviner (with a variety of other
ominous appearances or exhibitions) they
pretended to determine the events of futurity.[28]
Of all creatures the serpent exercised, in
the most curious manner, the invention of
the Druids. To the famous _anguinum_ they
attributed high virtues. The _anguinum_ or
serpent's egg, was a congeries of small snakes
rolled together, and incrusted with a shell,
formed by the saliva or viscous gum, or froth
of the mother serpent. This egg, it seems
was tossed into the air, by the hissings
of its dam, and before it fell again to the
earth (where it would be defiled) it was
to be received in the sagus or sacred vestment.
The person who caught the egg was to make
his escape on horseback, since the serpent
pursues the ravisher of its young, even to
the brink of the next river. Pliny, from
whom this account is taken (lib. 29. C. 3.)
proceeds with an enumeration of other absurdities
relating to the anguinum. This _anguinum_
is in British called _Glain-neider_, or the
serpent of glass; and the same superstitious
reverence which the Danmonii universally
paid to the anguinum, is still discoverable
in some parts of Cornwall. Mr. Llhuyd informs
us that "the Cornish retain a variety
of charms, and have still towards the Land's-End,
the amulets of Maen-Magal and Glain-neider,
which latter they call _Melprer_, and have
a charm for the snake to make it, when they
find one asleep, and stick a hazel wand in
the centre of her spirae," or coils.
We are informed by Cambden that, "in
most parts of Wales, and throughout all Scotland
and Cornwall, it is an opinion of the vulgar,
that about midsummer-eve (though in the time
they do not all agree) the snakes meet in
companies, and that by joining heads together
and hissing, a kind of bubble is formed,
which the rest, by continual hissing, blow
on till it passes quite through the body,
when it immediately hardens, and resembles
a glass-ring, which whoever finds shall prosper
in all his undertakings. The rings thus generated
are called _Gleiner-nadroeth_, or snake-stones.
They are small glass amulets, commonly about
half as wide as our finger rings, but much
thicker, of a green colour usually, though
sometimes blue, and waved with red and white."
Carew says, that "the country people,
in Cornwall, have a persuasion that the snake's
breathing upon a hazel wand produces a stone
ring of blue colour, in which there appears
the yellow figure of a snake, and that beasts
bit and envenomed, being given some water
to drink wherein this stone has been infused,
will perfectly recover the poison."[29]
From the animal, the Druids passed to the
vegetable world; and these also displayed
their powers, whilst by the charms of the
misletoe, the selago, and the samopis, they
prevented or repelled diseases. From the
undulation or bubbling of water stirred by
an oak branch, or magic wand, they foretold
events that were to come. The superstition
of the Druids is even now retained in the
western counties. To this day, the Cornish
have been accustomed to consult their famous
well at Madem, or rather the _spirit_ of
the well, respecting their future destiny.
"Hither," says Borlase, "come
the uneasy, impatient, and superstitious,
and by dropping pins[30] or pebbles into
the water, and by shaking the ground round
the spring, so as to raise bubbles from the
bottom, at a certain time of the year, moon
and day, endeavour to remove their uneasiness;
yet the supposed responses serve equally
to encrease the gloom of the melancholy,
the suspicions of the jealous, and the passion
of the enamoured. The Castalian fountain,
and many others among the Grecians were supposed
to be of a prophetic nature. By dipping a
fair mirror into a well, the Patraeans of
Greece received, as they supposed, some notice
of ensuing sickness or health from the various
figures pourtrayed upon the surface. The
people of Laconia cast into a pool, sacred
to Juno, cakes of bread corn: if the cakes
sunk, good was portended; if they swam, something
dreadful was to ensue. Sometimes the superstitious
threw three stones into the water, and formed
their conclusions from the several turns
they made in sinking." The Druids were
likewise able to communicate, by consecration,
the most portentous virtues to rocks and
stones, which could determine the succession
of princes or the fate of empires. To the
Rocking or Logan stone, several of which
remain still in Devonshire and Cornwall,
in particular, they had recourse to confirm
their authority, either as prophets or judges,
pretending that its motion was miraculous.
These religious rites were celebrated in
consecrated places and temples, in the midst
of groves. The mysterious silence of an ancient
wood diffuses even a shade of horror over
minds that are yet superior to superstitious
credulity. Their temple was seldom any other
than a wide circle of rocks perpendicularly
raised. An artificial pile of large flat
stone usually composed the altar; and the
whole religious mountain was usually enclosed
by a low mound, to prevent the intrusion
of the profane. "There was something
in the Druidical species of heathenism,"
exclaims Mr. Whitaker, in a style truly oriental,
"that was well calculated to arrest
the attention and impress the mind. The rudely
majestic circle of stones in their temples,
the enormous Cromlech, the massy Logan, the
huge Carnedde, and the magnificent amphitheatre
of woods, would all very strongly lay hold
upon that religious thoughtfulness of soul,
which has ever been so natural to man, amid
all the wrecks of humanity--the monument
of his former perfection!" That Druidism,
as existing originally in Devonshire and
Cornwall, was immediately transported, in
all its purity and perfection, from the East,
seems extremely probable.
Among the sacred rites of the Druids there
were none more celebrated than that they
used of the misletoe of the oak. They believed
this tree was chosen by God himself. The
misletoe was what they found but seldom:
whenever, therefore, they met with it, they
fetched it with great ceremony, and did it
on the sixth day of the moon, with which
day they began both their months and their
years. They gave a name to this shrub, denoting
that it had the virtue of curing all diseases.
They sacrificed victims to it, believing
that, by its virtue, the barren were made
fruitful. They looked upon it likewise as
a preservative against all poisons. Thus
do several nations of the world place their
religion in the observation of trifles.
The Druids were also extremely superstitious
in relation to the herb _selago_, which they
reckoned a preservative against sore eyes,
and almost all misfortunes. Another herb
called samotis, which they imagined had a
virtue to prevent diseases among cattle,
they were very ceremonious about gathering.
The person was obliged to be clad in white,
and was not suffered to handle it; and the
ceremony was preceded by a sacrifice of bread
and wine.
The Druids had another superstition amongst
them, in regard to their serpents' eggs,
which they supposed were formed of the saliva
of many of those creatures, at a certain
time of the moon: these they looked upon
as a sure prognostic of getting the better
of their enemies. These, with many other
ridiculous fooleries, were imposed upon the
credulous people, as they were very much
attached to divination. The Druids regarded
the misletoe as an antidote against all poisons,
and they preserved their selago against all
misfortunes. The Persians had the same confidence
in the efficacy of several herbs, and used
them in a similar manner. The Druids cut
their misletoe with a golden hook, and the
Persians cut the twigs of _Ghez_, or _haulm_,
called _bursam_, with a peculiar sort of
concentrated knife. The candidates for the
British throne had recourse to the fatal
stone to determine their pretensions; and
on similar occasions the Persians had recourse
to the _Artizoe_.
From every view of the Druid religion, Mr.
Polwhele concludes that it derived its origin
from the Persian magi. Dr. Borlasse has drawn
a long and elaborate parallel between the
Druids and Persians, where he has plainly
proved that they resembled each other, as
strictly as possible, in every particular
of religion.[31]
FOOTNOTES:
[22] Supplement to the translated preface
to Jarvis's Don Quixote.
[23] That the Druids worshipped rocks, stones,
and fountains, and imagined them inhabited,
and actuated by _divine intelligences of
a lower rank_, may plainly be inferred from
their stone monuments. These inferior deities
the Cornish call _spriggian, or spirits_,
which answer to genii or fairies; and the
vulgar in Cornwall still discourse of them,
as of real beings.
[24] See Macpherson's Introduction to the
history of great Britain and Ireland.
[25] This idol, which is called by the Septuagint,
Baal, is mentioned in other parts of scripture
by other names. To understand what this god
was, we may observe, that the deities of
the Greeks and Romans come from the East;
and it is a tradition among the ancient and
modern heathens that this idol was an obscure
deity, which may plead excuse for not translating
some passages concerning it; and this is
agreeable to Hosea
(ix. 10). They _went out_ into _Baal Pheor_,
and _separated themselves to their shame_.
And it is the opinion of Jerome, who quotes
it from an ancient tradition of the Jews,
that _Baal Pheor_ is the _Priapus_ of the
Greeks and Romans; and if you look into the
vulgar latin (1 Kings xv.
13.) we shall find it thus rendered, _and
Asa, the King removed_ Maacha, _his mother
from being queen, that she might no longer
be high Priestess in the sacrifices of Priapus_.
And he destroyed the grove she had consecrated,
and broke the most filthy idol, and burnt
it at the brook _Kedron_. Dr. Cumberland
inserts, that the import of the word _Peor_,
or _Baal Pheor_, is he that shews boastingly
or publicly, his nakedness. Women to avoid
barrenness, were to sit on this filthy image,
as the source of fruitfulness; for which
Lactantius and Augustine justly deride the
heathens.
[26] There was an awful mysteriousness in
the original Druid sacrifice. Descanting
upon the human sacrifices of various countries,
Mr. Bryant informs us, that among the nations
of Canaan, _the_ victims _were chosen in
a peculiar manner_; their own children, and
whatsoever was nearest and dearest to them,
were thought the most worthy offerings to
their gods! The Carthagenians, who were a
colony from Tyre, carried with them the religion
of their mother country and instituted the
same worship in the parts where they were
seated. Parents offered up their own children
as dearest to themselves, and therefore the
more acceptable to the deity: they sacrificed
"the fruit of their body for the sin
of their soul," The Druids, no doubt,
were actuated with the same views.
[27] There is no sort of doubt that _Baal_
and _Fire_ were principal objects of the
ceremonies and adoration of the Druids. The
principal season of these, and of their feasts
in honour of Baal, was new year's day, when
the sun began visibly to return towards us;
the custom is not yet at an end, the country
people still burning out the old year and
welcoming in the new by fires lighted on
the top of hills, and other high places.
The next season was the month of May, when
the fruits of the earth began, in the Eastern
countries, to be gathered, and the first
fruits of them consecrated to Baal, or to
the _Sun_, whose benign influence had ripened
them; and one is almost persuaded that the
dance round the May pole, in that month,
is a faint image of the rites observed on
such occasions. The next great festival was
on the 21st of June, when the sun, being
in Cancer, first appears to go backwards
and leave us. On this occasion the Baalim
used to call the people together, and to
light fires on high places, and to cause
their sons, and their daughters, and their
cattle to pass through the fire, calling
upon Baal to bless them, and not forsake
them.
[28] In Devonshire and Cornwall it is still
considered ominous if a hare crosses a person
on the road.
[29] See _Carew's Survey of Cornwall_, p.
22. Mr. Carew had a stone-ring of this kind
in his possession, and the person who gave
it to him avowed, that "he himself saw
a part of the stick sticking in it,"--but
"_Penes authorem sit fides_," says
Mr. Carew.
[30] The same superstition still exists in
Devonshire.
[31] See account of Druidism in Polewhele's
Historical Views of Devonshire, vol. 1.
CHAPTER VI.
AESCULAPIAN MYSTERIES, &C.
Apollo is said to have been one of the most
gentle, and at the same time, as may be inferred
from his numerous issue, one of the most
gallant of the heathen deities. The first
and most noted of his sons was Aesculapius,
whom he had by the nymph Coronis. Some say
that Apollo, on account of her infidelity,
shot his mother when big with child with
him; but repenting the fact, saved the infant,
and gave him to Chiron to be instructed in
physic.[32] Others report, that as King Phlegyas,
her father was carrying her with him into
Peloponnesus, her pains surprised her on
the confines of Epidauria where, to conceal
her shame, she exposed the infant on a mountain.
The _truth_, however is, that this Aesculapius
was a poor infant cast away, a dropt child,
laid in a wood near Epidaurus, by his unnatural
parents, who were afterwards ashamed to own
him; he was shortly afterwards found by some
huntsmen, who, seeing a lighted flame or
glory surrounding his head, looked upon it
as a prognostic of the child's future glory.
The infant was delivered by them to a nurse
named Trigo, but the poets say he was suckled
by a goat. He studied physic under Chiron
the centaur, by whose care he made such progress
in the medical art, as gained him so high
a reputation that he was even reported to
have raised the dead. His first cures were
wrought upon Ascles, King of Epidaurus, and
Aunes, King of Daunia, which last was troubled
with sore eyes. In short, his success was
so great, that Pluto, seeing the number of
his ghosts daily decrease, complained to
Jupiter, who killed him with his thunderbolts.
Such was his proficiency in medical skill,
that he was generally esteemed the god of
physic.
In the city of Tetrapolis, which belonged
to the Ionians, Aesculapius had a temple
full of rare cures, dedicated to him by those
who ascribed their recovery to him; and its
walls were covered and hung with memorials
of the miracles he had performed.
Cicero reckons up three of the names of Aesculapius.
The first the son of Apollo, worshipped in
Arcadia, who invented the probe and bandages
for wounds; the second the brother of Mercury,
killed by lightning; and the third the son
of Arsippus Arsione, who first taught the
art of tooth-drawing and purging. Others
make Aesculapius an Egyptian, King of Memphis,
antecedent by a thousand years to the Aesculapius
of the Greeks. The Romans numbered him among
the Dii Adcititii, of such as were raised
to heaven by their merit, as Hercules, Castor
and Pollux. The Greeks received their knowledge
of Aesculapius from the Phoenicians and Egyptians.
His chief temples were at Pergamus, Smyrna,
and Trica, a city of Ionia, and the isle
of Coos, or Cos; in which all votive tablets
were hung up,[33] shewing the diseases cured
by his assistance: but his most famous shrine
was at Epidaurus, where every five years
in the spring, solemn games were instituted
to him nine days after the Isthmian games
at Corinth.
It was by accident that the Romans became
acquainted with Aesculapius. A plague happened
in Italy, the oracle was consulted, and the
reply was that they should fetch the god
Esculapius from Epidaurus. An embassy was
appointed of ten senators, at the head of
whom was Q. Ogulnius. These deputies, on
their arrival, visiting the temple of the
god, a huge serpent came from under the altar,
and crossing the city, went directly to their
ship, and lay down in the cabin of Ogulnius;[34]
upon which they set sail immediately, and
arriving in the Tiber, the serpent quitted
the ship, and retired to a little island
opposite to the city, where a temple was
erected to the god, and the pestilence ceased.
The animals sacrificed to Aesculapius were
the goat; some say on account of his having
been nursed by this animal; others because
this creature is unhealthy, as labouring
under a perpetual fever. The dog and the
cock were sacrificed to him, on account of
their fidelity and vigilance; the raven was
also devoted to him for its forecast, and
being skilled in divination. Authors are
not agreed as to his being the inventor of
physic, some affirming he perfected that
part only which relates to the regimen of
the sick.
The origin of this fable is as follows:--the
public sign or symbol exposed by the Egyptians
in their assemblies, to warn the people to
mark the depth of the inundation of the Nile,
in order to regulate their ploughing accordingly,
was the figure of a man with a dog's head,
carrying a pole with serpents twisted round
it, to which they gave the name of Anubis,[35]
Thaaut,[36] and Aesculapius.[37] In process
of time, they made use of this representation
for a real king, who by the study of physic,
sought the preservation of his subjects.
Thus the dog and the serpents became the
characteristics of Aesculapius amongst the
Romans and Greeks, who were entirely strangers
to the original meaning of these hieroglyphics.
Aesculapius was represented as an old man,
with a long beard, crowned with a branch
of bay tree; in his hands was a staff full
of knots, about which a serpent had twisted
itself: at his feet stood an owl or a dog--characteristics
of the qualities of a good physician, who
must be as cunning as a serpent, as vigilant
as a dog, as cunning and experienced as an
old bashaw, to handle a thing so difficult
as physic. At Epidaurus his statue was of
gold and ivory,[38] seated on a throne of
the same materials, with a long beard, having
a knotty stick in one hand, the other entwined
with a serpent, and a dog lying at his feet.
The Phliasians depicted him as beardless,
and the Romans crowned him with a laurel,
to denote his descent from Apollo. The knots
in his staff signify the difficulties that
occur in the study of medicine. He had by
his wife Epione two sons, Machaon and Podalirius,
both skilled in surgery, and who are mentioned
by Homer as having been present at the siege
of Troy, and who were very serviceable to
the Greeks. He had also two daughters, called
Hygiaea and Jaso.
FOOTNOTES:
[32] Ovid, who relates the story of Coronis
in his fanciful way, tells us that Corvus,
or the raven, who discovered her armour,
had by Apollo, his feathers changed from
_black_ to _white_.
[33] From these tablets, or votive inscriptions,
Hippocrates is said to have collected his
aphorisms.
[34] The Romans who sent for Aesculapius
from Epidaurus, when their city was troubled
with the plague, say, that the serpent that
was worshipped there for him followed the
ambassadors of its own accord to the ship
that transported it to Rome, where it was
placed in a temple built in the isle called
Tiberina. In this temple the sick people
were wont to lie, and when they found themselves
no better, they reviled Aesculapius: so impatiently
ungrateful and peevish were often the afflicted,
that they made no scruple to reproach the
very god who administered to their maladies.
[35] From Hannobeach, which, in the Phoenician
language, signifies the _barker_, or _warner_,
Anubis.
[36] This word signifies the dog.
[37] From _Aeish_, man, and _caleph_, dog,
comes _Aescaleph_, the man-dog, or Aesculapius.
[38] This image was the work of Thrasymedes,
the son of Arignotus, a native of Paros.
CHAPTER VII.
INFERIOR DEITIES ATTENDING MANKIND PROM THEIR
BIRTH TO THEIR DECEASE.
It would be almost an endless task to enter
into a detail of all the inferior deities
of the Greeks and Romans; our object being
to refer to such only as preside over the
health of the human race, every part and
parcel of whom had their presiding genius.--During
pregnancy, the tutelar powers were the god
Pelumnus,[39] and the goddesses Intercedonia,[40]
and Deverra.[41] The import of these words
seems to point out the necessity of warmth
and cleanliness to ladies in this condition.
Besides the superior goddesses Jemo-Lucien,
Diana Hythia, and Latona, who all presided
at the birth, there were the goddesses Egeria,[42]
Prosa,[43] and Manageneta,[44] who with the
Dii Nixii,[45] had all the care of women
in labour.
To children, Janus performed the office of
door-keeper or midwife; and in this quality
was assisted by the goddess Opis or Ops;[46]
Cuma rocked the cradle, while Carmenta sung
their destiny; Levana lifted them up from
the ground;[47] and Vegetanus took care of
them when they cried; Rumina[48] watched
them while they suckled; Polina furnished
them with drink; and Edura with food or nourishment;
Osslago knit their bones; and Carna[49] strengthened
their constitutions. Nudina[50] was the goddess
of children's purification; Stilinus or Statanus
instructed them to walk, and kept them from
falling; Fabulina learnt them to prattle;
the goddess Paventia preserved them from
frights;[51] and Camaena taught them to sing.
Nor was the infant, when grown to riper years,
left without his protectors; Juventas was
the god of youth; Agenoria excited men to
action; and the goddesses Stimula and Strenua
inspired courage and vivacity; Horta[52]
inspired the fame or love of glory; and Sentra
gave them the sentiments of probity and justice;
Quies was the goddesses of repose or ease,[53]
and Indolena, or laziness, was deified by
the name of Murcia;[54] Vacua protected the
idle; Adeona and Abeona, secured people in
going abroad and returning;[55] and Vibilia,
if they wandered, was so kind as to put them
in the right way; Fessonia refreshed the
weary and fatigued; and Meditrina healed
the sickly;[56] Vitula was the goddess of
mirth and frolic;[57] Volupia the goddess
who bestowed pleasure;[58] Orbona was addressed,
that parents might not love their offspring;
Pellonia averted mischief and danger; and
Numeria taught people to cast and keep accounts;
Angerona cured the anguish or sorrow of the
mind;[59] Haeres Martia secured heirs the
estates they expected; and Stata or Statua
Mater, secured the forum or market place
from fire; even the thieves had a protectress
in Laverna;[60] Averruncus prevented sudden
misfortunes; and Conius was always disposed
to give good advice to such as wanted it;
Volumnus inspired men with a disposition
to do well; and Honorus raised them to preferment
and honours.
Nor was the marriage state without its peculiar
defenders. Five deities were esteemed so
necessary, that no marriages were solemnized
without asking their favours; these were
Jupiter-Perfectus, or the Adult, Juno, Venus,
Suadela,[61] and Diana. Jugatinus tied the
nuptial knot; Domiducus ushered the bride
home; Domitius took care to keep her there,
and prevent her gadding abroad; Maturna preserved
the conjugal union entire; Virginensis[62]
loosed the bridle zone or girdle; Viriplaca
was a propitious goddess, ready to reconcile
the married couple in case of any accidental
difference. Matuta was the patroness of matrons,
no maid being suffered to enter her temple.
The married was always held to be the only
honourable state for woman, during the times
of pagan antiquity. The goddess Vacuna,[63]
is mentioned by Horace (Lib. 1. Epist. X.
49.) as having her temple at Rome; the rustics
celebrated her festival in December, after
the harvest was got in (Ovid. Fast. Lib.
XI).
The ancients assigned the particular parts
of the body to particular deities; the head
was sacred to Jupiter; the breast to Neptune;
the waist to Mars; the forehead to Genius;
the eye-brows to Juno, the eyes to Cupid;
the ears to Memory; the right hand to Fides
or Veritas; the back to Pluto; the knees
to Misericordia or mercy; the legs to Mercury;
the feet to Thetis; and the fingers to Minerva.[64]
The goddess who presided over funerals was
Libitina,[65] whose temple at Rome, the undertakers
furnished with all the necessaries for the
interment of the poor or rich; all dead bodies
were carried through the Porto Libitina;
and the Rationes Libitinae mentioned by Suetonius,
very nearly answer to our bills of mortality.
FOOTNOTES:
[39] Either from _pilum_, a pestle; or from
_pello_, to drive away; because he procured
a safe delivery.
[40] She taught the art of cutting wood with
a hatchet to make fires.
[41] The inventress of brooms.
[42] From casting out the birth.
[43] Aulus Gellius.
[44] Aelian.
[45] From _erritor_, to struggle. See Ausonius,
Idyll 12.
[46] Some make her the same with Rhea or
Vesta.
[47] Among the Romans the midwife always
laid the child on the ground, and the father
or somebody appointed, lifted it up; hence
the expression of _tollere liberos_, to educate
children.
[48] This goddess had a temple at Rome, and
her offerings were milk.
[49] On the Kalends of June, sacrifices were
offered to Carna, of bacon and bean flour
cakes; whence they were called Fabariae.
[50] Boys were named always on the ninth
day after the birth, and girls on the eighth.
[51] From Pavorema vertendo.
[52] She had a temple at Home which always
stood open.
[53] She had a temple without the walls.
[54] Murcia had her temple on Mount Aventine.
[55] From _abeo_, to go away; and _adeo_,
to come.
[56] The festival of this goddess was in
September, when the Romans drank new wine
mixed with old, by way of physic.
[57] From _vitulo_, to leap or advance.
[58] From _voluptas_, pleasure.
[59] In a great murrain which destroyed their
cattle, the Romans invoked this goddess,
and she removed the plague.
[60] The image was a head without a body.
Horace mentions her (Lib. 1. Epist. XVI.
60). She had a temple without the walls,
which gave the name to the Porta Lavernalis.
[61] The goddess of eloquence, or persuasion,
who had always a great hand in the success
of courtship.
[62] She was also called Cinxia Juno.
[63] She was an old Sabine deity. Some make
her the same with Ceres; but Varro imagines
her to be the goddess of victory.
[64] From this distribution arose, perhaps,
the scheme of our modern astrologers, who
assign the different parts of the body to
the different constellations, or signs of
Zodiac: as the head to Aries, the neck to
Taurus, the shoulders to Gemini, the heart
to Cancer, the breast to Leo, and so on.
The pretended issues of astrology have been
always inseparable from stellar influence,
and the zodiac has ever been the fruitful
source of its solemn delusions.
[65] Some confound this goddess with Proserpine,
others with Venus.
CHAPTER VIII.
JUDICIAL ASTROLOGY--ITS CHEMICAL APPLICATION
TO THE PROLONGATION OF LIFE AND HEALTH--ALCHYMICAL
DELUSIONS.
The study of astrology, so flattering to
human curiosity got into favour with mankind
at a very early period,--especially with
the weak and ignorant. The first account,
of it we meet with is in Chaldea; and at
Rome it was known by the name of the "Babylonish
calculation," against which Horace very
wisely cautioned his readers.[66] It was
doubtless the first method of divination,
and probably prepared the mind of man for
all the various methods since employed of
searching into futurity; a brief view therefore
of the rise of this pretended science cannot
he improper in this place, especially as
the history of these absurdities is the best
method of confuting them. Others have ascribed
the invention of this deception to the Arabs;--be
this as it may, Judicial Astrology[67] has
been too much used by the priests and physicians
of all nations to encrease their own power
and emolument. They maintain that the heavens
are one great book, in which God has written
the history of the world; and in which every
man may read his own fortune and the transactions
of his time. In this department of astrology
(judicial) we meet with all the idle conceits
about the horary reign of planets, the _doctrine
of horoscopes, the distribution of the houses,
the calculation of nativities, fortunes,
lucky and unlucky_ hours, and other ominous
fatalities. They assert that it had its rise
from the same hands as astronomy itself;--that
while the ancient Assyrians, whose serene
unclouded sky favoured their celestial, observations,
were intent on tracing the paths and periods
of the heavenly bodies, they discovered a
constant settled relation or analogy between
them and things below; hence they were led
to conclude these to be the fates or destinies
(Parcae) so much talked of, which preside
at our birth, and dispose of our future state.
The Egyptians, who derived their astrological
superstitions from the Chaldeans, becoming
ignorant of the astronomical hieroglyphics,
by degrees looked upon the names of the signs
as expressing certain powers with which they
were invested, and as indications of their
several offices. The sun, on account of its
splendour and enlivening influence, was imagined
to be the great mover of nature; the moon
held the second rank of powers, and each
sign and constellation a certain share in
the government of the world. The ram, (Aries
[symbol: Aries]) had a strong influence over
the young of the flocks and herds; the balance,
(Libra [symbol: Libra]) could inspire nothing
but inclinations to good order and justice;
and the scorpion, (Scorpio [symbol: Scorpio])
to excite only evil dispositions. In short,
each sign produced the good or evil intimated
by its name.
Thus, if a child happened to be born at the
instant when the first star of the ram rose
above the horizon, (when, in order to give
this nonsense the air of a science, the star
was supposed to have its greatest influence,)
he would be rich in cattle; and he who should
enter the world under the crab, would meet
with nothing but disappointments, and all
his affairs go backwards and downwards. The
people were to be happy whose king entered
the world under the sign Libra; but completely
wretched if he should light under the horrid
sign scorpion. Persons born under capricorn
([symbol: Capricorn]) especially if the sun
at the same time ascended the horizon, were
sure to meet with success, and rise upwards
like the wild goat and the sun which then
ascends for six months together. The lion,
(Leo [symbol: Leo]) was to produce heroes;
and the virgin (Virgo [symbol: Virgo]) with
her ear of corn to inspire chastity, and
to unite virtue with abundance. Could anything
he more extravagant and ridiculous!
The case was exactly the same with respect
to the planets, whose influence is only founded
on the wild supposition of their being the
habitations of the pretended deities, whose
names they bear, and the fabulous characters
the poets have given them. Thus, to Saturn,
[symbol: Saturn], they gave languid and even
destructive influences, for no other reason
but because they had been pleased to make
this planet the residence of Saturn, who
was painted with grey hairs and a scythe.
To Jupiter [symbol: Jupiter] they gave the
power of bestowing crowns and distributing
long life, wealth, and grandeur, merely because
it bears the name of the father of life.
Mars [symbol: Mars] was supposed to inspire
a strong inclination for war, because it
was believed to be the residence of the god
of war. Venus [symbol: Venus] had the power
of rendering men voluptuous and fond of pleasure,
because they had been pleased to give it
the name of one who by some was thought to
be the mother of pleasure. Mercury [symbol:
Mercury], though almost always invisible,
would never have been thought to superintend
the property of states, and the affairs of
wit and commerce, had not men, without the
least reason, given it the name of one who
was supposed to be the inventor of civil
polity.
According to Astrologers, the power of the
ascending planet is greatly increased by
that of an ascending sign; then the benign
influences are all united, and fall together
on the head of all the happy infants who
at that moment enter the world; yet can anything
be more contrary to experience, which shews
us, that the characters and events produced
by persons born under the same aspect of
the stars, are so far from being alike, that
they are directly opposite.
"What completes the ridicule,"
says the Abbe La Pluche, to whom we are obliged
for these judicious observations, "is,
that what astronomers call the first degree
of the ram, the balance, or of sagitarius,
is no longer the first sign, which gives
fruitfulness to the flocks, inspires men
with a love of justice, or forms the hero.
It has been found that all the celestial
signs have, by degrees, receded from the
vernal equinox, and drawn back to the East:
notwithstanding this, the point of the zodiac
that cuts the equator is still called the
first degree of the ram, though the first
star of the ram be thirty degrees beyond
it, and all the other signs in the same proportion.
When, therefore, any one is said to be born
under the first degree of the ram, it was
in reality one of the degrees of pisces that
then came above the horizon: and when another
is said to be born with a royal soul and
heroic disposition, because at his birth
the planet Jupiter ascended the horizon,
in conjunction with the first star of sagitary,
Jupiter was indeed at that time in conjunction
with a star thirty degrees eastward of sagitary,
and in good truth it was the pernicious scorpion
that presided at the birth of this happy,
this incomparable child." And so it
would, as Shakspeare says, "if my mother's
cat had kittened. This," says our sagacious
bard, "is the excellent foppery of the
world, that when we are sick in fortune,
(after the surfeit of our own behaviour)
we make guilt of our disasters, the sun,
the moon, and the stars; as if we were villains
by necessity; fools, by heavenly compulsion;
knaves, thieves, and treachers, (traitors)
by spherical predominance; drunkards, liars,
and adulterers, by an enforced obedience
of planetary influence; and all that we are
evil in by a divine thrusting on; an admirable
evasion of a whoremaster to lay his goatish
tricks to the charge of a star! My father
compounded with my mother under the dragon's
tail; and my nativity was under _Ursa major_;
so that it follows I am rough and treacherous.--Tut!
I should have been that I am, had the maidenliest
star in the firmament twinkled at my bastardizing."
Thus it is evident, that astrology is built
upon no principles, that it is founded on
fables, and on influences void of reality.
Yet absurd as it is, and even was, it obtained
credit; and the more it spread, the greater
injury was done to the cause of virtue. Instead
of the exercise of prudence and wise precautions,
it substituted superstitious forms and childish
practices; it enervated the courage of the
brave by apprehensions grounded on puns,
and encouraged the wicked, by making them
lay to the charge of a planet those evils
which only proceeded from their own depravity.
But not content with such absurdities, which
destroyed the very idea of liberty, they
asserted that these stars, which had not
the least connection with mankind, governed
all the parts of the human body, and ridiculously
affirmed that the ram presided over the head,
the bull over the gullet, the twins over
the breast, the scorpion over the entrails,
the fishes over the feet, etc. The juggles
of astrology have been admirably ridiculed
by Butler in the following lines:
Some by the nose with fumes trepan 'em, As
Dunstan did the devil's grannam; Others,
with characters and words, Catch 'em, as
men in nets do birds; And some with symbols,
signs, and tricks, Engrav'd in planetary
nicks, With their own influence will fetch
'em Down from their orbs, arrest and catch
'em; Make 'em depose and answer to All questions,
ere they let them go. Bombastus kept a devil's
bird Shut in the pummel of his sword, And
taught him all the cunning pranks Of past
and future mountebanks. _Hudibras_, part
ii. canto 3.
By means of the zodiac, astrologers pretended
to account for the various disorders of the
body, which were supposed to be in a good
or had disposition, according to the different
aspects[68] of these signs. To mention only
one instance, they pretended that great caution
ought to be used in taking medicine under
Taurus, or the bull; because, as this animal
chews his cud, the person would not be able
to keep it in his stomach.
Each hour of the day had also its presiding
star. The number seven, as being that of
the planets, became of mighty consequence.
The seven days in the week,--a period of
time handed down by tradition, happened to
correspond with the number of the planets:
and therefore they gave the name of a planet
to each day; and from thence some days in
the week were considered more fortunate or
unlucky than the rest; and hence seven times
seven, called the climacterical period of
hours, days, or years, were thought extremely
dangerous, and to have a surprising effect
on private persons, the fortunes of princes,
and the government of states. Thus the mind
of man became distressed by imaginary evils,
and the approach of these moments, in themselves
as harmless as the rest of their lives, has
by the strength of the imagination, brought
on the most fatal effects.
Nay, the influence of the planets were extended
to the bowels of the earth, where they were
supposed to produce metals. From hence it
appears that when superstition and folly
are once on foot, there is no setting hounds
to their progress. Gold, as a matter of course,
must be the production of the sun, and the
conformity in point of colour, brightness,
and value, was a sensible proof of it. By
the same mode of reasoning, the moon produced
all the silver, to which it was related by
colour; Mars, all the iron, which ought to
be the favourite metal of the god of war.
Venus presided over copper, which she might
be well supposed to produce, since it was
found in abundance in the isle of Cyprus,
the supposed favourite residence of this
goddess. In the same strain, the other planets
presided over the other metals. The languid
Saturn domineered over the lead mines, and
Mercury, on account of his activity, had
the superintendency of quicksilver; while
it was the province of Jupiter to preside
over tin, as this was the only metal left
him, it would appear, a kind of "Hobson's
choice."
This will explain the manner in which the
metals obtained the names of the planets;
and from this opinion, that each planet engendered
its own peculiar metal, they at length formed
an idea that, as one planet was more powerful
than another, the metal produced by the weakest
was converted into another by the predominating
influence of a stronger orb.
Lead, though really a metal, and as perfect
in its kind as any of the rest, was considered
only half a metal, which, in consequence
of the languid influences of old Saturn,
was left imperfect; and, therefore, under
the auspices of Jupiter, it was converted
into tin; under that of Venus, into copper:
and at last into gold, under some particular
aspects of the sun. From hence, at length,
arose the extravagant opinion of the alchymists,
who, with amazing sagacity, endeavoured to
find out means for hastening these changes
or transmutations, which, as they conceived,
the planets performed too slowly. The world,
however, became at length convinced that
the art of the alchymist was as ineffectual
as the influences of the planets, which,
in a long succession of ages, had never been
known to change a mine of lead to that of
tin or any other metal.[69]
The first author we are acquainted with who
talks of making gold by the transmutation
of one metal, by means of an alcahest[70]
into another, is Zozimus the Pomopolite,
who lived about the commencement of the fifth
century, and who has a treatise express upon
it, called, "The divine art of making
gold and silver," in manuscript, and
is, as formerly, in the library of the King
of France.
As regards the universal medicine, said to
depend on alchemical research, we discover
no earlier or plainer traces than in this
author, and in Aeneas Gazeus, another Greek
writer, towards the close of the same century;[71]
nor among the physicians and materialists,
from Moses to Geber the Arab,[72] who is
supposed to have lived in the seventh century.
In that author's work, entitled the "Philosopher's
stone," mention is made of medicine
that cures all leprous diseases. This passage,
some authors suppose, to have given the first
hint of the matter, though Geber himself,
perhaps, meant no such thing; for, by attending
to the Arabic style and diction of this author,
which abounds in allegory, it is highly probable
that by man he means gold, and by leprous,
or other diseases, the other metals, which,
with relation to gold, are all impure.
The origin and antiquity of alchymy have
been much controverted. If any credit may
be placed on legend and tradition, it must
be as old as the flood--nay, Adam himself
is represented to have been an alchymist.
A great part, not only of the heathen mythology,
but of the Jewish Scriptures, are supposed
to refer to it. Thus, Suidas[73] will have
the fable of the philosopher's stone to be
alluded to in the fable of the Argonauts;
and others find it in the book of Moses,
as well as in other remote places. But, if
the era of the art be examined by the test
of history, it will lose much of its fancied
antiquity. The manner in which Suidas accounts
for the total silence of alchymy among the
old writers is, that Dioclesian procured
all the books of the ancient Egyptians to
be burnt; and that it was in these the great
mysteries of chemistry were contained.[74]
Kercher asserts, that the theory of the philosopher's
stone is delivered at large in the table
of Hermes, and the ancient Egyptians were
not ignorant of the art, but declined to
prosecute it.
FOOTNOTES:
[66]
------ nec Babylonios Tentaris numeros.--Lib,
1. ad XI.
That is, consult not the tables of planetary
calculations used by astrologers of Babylonish
origin.
[67] This conjectural science is divided
into natural and judicial. The first is confined
to the study of exploring natural effects,
as change of weather, winds and storms--hurricanes,
thunder, floods, earthquakes, and the like.
In this sense it is admitted to be a part
of natural philosophy. It was under this
view that Mr. Good, Mr. Boyle, and Dr. Mead
pleaded for its use. The first endeavours
to account for the diversity of seasons from
the situations, habitudes, and motions of
the planets; and to explain an infinity of
phenomena by the contemplation of the stars.
The honourable Mr. Boyle admitted, that all
physical bodies are influenced by the heavenly
bodies; and the doctor's opinion, in his
treatise concerning the power of the sun
and moon, etc. is in favour of the doctrine.
But these predictions and influence are ridiculed,
and entirely exploded by the most esteemed
modern philosophers, of which the reader
may have a learned specimen in Rohault's
Tract. Physic. pt. II. c
27.
[68] By aspect is to be understood an angle
formed by the rays of two planets meeting
on the earth, able to execute some natural
power or influence.
[69] Those who wish to read a curious monument
of the follies of the alchymists, may consult
the diary of Elias Ashmole, who is rather
the historian of this vain science, than
an adept. It may amuse literary leisure to
turn over his quarto volume, in which he
has collected the works of several English
alchymists, to which he has subjoined his
commentary. It affords curious specimens
of Rosicrucian mysteries; and he relates
stories, which vie for the miraculous, with
the wildest fancies of Arabian invention.
[70] Alcahest, in chemistry, (an obsolete
term,) means a most pure and universal menstruum
or dissolvent, with which some chemists have
pretended to resolve all bodies into their
first elements, and perform other extraordinary
and unaccountable operations.
[71] In this writer we find the following
passage: "Such as are skilled in the
ways of nature, can take; silver and tin,
and changing their nature, can turn them
into gold." He also tells us that he
was "wont to call himself a _gold-melter_
and a _chemist_."
[72] The principal Authors on alchymy are
Geber, the Arab, Friar Bacon, Sully, John
and Isaac Hallendus, Basil Valentine, Paracelsus,
Van Zuchter, and Sendirogius.
[73] Corringius calls this statement in question,
and asks how Suidas, who lived but five hundred
yours between them, should know what happened
eight hundred years before him? To which
Borrichius the Dane, answers, that he had
learnt it of Eudemus, Helladius, Zozimus,
Pamphilius, and others, as Suidas himself
relates.
[74] It does not appear that the Egyptians
transmuted gold; they had ways of separating
it from all kinds of bodies, from the very
mud of the Nile, and stones of all kinds:
but, adds Kercher, these secrets were never
written down, or made public, but confined
to the royal family, and handed down traditionally
from father to son.
CHAPTER IX.
ALCHYMICAL AND ASTROLOGICAL CHIMERA.
Having so far explained the fragile basis
on which human knowledge may be said to have
depended, during the obscurity and barbarity
of the middle ages, when the progress of
true knowledge was obstructed by the most
absurd fancies, and puerile conceits: when
conjectures, caprices, and dreams supplied
the place of the most useful sciences, and
of the most important truths, the subsequent
illustrative reflections may serve as a guide
to direct the attention of the reader to
other delusions, which arose out of the general
chaos.
Chemistry, a science so essentially requisite
to explain the phenomena of known and unknown
substances, was studied chiefly by jugglers
and fanatics;--their systems, replete with
metaphysical nonsense, and composed of the
most crude and heterogeneous materials, served
rather to nourish superstition than to establish
facts, and illustrate useful truths. Universal
remedies, in various forms, met with strenuous
advocates and deluded consumers. The path
of accurate observation and experiment was
forsaken: instead of penetrating into the
mysterious recesses of nature, they bewildered
themselves in the labyrinth of fanciful speculation;
they overstepped the bounds of good sense,
modesty, and truth; and the blind led the
blind. The prolongation of life too was no
longer sought for in a manner agreeable to
the dictates of nature; even this interesting
branch of human pursuits was rendered subservient
to chemistry, or rather to the confused system
of alchymy. Original matter was considered
as the elementary cause of all beings, by
which they expected literally to work miracles,
to transmute the base into noble metals,
to metamorphose man in his animal state by
chemical processes, to render him more durable,
and to secure him against early decline and
dissolution. Millions of vessels, retorts,
and phials, were either exposed to the action
of the most violent artificial heat, or to
the natural warmth of the sun; or else they
were buried in some dunghill or other fetid
mass, for the purpose of attracting this
_original matter_, or obtaining it from putrescible
substances.
As the metal called gold always bore the
highest value, these crude philosophers concluded,
from a ridiculous analogy, that its value
with respect to the preservation of health
and the cure of diseases, must likewise surpass
that of all other remedies. The nugatory
art of dissolving it, so as to render it
potable, and to prevent it from again being
converted into metal, employed a multitude
of busy idiots, not only in concealed corners,
but in the splendid laboratories of the great.
Sovereigns, magistrates, counsellors, and
impostors, struck with the common frenzy,
entered into friendship and alliance, formed
private fraternities, and sometimes proceeded
to such a pitch of extravagance, as to involve
themselves and their posterity in ruinous
debts. The real object of many was, doubtless,
to gratify their avarice and desire of aggrandisement:
although this sinister motive was concealed
under the specious pretext of searching for
a remedy that should serve as a tincture
of life, both for the healthy and diseased,
yet some among these whimsical mortals were
actuated by more honourable motives, zealous
only for the interest of truth, and the well-being
of their fellow creatures.
The common people, in some countries, particularly
Italy, Germany, and France often denied themselves
the common necessaries of life, to save as
much as would purchase a few drops of the
tincture of gold, which was offered for sale
by some superstitious or fraudulent chemist:
and so thoroughly persuaded were they of
the efficacy of this remedy, that it afforded
them in every instance the most confident
and only hope of recovery. These beneficial
effects were positively promised, but were
looked for in vain. All subduing death would
not submit to be bribed with gold, and disease
refused to hold any intercourse with that
powerful deity, who presides over the industry
and commerce of all nations.
As, however, these diversified and almost
numberless experiments were frequently productive
of useful inventions in arts and manufactures;
and, as many chemical remedies of real value
were thereby accidentally discovered, great
and almost general attention to those bold
projectors was constantly kept alive and
excited. Indeed, we are indebted to their
curious observations, or rather perhaps to
chance, for several valuable medicines, the
excellence of which cannot be disputed, but
which, nevertheless, require more precaution
in their use and application, and more perspicuity
and diligence in investigating their nature
and properties than the original preparers
of such articles were able or willing to
afford. All their endeavours to prolong life,
by artificial means, could not be attended
with beneficial effects; and the application
of the remedies thus contrived, must necessarily,
in many cases, have proved detrimental to
the health of the patient.
In proof of this assertion, it will be sufficient
to give a slight sketch of the different
views and opinions of the gold-makers, Rosicrucians,
manufacturers of astralian salts, drops of
life, and tinctures of gold, hunters after
the philosopher's stone, and other equally
absurd chimera.
Some of these extravagant enthusiasts fancied
that life resembled a flame, from which the
body derived warmth, spirit, and animation.
They endeavoured to cherish and increase
the flame, and supplied the body with materials
to feed it, as we pour oil into a burning
lamp. Others imagined they had discovered
something invisible and incorporeal in the
air, that important medium which supports
the life of man. They pretended to catch,
refine, reduce, and materialize this indefinable
something, so that it might be swallowed
in the form of powders, and drops; that,
by its penetrating powers, it might insinuate
itself into the whole animal frame, invigorate,
and consequently qualify it for a longer
duration.
Others again were foolish enough to indulge
a notion that they could divest themselves
of the properties of matter during this life;
that in this manner they might be defended
against the gradual approaches of dissolution,
to which every animal body is subject: and
that thus fortified, without quitting their
terrestrial tabernacle, they could associate
at pleasure with the inhabitants of the spiritual
world. The sacred volume itself was interpreted
and commented upon by alchymists, with a
view to render it subservient to their intended
designs. Indisputable historical facts, recorded
in this invaluable book, were treated by
them as hieroglyphical symbols of chemical
processes: and the fundamental truths of
the christian religion were applied, in a
wanton and blasphemous manner, to the purposes
of making gold, and distilling the elixir
of life.
The world of spirits was also invaded, and
summoned, as it were, to contribute to the
prolongation of human life. Spirits were
supposed to have the dominion of air, fire,
earth, and water; they were divided into
distinct classes, and particular services
ascribed to each. The malevolent spirits
were opposed and counteracted by various
means of prevention: the good and tutelary
were obliged to submit to n sort of gentle,
involuntary servitude. From invisible beings
were expected and demanded visible means
of assistance--riches, health, friends, and
long life. Thus the poor spirits were profanely
maltreated, nay, sometimes severely punished,
and even miserably flogged in effigy, when
they betrayed symptoms of disaffection, or
want of implicit fealty.
As men had thus, in their weakness and folly,
forsaken the bounds of this terrestrial sphere,
it will easily be believed, that, with the
help of an exuberant imagination, they would
make a transition to the higher regions--to
the celestial bodies and the stars to which,
indeed, they ascribed no less a power than
that of deciding the destinies of men, and
which, consequently, must have had a considerable
share in shortening or prolonging the duration
of human life--every nation or kingdom was
subjected to the dominion of its particular
planet the time of whose government was determined;
and a number of ascendant powers were fictitiously
contrived, with a view to reduce, under its
influence, every thing which was produced
and born under its administration. The professors
of astrology appeared as the confidents of
these invisible rulers, and the interpreters
of their will; they were well versed in the
art of giving a respectable appearance to
this usurped dignity. Provided they could
but ascertain the hour and minute of a person's
birth, they confidently took upon themselves
to predict his mental capacities, future
vicissitudes of life, and the diseases he
would be visited with, together with the
circumstances, the day and hour of his death.[75]
Not only the common people, but persons of
the highest rank and stations, nay, even
men the most distinguished for their rank
and abilities, did homage to those "gods
of their idolatry," and lived in continual
dread of their occult powers. With anxious
countenance and attentive ears, they listened
to the cantrip effusions of these pretended
oracles, which prognosticated the bright
or gloomy days of futurity. Even physicians
were solicitous to qualify themselves for
appointments no less lucrative than respectable:--they
forgot, over the dazzling hoards of Mammon,
that they are peculiarly and professedly
the pupils of nature.--The curious student
in the universities found everywhere public
lecturers, who undertook to instruct him
in the profound arts of divination, chiromancy,
and the _cabala_.
Among other instances, the following anecdote
is related of the noted Thurneisen, who,
in the seventeenth century, was invested,
at Berlin, with the respectable offices of
printer to the court, bookseller, almanack-maker,
astrologer, chemist, and first physician.
Messengers daily arrived from the most respectable
houses in Germany, Poland, Hungary, Denmark,
and even from England, for the purpose of
consulting him respecting the future fortunes[76]
of their new-born infants, acquainting him
with the hour of the nativity, and soliciting
his advice and directions as to their management.
Many volumes of this singular correspondence
are still preserved in the royal library
at Berlin. The business of this fortunate
adept increased so rapidly, that he found
it necessary to employ a number of subaltern
assistants, who, together with their master,
realized considerable fortunes. He died in
high reputation and favour with his superstitious
contemporaries.
The famous Melancthon was a believer in judicial
astrology, and an interpreter of dreams.
Richelieu and Mazarin were so superstitious
as to employ and pension Morin, another pretender
to astrology, who cast the nativities of
these two able politicians. Nor was Tacitus
himself, who generally appears superior to
superstition, untainted with this folly,
as may be seen from his twenty-second chapter
of the sixth book of his Annals.
In the time of the civil wars, astrology
was in high repute. The royalists and the
rebels had their astrologers as well as their
soldiers; and the predictions of the former
had a great influence over the latter. When
Charles the first was imprisoned, Lilly,
the famous astrologer, was consulted for
the hour that should favour his escape; and
in Burnet's History of his own Times, there
is a story which strongly proves how much
Charles II was bigotted to judicial astrology,
a man, though a king, whose mind was by no
means unenlightened. The most respectable
characters of the age, Sir William Dugdale,
Elias Ashmole,[77] Dr. Grew, and others,
were members of the astrological club. Congreve's
character of Foresight, in Love for Love,
was then no uncommon person, though the humour,
now, is scarcely intelligible. Dryden cast
the nativities of his sons; and what is remarkable,
his prediction relating to his son Charles,
was accomplished. The incident being of so
late a date, one might hope that it would
have been cleared up; but, if it be a fact,
it must be allowed that it forms a rational
exultation for its irrational adepts. Astrologers
were frequently, as may easily be understood,
put to their wit's end when their predictions
did not come to pass. Great winds were foretold,
by one of the craft, about the year 1586.
No unusual storms, however, happened. Bodin,
to save the reputation of the art, applied
it as a figure to some revolutions in the
state, of which there were instances enough
at that time.
At the commencement of the 18th century,
the _Illuminati_, a sect of astrologers,
had excited considerable sensation on the
continent. Blending philosophy with enthusiasm,
and uniting to a knowledge of every chemical
process a profound acquaintance with astronomy,
their influence over the superstitious feelings
of the people was prodigious; and in many
instances the infatuation was attended with
fatal consequences. We shall relate the following,
as nearer home than many now before us.
THE HOROSCOPE, A TALE OF THE STARS.
On the summit of St. Vincent's rocks, in
the neighbourhood of Clifton, looking on
the Avon, as it rolls its lazy courses towards
the Bristol Channel, stands an edifice, known
by the name of "Cooke's Folly."
It consists of a single round tower, and
appears at a distance rather as the remnant
of some extensive building, than a complete
and perfect edifice, as it now exists. It
was built more than two centuries ago, by
a man named Maurice Cooke; not, indeed, as
a strong hold from the arms of a mortal enemy,
but as a refuge from the evils of destiny.
He was the proprietor of extensive estates
in the neighbourhood; and while his lady
was pregnant with her first child, as she
was one evening walking in their domains,
she encountered a strange looking gipsey,
who, pestering her for alms, received but
a small sum. The man turned over the coin
in his hand, and implored a larger gift.
"That," said the lady, "will
buy you food for the present."
"Lady," said the gipsey, "it
is not food for the wretched body that I
require; the herbs of the field, and the
waters of the ditch, are good enough for
that. I asked your alms for higher purposes.
Do not distrust me, if my bearing be prouder
than my garments; do not doubt the strength
of my sunken eye, when I tell you that I
can read the skies as they relate to the
fate of men. Not more familiar is his hornbook
to the scholar, than are the heavens to my
knowledge."
"What, thou art an astrologer?"--"Aye,
lady! my fathers were so before me, even
in the times when our people had a home amidst
the pyramids of the mighty--in the times
when you are told the mightier prophets of
the Israelites put the soothsayers of Egypt
to confusion; idle tales! but if true, all
reckless now. Judah's scattered sons are
now desolate as ourselves; but they bend
and bow to the laws and ways of other land--we
remain in the stern stedfastness of our own."
"If then," returned the lady, "I
give thee more money, how will it be applied?"
"That is not a courteous question, but
I will answer it. The most cunning craftsman
cannot work without his tools, and some of
mine are broken, which I seek to repair:
another crown will be enough."
The lady put the required sum into his hand,
and at the same time intimated a desire to
have a specimen of his art.
"Oh! to what purpose should that be?
why, why seek to know the course of futurity?
destiny runs on in a sweeping and resistless
tide. Enquire not what rocks await your bark:
the knowledge cannot avail you, for caution
is useless against stern necessity."--"Truly,
you are not likely to get rich by your trade,
if you thus deter customers."--"It
is not for wealth I labour: I am alone on
the earth, and have none to love. I will
not mix with the world lest I should learn
to hate. This present is nothing to me. It
is in communion with the spirits who have
lived in the times that are past, and with
the stars--those historians of the times
to come--that I feel aught of joy. Fools
sometimes demand the exertions of my powers,
and sometimes I gratify their childish curiosity."
--"Notwithstanding I lie under the imputation
of folly, I will beg that you predict unto
me the fate of the child which I shall bear."--"Well,
you have obliged me, and I will comply. Note
the precious moment at which it enters the
world, and soon after you shall see me again."
Within a week the birth of an heir awoke
the clamorous joy of the vassals, and summoned
the strange gipsey to ascertain the necessary
points. These learned, he returned home;
and the next day presented Sir Maurice with
a scroll, containing the following lines:
"Twenty times shall Avon's tide In chains
of glistening ice be tied-- Twenty times
the woods of Leigh Shall wave their brunches
merril In spring burst forth in mantle gay,
And dance in summer's scorching ray: Twenty
times shall autumn's frown, Wither all their
green to brown-- And still the child of yesterday
Shall laugh the happy hour away. That period
past, another sun Shall not his annual journey
run, Before a secret silent foe, Shall strike
that boy a deadly blow. Such, and sure his
fate shall be: Seek not to change his destiny."
The knight read it; and in that age, when
astrology was considered a science as unerring
as holy prophecies, it would have been little
less than infidelity to have doubted the
truth of the prediction. Sir Maurice, however,
was wise enough to withhold the paper from
his lady; and in answer to her inquiries,
continually asserted that the gipsey was
an impostor, and that the object of his assuming
the character was merely to increase her
alms.
The fated child grew in health and beauty;
and as we are the most usually the more strongly
attached to pleasures in proportion to the
brevity of continuance, so did the melancholy
fate of his son more firmly fix him in the
heart of Sir Maurice. Often did the wondering
lady observe the countenance of her husband
with surprise, as watching the endearing
sportiveness of the boy, his countenance,
at first brightened by the smile of paternal
love, gradually darkened to deepest grief,
till unable to suppress his tears, he would
cover the child with caresses, and rush from
the room. To all inquiries, Sir Maurice was
silent, or returned evasive answers.
We shall pass over the infancy of young Walter,
and resume the narrative at the period in
which he entered into his twentieth year.
His mother was now dead, and had left two
other children, both girls, who, however,
shared little of their father's love, which
was almost exclusively fixed on Walter, and
appeared to encrease in strength as the fatal
time grew near.
It is not to be supposed that he took no
precaution against the predicted event. Sometimes
hope suggested that a mistake might have
been made in the horoscope, or that the astrologer
might have overlooked some sign which made
the circumstance conditional; and in unison
with the latter idea he determined to erect
a strong building, where, during the year
in which his doom was to be consumated, Walter
might remain in solitude. He accordingly
gave directions for raising a single tower,
peculiarly formed to prevent ingress, except
by permission of its inhabitants. The purpose
of this strange building, however, he kept
secret; and his neighbours, after numerous
vain conjectures, gave it the name of "Cooke's
Folly."
Walter, himself, was kept entirely ignorant
of the subject, and all his inquiries were
answered with tears. At length the tower
was completed, and furnished with all things
necessary for comfort and convenience; and
on the eve of Walter's completing his twentieth
year, Sir Maurice shewed him the gipsey's
scroll, and begged him to make use of the
retreat prepared for him till the year expired.
Walter at first treated the matter lightly,
laughed at the prophecy, and declared he
would not lose a year's liberty if all the
astrologers in the world were to croak their
ridiculous prophecies against him. Seeing,
however, his father so earnestly bent on
the matter, his resolution began to give
way, and at length he consented to the arrangement.
At six the following morning, therefore,
Walter entered the tower, which he fastened
within as strongly as iron burs would admit,
and which was secured outside in a manner
equally firm. He took possession of his voluntary
prison with melancholy feelings, rather occasioned
by the loss of present pleasure, than the
fear of future pain. He sighed as he looked
upon the wide domain before him, and thought
how sad would it be to hear the joyous horn
summoning his companions to the chase, and
find himself prevented from attending it--to
hear the winter wind howling round his tower,
and rushing between the rocks beneath him,
and miss the cheerful song and merry jest,
which were wont to make even the blast a
pleasant sound. Certainly his time passed
as pleasantly as circumstances permitted.
He drew up in a basket, at his meal hours,
every luxury which the season produced. His
father and sisters daily conversed with him
from below, for a considerable time; and
the morris-dancers often raised his laughter
by their grotesque movements.
Weeks and months thus passed, and Walter
still was well and cheerful. His own and
his sisters' hopes grew more lively, but
the anxiety of Sir Maurice increased. The
day drew near which was to restore his son
to his arms in confident security, or to
fulfil the prediction which left him without
an heir to his name and honours.
On the preceding afternoon Walter continually
endeavoured to cheer his parent, by speaking
of what he would do on the morrow; desired
his sisters to send round to all their friends,
that he might stretch his limbs once more
in the merry dance; and continued to talk
of the future with much confidence, that
even Sir Maurice caught a spark of hope from
the fiery spirits of the youth.
As the night drew on, and his sisters were
about to leave him, promising to wake him
at six by a song, in answer to their usual
inquiry if he wanted anything more that night,
"Nothing," said he, "and yet
the night feels chilly, and I have little
fuel left--send me one more faggot."
This was sent him, and as he drew it up,
"This," said he, "is the last
time I shall have to dip for my wants, like
an old woman for water: thank God! for it
is wearisome work to the arm."
Sir Maurice still lingered under the window
in conversation with his son, who at length
complained of being cold and drowsy. "Mark,"
said he, as he closed the window, "mark
father, Mars, the star of my fate, looks
smilingly to-night, all will be well."
Sir Maurice looked up--a dark cloud spot
suddenly crossed the planet, and he shuddered
at the omen. The anxious father could not
leave the spot. Sleep he knew it was vain
to court, and he therefore determined to
remain where he was. The reflexions that
occupied his mind continually varied: at
one time he painted to himself the proud
career of his high spirited boy, known and
admired among the mighty of his time; a moment
after he saw the prediction verified, and
the child of his love lying in the tomb.
Who can conceive his feelings as hour dragged
after hour, while he walked to and fro, watching
the blaze of the fire in the tower, as it
brightened and sunk again--now pacing the
court with hasty steps, and now praying fervently
for the preservation of his son? The hour
came. The cathedral bell struck heavy on
the father's heart, which was not to be lightened
by the cheerful voices of his daughters,
who came running full of hope to the foot
of the tower. They looked up, but Walter
was not there;--they called his name, he
answered not. "Nay," said the youngest,
"this is only a jest; he thinks to frighten
us, but I know he is safe." A servant
had brought a ladder, which he ascended,
and he looked in at the window. Sir Maurice
stood immoveable and silent.--He looked up,
and the man answered the anxious expression
of his eyes. "He is asleep," said
he. "He is dead!" murmured the
father.
The servant broke a pane of glass in the
window, and opening the casement, entered
the room. The father, changing his gloomy
stedfastness for frenzied anxiety, rushed
up the ladder. The servant had thrown aside
the curtains and the clothes, and displayed
to the eyes of Sir Maurice, his son lying
dead, a serpent twined round his arm, and
his throat covered with blood. The reptile
had crept up the faggot last sent him, and
fulfilled the _prophecy_.
To this happy effort of the imagination in
favour of prying into futurity, may be added,
with the same intention.
THE FATED PARRICIDE; AN ORIENTAL TALE OF
THE STARS.
Ibrahim was universally celebrated for his
riches and magnificence. His armies were
formidable, his victories splendid, and his
treasury inexhaustible. He enjoyed, moreover,
what was ten thousand times more solid and
more valuable than riches--the love and veneration
of his subjects; and he had a beautiful young
wife, in whose endearing tenderness alone
he could find happiness--if happiness could
be found on earth. All these advantages entitled
Ibrahim to the appellation of the Solomon
of his age; and yet Ibrahim was not happy.
A son was wanting to crown his felicity.
In vain did a heart formed for all the charities
of the wedded state, endeavour to supply
the refusal of nature, by the adoption of
a son; in vain did gratitude endeavour to
deceive his heart, by caresses which any
other would have thought to be the natural
effusions of filial sensibility, of filial
piety and affection; that heart incessantly
perceived a solitude within itself. Even
the consolatory visions of hope began to
grow less frequent, when heaven at last heard
his prayers, Alas! in the very instant that
Fortune gratifies our fondest wishes, she
often betrays us; and her smiles are a thousand
times more fatal than her frowns. The birth
of the prince was celebrated throughout the
empire by the customary public demonstrations
of joy. The felicity of Ibrahim was complete.
He was perpetually revolving in his mind
the sentiments and hopes which the nation
would form of the royal infant. Scarce was
he born, when paternal solicitude embraced,
as it were, his whole life. Impatient to
know his destiny, that solicitude plunged
into futurity, determined, if possible, to
wrest from time, the secrets of which he
was the hoary-headed guardian.
In Ibrahim's dominions were some sages particularly
honoured with the confidence of heaven. He
commanded them to consult the stars, and
to report their answer. "Tremble,"
said the sages; "thou unfortunate father,
tremble! Never before have the skies presented
such inauspicious omens. Let him fly; let
this son, too dear to you, fly; let him avoid,
if possible, the meeting with any savage
beasts. His seventh year is the fatal one;
and if he should happen then, to escape the
misfortune that hangs over him, ah! do not
wish him to live. His father, his very father,
will not be able to escape from the hand
of a parricide."
This answer threw the sultan into the deepest
consternation. He did not sink, however,
into absolute despondency; his courage soon
revived. He determined to take all the precautions
which paternal tenderness could suggest,
to defeat the prediction of the astrologers.
He, therefore, caused a kind of subterranean
palace to be made on the summit of a lofty
mountain. The labour and expense of the excavation
was prodigious. Extensive walks were formed,
with a variety of apartments, in which every
thing was provided that could contribute
to the conveniences, and even the luxuries
of life. In this magnificent cavern, Ibrahim,
as it were, inhumed his son, together with
his governess, of whose care, and fidelity
he had no doubt. Provisions were constantly
carried thither at stated periods. The king
forgot not a single day to visit the mountain
that contained his beloved treasure, and
to be satisfied of his safety with his own
eyes. With what delight did he behold the
growing beauties of his son! With what pleasure
and rapture did he listen to his sprightly
saillies of wit, his smart repartees, and
those pretty _nothings_ which a father, in
particular, is fond to recollect and to repeat;
at which the most rigid gravity may smile,
and which are worth all the understanding
of riper years. He was perpetually counting
the hours and minutes that he had to spend
with his son; and he incessantly reproached
himself, for not seeing him more frequently.
Shah Abbas, for such was his name, at length
reached his seventh year, that fatal year,
which Ibrahim would fain have delayed, even
at the expense of his crown. He would never
leave his son a minute. But, alas! is it
possible to escape our destiny? Summoned
one day to his palace by affairs of the most
pressing exigency, he left the mountain with
extreme reluctance. Never had Shah Abbas
appeared wore amiable in his father's eyes,
never had Ibrahim appeared more affectionate
to his son! Each was tormented by an uneasy
sensation, an unaccountable presentiment
that they were to meet there no more!
Some robbers were hunting wild beasts: the
ardour of the pursuit brought them to this
mountain. A lion that fled from them, perceived
the subterraneous passage, and took refuge
in it. The robbers, who durst not follow
him, waited, however, for the sequel of this
adventure. On a sudden, they heard a violent
scream, and presently all was silent. This
silence suggested to them, that the cavern
now contained, not a living creature, but
the lion. They threw down a quantity of stones,
which soon put an end to the existence of
the formidable animal. They then descended
into the cavern, securing themselves from
all further danger from the lion by cutting
off his head. Wandering through every part
of this subterraneous palace, they were astonished
at the prodigious riches which they beheld.
They perceived a slaughtered woman: this
was the prince's governess. By her side lay
a child covered with blood, who shewed, however,
some signs of life. They examined his wounds:
they found not one of them dangerous. The
captain of these banditti, after stripping
the cavern of its valuable contents, dressed
the young prince's wounds himself, and effected
a cure. The growing qualities of Shah Abbas
endeared him to the chief, who adopted him
as his son, and distinguished him as such
by all the tenderness of a paternal heart.
Some years had elapsed since Ibrahim had
first deplored the loss of a son, who, having
been constantly ignorant of the name and
titles of his father, had been unable to
explain his origin to the robbers, was soon
to become their chief. Such were the unaccountable
caprices of fortune, which led to the completion
of the prophecy, that had destined him to
become one day a parricide. Ibrahim was wont
to divert his grief by the pleasures of the
chase; and this exercise soon became almost
his only occupation. One evening that he
had strayed, with a very slender escort,
into the defiles of a very solitary mountain,
a troop of robbers rushed upon him. The combat
for sometime was furious. An arrow pierced
the king; it excited the spirit of vengeance
in his attendants, and they fought, determined
to conquer or die. They were soon victorious.
The murderer was taken, and conducted to
the metropolis, that he might undergo the
punishment due to his crime.
Ibrahim, on the bed of death, summoned the
astrologers to attend him, and thus addressed
them: "I was to have perished, you told
me, by the hand of a son; but it is the hand
of a robber that has inflicted the blow."--"Sire,"
answered the sages, "forbear to seek
an explanation. The robber"... They
proceed no further. The young robber appears,
and relates his history. Ibrahim, while he
bowed in submission to God, and adored His
inscrutable decrees, blessed Him also for
having restored his son; and the tears which
he saw flow from the eyes of Shah Abbas,
were a consolation in his dying moments.
APPLICATION OF ASTROLOGY TO THE PROLONGATION
OF LIFE, &C.
Astrology was also made subservient to the
means of prolonging human life; but how an
art which determines the fate of mortals,
and ascertains the impassable limits of the
grave, could consistently be made subservient
to such a purpose, we are rather at a loss
to conceive, unless accounted for as follows.
The teachers of divination maintained, that
not only men, but all natural bodies, plants,
animals, nay even whole countries, including
every place and family, were under the government
of some particular planet. As soon as the
masters of the occult science had discovered
by their tables, under what constellation
the misfortune or distemper of any person
originated, nothing farther was required,
than that he should remove to a dwelling
ruled by an opposite planet, and confine
himself exclusively to such articles of food
and drink as were under the influence of
a different star. In this artificial manner
they contrived to form a system, or peculiar
classification of planets, namely, Lunar,
Solar, Mercurial and the like--and hence
arose a confused map of dictated rules, which,
when considered with reference to the purposes
of health, cleanliness, exercise etc. form
remarkable contrasts to those of the Greeks.
But this preventive and repulsive method
was not merely confined to persons who suffered
under some bodily disorder: even individuals,
who enjoyed a good state of health, if an
unlucky constellation happened to forebode
a severe disease, or any other misfortune,
were directed to choose a place of residence
influenced by a more friendly star--or to
adopt such aliment only, as being under the
auspices of a propitious star, might counteract
the malignant influence of its antagonist.
It was also pretty generally believed and
maintained, that a sort of intimate relation
or sympathy subsisted between metals and
plants: hence the names of the latter were
given to the former, in order to denote this
supposed connexion and affinity. The corresponding
metals were melted into a common mass, under
a certain planet, and were formed into small
medals, or coins, with the firm persuasion,
that he who carried such a piece about his
person, might confidently expect the whole
favour and protection of the planet, thus
represented.[78] Thus we perceive how easy
the transition is from one degree of folly
to another; and this may help to account
for the shocking delusions practised in the
manufacturing and wearing of metallic amulets
of a peculiar mould, to which were attributed,
by a sort of magic influence, the power and
protection of the respective planet: these
charms were thought to possess virtue sufficient
to overrule the bad effects presaged by an
unlucky hour of birth, to promote to places
of honour and profit, and to be of potent
efficacy in matters of commerce and matrimony.
The German soldiers, in the dark and superstitious
ages, believed that if the figure of Mars,
cast and engraved under the sign of the Scorpion,
were worn about the neck, it would render
them invulnerable, and insure success to
their military enterprises--hence the reason
why amulets were then found upon every soldier,
either killed in battle or taken prisoner.
We shall so far conclude these observations
on the chimera of astrology and medicine
with the following remarks in the words of
Chamber against Knight's work,[79] which
defends this fanciful science, if science
it may be called. "It demonstrates nothing
while it defends every thing. It confutes,
according to Knight's own ideas: it alleges
a few scattered facts in favour of astrological
productions, which may be picked up in that
immensity of fabling which disgraces history.
He strenuously denies, or ridicules, what
the greatest writers have said of this fanciful
art, while he lays great stress on some passages
from obscure authors, or what is worse, from
authors of no authority."--The most
pleasant part, however, is at the close where
he defends the art from the objections of
Mr. Chamber by recrimination. Chamber had
enriched himself by medical practice, and
when he charges the astrologers by merely
aiming to gain a few beggarly pence, Sir
Christopher catches fire, and shews by his
quotations, that if we are to despise an
art by its professors attempting to subsist,
or for the objections which may be raised
against its vital principles, we ought by
this argument most heartily to despise the
medical science, and medical men; he gives
all here he can collect against physic and
physicians, and from the confessions of Galen
and Hippocrates, Avicenna and Agrippa, medicine
is made to appear a vainer science than even
astrology itself.
Lilly's opinions, and his pretended science,
were such favourites of the age, that the
learned Gataker[80] wrote professedly against
this popular delusion. At the head of his
star-expounding friends, Lilly not only formally
replied to, but persecuted Gataker annually
in his predictions, and even struck at his
ghost, when beyond the grave. Gataker died
in July 1654, and Lilly, having written in
his almanack for that year, for the month
of August, the following barbarous latin
line--
Hoc in tumbo, jacet presbyter et nebulo!
Here in this tomb lies a presbyter and a
knave,
had the impudence to assert, that he had
predicted Gataker's death! But the truth
is, it was an empty epitaph to the "Lodgings
to let:" it stood empty, reader, for
the first passenger that the immortal ferryman
should carry over the Styx.
But hear that arch imposter Old Patridge
of more modern date whose _gulleries_ appear
to have no end. "The practice of astrology
is divided into speculative and theoretical."
(Astronomy and judicial astrology). The first
teaches us how to know the stars and planets,
and to find their places and motions. The
second directs us to the knowledge of the
influence and operations of the stars and
planets upon sublunary bodies, and without
this last the former is of little use. Astronomy
cannot direct and inform us of the secret
influences and operations of the stars and
planets, without the assistance of' the _most
sublime_ art of astrology. For astronomy
is conversant about the subject of this art,
and doth furnish the astrologer with matter
whereon to exercise his judgment, but astrology
disposes this matter into predictions, or
rational conjectures, as time and occasion
require.
"The practice again is subdivided into
two parts, or quadripartite, as Ptolomy (lib.
2) declares: the first considers the general
state of the world, and from eclipses and
comets, great conjunctions, annual revolutions,
quarterly ingressions and lunations, also
the rising, culminating, and setting of the
fixed stars, together with the configurations
of the planets both to the sun and among
themselves, judgment is deduced, and the
astrologer doth frame his annual predictions
of all sensitive and vegetative things lying
in the air, earth, or water; of plague, plenty,
dearth, mutations of the air, wars, peace,
and other general accidents of countries,
provinces, cities, etc.
"The second of these subdivided parts,
in particular, respects only the private
state of every single man and woman, which
must be performed from the scheme of the
nativity, the knowledge of which is of most
excellent use to all persons. Therefore let
the nativities of children be diligently
observed for the future, that is to say,
the day, hour, and minute of birth as near
as can be, which will be of use to the astrological
physician, for the most principal conjecture
of the malignity of the disease, whether
it be curable, or shall end with death, depends
upon the knowledge of the nativity; and very
rarely any disease invades a person, but
some unfortunate direction of the luminaries
or ascendant to the body, or beams of malignant
planets preceded the same, or did then operate,
or at least some evil revolution, profection
or transit, which cannot be discovered by
any other way but by astrology. Moreover,
it would be convenient that the true time
of the first falling sick be observed precisely,
and by that, together with the nativity,
be judiciously compared, the physician shall
gain more credit than by all his other skill;
and herein, the astrologer's foresight shall
often contradict the judgment of the physician;
for when the astrologer foretells a phlegmatic
man, that at such a time he shall be afflicted
with a choleric disease, the doctor will
perceive by his physical symptoms, the astrologer,
from his knowledge in more secret causes
of nature, hath excelled him in his art.
"Now if God Almighty do not countermand
or check the ordinary course of nature, or
the matter of elementary bodies here below
be not unproportionable, and thereby unapt
to receive their impressions, there is no
reason why, in a natural and physical necessity,
astrological predictions should not succeed
and take effect, and by how much the knowledge
which we have by the known causes is more
demonstrative and infallible than that which
we have either by signs or effects, so much
by this companion doth Astrology appear worthy
to be preferred before Physic." Cardan,
who was an excellent physician saith: "If
by the art of Astrology he had not better
attained to the knowledge of his diseases,
than the physician that would have administered
to him by his skill, he had been assuredly
cured by death, rather than preserved alive
by physic. (Vide his Comment. upon Ptol.
Quidrepart.) From hence it appears it is
necessary that the physician should be skilful
in astrology, but on the contrary, _ex quovis
legno non fit Mercurius_, every astrologer
cannot be a physician; if the nativity be
but precisely known, or if, but _tempus ablatum_
or _suppositum_, and withal some notable
accidents of sickness, danger of drowning,
peril by fire, marriage, or other, the like
accidents may be foreseen."
The astrologers were a set of cunning, equivocal
rogues; the more cautious of whom only uttered
their prognostications in obscure and ambiguous
language, which might be applied to all things,
times, princes, and nations whatever. An
almanack maker, a Spanish friar, predicted,
in clear and precise words, the death of
Henry the Fourth of France; and Pierese,
though he had no faith in star-gazing, yet,
alarmed at whatever menaced the life of a
beloved sovereign, consulted with some of
the king's friends, and had the Spanish almanack
laid before his Majesty, who courteously
thanked them for their solicitude, but utterly
slighted the prediction: the event occurred,
and in the following year, the Spanish _Lilly_
spread his own fame in an new almanack. This
prediction of the friar, was the result either
of his being acquainted with the plot, or
from his being made an instrument for the
purposes of those who were.
Cornelius Agrippa rightly designates astrologers
"a perverse and preposterous generation
of men, who profess to know future things,
but in the meantime are altogether ignorant
of past and present; and undertaking to tell
all people most obscure and hidden secrets
abroad, at the same time, know not what happens
in their own houses."
But this Agrippa, for profound And solid
lying, was renown'd: The Anthroposophus,
and Floud, And Jacob Behmen, understood;
Knew many an amulet and charm That would
do neither good nor harm. He understood the
speech of birds As well as they themselves
do words; Could tell what subtlest parrots
mean That speak and think contrary, clean;
What member 'tis of whom they talk, Why they
cry, rope and--walk, knave, walk. He could
foretell whatever was By consequence to come
to pass; As death of great men, alterations,
Diseases, battles, inundations: All this
without th' eclipse o' th' sun, Or dreadful
comet, he hath done By inward light, a way
as good, And easy to be understood: But with
more lucky hit than those That use to make
the stars depose As if they were consenting
to All mischief in the world men do: Or like
the devil, did tempt and sway 'em To rogueries,
and then betray 'em.
We shall conclude our astrological strictures
with the following advertisement, which affords
as fine a satirical specimen of quackery
as is to be met with. It is extracted from
"poor Robin's" almanack for
1773; and may not be without its use, to
many at the present day. We will vouch for
it being harmless, but as we are not in the
secret of all that it contains, our readers
must endeavour to get the information that
may be wanted, on certain important points,
from other quarters. It will shew, however,
that the almanack astrologers did not live
upon the best terms, but like their predecessors,
were constantly abusing and attacking each
other.
ADVERTISEMENT.
"The best time to cut hair. How moles
and dreams are to be interpreted. When most
proper season to bleed. Under what aspect
of the moon best to draw teeth, and cut corns.
Pairing of nails, on what day unlucky. What
the kindest sign to graft or inoculate in;
to open bee-hives, and kill swine. How many
hours boiling my Lady Kent's pudding requires.
With other notable questions, fully and faithfully
resolved, by me Sylvester Patridge, student
in physic and astrology, near the Gun in
Moorfields."
"Of whom likewise may be had, at reasonable
rates, trusses, antidotes, elixirs, love-powders.
Washes for freckles, plumpers, glass-eyes,
false calves and noses, ivory-jaws, and a
new receipt to turn red hair into black."
Old Robin's almanack was evidently the best
of the time, and free from all the astrological
cant with which Patridge's Merlinus Liberatus
was filled; against which Poor Robin did
not a little declaim. The motto to his title
runs thus:--
"We use no weather-wise predictions
Nor any such-like airy fictions; But (which
we think is much the best) Write the plain
truth, or crack a jest: And (without any
further pretence) Confess we write, and think
of the pence: For that's the aim of all who
write, Profit to gain, mixed with delight."
Poor old Robin attacked the astrologers of
his day with no little vehemence: "How
different a task is it," says he, "for
man to behave so in this world as to please
all the people that inhabit it! A man who
makes use of his best endeavours to please
every body is sure to please but very few,
and by that means displease a great many;
which may very possibly be the case with
poor Robin this year. But (be that as it
will) _old Bob_ is sometimes well pleased,
when rogues, prick-eared coxcombs, fools,
and such like, are the most displeased at
him: be it therefore known, that it is only
men of sense and integrity, (whether they
have much money or no money) that he has
any, (the least) regard for: I see very plainly,
that an humble man is (generally) accounted
_base_; if otherwise, he is esteemed _proud_;
a bold look is looked upon as _impudence_;
if modest, (then to be sure) he must be _hypocritical_;
if his behaviour is grave, it is owing to
a _sullenness_ of temper; if affable, he
is but _little_ regarded; if strictly just,
then _cruel_ must be his character; but,
if merciful and forbearing, then (of consequence)
a silly, sheepish-headed fool! Now, I challenge
all the ASS-TROLOGERS and CONJURERS, throughout
the whole kingdom, to demonstrate that all
the whimsey-headed opinions which different
men retain of different actions, together
with their being so vastly different at different
times, one from another; I say, I call upon
them ALL to prove, that they are (wholly)
owing to the STARRY influences! There being,
(I believe) in general as many different
ideas and conceptions in the mind of mankind,
as there are variety of complexions and countenances."
His observations on the four _unequal_ quarters
of the year, as he terms them, are no less
satirical, humorous, and full of truth, and
so much in "opposition" with others
of the trade, that poor old Robin, in good
sense and trite remarks, carries away the
palm from all his predecessors and contemporaries;
indeed, he is so little of an astrologer,
that, instead of consulting the angles, aspects,
conjunctions and trines, of the planets,
he is vulgar enough to attach more importance
to the substantials and doings of this nether
world. We present our readers with the following
as a specimen, which, though in his usual
way, a little rough-mouthed, occasionally
is free from that almanack-cant which characterises
the vocations of his fellow-labourers in
the same field.
SPRING,
which, being the most delightful season in
the whole year, as it comes the next after
a long and cold winter makes it as welcome
as it is delightful; for now the lengthening
days afford full time for every body but
drunkards and watchmen to finish their respective
day's works by day-light, besides some time
to spare to walk abroad, to see the fine
new livery with which Dame Flora has now
decked out Mother Earth. In the opening of
the Spring, when all nature begins to recover
herself, the same animal pleasure which makes
the bird sing, and the whole brute creation
rejoice, rises very sensibly in the hearts
of mankind. This quarter will bring whole
shoals of mackerel, and plenty of green pease;
likewise gooseberries, cherries, cheese-cakes,
and custards.
But, let us now moralize,--and improve these
vernal delights into real virtue; and, when
we find within ourselves a secret satisfaction
arising from the beauties of the creation,
may we consider to whom we stand indebted
for all these various gratifications and
entertainments of sense; who it is that opens
thus his hand, and fills the world with good!
But so soon as this quarter is ended; i.
e. there, or then, or thereabout, for in
this case a day or two can break no great
squares--I say this quarter (as usual) will
be followed by the
SUMMER,
when, and at which time the days will have
attained their greatest, and consequently
the nights the shortest lengths. June, in
which month this quarter is said to begin,
will retain some likeness, if not exhibit
the perfections of the Spring; but the two
next succeeding months will perhaps have
less vigour, but a greater degree of heat;
for, as they pass on, they will be ripening
the fruits of the earth; whilst the Dog star
is shooting his rays amongst, the industrious
farmer will have business enough upon his
hands: for now he expects to be reaping and
gathering together the returns of his labour;
but then he must expect, nevertheless, to
bear the heat and burthen of the day.
This quarter very justly represents a man
in the full vigour of health and strength;
the beauty of the Spring is gone! The strength
of Summer is of short continuance! It will
very soon be succeeded by Autumn: thus, and
thus (O reader) do then consider, hast thou
seen the seasons, two, three, or four times
return in regular succession: remember that
the time is coming, when all opportunities
of this sort will be for ever hid from thine
eyes: remember if forty years have passed
thee, I say, I would have thee remember,
that thy spring is gone, thy summer almost
spent! Have then, therefore, a very serious
retrospective view of thy past, and, (if
it please God) a fixed resolution to amend
thy prolonged life: then being now arrived
almost on the eve of
AUTUMN
which begins this year (as usual) when, or
then, or thereabouts, the time the Summer
quarter ends--namely, when the nights begin
to grow longer and the days shorter: this
is the time when the barns are filled with
wheat, which soon must be thrashed out, in
order to be sowed again. This also is the
time when the orchards abound with fruits
of the kind, and consequently the properest
time to make cider.
Lamentable now must be the case of those
poor women who, in this quarter, happen to
long for green pease or strawberries; for
I dare assure them, upon the _honest word_
of an astrologer, that they can get none
on this side of next Easter. Some now-abouts
under the notion of soldiers, shall sally
out at night upon _Pullen_, or perhaps lie
in embuscade for a rope of onions, as if
they were Welsh freebooters. Loss of time
and money may be recovered by industry: but
to be a fool-born, or a rogue in nature,
are diseases incurable.
Remember that in any quarter of the year,
this is almost always a certain presage of
a wedding, when all parties are agreed, and
the parson in readiness; and then you must
be sure to have money in readiness too, or
your intended marriage may happen to prove
a miscarriage. But those who are able to
pay for tying the knot, when it is fairly
tied, may go home to dinner and be merry;
go to the tavern and be merry; go to supper
and be merry; rise next morning and be merry:
and let the world know, that a married life
is a plentiful life, when people have good
estates; a fruitful life when they have many
children; and an happy life, when man and
wife love each other as they ought to do,
and never quarrel nor disagree.
OF THE WINTER QUARTER.
But now comes on the cold, dirty, dithering,
pouting, rainy, shivering, freezing, blowing,
stormy, blustering, cruel quarter called
winter; the very thoughts of it are enough
to fright one; but that it very luckily happens
to be introduced (this year) by a good, fat
merry Christmas: yet it is the last and worse,
and very much resembles extreme old age accompanied
by poverty; this quarter is also pretty much
like Pharoah's lean kine; for it generally
(we find) eats up and devours most of the
produce of the preceding seasons: now the
sun entering the southern tropic, affords
us the least share of his light, and consequently
the longest long nights: yet, nevertheless,
in this uncomfortable quarter, you may possibly
pick up some crumbs of comfort, provided
you have good health, good store of the ready
Rhino, a good wife, and other good things
about you: and especially a good conscience:
for then the starry influences must necessarily
appear very benign, notwithstanding the inclemency
of the weather; for in such cases there will
be frequent _conjunctions_ of sirloins and
ribs of beef; _aspects_ of legs and shoulders
of mutton, with _refrenations_ of loins of
veal, shining near the watery triplicity
of plumb-porridge--together with trine and
sextile of minced pies; collared brawn from
the Ursus major, and sturgeon from Pisces--all
for the honour of Christmas: and I think
it is a much pleasanter sight than a Covent-Garden
comedy, to see a dozen or two of husbandmen,
farmers, and honest tenants, at a nobleman's
table (who never raised their rents) worry
a sirloin, and hew down, (I mean cut up)
a goose like a log: while a good Cheshire
cheese, and plenty of nappy ale, and strong
March beer, washes down the merry goblets,
sets all their wit afloat, and sends them
to their respective homes, as happy as kings.
And now, kind loving readers, every one,
God send y'a good new-year, when the old
one 's gone.
FOOTNOTES:
[75] The following prediction, and the verification
of it are of so recent a date, that we cannot
resist giving it a place in our pages. In
the account of the late Captain Flinder's
voyage of discovery, is the melancholy relation
of the loss of the master, Mr. Thistle, with
seven others, in a boat, on the inhospitable
shores of Terra Australia. To this narrative,
the following note is subjoined, which we
shall here quote in Captain Flinder's own
words: "This evening, Mr. Fowler, the
lieutenant, told me a circumstance which
I thought very extraordinary, and it afterwards
proved to be more so. While we were lying
at Spithead, Mr. Thistle was one day waiting
on shore, and having nothing else to do,
went to a certain old man, named Pine, to
have his fortune told. The cunning man informed
him that he was going on a long voyage, and
that the ship, on arriving at her destination,
would be joined by another vessel. That such
was intended, he might have learnt privately;
but he added that Mr. Thistle would be lost
before the other vessel joined. As to the
manner of his loss the magician refused to
give any information. My boat's crew, hearing
what Mr. Thistle said, went to consult the
wise man, and after the prefatory information
of a long voyage, they were told that they
would be shipwrecked, but not in the ship
they were going out in; whether they would
escape and return to England, he was not
permitted to reveal. This tale Mr. Thistle
often told at the mess-table; and I remarked,
with some pain, in a future part of the voyage,
that every time my boat's crew went to embark
in the Lady Nelson, there was some degree
of apprehension amongst them, that the time
of the predicted shipwreck was arrived. I
make no comment, (says Capt. Flinders,) upon
this story, but to recommend a commander,
if possible, to prevent any of his crew from
consulting fortune-tellers."--It should
be observed that, strange as it may appear,
every particular of these predictions came
exactly to pass, for the master and his boat's
crew were lost before the Investigator was
joined by the Lady Nelson, from Port-Jackson;
and when the former ship was condemned, the
people embarked with their commander on board
the Porpoise, which was wrecked on a coral
reef, and nine of the crew were lost.
[76] In 1670, the passion for horoscopes
and expounding the stars, prevailed in France
among the first rank. The new-born child
was usually presented naked to the astrologer,
who read the first lineaments in its forehead,
and the transverse lines in its hands, and
thence wrote down its future destiny. Catherine
de Medicis carried Henry IV, when a child,
to old Nostradamus, who antiquaries esteem
more for his Chronicle of Provence than for
his vaticinating powers. The sight of the
revered seer, with a heard which "streamed
like a meteor in the air," terrified
the future hero, who dreaded a whipping from
so grave a personage.
[77] The Chaldean Sages were nearly put to
the route by a quarto pack of artillery,
fired on them by Mr. John Chamber, in 1691.
Apollo did not use Marsyas more inhumanly
than his scourging pen this mystical race;
and his personalities made them sorely feel
it. However, a Norwich knight, the very Quixote
of Astrology, arrayed in the enchanted armour
of his occult authors, encountered this pagan
in a most stately carousal. He came forth
with "A Defence of Judicial Astrologye,
in answer to a treatise lately published
by Mr. John Chamber. By Christopher Knight.
Printed at Cambridge, 1693."
[78] Vide Amulets passim.
[79] Lilly's work, a voluminous quarto monument
of the folly of the age, was sold originally
for four guineas; it is entitled "Christian
Astrology," modestly treated, in three
books, by William Lilly, student in Astrology,
2nd. edition 1659. Every page is embellished
with a horoscope which, sitting on the pretending
tripod, he explains with the utmost facility.
There is also a portrait of this arch rogue
and star-gazer, an admirable illustration
for Lavater. As to Lilly's great skill in
prophecy, there goes a pleasant story related
by a kinsman of Dr. Case, his successor--namely--that
a person wanting to consult him on a certain
point coming to his house one morning, Lilly
himself going to the door, saw a piece of
filthy carrion which some one, who had more
wit than manners, had left there: and being
much offended at its unsightly appearance
wished heartily he did but know who had treated
him in that manner by leaving such an unwelcome
legacy, as it were, in his very teeth, that
he might punish them accordingly; which his
customer observing when the conjurer demanded
his business, "Nothing at all,"
said he, "for I'm sure if you can't
find out who has defiled your own door, it
is impossible you should discover anything
relating to me," and with this caustic
remark he left him.
[80] The Reverend and learned Thomas Gataker,
with whom Lilly was engaged in a dispute,
in his Annotations on the tenth chapter of
Jeremiah and 10th verse, called him a "blind
buzzard," and Lilly reflected again
on his antagonist in his _Annus Tenebrosus_.
Mr. Gataker's reply was entitled Thomas Gataker,
B. D. his Vindication of the annotation by
him published upon these words, "thus
saith the Lord,"
(Jer. x. 2) against the scurrilous aspersions
of that grand impostor William Lilly; as
also against the various expositions of two
of his advocates Mr. John Swan, and another
by him cited but not named. Together with
the Annotations themselves, wherein the pretended
grounds of judiciary astrology, and the scripture
proofs produced to it, are discussed and
refuted. London, 1653, in 4th part 192. Our
author making animadversions on this piece
in his English Merlin, 1654 produced a third
piece from Mr. Gataker, called a Discourse
apologetical, wherein Lilly's lewd, and loud
lies in his Merlin or Pasquil for 1654, are
clearly laid open; his shameless desertion
of his own cause further discovered, his
abominable slanders fully refuted, and his
malicious and _murtherous_ mind, inciting
to a general massacre of God's ministers,
from his own pen, evidently known, etc. London
1654.
CHAPTER X.
ONEIROCRITICAL PRESENTIMENT, ILLUSTRATING
THE CAUSE, EFFECTS, PRINCIPAL PHENOMENA,
AND DEFINITION OF DREAMS, ETC.
As we shall have to speak of the art practised
through the medium, termed incubation, of
curing diseases, it may be proper to say
something previously on the interpretation
of dreams through whose agency these events
were said to be realized.
Oneirocritics, or interpreters of dreams,
were called conjecturers, a very fit and
proper name for these worldly wise men, according
to the following lines, translated from Euripides--
He that conjectures least amiss Of all, the
best of prophets is.
To the delusion of dreams not a few of the
ancient philosophers lent themselves. Among
these were Democritus, Aristotle, and his
follower Themistius, Siresius the Platonic;
who so far relied on dreams which some accident
or other brought about, that they thence
endeavoured to persuade men there are no
dreams but what are founded on realities.
For, say they, as the celestial influences
produce various forms and changes in corporeal
matter, so out of certain influences, predominating
over the power of the fancy, the impression
of visions is made, being consentaneous,
through the disposition of the heavens, to
the effect produced; more especially in dreams,
because the mind, being then at liberty from
all corporeal cares and exercises, more freely
receives the divine influences: it happens,
therefore that many things are revealed to
them that are asleep, which are concealed
from them that are awake. With these and
such reasons it is pretended that much is
communicated through the medium of dreams:
When soft sleep the body lays at ease, And
from the heavy mass the fancy frees, Whate'er
it is in which we take delight, And think
of most by day we dream at night.
The transition from sleep is very natural
to that of dreams, the wonderful and mysterious
phenomena of that state, the ideal transactions
and vain illusions of the mind. According
to Wolfius, an eminent philosopher of Silesia,
every dream originates in some sensation,
and is continued by the succession of phantoms;
but no phantasm can arise in the mind without
some previous sensation. And yet it is not
easy to confirm this by experience, it being
often difficult to distinguish those slight
sensations, which give rise to dreams, from
phantasms, or objects of imagination.[81]
The series of phantasms which thus constitute
a dream, seems to be accounted for by the
law of the imagination, or association of
ideas; though it may be very difficult to
assign the cause of every minute difference,
not only in different subjects, but in the
same, at different times, and in different
circumstances. And hence M. Formey, who adopts
the opinion of Wolfius, concludes, that those
dreams are supernatural, which either do
not begin by sensation, or are not continued
by the law of imagination.[82]
The opinion is as old as Aristotle, who asserted,
that a dream is only the [Greek: Phantasma]
or _appearance_ of things, excited in the
mind, and remaining after the objects are
removed.[83] The opinion of Lucretius, translated
in our motto, was likewise that of Tully.[84]
Locke also traces the origin of dreams to
previous sensations. "The dreams of
sleeping men," says this profound philosopher,
"are all made up of the waking man's
ideas, though for the most part oddly put
together."[85] And Dr. Hartley, who
explains all the phenomena of the imagination
by his theory of vibrations and associations,
says, that dreams are nothing but the imaginations
or reveries of sleeping men, and that they
are deducible from three causes--viz, the
impressions and ideas lately received, and
particularly those of the preceding day,
the state of the body, more especially of
the stomach and brain, and association.[86]
Macrobius mentions five sorts of dreams.
1st. vision--2nd. a discovery of something
between sleeping and waking--3rd. a suggestion
cast into our fancy, called by Cicero, _visum_,--4th.
an ordinary dream--and fifth, a divine apparition
or revelation in our sleep; such as were
the dreams of the prophets, and of Joseph,
as also of the Eastern Magi.
CAUSE OF DREAMS.
Avicen makes the cause of dreams to be an
ultimate intelligence moving the moon in
the midst of that light with which the fancies
of men are illuminated while they sleep.
Aristotle refers the cause of them to common
sense, but placed in the fancy. Averroes,
an Arabian physician, places it in the imagination;
Democritus ascribes it to little images,
or representations, separated from the things
themselves; Plato among the specific and
concrete notions of the soul; Albertus to
the superior influences, which continually
flow from the sky, through many specific
channels.
Some physicians attribute the cause of dreams
to vapours and humours, and the affections
and cares of persons predominant when awake;
for, say they, by reason of the abundance
of vapours, which are exhaled in consequence
of immoderate feeding, the brain is so stuffed
by it, that monsters and strange chimera
are formed, of which the most inordinate
eaters and drinkers furnish us with sufficient
instances. Some dreams, they assert, are
governed partly by the temperature of the
body, and partly by the humour which mostly
abounds in it; to which may be added the
apprehensions which have preceded the day
before; and which are often remarked in dogs,
and other animals, which bark and make a
noise in their sleep. Dreams, they observe,
proceed from the humours and temperature
of the body; we see the choleric dreams of
fire, combats, yellow colours, etc. the phlegmatic
of water baths, of sailing on the sea; the
melancholies of thick fumes, deserts, fantasies,
hideous faces, etc. they that have the hinder
part of their brain clogged, with viscous
humours, called by physicians Ephialtes incubus,
dream that they are suffocated. And those
who have the orifice of their stomach loaded
with malignant humours, are affrighted with
strange visions, by reason of those venemous
vapours that mount to the brain and distemper
it.
POETICAL ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE EFFECTS OF
THE IMAGINATION IN DREAMS.
Were we to enter more profoundly into the
mysterious phenomena of dreams, our present
lucubrations might become too abstruse; and,
after all, no philosophical nor satisfactory
account can be given of them. Such of our
readers therefore, as may wish for a more
minute inquiry into the opinions above stated,
we beg leave to refer to the respective authors
whom we have already quoted. The reader,
who is fond to find amusement even in a serious
subject, from the scenes of nocturnal imagination,
will be glad, perhaps for a moment, to be
transported into the regions of poetic fancy.
And here we find that the fancy is not more
sportive in dreams, than are the poets in
their descriptions of her nocturnal vagaries.
On the effects of the imagination in dreams,
the following effusion, put into the mouth
of the volatile Mercurio, is an admirable
illustration:--
O, then I see, Queen Mab has been with you.
She is the fancy's midwife, and she comes
In shape no bigger than an agate stone On
the fore-finger of an Alderman, Drawn with
a team of little atomies, Athwart men's noses
as they lie asleep: Her waggon spokes made
of long spinners' legs; The cover of the
wings of grasshoppers; The traces of the
smallest spider's web; The collars of the
moonshine's watery beams; Her whip of cricket's
bone; the lash of film; Her waggoner, a small
grey coated gnat, Not half so big as a round
little worm, Prickt from the lazy finger
of a maid. Her chariot is an empty hazel
nut, Made by the joiner squirril, old grub,
Time out of mind the fairies' coachmakers:
And in this state she gallops night by night,
Thro' lovers' brains, and then they dream
of love; On courtiers' knees, that dream
on curtsies strait; O'er lawyers' fingers,
who strait dream on fees; O'er ladies lips,
who strait on kisses dream, Which oft the
angry Mab with blisters plague, Because their
breath with sweetmeats tainted are. Sometimes
she gallops o'er a lawyer's nose, And then
dreams he of smelling out a suit, And sometimes
comes she with a tithe-pig tail, Tickling
the parson as he lies asleep; Then dreams
he of another benefice; Sometimes she driveth
o'er a soldier's neck And then he dreams
of cutting foreign throats, Of breaches,
ambuscades, Spanish blades, Of healths fire
fathom deep; and then anon Drums in his ears,
at which he starts and wakes, And being thus
frighted, swears a pray'r or two, And sleeps
again.
Lucretius, and Petronius in his poem on the
vanity of dreams, had preceded our immortal
bard in a description of the effects of dreams
on different kinds of persons. Both the passages
here alluded to, only serve to shew the vast
superiority of Shakspeare's boundless genius:
their sense is thus admirably expressed by
Stepney:
At dead of night imperial reason sleeps,
And fancy with her train, her revels keeps;
Then airy phantoms a mix'd scene display,
Of what we heard, or saw, or wish'd by day;
For memory those images retains Which passion
form'd, and still the strongest reigns. Huntsmen
renew the chase they lately run, And generals
fight again their battles won. Spectres and
fairies haunt the murderer's dreams; Grants
and disgraces are the courtier's themes.
The miser spies a thief, or a new hoard;
The cit's a knight; the sycophant a lord,
Thus fancy's in the wild distraction lost,
With what we most abhor, or covet most. Honours
and state before this phantom fall; For sleep,
like death, its image, equals all.
Chaucer in his tale of the Cock and Fox,
has a fine description, thus versified by
Dryden:--
Dreams are but interludes which fancy makes:
When monarch reason sleeps, this mimic wakes;
Compounds a medley of disjointed things,
A court of coblers and a mob of kings: Light
fumes are merry, grosser fumes are sad: Both
are the reasonable soul run mad; And many
monstrous forms in sleep we see, That neither
were, or are, or e'er can be. Sometimes forgotten
things, long cast behind, Rush forward in
the brain, and come to mind. The nurse's
legends are for truth received, And the man
dreams but what the boy believed, Sometimes
we but rehearse a former play, The night
restores our actions done by day; As hounds
in sleep will open for their prey. In short,
the farce of dreams is of a piece In chimeras
all; and more absurd or less.
Shakspeare again:--
I talk of dreams, Which are the children
of an idle brain, Begot of nothing but vain
phantasy, Which is as thin of substance as
the air, And more inconsistant than the wind.
Nor must Milton be omitted--
In the soul Are many lesser faculties, that
serve Reason as chief; among these Fancy
next Her office holds; of all external things,
Which the five watchful senses represent,
She forms imaginations, airy shapes, Which
reason joining, or disjoining, frames, And
all that we affirm, or what deny, or call
Our knowledge or opinion; then retires Into
her private cell, when nature rests. Oft
in her absence mimic fancy wakes, To imitate
her; but misjoining shapes, Wild works produces
oft, but most in dreams Ill matching words
or deeds, long past or tale.
PRINCIPAL PHENOMENA IN DREAMING.
From these practical descriptions let us
proceed to take a view of the principal phenomena
in dreaming. And first, Mr. Locke's beautiful
_modes of_ which will greatly illustrate
the preceding observations.
"When the mind," says Locke, "turns
its view inward upon itself, and contemplates
its own actions, _thinking_ is the first
that occurs. In it the mind observes a great
variety of modifications, and from thence
receives distinct _ideas_. Thus the perception,
which actually accompanies, and is annexed
to any impression on the body, made by an
external object, being distinct from all
other modifications of thinking, furnishes
the mind with a distinct idea which we call
_sensation_; which is, as it were, the actual
entrance of an idea into the understanding
by the senses.
"The same idea, when it occurs again
without the operation of the like object
on the external sensory, is _remembrance_:
if it be sought after by the mind, and with
pain and endeavour found, and brought again
in view, it is _recollection_: if it be held
there long under consideration, it is _contemplation_;
when ideas float in our mind without any
reflexion or regard of the understanding,
it is that which the French call _reverie_;[87]
our language has scarce a name for it. When
the ideas that offer themselves (for as I
have observed in another place, while we
are awake, there will always be a train of
ideas succeeding one another in our minds)
are taken notice of, and, as it were, registered
in the memory, it is _attention_; when the
mind, with great earnestness, and of choice,
fixes its view on any idea, considers it
on all sides, and will not be called off
by the ordinary solicitations of other ideas,
it is what we call _intention_ or _study_.
Sleep without dreaming is rest from all these:
and _dreaming_ itself, is the having of ideas
(while the outward senses are stopped, so
that they receive not outward objects with
their usual quickness) in the mind, not suggested
by any external objects, or known occasion,
nor under any choice or conduct of the understanding
at all, and whether that which we call _ecstasy_,
be not dreaming with the eyes open, I leave
to be examined."
Dr. Beattie, in his "Dissertations moral
and critical," has an ingenious essay
on this subject, in which he attempts to
ascertain, not so much the _efficient_ as
the _final_ causes of the phenomenon, and
to obviate those superstitions in regard
to it, which have sometimes troubled weak
minds. He labours, with great earnestness,
to shew, that dreams may be of use in the
way of physical admonition: that persons,
who attend to them with this view, may make
important discoveries with regard to their
health; that they may be serviceable as the
means of moral improvement; that, by attending
to them, we may discern our predominant passions,
and receive good hints for the regulation
of them; that they may have been intended
by Providence to serve as an amusement to
the mental powers; and that dreaming is not
universal, because, probably, all constitutions
do not require such intellectual amusement.
In observations of this kind, we may discover
the ingenuity of fancy and the sagacity of
conjecture. We may find amusement in the
arguments, but we look in vain for satisfaction.
Nature, certainly, does nothing in vain,
yet we are far from thinking, that man is
able, in every case, to discover her intentions.
Final causes, perhaps, ought never to be
the subject of human speculation, but when
they are plain and obvious. To substitute
vain conjectures, instead of the designs
of Providence, on subjects where those designs
are beyond our reach, serves only to furnish
matter for the cavils of the sceptical, and
the sneers of the licentious.
Among the many striking phenomena in our
dreams, it may be observed, that, while they
last, the memory seems to lie wholly torpid,
and the understanding to be employed only
about such objects as are then presented,
without comparing the present with the past.
When we sleep, we often converse with a friend
who is either absent or dead, without remembering
that the grave or the ocean is between us.
We float, like a feather, upon the wind;
for we find ourselves this moment in England,
and the next in India, without reflecting
that the laws of nature are suspended, or
inquiring how the scene could have been so
suddenly shifted before us. We are familiar
with prodigies; we accommodate ourselves
to every event, however romantic; and we
not only reason, but act upon principles,
which are in the highest degree absurd and
extravagant. Our dreams, moreover, are so
far from being the effect of a voluntary
effort, that we neither know of what we shall
dream, or whether we shall dream at all.
But sleep is not the only time in which strange
and unconnected objects involve our ideas
in confusion. Besides the _reveries_ of the
day, already spoken of, we have, in a moral
view, our _waking-dreams_, which are not
less chimerical, and impossible to be realized,
than the imaginations of the night.
Night visions may befriend---- Our waking
dreams are fatal. How I dreamt Of things
impossible (could sleep do more?) Of joys
perpetual in perpetual change! Of stable
pleasures on the tossing wave! Eternal sunshine
in the storms of life! How richly were my
noon-tide trances hung, With gorgeous tapestries
of pictur'd joys! Till at deaths' toll,----
Starting I woke, and found myself undone.
Many of the fabulous stories of ghosts or
apparitions have originated unquestionably
in dreams. There are times of slumber when
we are sensible of being asleep. "When
the thoughts are much troubled," says
Hobbes, "and when a person sleeps without
the circumstance of going to bed, or pulling
off his clothes, as when he nods in his chair,
it is very difficult to distinguish a dream
from a reality. On the contrary, he that
composes himself to sleep, in case of any
uncouth or absurd fancy, easily suspects
it to have been a dream."[88] On this
principle, Hobbes has ingeniously accounted
for the spectre which is said to have appeared
to Brutus; and the well-known story told
by Clarendon, of the apparition of the duke
of Buckingham's father will admit of a similar
solution. There was no man at that time in
the kingdom so much the topic of conversation
as the duke; and, from the corruptness of
his character, he was very likely to fall
a sacrifice to the corruptness of the times.
Sir George Villiers is said to have appeared
to the man at midnight--there is therefore
the greatest probability that the man was
asleep; and the dream affrighting him, made
a strong impression, and was likely to be
repeated.
History furnishes us with numerous instances
of a forecast having been communicated through
the medium of dreams, some of which are so
extraordinary as almost to shake our belief
that the hand of Providence is not sometimes
evident through their instrumentality. Cicero,
in his first book on Divination, tells us,
that Heraclides, a clever man, and who had
been a disciple of Plato, writes that the
mother of Phalaris saw in a dream the statues
of the gods which she had consecrated in
the house of her son; and among other things,
it appeared to her, that from a cup which
Mercury held in his hand, he had spilled
some blood from it, and that the blood had
scarcely touched the ground, than rising
up in large bubbles it filled the whole house.
This dream of the mother was afterwards but
too truly verified in the cruelty of the
son. Cyrus dreamt that seeing the sun at
his feet, he made three different unsuccessful
attempts to lay his hand upon it, at each
of which it evaded him. The Persian Magi
who interpreted this dream told him that
these three attempts to seize the sun signified
that he would reign thirty years. This prediction
was verified: he died at the age of seventy,
having begun to reign when he was forty years
old.
"There is doubtless," says Cicero,
"something even among barbarians which
marks that they possess the gift of presentiment
and divination." The Indian Calanus
mounting the flaming faggot on which he was
about to be burnt, exclaimed "O what
a fine exit from life, when my body, like
that of Hercules, shall be consumed by the
fire, my spirit will freely enjoy the light."
And Alexander having asked if he had anything
to say, he replied, "Yes, I shall soon
see you," which happened as he foretold,
Alexander having died a few days afterwards
at Babylon. Xenophon, an ardent disciple
of Socrates, relates that in the war which
he made in favour of young Cyrus, he had
some dreams which were followed by the most
miraculous events. Shall we say that Xenophon
does not speak truth, or is too extravagant?
What! so great a personage, and so divine
a spirit as Aristotle, can he be deceived?
Or does he wish to deceive others, when he
tells us of Eudemus of Cyprus, one of his
friends, wishing to go into Macedonia, passed
by Pheres, a celebrated town in Thessaly,
which at that time was under the dominion
of the tyrant Alexander; and that having
fallen very sick, he saw in a dream a very
handsome young man, who told him that he
would cure him, and that the tyrant Alexander
would shortly die, but as to himself, he
would return home at the end of five years.
Aristotle remarks that the two first predictions
were, indeed, soon accomplished; that Eudemus
recovered, and that the tyrant was killed
by his wife's brothers; but that at the expiration
of five years, the time at which it was hoped
Eudemus, according to the dream, was to return
to Sicily, his native country, news were
received that he had been killed in a combat
near Syracuse; which gave rise to another
interpretation of the dream, namely, that,
when the spirit or soul of Eudemus left his
body, it went thence straight to his own
house.--A cup of massy gold having been stolen
from the temple of Hercules, this god appeared
in a dream to Sophocles three consecutive
times, and pointed out the thief to him;
who was put to the torture, confessed the
delinquency, and gave up the cup. The temple
afterwards received the name of Hercules
Indicator.
An endless variety of similar instances,
both from ancient and modern history, might
be adduced of the singularity of dreams,
as well as their instrumentality in revealing
secrets which, without such agency, had lain
for ever in oblivion; these, however, are
sufficient for our purpose here; and the
occurrence of one of a very recent date,
connected with the discovery of the body
of the murdered Maria Martin, in the red
barn, is still fresh in the recollection
of our readers. That there is a ridiculous
infatuation attached by some people to dreams,
which have no meaning, and which are the
offsprings of the day's thoughts, even among
persons whose education should inform them
better, particularly among the fair sex,
cannot be denied; indeed, a conversation
seldom passes among them, but some inconsistent
dream or other, form a leading feature of
their gossip; and doubtless is with them
an hysterical symptom.
Sometimes in our sleeping dreams, we imagine
ourselves involved in inextricable woe, and
enjoy at waking, the ecstasy of a deliverance
from it. "And such a deliverance,"
says Dr. Beattie, "will every good man
meet with at last, when he is taken away
from the evils of life, and awakes in the
regions of everlasting light and peace; looking
back upon the world and its troubles, with
a surprise and satisfaction similar in kind
(though far higher in degree) to that which
we now feel, when we escape from a terrifying
dream, and open our eyes to the sweet serenity
of a summer morning." Sometimes, in
our dreams, we imagine scenes of pure and
unutterable joy; and how much do we regret
at waking, that the heavenly vision is no
more! But what must the raptures of the good
man be, when he enters the regions of immortality,
and beholds the radiant fields of permanent
delight! The idea of such a happy death,
such a sweet transition, from the dreams
of earth to the realities of heaven, is thus
beautifully described by Dryden, in his poem
entitled Eleonora:
"She passed serenely, with a single
breath; This moment perfect health, the next
was death; One sigh did her eternal bliss
assure; So little penance needs when souls
are pure. As gentle dreams our waking thoughts
pursue; Or, one dream past, we slide into
a new; So close they follow and such wild
order keep, We think ourselves awake and
are asleep; So softly death succeeded life
in her: She did but dream of heaven and she
was there."
DEFINITION OF DREAMS.
Dreams are vagaries of the imagination, and
in most instances proceed from external sensations.
They take place only when our sleep is unsound,
in which case the brain and nervous system
are capable of performing certain motions.
We seldom dream during the first hours of
sleep; perhaps because the nervous fluid
is then too much exhausted; but dreams mostly
occur towards the morning, when this fluid
has been, in some measure, restored.
Every thing capable of interrupting the tranquillity
of mind and body, may produce dreams; such
are the various kinds of grief and sorrow,
exertions of the mind, affections and passions,
crude and undigested food, a hard and inconvenient
posture of the body. Those ideas which have
lately occupied our minds or made a lively
impression upon us, generally constitute
the principal subject of a dream, and more
or less employ our imagination, when we are
asleep.
Animals are likewise apt to dream, though
seldom; and even men living temperately,
and enjoying a perfect state of health, are
seldom disturbed with this play of the fancy.
And, indeed, there are examples of lively
and spirited persons who never dream at all.
The great physiologist Haller considers dreaming
as a symptom of disease, or as a stimulating
cause, by which the perfect tranquillity
of the sensorium is interrupted. Hence, that
sleep is the most refreshing, which is undisturbed
by dreams, or, at least, when we have the
distinct recollection of them. Most of our
dreams are then nothing more than sports
of the fancy, and derive their origin chiefly
from external impressions; almost every thing
we see and hear, when awake, leads our imagination
to collateral notions or representations,
which, in a manner, spontaneously, and without
the least effort, associate with external
sensations. The place where a person whom
we love formerly resided, a dress similar
to that which we have seen her wear, or the
objects that employed her attention, no sooner
catch our eye, than she immediately occupies
our mind. And, though these images associating
with external sensations, do not arrive at
complete consciousness within the power of
imagination, yet even in their latent state
they may become very strong and permanent.
Cicero furnishes us with a story of two Arcadians,
who, travelling together, arrived at Megara,
a city of Greece, between Athens and Corinth,
where one of them lodged in a friend's house,
and the other at an inn. After supper, the
person who lodged at the private house went
to bed, and falling asleep, dreamed that
his friend at the inn appeared to him and
begged his assistance, because the innkeeper
was going to kill him. The man immediately
got out of bed much frightened at the dream;
but recovering himself, and falling asleep
again, his friend appeared to him a second
time, and desired that, as he would not assist
him in time, he would take care at least
not to let his death go unpunished; that
the innkeeper having murdered him had thrown
his body into a cart and covered it with
dung; he therefore begged that he would be
at the city gate in the morning, before the
cart was out; struck with this new dream,
he went early to the gate, saw the cart,
and asked the driver what was in it; the
driver immediately fled, the dead body was
taken out of the cart, and the innkeeper
apprehended and executed.
It is very frequently observed, that in a
dream a series of representations is suddenly
interrupted, and another series of a very
different kind occupies its place. This happens
as soon as an idea associates itself; which,
from whatever cause, is more interesting
than that immediately preceding. The last
then becomes the prevailing one, and determines
the association. Yet, by this too, the imagination
is frequently reconducted to the former series.
The interruption in the course of the preceding
occurrences is remarked, and the power of
abstracting similarities is in search of
the cause of this irregularity. Hence, in
such cases, there usually happens some unfortunate
event or other, which occasions the interruption
of the story. The representing power may
again suddenly conduct us to another series
of ideas, and thus the imagination may be
led by the subreasoning power before defined,
from one scene to another. Of this kind,
for instance, is the following remarkable
dream, as related and explained in the works
of professor Maas of Halle: "I dreamed
once," says he "that the Pope visited
me. He commanded me to open my desk, and
carefully examined all the papers it contained.
While he was thus employed, a very sparkling
diamond fell out of his triple crown into
my desk, of which, however, neither of us
took any notice. As soon as the Pope had
withdrawn, I retired to bed, but was soon
obliged to rise, on account of a thick smoke,
the cause of which I had yet to learn. Upon
examination I discovered, that the diamond
had set fire to the papers in my desk, and
burnt them to ashes."
On account of the peculiar circumstances
by which this dream was occasioned, it deserves
the following short analysis. "On the
preceding evening," says professor Maas,
"I was visited by a friend with whom
I had a lively conversation, upon Joseph
IInd's suppression of monasteries and convents.
With this idea, though I did not become conscious
of it in my dream, was associated the visit
which the Pope publicly paid the Emperor
Joseph at Vienna, in consequence of the measures
taken against the clergy; and with this again
was combined, however faintly, the representation
of the visit, which had been paid me by my
friend. These two events were, by the subreasoning
faculty, compounded into one, according to
the established rule--that things which agree
in their parts, also correspond as to the
whole;--hence the Pope's visit, was changed
into a visit made to me. The subreasoning
faculty then, in order to account for this
extraordinary visit, fixed upon that which
was the most important object in my room,
namely, the desk, or rather the papers contained
in it. That a diamond fell out of the triple
crown was a collateral association, which
was owing merely to the representation of
the desk. Some days before when opening the
desk, I had broken the glass of my watch,
which I held in my hand, and the fragments
fell among the papers. Hence no farther attention
was paid to the diamond, being a representation
of a collateral series of things. But afterwards
the representation of the sparkling stones
was again excited, and became the prevailing
idea; hence it determined the succeeding
association. On account of its similarity,
it excited, the representation of fire, with
which it was confounded; hence arose fire
and smoke.--But, in the event, the writings
only were burnt, not the desk itself; to
which, being of comparatively less value,
the attention was not at all directed."
It is farther observable, that there are
in the human mind certain obscure representations,
and that it is necessary to be convinced
of the reality of these images, if we are
desirous of perceiving the connexion, which
subsists among the operations of the imagination.
Of the numerous phenomena, founded on obscure
ideas, and which consequently prove their
existence, we shall only remark the following.
It is a well known fact, that many dreams
originate in the impressions made in the
body during sleep; and they consist of analogous
images or such as are associated with sensations
that would arise from these impressions,
during a waking state. Hence, for instance,
if our legs are placed in a perpendicular
posture, we are often terrified by a dream
that implies the imminent danger of falling
from a steep rock or precipice. The mind
must represent to itself these external impressions
in a lively manner, otherwise no ideal picture
could be thus excited; but, as we do not
become at all conscious of them, they are
but faintly and obscurely represented.
If we make a resolution to rise earlier in
the morning than usual; and if we impress
the determination on our mind, immediately
before going to rest, we are almost certain
to succeed. Now it is self-evident that this
success cannot be ascribed to the efforts
of the body, but altogether to the mind,
which probably, during sleep perceives and
computes the duration of time, so that it
makes an impression on the body, which enables
us to awake at an appointed hour. Yet all
this takes place, without our consciousness,
and the representations remain obscure. Many
productions of art are so complicated, that
a variety of simple conceptions are requisite
to lay the foundation of them; yet the artist
is almost entirely unconscious of these individual
notions. Thus a person performs a piece of
music, without being obliged to reflect,
in a conscious manner, on the signification
of the notes, their value, and the order
of the fingers he must observe; nay even
without clearly distinguishing the strings
of the harp, or the keys of the harpsichord.
We cannot attribute this to the mechanism
of the body, which might gradually accustom
itself to the accurate placing of the fingers.
This could be applied only where we place
a piece of music, frequently practised; but
it is totally inapplicable to a new piece,
which is played by the professor with equal
facility, though he has never seen it before.
In the latter case there must arise, necessarily,
an ideal representation, or an act of judgment,
previous to every motion of the finger.
These arguments, we trust, are sufficient,
to evince the occurrence of these obscure
notions and representations, from which all
our dreams originate. Before, however, we
close this subject, we shall relate the following
extraordinary dream of the celebrated Galileo,
who at a very advanced age had lost his sight.
In one of his walks over a beautiful plain,
conducted by his pupil Troicelli, the venerable
sage related the following dream to him.
"Once," said he, "my eyes
permitted me to enjoy the charms of these
fields. But now, since their light is extinguished,
these pleasures are lost to me for ever.
Heaven justly inflicts the punishment which
was predicted to me many years ago. When
in prison, and impatiently languishing for
liberty, I began to be discontented with
the ways of Providence; Copernicus appeared
to me in a dream; his celestial spirit conducted
me over luminous stars, and, in a threatening
voice, reprehended me for having murmured
against him, at whose _fiat_ all these worlds
had proceeded from nothing. 'A time shall
come (said he) when thine eyes shall refuse
to assist thee in contemplating these wonders.'"
We shall now proceed to notice the subject
of dreams in another point of view--that
is, as being employed as a medium of divination
in the cure of diseases, in which the fancies
of the brain appear, in reality, to as little
advantage as they do with reference to any
other considerations in which such pretended
omens exist.
FOOTNOTES:
[81] Wolfius, Psychol. Empir. Sect. 123.
[82] Mem. de l'acad. de Berlin, tom. ii.
p. 316.
[83] Arist. de insomn. cap 3.
[84] Quae in vita usurpant homines, cogitant,
curant, vident quaeque agunt vigilantes,
agitantque, ea cuique in somno accidunt.
_De Div._
[85] Essay on Human Understanding, book,
chap. i. sect 17.
[86] Obs, on Man, vol. 1, sect. 5.
[87] There is a phenomenon in the mind, which,
though it happen to us while we are perfectly
awake, yet approaches the nearest to sleep
of any I know. It is called the _Reverie_,
or, as some term it, the _brown study_, a
sort of middle state between waking and sleeping;
in which, though our eyes are open, our senses
seem to be entirely shut up, and we are quite
insensible of every thing about us, yet we
are all the while engaged in a musing indolence
of thought, or a supine and lolling kind
of roving from one fairy scene to another,
without any self-command; from which, if
any noise or accident rouse us, we wake as
from a real dream, and are often as much
at a loss to tell how our thoughts were employed,
as if we had waked from the soundest sleep.
This is frequently called _dreaming_, sometimes
_absence_, a thing often observed in lovers
and people of a melancholy or indeed speculative
turn.--_Fordyce's Dialogues concerning education,
vol. II. p. 255._
[88] Leviathan, part. 1. c. 1.
CHAPTER XI.
ON INCUBATION; OR THE ART OF HEALING BY VISIONARY
DIVINATION.
Medicine unquestionably ranks among the most
ancient of all human sciences. In the infant
state of society, when simplicity of manners
characterised the pursuits of mankind, medical
assistance was little wanted; but when the
nature of man degenerated, and vice and luxury
corrupted his habits of innocence and temperance,
diseases sprung up which those aids alone
could check or eradicate. The knowledge of
them at first could not fail to be empirical
and precarious. The sick were placed in the
high ways, that travellers and passers by
might assist them with their counsel; and
at length the priesthood appropriated this
privilege exclusively to themselves.
It was not merely the sacerdotal dignity
which rendered them objects of awe and reverence
to the illiterate multitude; the priests
were regarded as the depositaries of science
and learning; and proved themselves as skilful
as they were successful, in cementing their
influence by those arts which were best calculated
to inflame the prejudices of the vulgar in
their favour.
It is the work of ages to wean men and nations
from popular illusions, and the deep-rooted
opinions transmitted from sire to son: it
cannot therefore surprise us, that even when
the intellectual energy of Greece was signalizing
itself by efforts which have commanded the
admiration of after ages, it should still
remain a popular dogma in medicine "that
persons labouring under bodily infirmity,
might be thrown into a state of charmed torpor,
in which, though destitute of any previous
medical knowledge, they would be enabled
to ascertain the nature of their malady,
as well as of the diseases of others, and
devise the means of their cure." Upon
this dogma was founded the mystery of incubations,
or the art of healing by visionary divination.
It is not our object here to discuss whether
a man can be capable of divination: such
a power, however, was assigned to him, not
only by the vulgar, but by the greater number
of the philosophical sects of antiquity;
and it does appear to savour a little of
temerity, that Epicurus and the cynics should
have ventured to reject a belief so universally
and strenuously maintained, and resting on
an infinity of traditions and accounts of
prophets, in whom Greece had abounded from
her earliest times, and of whose divine gift
of prophecy the firmest conviction was currently
entertained. Aeschylus, Plutarch, Apuleius,
and other Greek authors, bear ample testimony
of this persuasion, and tell us that by uncommon
and irregular motions of the body intoxicating
vapours, or certain holy ejaculations, men
might be thrown into an enchanted trance;
in which, being in a state between sleeping
and waking, they were unsusceptible of external
impressions and obtaining a glimpse of futurity,
were gifted with the power of prophecy. Here
their allusion, however, only concerns the
celebrated divinations of the Pythia.[89]
We must therefore, probe somewhat deeper,
in order to illustrate that species of divination
which was the result of dreams, and a source
of divination on the nature of diseases and
their remedies.
This kind of superstition was in no less
acceptation than the former among the ancients,
whose temples were constantly crowded with
the sick, and reverberated with their supplications
for divinatory dreams, which were regarded
as an immediate gift from the gods. Indeed,
the celestial origin of dreams was universally
admitted by the nations of antiquity, and
thence also their efficacy as oracles. Nothing
could be more natural than such an idea.
From the crude and imperfect notions which
long prevailed with respect to the soul,
it was scarcely possible for them to ascribe
the impressions, which their memory retained
of the creation of their fancy during their
slumbers, to the instrumentality of their
own conceits; they could not fail therefore
to impute them to the interposition of some
foreign agent, and to whom more naturally
could they refer them than to a divinity?
When awake, they imagined themselves always
attended by the gods in person, and ascribed
every thought, and resolved every appearance
or accident, which deviated from the common
course of nature, to the immediate influence
of a superintending deity. It was under such
impressions that so many nations originally
rested their belief in divinatory dreams.
The records of antiquity therefore abound
in instances (for the greater part of an
early date) where the actions of men have
been the result of a dream, whose conceit
was entirely at variance with the real state
of their affairs. It was not long before
the diversity of dreams awakened their attention:
some were connected and simple, others were
obscure, and made up of curious fancies,
though not incapable of being resolved by
the windings and turnings of allegory.
It was no unnatural transition from the received
belief in dreams, to the idea that they might
become the medium of seeking instruction
from the gods: hence the institution of oracles,
whose responses were given in dreams; and
the addition of sleeping chambers to many
temples, such as those in Epidaurus and at
Oropos. Here it was, that after pious ceremonies
and prayers, men laid themselves down in
expectation of dreams; when the expectation
was realized, though the dream proved ever
so confused or intricate, the dreamer always
succeeded in reconciling it to his circumstances:
his own belief and priestly wiles, readily
effected the solution. The conceit of dreams,
according to the votary's wishes, was so
powerfully promoted by the preparatory initiation
he had undergone, that it would have been
somewhat extraordinary had he been altogether
disappointed. He was generally anxious to
increase the fame of his divinity by his
dream, and possessed a high veneration and
deep impression of the miracles which that
divinity had wrought. With these predispositions
he resorted to the temple, where he had a
whole day before him to ponder on his malady,
and on every sort of remedy that might have
been suggested to him; how natural was it,
therefore, for his busy imagination to fix,
in his sleep, upon one particular remedy
more forcibly than upon another? Add to this,
the solemn lonely hour of night was the appointed
hour for his sleep, which was preceded by
prayer and other inspiring ceremonies, that
would naturally elevate his devotion to the
highest pitch. He had also previously perambulated
the temple, and with a full heart surveyed
the offerings of those whose sickness had
departed from them.
If all these preparations were unavailing,
the officiants of the temple had still means
in reserve, by which the credulous should
be thrown into that bodily state which was
indispensable to the divinatory sleep: of
these, succeeding instances will be hereafter
produced. In those days, there were however,
some men from whom the somniferous faculty
was withheld: they were, therefore, admonished
to repeat their prayers and oblations, in
order to win the divinity's favour: and the
ultimate and customary resort was, if success
did not crown his perseverance, to pronounce
it a token, that such patients were an eyesore
to the divinity.
From this divinatory sleep, arose the vulgar
expressions in Greece [Greek: enkoimasdai],
and [Greek: enkoimaesis][90] The latin terms
are _incubare_ and _incubatio_ an exact translation
of the Greek words. It appears, therefore,
that the Romans and Greeks were equally acquainted
with the institution; though we find but
very little mention made of it by the Latin
writers, yet this is no argument against
its prevalence among the Romans, as we are
left with as scanty accounts of many other
superstitions which were in vogue amongst
them. It is highly probable that it was not
by any means so popular in Rome as in Greece;
and the cause of this may, perhaps, be found
in the reflecting disposition and sober character
of the haughty Roman, to which the light
and volatile temperament of the Grecian,
formed so striking a contrast.
That incubation was a ready means of diving
into the future, needs no demonstration.
Although its practice was chiefly resorted
to in cases where medical aid was desired,
it was still made use of in every other case,
in which the ancient oracles were consulted.
Whether it arose in Greece, or migrated thither
from the East, is a point with which the
ancients have left us unacquainted, though
they advert to its prevalence amongst those
who were called barbarians. Strabo has several
instances of it, and particularly mentions
a place in the Caspian sea, where such an
oracle existed;[91] he also relates, in his
celebrated account of Moses, that this law-giver
laid it down, in common with the priests
of Esculapius, that to those who led a chaste
and virtuous life the deity would vouchsafe
prophetical visions in his sanctuary; but
to those who were of idle and impure habits,
they would be denied.[92]
Pomponius Mela even mentions a savage nation,
in the interior of Africa, who laid themselves
down to sleep on the grave-stones of their
ancestors, and looked upon the dreams they
had on those spots as oracles from the dead.[93]
We shall see, hereafter, that this superstition
was equally indigenous among the Egyptians.
Although it be doubtful whether the Greeks
owed this species of divination to their
own invention or not, its existence may at
least be traced as far as the earliest ages
of their history; notwithstanding no positive
mention of it has been made either by Homer
or the authors following him.
The oracular power of dreams, and the sanctuaries
where they are supposed to be dispersed,
have been diffusely treated of in the compilations
of Van Dale and other learned writers. These
species of oracles were in high estimation,
even in the most enlightened and flourishing
periods of Greece; it is somewhat singular,
however, that no people cherished them more
devoutly than the Spartans, who depended
altogether upon oracles in their weightiest
affairs of state. Of all the civilized nations
of Greece, Sparta always approved herself
the most superstitious; her advancement was
rather the effect of her policy, than of
any stimulus given to her civilization by
science. This consideration will enable us
to account for the powerful influence which,
even in the latest stages of Lacedemonian
story, attached to the responses of Passiphae,
a local goddess of Thalame, but little known
beyond the confines of Laconia. The extent
of their influence is particularly evident
in the history of Agis and Cleomenes.[94]
The greater part of these somnambulistic
oracles were ascribed to persons who had
distinguished themselves as great dreamers
when on earth. In old times there was a description
of prophets who pretended to prepare themselves
for the foreboding of future events through
the medium of sacred dreams. They were classed
under the appellation of [Greek: Oneiroploi],
to which rank the most celebrated Vates of
the heroic age belonged. In this way it was
that a sacred spot was dedicated to Calchus,
whence he gave his responses in dreams after
his decease: this spot lay in Daunia, on
the coast of the Adriatic. The supplicant's
offices began with the offering up of a ram,
on whose skin he laid himself down, and in
this situation, received the instruction
he sought for.[95] Amphilocus, a contemporary
soothsayer, who accompanied the Epigoni in
the first Theban war, had a similar oracle
at Mallos, in Cilicia, which Pausanias asserts,
even at the close of the second century,
to have been the most credible of his age;
it is also mentioned by Dion Cassius, in
his history of Commodus.[96]
The most famous, however, of this class of
oracles, was that of Amphiaraus, the father
of Amphilocus, which was one of the five
principal oracles of Greece; he had signalized
himself as a sapient soothsayer in the first
Theban war; and his oracle was situated at
Oropos, on the borders of Boetia and Attica.
Of all others this deserves our most particular
attention, as it was resorted to more frequently
in cases of infirmity and disease, than in
any other circumstances. His responses were
always delivered in dreams, in whose interpretation,
as he was the first to possess that faculty.
Pausanias says he received divine honours.
Those who repaired to Amphiaraus's oracle
to supplicate his aid, laid themselves down
in the manner we have just related, after
several preparatory lustrations and sacrifices,
on the skin of a ram slain in honour of the
god, and awaited the dreams, which were to
unfold the means of their different cures.
Lustrations and sacrifices were not, however,
the only preparatives for inducing the visionary
disposition. The priests subjected the patients
to various others, which Philostratus affirms[97]
to have been very instrumental towards rendering
the sleeper's mind clear and unclouded. Part
of these preparatives consisted in one day's
abstinence from eating, and three, nay, even
in some cases, fifteen days' abstinence from
wine, the common beverage of the Greeks.
This was the practice also with other oracles;
nor were the priests in the meantime insensible
to their own interests on these occasions;
for those who were cured by Amphiaraus's
revelations were permitted to bathe in the
sacred waters of a fountain, into which they
were enjoined to cast pieces of gold and
silver, which were destined, most probably,
to sweeten the labours of his officiants.
The oracles, whose intervention was principally
or altogether sought for the healing of the
sick by means of divination founded on dreams,
were scattered over Greece, Italy, Egypt,
and other countries. As regards those of
Egypt, it may be remarked, that although
many of the Egyptians believed there were
thirty-six demons, or aerial deities, each
of whom had the care of a certain portion
of the human frame, and when that portion
was diseased, would heal it on the patient's
earnest prayer, yet a variety of their oracles,
such as those of Serapis, Isis, and Phthas,
the Hephaestos of the Greeks, appertained
to the class, which is the present object
of our inquiry.
The oracle Serapis was situated near Canopus;
it was visited with the highest veneration
by the wealthiest and most illustrious Egyptians,
and contained ample records of miraculous
cures which that god had performed on sleepers.[98]
Isis, it is said, effected similar cures
in her lifetime, whence it became her office,
in her after state of deification, to reveal
in dreams the most efficacious remedies to
the sick. Indeed the healing powers of this
goddess were such, that, as we are told by
Diodorus,[99] the remedies she prescribed
never failed of their effect, and that convalescents
were daily seen returning from her temple,
many of whom had been abandoned as incurable
by the physicians.
The third oracle of the sick was consecrated
to Phthas, and lay near Memphis, but it is
seldom mentioned by the ancients.[100]
In Italy there existed two oracles, whose
responses were imparted in dreams, before
the worship of Esculapius was introduced
from Greece. One of them only belongs to
this place, that of the physician Podalirus,
in Daunia,[101] which is mentioned by Lycophron.[102]
Subsequently it is well known incubation
was practised after the Grecian form in the
Roman temple of Aesculapius on the Insula
Tiberina.[103]
This description of oracles abounded throughout
Greece; the most memorable of which was that
on the Asiatic coast, between Trattis and
Nyssa, which is more particularly described
by Strabo than any other. Not far from the
town of Nyssa, says he, there is a place
called Charaka, where we find a grove and
temple sacred to Pluto and Proserpine, and
close to the grove a subterraneous cave,
of a most extraordinary nature. It is related
of it, that diseased persons, who have faith
in the remedies predicted by those deities,
are accustomed to resort to it and pass some
time with experienced priests, who reside
near the cave. These priests lay themselves
down to sleep in the cave, and afterwards
order such medicine as have been revealed
to them there, to be furnished to their patients
in the temple. They frequently conduct the
sick themselves into the cave, where they
remain for several days together, without
touching a morsel of food; nor are the profane
withheld from a participation in the _divinatory_
sleep, though this is not permitted otherwise
than under the controul, and with the sacred
sanction, of the priests. There is, however,
nothing more surprising about this place
than that it is esteemed _noxious and fatal
to the healthy_.[104] This last remark of
our geographer, proves how jealous the priestly
physicians were of their medical monopoly,
and how fearful lest the _saner_ part of
mankind should detect and expose the pretended
virtues of their medical sanctuary.
We have hitherto mentioned the name of Aesculapius
but casually, though there was no god of
antiquity more celebrated for curing every
species of malady by the incubatory process.
He was particularly designated by the Greeks
as "the sender of dreams," [Greek:
Oneiropompon]; nor could any other deity
boast of so great a number of those oracles.
The most distinguished of these was the oracle
of Epidaurus, in the Argivian territory;
from which spot his worship extended over
a great proportion of the old world;--hither,
as being the place of his birth and the site
of his richest temple, crowds of sick persons
constantly repaired in quest of dreams. The
success attending them was diligently set
forth on every wall of the temple; where
the _tabulae votivae_ recorded the names
of those who had been healed, the nature
of their maladies, and the cure which the
god prescribed. Similar circumstances are
related of his Temple at Triccae, in Thessaly,
where Esculapius was held in great veneration
at a very early period; there appears also
to have been another such temple either at
or near Athens,[105] where we must look for
the scene of the ridiculous cure which Aristophanes
makes Aesculapius to perform on the blind
god of riches. Though there is undoubtedly
a rich vein of the burlesque in the Plutus
of the Grecian dramatist, yet we may gather
much concerning our present subject from
the scene in which the slave, who had attended
Plutus in the Temple, relates the whole process
of his master's wife. Here also the night
was the chosen period of incubation. Before
the signal for sleep was given, the officiants
of the temple extinguished all the lights
in the sick men's chamber; thus involving
them in a solemn stillness and obscurity
highly favourable to the work in hand, but
in a particular manner to the subterfuge
of the priests, who enacted the nocturnal
apparition of Aesculapius to his sick client.
This passage in Plutus is certainly the earliest
circumstantial relation we possess of the
practice of this species of incubation.[106]
The license permitted to Grecian comedy was
such as to authorise the ridicule and contempt
of the most popular deities; we are not,
therefore to conclude from the scenes that
there were many unbelievers, or that this
ancient system of cure had sunk into disrepute:
for the history of our comedian's great contemporary,
Hippocrates, informs us, that at this very
time the temple of Aesculapius at Cos abounded
in tablets, on which the sick attested the
remedies that had been revealed to them during
incubation, and that he himself was highly
indebted to them for much of his medical
knowledge.
Were it not authenticated by the most undeniable
testimonies, it would appear incredible that
the impostures of the disciples of Aesculapius,
and the common faith in his regenerative
powers, should have survived with equal potency
and acceptation during the ages immediately
succeeding the Christian era. It must not
however, be forgotten, that these were the
times also, when an infinity of superstitious
of every description disgraced the Roman
world; although it would have appeared a
necessary consequence, that their prevalency
should have been checked by the increasing
determination of learning and science.
If at this period the number of dreaming
patients had fallen off at Cos and Epidaurus,
the deficiency was amply compensated by the
growing popularity of Aesculapius's shrines
at Rome, Pergamus, Alaea, Mallos, and other
places, where the ancient rituals were faithfully
preserved. The highest magistrates in the
Roman states not only countenanced, but patronised
the superstition; Marcus Aurelius, by the
friendship with which he honoured the Paphlagonian
imposter Alexander, and Caracalla, by the
journey he undertook to Pergamus, to obtain
the cure of a disease which inflicted him.
This Alexander, the Cagliostro of his age,
whose memoirs have been handed down to us
by Lucian, made shift to father a new species
of juggling upon the ancient process of incubation:
for he pretends that it was necessary for
him to sleep for a night in the sealed scrips
which contain the queries he was to have
resolved for those who visited his oracle.[107]
During this interval he dexterously opened
the scrips, and sealed them up again; pretending
that the responses which he delivered to
the querists in the morning, had been revealed
to him by the deity in a dream.
The priests of Aesculapius possessed a never
failing source of information on the recipes
or votive tablets with which these temples
abounded. These were sometimes engraven on
pillars, as at Epidaurus; of which Pausanias
says there were six remaining in his time,
and besides these, one in particular removed
from the rest, on which it was recorded that
Hippolytus had sacrificed twenty horses,
in return for his having been restored to
life by him. Five memorials only of this
kind have reached the present age. One of
them is to be found in the beginning of Galen's
fifth book de Compos, medic.: it is taken
from the temple of Phthas, near Memphis,
and is the least interesting of the whole.
Its subject is the use of the Diktamnus,
borrowed from Heras of Cappadocia, a medical
writer, frequently quoted by Galen. The remaining
four are much more important: they were engraven
on a marble slab,[108] of later date at Rome,
and are thought, with much probability, to
have belonged to the Aesculapian temple in
the Insula Tiberina. The present translation,
in which some errors either of the artist
or copyist are rectified, is extracted from
the first volume of Gruter's Corp. Inscriptionum.
The narrations are perspicuous and laconic.
1. "In these latter days, a certain
blind man, by name Caius, had this oracle
vouchsafed to him--'that he should draw near
to the altar after the manner of one who
could see; then walk from right to left,
lay the five fingers of his right hand on
the altar, then raise up his hand and place
it on his eyes.' And behold! the multitude
saw the blind man open his eyes, and they
rejoiced, such splendid miracles should signalize
the reign of our Emperor Antoninus."
2. "To Lucius, who was so wasted away
by pains in his side, that all doubted of
his recovery, the god gave this response:
'Approach thou the altar; take ashes from
it, mix them up with wine and then lay thyself
on thy sore side.' And the man recovered,
and openly returned thanks to the god amidst
the congratulations of the people."
3. "To Julian who spitted blood, and
was given over by every one, the god granted
this response: 'Draw near, take pine apples
from off the altar, and eat them with wine
for three days. And the man got well, and
came and gave thanks in the presence of the
people."
4. "A blind soldier, Valerius Asper
by name, received this answer from the god:
that he should mix the blood of a white cock
with milk, make an eye ointment therewith,
and rub his eyes with it for three days.
And lo! the blind recovered his sight, and
came, and publicly gave thanks to the god."
The success with which the Priests of Aesculapius
carried on their impostures, and the popularity
which their dexterous management, no less
than the vulgar credulity obtained for them,
will cease to surprise us on maturer consideration.
It could not be a difficult task for them
to give the minds of their patients whatever
bias was best adapted to their purposes.
These credulous beings passed several days
and nights in the temple, and their imagination
could not fail to be powerfully impressed
with what was diligently told them of the
prescriptions and cures of Aesculapius; nor
to retain during their slumbers many lively
impressions of their meditations by day;
their priestly nurses too were neither so
blind to their own interests, nor so careless
of their reputations as to omit the prescribing
of such modes of diet and medical remedies
as were calculated to appease their patients'
sufferings. Besides which, however delusive
and empirical their outward ceremonials and
bold pretensions might have been, we should
remember, that priests, having some acquaintance
with the science of medicine, were generally
selected to officiate on those spots where
the incubitary process[109] was the order
of the day. To this acquaintance were added
the results of daily experience, and the
frequent opportunities which the incessant
demands of the infirm upon their skill afforded
them of correcting previous errors and improving
their practical knowledge: of gradually ascertaining
the various kinds and appearances of human
disorders; and of digesting such data as
would enable them, with the least possible
chance of failure, to prescribe the modes
of cure and treatment suitable to the various
stages and species of the applicant's maladies.
With such means, it would have been not a
little singular if the priests of Aesculapius
had failed in converting the popular veneration
to his credit and their own emolument.
FOOTNOTES:
[89] The Priestess of Apollo, by whom he
delivered oracles. She was called Pythia
from the god himself, who was styled Apollo
Pythius, from his slaying the serpent Python.
The Priestess was to be a pure virgin. She
sat on the covercle or lid of a brazen vessel,
mounted on a tripod, and thence, after a
violent enthusiasm, she delivered his oracles;
i. e. she rehearsed a few ambiguous and obscure
verses, which were taken for oracles.
[90] These words are but ill explained by
the best Greek Lexicographers. Servius ad
Virg., Aen. vii. 88, says: _Incubare dicuntur
proprie hic, qui dormiunt accipienda responsa_.
Tertullian de Anima, C. 49, thence calls
them _Incubatores fanorum_.
[91] Lib. XI. p. 108. Paris, fol. 1620.
[92] Ibid. lib. XVI. p. 761.
[93] De situ orbis, lib. I. cap. 1.
[94] Plutarch apud Agis et Cleomen. Cicero
(de Div. 1. c. 48) probably alludes to this
oracle, when he says, that the Ephori of
Sparta were accustomed to sleep in the temple
of Pasiphae on state emergencies. There was
a similar oracle in the neighbourhood of
Thalame, not fur from Aetylum, sacred to
Ino.
[95] Strabo, lib. VI. p, 284.
[96] Pausanias, 1, 35.
[97] De vita Apoll. Thyan, 11. 37.
[98] Strabo, lib. xvii. p. 801. Anian. Exped.
Alex, vii. 6.
[99] In Egypt lib. I, 25.
[100] Galen de comp. Med. p. Gen v. 2.
[101] Podalirius and Machaon, the two sons
of Esculapius. The state of medicine at the
time of the Trojan war was very imperfect,
as we find exemplified by these two acting
as surgeons general to the Grecian army.
Their simple practice consisted chiefly in
extracting darts or arrows, in staunching
blood by some infusion of bitter herbs, and
sometimes they added charms or incantations;
which seemed to be a poetical way of hinting,
that frequently wounds were healed or diseases
cured in a manner unaccountable by any known
properties they could discover either in
the effects of their rude remedies, or in
the then known powers of the human body to
relieve itself. In Homer's description of
the wound which Ulysses, when young, received
in his thigh from the tusk of an enraged
wild boar, the infusion of blood was stopped
by divine incantations and divine songs,
and some sort of bandage which must have
acted by pressure. If any virtue could have
acted as a charm, the very verse that describes
the wound might have as good a right to such
a claim as any other; but, in what manner
the surgeons of ancient Greece, before the
discovery of the circulation of the blood,
might apply bandages for the purposes here
mentioned, is not easily explained; though
doubtless these bandages must have acted
like a tourniquet, which is now the most
effectual remedy for compressing a wounded
artery, and thereby stopping an hemorrhage.
[102] Alexand. 1050.
[103] Suet. Claid. c. 28.
[104] Strabo. lib. xiii. Pausan. lib. ii.
[105] Scholia ad Plut. v. 621
[106] Aristoph, Plut act. ii, sc. 6, and
iii. sc 2.
[107] Luciani, oper. t. ii. ed Reitzii.
[108] It is often called by antiquaries _Tabella
Marmorea apud Maffaeos_, as it was first
preserved in the collection.
[109] It is somewhat singular, that Cicero's
treatise on divination, as well as the works
of Hippocrates and Galen, should be so destitute
of information on the subject of a mode of
cure which was of such long standing, and
so universally esteemed. From the two last,
one should at least have expected something
more satisfactory: Cos being the birthplace
of the one, and Pergamus of the other.
CHAPTER XII.
ON AMULETS, CHARMS, TALISMANS--PHILTERS,
THEIR ORIGIN AND IMAGINARY EFFICACY, ETC.
Amulets are certain substances worn about
the neck or other parts of the body, under
the superstitious impression of preventing
diseases, of curing, or removing them.
The origin of amulets may be traced to the
most remote ages of mankind. In our researches
to discover and fix the period when remedies
were first employed for the alleviation of
bodily suffering, we are soon lost in conjecture
or involved in fable. We are unable, indeed,
to reach the period in any country, when
the inhabitants were destitute of medical
resources, and even among the most uncultivated
tribes we find medicine cherished as a blessing
and practised as an art. The feelings of
the sufferer, and the anxiety of those about
him, must, in the rudest state of society,
have incited a spirit of industry and research
to procure ease, the modification of heat
and cold, of moisture and dryness; and the
regulation and change of diet and habit,
must intuitively have suggested themselves
for the relief of pain; and when these resources
failed, charms, amulets, and incantations,
were the natural expedients of the barbarians,
ever more inclined to indulge the delusive
hope of superstition than to listen to the
voice of sober reason.
Traces of amulets may be discovered in very
early history, though Dr. Warburton is evidently
in error when he fixes the origin of these
magical instruments to the age of the Ptolomies,
which was not more than three hundred years
before Christ. This assertion is refuted
by Galen, who informs us the Egyptian King
Nechepsus, who lived 630 years before Christ,
had written, that a green jasper cut into
the form of a dragon surrounded with rays,
if applied externally, would strengthen the
stomach and organs of digestion. This opinion,
moreover, is supported by scripture: for
what were the earrings which Jacob buried
under the oak of Sechem, as related in Genesis,
but amulets. And Josephus in his antiquities
of the Jews,[110] informs us that Solomon
discovered a plant efficacious in the cure
of epilepsy, and that he employed the aid
of a charm, for the purposes of assisting
its virtues. The root of the herb was concealed
in a ring, which was applied to the nostrils
of the demoniac; and Josephus remarks that
he saw himself a Jewish priest practise the
art of Solomon with complete success in the
presence of the Emperor Vespasian, his sons
and the tribunes of the Roman army. From
this art of Solomon, exhibited through the
medium of a ring or seal, we have the Eastern
stories which celebrate the seal of Solomon,
and record the potency of his sway over the
various orders of demons or of genii, who
were supposed to be the invincible tormentors
or benefactors of the human race.
Nor were such means confined to dark and
barbarous ages. Theophrastus pronounced Pericles
to be insane in consequence of seeing him
with an amulet suspended from his neck. And
in the declining era of the Roman Empire,
we find this superstitious custom so general
that the Emperor Caracalla was induced to
make a public edict, ordering, that no man
should wear any superstitious amulets about
his person.
All remedies working as it were sympathetically,
and plainly unequal to the effect, may be
termed amulets; whether used at a distance
by another person, or carried immediately
about the patient. By the Jews, amulets were
called _kamea_, and by the Greeks _phylacteries_.
The latins called them _amuleta_ or _ligatura_;
the catholics _agnus dei_, or consecrated
relics; and the natives of Guinea _fetishes_.
Various kinds of substances are employed
by different people, and which they venerate
and suppose capable of preserving them from
danger and infection, as well as to remove
disease when present. Plutarch says of Pericles,
an Athenian general, that when a friend come
to see him, and inquired after his health
he reached out his hand and shewed him his
amulet; by which he meant to intimate the
truth of his illness, and, at the same time,
the confidence he placed in these popular
remedies.
Amulets are still prevalent in catholic countries
at the present day; the Spaniards and Portuguese
maintain their popularity. Among the Jews
they are equally venerated. Indeed, there
are few instances of ancient superstition
some portion of which has not been preserved,
and not unfrequently have they been adopted
by men of otherwise good understanding, who
plead in excuse, that they are innoxious,
cost little, and if they can do no good,
they can do no harm.
Lord Bacon, whom no one can suspect of ignorance,
says, that if a man wear a bone ring or a
planet seal, strongly believing, by that
means, that he might obtain his mistress,
and that it would preserve him unhurt at
sea, or in a battle, it would probably make
him more active and less timid; as the audacity
they might inspire would conquer and bind
weaker minds in the execution of a peculiar
duty.
AMULETS USED BY THE COMMON PEOPLE.
A variety of things are worn about the person
by the common people for the cure of ague;
and, upon whatever principle it may be accounted
for, whether by the imagination or a natural
termination of the disease, many have apparently
been cured by them, where the Peruvian bark,
the boasted specific, had previously failed.
Dr. Willis says that charms resisting agues
have often been applied to the wrist with
success. ABRACADABRA, written in a peculiar
manner, that is, in the form of a cone, it
is said, has cured the ague; the herb lunaria,
gathered by moon-light, has, on some high
authorities, performed surprising cures.
Perhaps it was gathered during the invocating
influence of the following charm, which may
be found in the 12th book, chap. XIV. p.
177 of "Scot's discovery of witchcraft,"
which is headed thus:--
"_Another charme that witches use at
the gathering of their medicinal herbs._"
Haile be thou holy herbe, Growing in the
ground. And in the mount Calvaire First wert
thou found. Thou art good for many a sore,
And healest many a wound, In the name of
sweet Jesus I take thee from the ground.
We are told that Naaman was cured by dipping
seven times in the river Jordan. Certain
formalities were also performed at the pool
of Bethesda. Dr. Chamberlayne's anodyne necklaces,
were, for a length of time, objects of the
most anxious maternal solicitude, until their
occult virtues became lost by the reverence
for them being destroyed; and those which
succeeded them have long since run their
race or nearly so.
The grey limewort was at one time supposed
to have been a specific in hydrophobia--that
it not only cured those labouring under this
disorder, but by carrying it about the person,
it was reputed to possess the extraordinary
power of preventing mad dogs from biting
them. Calvert paid devotions to St. Hubert
for the recovery of his son, who was cured
by this means. The son also performed the
necessary rites at the shrine, and was cured
not only of the hydrophobia "but of
the worser phrensy with which his father
had instilled him." Cramp-rings were
also used; and eelskins to this day are tied
round the legs as a preventive of this spasmodic
affection; and by laying sticks across the
floor, on going to bed, cramp has also been
prevented.
Numerous are the charms and incantations
used at the present day for the removal of
warts, many cases of which are not a little
surprising. And we are told by Lord Verulam,
who is allowed to have been as great a genius
as this country ever produced, that, when
he was at Paris, he had above a hundred warts
on his hands; and that the English ambassador's
lady, then at court, and a woman far above
superstition, removed them all by only rubbing
them with the fat side of the rind of a piece
of bacon, which they afterwards nailed to
a post, with the fat side towards the south.
In five weeks, says my Lord, they were all
removed. The following are his Lordship's
observations, in his own words, relative
to the power of amulets. After deep metaphysical
observations on nature, and arguing in mitigation
of sorcery, witchcraft, and divination, effects
that far outstrip the belief in amulets,
he observes "We should not reject all
of this kind, because it is not known how
far those contributing to superstition, depend
on natural causes. Charms have not the power
from contract with evil spirits, but proceed
wholly from strengthening the imagination:
in the same manner that images and their
influence, have prevailed on religion, being
called from a different way of use and application,
sigils, incantations, and spells."
ECCENTRICITIES, CAPRICES, AND EFFECTS, OF
THE IMAGINATION.
A certain writer, apologizing for the irregularities
of great genii, delivers himself as follows:
"The gifts of imagination bring the
heaviest task upon, the vigilance of reason;
and to bear those faculties with unerring
rectitude or invariable propriety, requires
a degree of firmness and of cool attention,
which does not always attend the higher gifts
of the mind. Yet, difficult as nature herself
seems to have reduced the task of regularity
to genius, it is the supreme consolation
of dullness, to seize upon those excesses,
which are the overflowings of faculties they
never enjoyed."[111] Are not the _gifts
of imagination_ mistaken here for the strength
of passions? Doubtless, where strong passions
accompany great parts, as perhaps they often
do, the imagination may encrease their force
and activity: but, where passions are calm
and gentle, imagination of itself should
seem to have no conflict but speculatively
with reason. There, indeed, it wages an eternal
war; and, if not contracted and strictly
regulated, it will carry the patient into
endless extravagancies. The term patient
is here properly used, because men, under
the influence of imagination, are most truly
distempered. The degree of this distemper
will be in proportion to the prevalence of
imagination over reason, and, according to
this proportion, amount to more or less of
the whimsical; but when reason shall become,
as it were, extinct, and imagination govern
alone, then the distemper will be madness
under the wildest and most fantastic modes.
Thus, one of those invalids, perhaps, shall
be all sorrow for having been most unjustly
deprived of the crown; though his vocation,
poor man! be that of a school-master. Another,
like Horace's madman, is all joy; and it
may seem even cruelty to cure him.
The operations and caprices of the imagination
are various and endless; and, as they cannot
be reduced to regularity or system, so it
is highly improbable that any certain method
of cure should ever be found out for them.
It has generally been thought, that matter
of fact might most successfully be opposed
to the delusions of imagination, as being
proof to the senses, and carrying conviction
unavoidably to the understanding; but we
rather suspect, that the understanding or
reasoning faculty, has little to do in all
these cases: at least so it should seem from
the two following facts, which are by no
means badly attested.
Fienus, in his curious little book, _de Viribus
Imaginationis_, records from Donatus the
case of a man, who fancied his body encreased
to such a size, that he durst not attempt
to pass through the door of his chamber.
The physician believing that nothing could
more effectually cure this error of imagination,
than to shew that the thing could actually
be done, caused the patient to be thrust
forcibly through it: who, struck with horror,
and falling suddenly into agonies, complained
of being crushed to pieces, and expired soon
after.[112]
The other case, as related by Van Swieten,
in his commentaries upon Boerhaave, is that
of a learned man, who had studied, till be
fancied his legs to be of glass: in consequence
of which he durst not attempt to stir, but
was constantly under anxiety about them.
His maid bringing one day some wood to the
fire, threw it carelessly down; and was severely
reprimanded by her master, who was terrified
not a little for his legs of glass. The surly
wench, out of all patience with his megrims,
as she called them, gave him a blow with
a log upon the parts affected; which so enraged
him, that he instantly rose up, and from
that moment recovered the use of his legs.--Was
reason concerned any more here; or was it
not rather one blind impulse acting against
another?
Imagination has, unquestionably, a most powerful
effect upon the mind, and in all these miraculous
cures, is by far the strongest ingredient.
Dr. Strother says, "The influence of
the mind and passions works upon the mind
and body in sensible operations like a medicine,
and is of far the greater force than exercise.
The countenance betrays a good or wicked
intention; and that good or wicked intention
will produce in different persons a strength
to encounter, or a weakness to yield to the
preponderating side." Dr. Brown says,
"Our looks discover our passions, there
being mystically in our faces certain characters,
which carry in them the motto of our souls,
and, therefore, probably work secret effects
in other parts." This idea is beautifully
illustrated by Garth in his Dispensatory,
in the following lines:--
"Thus paler looks impetuous rage proclaim,
And chilly virgins redden into flame. See
envy oft transformed in wan disguise, And
mirth sits gay and smiling in the eyes, Oft
our complexions do the soul declare, And
tell what passions in the features are. Hence
'tis we look the wond'rous cause to find,
How body acts upon impassive mind."
On the power and pleasure of the imagination,
from the pleasures and pains it administers
here below, Addison concludes that God, who
knows all the ways of afflicting us, may
so transport us hereafter with such beautiful
and glorious visions, or torment us with
such hideous and ghastly spectres, as might
even of themselves suffice to make up the
entire heaven or hell of any future being.
DOCTRINE OF EFFLUVIA--MIRACULOUS CURES BY
MEANS OF CHARMS, AMULETS, ETC.
Dr. Willis, in his Treatise on nervous disorders,
does not hesitate to recommend amulets in
epileptic disorders. "Take," says
he, "some fresh peony roots, cut them
into square bits, and hang them round the
neck, changing them as often as they dry."
It is not improbable that the hint was taken
from this circumstance for the anodyne necklaces,
which, some time ago, were in such repute,
as the Doctor, some little way further on,
prescribes the same root for the looseness,
fevers, and convulsions of children, during
the time of teething, mixed, to make it appear
more miraculous, with some elk's hoof.
St. Vitus's dance is said to have been cured
by the afflicted person paying a visit to
the tomb of the saint, near Ulm, every May.
Indeed, there is no little reason in this
assertion; for exercise and change of air
will change many obstinate diseases. The
bite of the tarantula is cured by music;
and this only by certain tunes. Turner, whose
ideas are so extravagantly absurd, where
he asserts, that the symptoms of hydrophobia
may not appear for forty years after the
bite of the dog, and who maintains that "the
slaver or breath of such a dog is infectious;"
and that men bitten by mad dogs, will bite
like dogs again, and die mad; although he
laughs at the anodyne necklaces, argues much
in the same manner. It is not, indeed, so
very strange that the effluvia from external
medicines entering our bodies, should effect
such considerable changes, when we see the
efficient cause of apoplexy, epilepsy, hysterics,
plague, and a number of other disorders,
consists, as it were, in imperceptible vapours.--Blood-stone
(Lapis Aetites) fastened to the arm by some
secret means, is said to prevent abortion.
Sydenham, in the iliac passion, orders a
live kitten to be constantly applied to the
abdomen; others have used pigeons split alive,
applied to the soles of the feet, with success,
in pestilential fevers and convulsions. It
was doubtless the impression that relief
might be obtained by external agents, that
the court of king David advised him to seek
a young virgin, in order that a portion of
the natural heat might be communicated to
his body, and give strength to the decay
of nature. "Take the heart and liver
of the fish and make a smoke, and the devil
shall smell it and flee away." During
the plague at Marseilles, which Belort attributed
to the larvae of worms infecting the saliva,
food, and chyle; and which, he says, "were
hatched by the stomach, took their passage
into the blood, at a certain size, hindering
the circulation, affecting the juices and
solid parts." He advised amulets of
mercury to be worn in bags suspended at the
chest and nostrils, either as a safeguard,
or as means of cure; by which method, through
the _admissiveness_ of the pores, effluvia
specially destructive of all venomous insects,
were received into the blood. "An illustrious
prince," Belort says, "by wearing
such an amulet, escaped the small-pox."
Clognini, an Italian physician, ordered two
or three drachms of crude mercury to be worn
as a defensive against the jaundice; and
also as a preservative against the noxious
vapours of inclement seasons: "It breaks,"
he observes, "and conquers the different
figured seeds of pestilential distempers
floating in the air; or else, mixing with
the air, kills them where hatched."
By others, the power of mercury, in these
cases, has been ascribed to an elective faculty
given out by the warmth of the body, which
draws out the contagious particles. For,
according to this entertained notion, all
bodies are continually emitting effluvia,
more or less, around them, and some whether
they are internal or external. The Bath waters,
for instance, change the colour of silver
in the pocket of those who use them. Mercury
produces the same effect; Tartar emetic,
rubbed on the pit of the stomach, produces
vomiting. Yawning and laughing are infectious;
so are fear and shame. The sight of sour
things, or even the idea of them, will set
the teeth on edge. Small-pox, itch, and other
diseases, are contagious; if so, say they,
mercurial amulets bid fair to destroy the
germ of some complaints when used only as
an external application, either by manual
attrition, or worn as an amulet. But medicated
or not, all amulets are precarious and uncertain,
and in the cure of diseases are, by no means,
to be trusted to.
The Barbary Moors, and generally throughout
the Mahommedan dominions, the people are
strikingly attached to charms, to which,
and nature, they leave the cure of almost
every disorder; and this is the most strongly
impressed upon them from their belief in
predestination, which, according to their
creed, stipulates the evil a man is to suffer,
as well as the length of time it is ordained
he should live upon the land of his forefathers;
consequently they imagine that any interference
from secondary means would avail them nothing,
an opinion said to have been entertained
by William III, but one by no means calculated
for nations, liberty, and commerce; upon
the principle that when the one was entrenched
upon, men would probably be more sudden in
their revenge, and dislike physic and occupation;
and when actuated with religious enthusiasm,
nothing could stand them in any service.
The opinion of an old navy surgeon,[113]
on the subject, is worth recording here.
"A long and intense passion on one object,
whether of pride, love, fear, anger, or envy,
we see have brought on some universal tremors;
on others, convulsions, madness, melancholy,
consumption, hectics, or such a chronical
disorder as has wasted their flesh, or their
strength, as certainly as the taking in of
any poisonous drugs would have done. Anything
frightful, sudden, or surprising, upon soft,
timorous natures, not only shews itself in
the continuance, but produces sometimes very
troublesome consequences--for instance, a
parliamentary fright will make even grown
men _bewray_ themselves, scare them out of
their wits, turn the hair grey. Surprise
removes the hooping cough; looking from precipices
or seeing wheels turn swiftly will give giddiness.
Shall then these little accidents, or the
passions, (from caprice or humour, perhaps,)
produce those effects, and not be able to
do anything by amulets? No; as the spirits,
in many cases, resort in plenty, we find
where the fancy determines, giving joy and
gladness to the heart, strength and fleetness
to the limbs, and violent palpitations. To
amulets, under strong imagination, is carried
with more force to a distempered part, and,
under these circumstances, its natural powers
exert better to a discussion.
"The cures compassed in this manner,"
says our author, "are not more admirable
than many of the distempers themselves. Who
can apprehend by what impenetrable method
the bite of a mad dog, or tarantula, can
produce these symptoms? The touch of a torpedo
numbness? If they are allowed to do these,
doubtless they may the other; and not by
miracles, which Spinoza denies the possibility
of, but by natural and regular causes, though
inscrutable to us. The best way, therefore,
in using amulets, must be in squaring them
to the imagination of patients: let the newness
and surprise exceed the invention, and keep
up the humour by a long scroll of cures and
vouchers; by these and such means, many distempers
have been cured. Quacks again, according
to their boldness and way of addressing (velvet
and infallibility particularly) command success
by striking the fancies of an audience. If
a few, more sensible than the rest, see the
doctor's miscarriages, and are not easily
gulled at first sight, yet, when they see
a man is never ashamed, in time, jump in
to his assistance."
There is much truth and pertinence in some
of the above remarks, and they apply nearly
to the general practice of the present day.
The farces and whims of people require often
as much discrimination on the part of the
physician as the disease itself. Those who
know best how to flatter such caprices, are
frequently the best paid for their trouble.
Nervous diseases are always in season, and
it is here that some professional dexterity
is pardonable. Nature, when uninterrupted,
will often do more than art; but our inability
upon all occasions to appreciate the efforts
of nature in the cure of diseases, must always
render our notion, with respect to the powers
faith, liable to numerous errors and deceptions.
There is, in fact, nothing more natural,
and at the same time more erroneous, than
to lay the cure of a disease to the door
of the last medicine that had been prescribed.
By these means the advocates of amulets and
charms, have ever been enabled to appeal
to the testimony of what they are pleased
to call experience in justification of their
pretensions, and egregious superstitions;
and cases which, in truth, ought to have
been classed, or rather designated, as lucky
escapes, have been triumphantly pulled off
as skilful cures; and thus, medicines and
medical practitioners, have alike received
the meed of unmerited praise, or the stigma
of unjust censure. Of all branches of human
science, medicine is one of the most interesting
to mankind: and, accordingly as it is erroneously
or judiciously cultivated, is evidently conducive
to the prejudice or welfare of the public.
Of how great consequence is it, then, that
our endeavours should be exerted in stemming
the propagation of errors, whether arising
from ignorance, or prompted by motives of
base cupidity, in giving assistance to the
disseminations of useful truths, and to the
perfection of ingenious discoveries.
FOOTNOTES:
[110] Lib. viii. chap. 2. 5.
[111] Langhorne's Life of Mr. Collins
[112] Reverii Praxis Medica, p. 188.
[113] John Ailkin, author of the Navy Surgeon,
1742. Sec Demonologia, p.
64 et seg.
CHAPTER XIII.
ON TALISMANS--SOME CURIOUS, NATURAL ONES,
ETC.
The Egyptian amulets are not so ancient as
the Babylonian talismans, but in their uses
they were exactly similar. Some little figures,
supposed to have been intended as charms,
have been found on several mummies, which,
at various times, have been brought to Europe.
Plutarch informs us that the soldiers wore
rings, on which the representation of an
insect resembling our beetle, was inscribed;
and we learn from Aelian, that the judges
had always suspended round their necks a
small figure of Truth formed of emeralds.
The superstitious belief in the virtues of
talismans is yet far from being extinct,
the Copths, the Arabians, the Syrians, and,
indeed, almost all the inhabitants of Asia,
west of the Ganges, whether Christians or
mahometans, still use them against possible
evils.
There is little distinction between talismans,
amulets and the gree-grees of the Africans
as regards their pretended efficacy; though
there is some in their external configuration.
Magical figures, engraven or cut under superstitious
observances of the characterisms and configurations
of the heavens, are called talismans; to
which astrologers, hermetical philosophers,
and other adepts, attribute wonderful virtues,
particularly that of calling down celestial
influences.[114]
The talismans of the Samothracians, so famous
of old, were pieces of iron formed into certain
images, and set in rings. They were reputed
as preservatives against all kinds of evils.
There were other talismans taken from vegetables,
and others from minerals. Three kinds of
talismans were usually distinguished 1st.
the _astronomical_ known by the signs or
constellations of the heavens engraven upon
them, with other figures, and some unintelligible
characters; 2nd. the _magical_, bearing very
extraordinary figures, with superstitious
words and names of angels unheard of; 3rd.
the _mixt_ talismans, which consist of signs
and barbarous words; but without any superstitious
ones, or names of angels.
It has been asserted and maintained by some
Rabins, that the brazen serpent raised by
Moses in the wilderness, for the destruction
of the serpents that annoyed the Israelites,
was properly a talisman. All the miraculous
things wrought by Apollonius Tyanaeus are
attributed to the virtue and influence of
_talismans_; and that wizard, as he is called,
is even said to be the inventor of them.
Some authors take several Runic medals,--medals,
at least, whose inscriptions are in the Runic
characters,--for talismans, it being notorious
that the northern nations, in their heathen
state, were much devoted to them, M. Keder,
however has shown, that the medals here spoken
of are quite other things than talismans.
It appears from the Evangelists[115] that,
when St. Paul, after he had been shipwrecked,
and escaped to the island of Malta, a viper
fastened on his hand as he was laying a bundle
of sticks, he had gathered, on the fire;
and that, by a miracle, and to the great
astonishment of the spectators, inhabitants
of the island, he not only suffered no harm,
but also cured, by the divine power, the
chief of the island, and a great number of
others, of very dangerous maladies. There
remain still in that island, as so many trophies
gained by the Apostle over that venemous
beast, a great many small stones representing
the eyes and tongues of serpents, and considered
for several centuries past, as powerful amulets
against different sorts of distempers and
poisons. As the virtue of these stones is
still much boasted of by the Maltese, and
as some, on the contrary, maintain that they
are the petrified teeth of a fish called
lamia, it will not be irrelevant here to
relate some observations from the best authors
on this interesting subject, so much to our
purpose.
It is said that those eyes and tongues of
serpents are only found by the Maltese when
they dig into the earth, which is whitish
throughout the island, or draw up stone,
especially about the cave of St. Paul. This
stone is so soft, that, like clay, it may
be cut through with any sharp instrument,
and made to receive easily different figures,
for building the walls of their houses and
ramparts; but, when it has been imbibed with
a sufficient quantity of rain or well water,
it changes into a flint that resists the
cutting of the sharpest instrument: whence
the houses that are built of it in the two
cities, appear as hewn out of one solid rock,
and become harder, the more they are exposed
to the inclemencies of the weather. This
hardness may, with good reason, be ascribed
to the salt of nitre, which contracts a certain
viscidity from the rain wherewith it is mixed,
and which easily penetrates into these stones,
because their substance is spongy and cretaceous,
and adheres to the tongue as hartshorn.
It is in these stones that not only the eyes
and tongues of serpents are found, but also
their viscera and other parts: as lungs,
liver, heart, spleen, ribs, and so resembling
life, and with such natural colours, that
one may well doubt whether they are the work
of nature or art; the figure of the eyes
and tongues is very different. Some are elliptic,
but, for the greater part round: some represent
an hemisphere, others a segment, others an
hyperbola. The glossopetrae are naturally
of a conic figure, representing acute, obtuse,
regular, and irregular cones. They are also
of different colours, especially the eyes;
for some of them are of an ash-colour, others
liver colour, some brown, others blackish;
but these, as most rare, are most esteemed.
Bracelets are frequently made of them and
set in gold: some representing an entire
eye with a white pupil, and these are the
most beautiful. Several are likewise found
of an orange colour.
The virtues attributed by the Maltese to
those eyes and tongues, and to the white
earth which is found in the island, particularly
in St. Paul's cave, and which is kept for
use by the apothecaries, as the American
bole, are very singular; for they reckon
them not only a preservative against all
sorts of poison, and an efficacious remedy
for those who have taken poison, but also
good in a number of diseases. They are taken
internally, infused in water, wine, or in
any other convenient liquor; or let to lie
for some hours in vessels made of the white
earth; or the white earth is taken itself
dissolved in those liquors. The eyes set
as precious stones in rings, and so as to
touch immediately the flesh, are worn by
the inhabitants on the fingers; but the tongues
are fastened about the arm, or suspended
from the neck.
Paul Bucconi, a Sicilian nobleman, treated
this notion of the eyes and tongues of serpents
as a mere vulgar error; and maintains that
they either constitute a particular species
of stone produced in the earth, or in the
stones of the island of Malta, as in their
matrix; or that they are nothing more than
the petrified teeth of some marine fish;
which is also the opinion of Fabius Columna,
Nicholas Steno and other physicians and anatomists.
It seems to this noble author that the glossopetrae
should be classed in the animal kingdom,
because, being burnt, they are changed into
cinders as bones, before they are reduced
into a calx or ashes, whilst calcined stones
are immediately reduced into a calx. He further
says, that the roots of the glossopetrae
are often found broken in different ways,
which is an evident argument that they have
not been produced by nature, in the place
they are digged out of, because nature forms
other fossils, figured entirely in their
matrix, without any hurt or mutilation. Add
to this, that the substance is different
in different parts of the glossopetrae; solid
at the point, less solid at the root, compact
at the surface, porous and fibrous in the
interior: besides, the polished surface,
contrary to the custom of nature, which forms
no stone, whether common or precious, is
polished; and, lastly, the figure that varies
different ways, as well as the size, being
found great, broad, triangular, narrow, small,
very small, pyramidal, straight, curved before,
behind, to the right and to the left, in
form of a saw with small teeth, furnished
with great jags or notches, and frequently
absolutely pyramidal without notches; all
these particulars favour his opinion. But,
as he thence believes he has proved that
the glossopetrae should not be classed amongst
stones, so also what he has said may prove
that they are the natural teeth of those
fishes, which are called, by lithographers,
lamia, aquila, requiem, (shark) etc. and
therefore there scarce remains any reason
for a further doubt on this head.
There are representations of curiosities,
which we shall give an account of from the
Ephemerides of the Curious. It is customary
to see at Batavia, in the island of Java,
the figure of serpents impressed on the shells
of eggs, Andrew Cleyerus, a naturalist of
considerable note, says, that when he was
at Batavia in 1679, he had seen himself,
on the
14th of September, an egg newly laid by a
hen, of the ordinary size, but representing
very exactly, towards the summit of the other
part of the shell, the figure of a serpent
and all its parts, not only the lineaments
of the serpent were marked on the surface,
but the three dimensions of the body were
as sensible as if they had been engraved
by an able sculptor, or impressed on wax,
plaister or some other like matter. One could
see very plainly the head, ears, and a cloven
tongue starting out of the throat; the eyes
were sparkling and resplendent, and represented
so perfectly the interior and exterior of
the parts of the eye, with their natural
colours, that they seemed to behold with
astonishment the eyes even of the spectators.
To account for this phenomenon, it may be
supposed that, the hen being near laying,
a serpent presented itself to her sight,
and that her imagination, struck thereby,
impressed the figure of the serpent on the
egg that was ready to press out of the ovarium.
An egg equally wonderful, was laid by a hen
at Rome on the 14th. of December, 1680. The
famous comet that appeared then on the head
of Andromeda, with other stars, were seen
represented on its shell. Sebastian Scheffer
says, that he had seen an egg with the representation
of an eclipse on it. Signor Magliabecchi,
in his letter to the academy of the Curious,
on the 20th. of October 1682, has these words;
"Last month I had sent me from Rome,
a drawing of an egg found at Tivoli, with
the impression of the sun and the transparent
comet with a twisted tail."
There are also representations of Indian
nuts, or small cocos, with the head of an
ape. The nut has been exactly engraved in
the Ephemerides of the Curious, both as to
size and form, and covered with its shell,
as expressed there by cyphers and other figures
which represent the same nut stripped of
its covering, and exhibiting the head of
an ape. This nut seems pretty much like the
foreign fruit described by Clusius, Exoticorum
lib. a, which John Bauhin (Hist. Plant. Universal
Lib. 3) retaining the description of Clusius,
calls, "a nut resembling the areca,"
and which C. Bauhin (Pinac. lib. II, sect.
6) calls, the fruit of the fourteenth of
Palm-tree, that bears nuts, or a foreign
fruit of the same sort as the areca.
This fruit with its shell, is, as Clusius
says, an inch and a half in length, but is
somewhat more than an inch thick. Its shell
or membraneous covering, is about the thickness
of the blade of a knife, and outwardly of
an ash colour mixed with brown. Clusius was
in the right to say, that the shell of this
nut was formed of several fibrous parts,
but those fibres resemble rather those of
the shell of a coco, than the fibrous parts
of the back of the areca nut. He, moreover,
has very properly observed, that this shell
is armed, at its lower part, with a double
calyx and that the opposite part terminates
in a point; but it is necessary to observe,
that this point is not formed by the prolongation
of the shell, as the figure he has given
of it seems to specify; but that from the
middle of the upper part of the fruit, there
juts out a sort of small needle.
The shell being taken off, the nut is found
to be hard, ligneous, oblong, of unequal
surface, furrowed, and of a chesnut yellow.
One of its extremities is roundish, and the
other, by the reunion and prolongation of
three sorts of tubercles, terminates in a
point; those protuberances being so formed,
that the middlemost placed between the two
others, has the appearance of a nose, and
the two lateral protuberances resemble flat
lips. On each side of that which forms what
we call the nose, a small hole or nook is
perceived, capable of containing a pea; but
does not penetrate deep, and is surrounded
with black filaments, sometimes like eye-brows
and eyelashes, so that the nut on that side
resembles an ape or a hare.
This _lusus naturae_, or sport of nature,
has a very pretty effect, but is oftener
found in stones than other substances. A
great variety of such rare and singular productions
of nature may be seen at the British Museum:
but nothing can be more extraordinary in
this respect than what is related concerning
the agate of Pyrrhus, which represented,
naturally, Apollo holding a lyre, with the
nine muses distinguished each by their attributes.
In all probability, there is great exaggeration
in this fact, for we see nothing of the kind
that comes near this perfection. However,
it is said, that, at Pisa, in the church
of St. John, there is seen, on a stone, an
old hermit perfectly painted by nature, sitting
near a rivulet, and holding a bell in his
hand; and that, in the temple of St. Sophia,
at Constantinople, there is to be seen, on
a white sacred marble, an image of St. John
the Baptist, cloaked with a camel's skin,
but so far defective that nature has given
him but one foot.
There is an instance in the Mercury of France,
for July 1730, of some curious sports of
nature on insects. The rector of St. James
at Land, within a league of Rennes, found
in the month of March, 1730, in the church-yard,
a species of butterfly, about two inches
long, and half-an-inch broad, having on its
head the figure of a death's-head, of the
length of one nail, and perfectly imitating
those that are represented on the church
ornaments which are used for the office of
the dead. Two large wings were spotted like
a pall, and the whole body covered with a
down, or black hair, diversified with black
and yellow, bearing some resemblance to yellow.
These freaks of nature are equally extended
to animate as to inanimate bodies; and the
human species, as well as the brute creation,
affords numerous specimens, not only of redundance
and deficiency in her work, but a variety
of other phenomena not well understood. The
march of intellect, however, it is to be
hoped, will be as successful in this instance,
as in obliterating the hobgoblins of astrologers
and quacks who so long have ruled the destiny
and health of their less sagacious fellow-creatures;--and
when the public shall become persuaded of
the advantages which science may derive from
occurrences similar to those we shall enumerate
in the next chapter, it will be more disposed
to offer them to the consideration of scientific
men.
FOOTNOTES:
[114] The author of a book, entitled "_Talismans
justifies_" pronounces a talisman to
be the seal, figure, character, or image
of a heavenly sign, constellation or planet,
engraven on a sympathetic stone, or on a
metal corresponding to the star, etc. in
order to receive its influences.
[115] Acts of the Apostles, chap. xxviii.
v. 3.
CHAPTER XIV.
ON THE MEDICINAL POWERS ATTRIBUTED TO MUSIC
BY THE ANCIENTS.
The power of music over the human mind, as
well as its influence on the animal creation,
has been variously attested; and its curative
virtues have been no less extolled by the
ancients.[116] Martianus Capella assures
us, that fevers were removed by songs, and
that Asclepiades cured deafness by the sound
of the trumpet. Wonderful indeed! that the
same noise which would occasion deafness
in some, should be a specific for it in others!
It is making the viper cure its own bite.
But, perhaps Asclepiades was the inventor
of the _acousticon_, or ear-trumpet, which
has been thought a modern discovery; or of
the speaking-trumpet, which is a kind of
cure for distant deafness. These would be
admirable proofs of musical power![117] We
have the testimony of Plutarch, and several
other ancient writers, that Thaletas the
Cretan, delivered the Lacedemonians from
the pestilence by the sweetness of his lyre.
Xenocrates, as Martianus Capella further
informs us, employed the sound of instruments
in the cure of maniacs; and Apollonius Dyscolus,
in his fabulous history (Historia Commentitia)
tells us, from Theophrastus's Treatise upon
Enthusiasm, that music is a sovereign remedy
for a dejection of spirits, and disordered
mind; and that the sound of the flute will
cure epilepsy and the sciatic gout. Athenaeus
quotes the same passage from Theophrastus,
with this additional circumstance, that,
as to the second of these disorders, to render
the cure more certain, the flute should play
in the Phrygian mode. But Aulus Gellius,
who mentions this remedy, seems to administer
it in a very different manner, by prescribing
to the flute-player a soft and gentle strain,
_si modulis lenibus_ says he, _tibicen incinet_:
for the Phrygian mode was remarkably vehement
and furious.
This is what Coelius Aurelianus calls _loca
dolentia decantare_, enchanting the disordered
places. He even tells us how the enchantment
is brought about upon these occasions, in
saying that the pain is relieved by causing
a vibration of the fibres of the afflicted
part. Galen speaks seriously of playing the
flute on the suffering part, upon the principle,
we suppose, of a medicated vapour bath.
The sound of the flute was likewise a specific
for the bite of a viper, according to Theophrastus
and Democritus, whose authority Aulus Gellius
gives for his belief of the fact. But there
is nothing more extraordinary among the virtues
attributed to music by the ancients, than
what Aristotle relates in its supposed power
of softening the rigour of punishment. The
Tyrhenians, says he, never scourge their
slaves, but by the sound of flutes, looking
upon it as an instance of humanity to give
some counterpoise to pain, and thinking by
such a diversion to lessen the sum total
of the punishment. To this account may be
added a passage from Jul. Pallus, by which
we learn, that in the _triremes_, or vessels
with three banks of oars, there was always
a _tibicen_, or flute-player, not only to
mark the time, or cadence for each stroke
of the oar, but to sooth and cheer the rowers
by the sweetness of the melody. And from
this custom Quintilian took occasion to say,
that music is the gift of nature, to enable
us the more patiently to support toil and
labour.[118]
These are the principal passages which antiquity
furnishes, relative to the medicinal effects
of music; in considering which, reliance
is placed on the judgment of M. Burette,
whose opinions will come with the more weight,
as he had not only long made the music of
the ancients his particular study, but was
a physician by profession. This writer, in
a dissertation on the subject, has examined
and discussed many of the stories above related,
concerning the effects of music in the cure
of diseases. He allows it to be possible,
and even probable, that music, by reiterated
strokes and vibrations given to the nerves,
fibres, and animal spirits, may be of use
in the cure of certain diseases; yet he by
no means supposes that the music of the ancients
possessed this power in a greater degree
than the modern music, but rather that a
very coarse and vulgar music is as likely
to operate effectually on such occasions
as the most refined and perfect. The savages
of America pretend to perform these cures
by the music and jargon of their imperfect
instruments; and in Apulia, where the bite
of the tarantula is pretended to be cured
by music, which excites a desire to dance,
it is by an ordinary tune, very coarsely
performed.[119]
Baglivi refines on the doctrine of effluvia,
by ascribing his cures of the bite of the
tarantula to the peculiar undulation any
instrument or tune makes by its strokes in
the air; which, vibrating upon the external
parts of the patient, is communicated to
the whole nervous system, and produces that
happy alteration in the solids and fluids
which so effectually contributes to the cure.
The contraction of the solids, he says, impresses
new mathematical motions and directions to
the fluids; in one or both of which is seated
all distempers, and without any other help
than a continuance of faith, will alter their
quality; a philosophy as wonderful and intricate
as the nature of the poison it is intended
to expel; but which, however, supplies this
observation, that, if the particles of sound
can do so much, the effluvia of amulets may
do more.
Credulity must be very strong in those who
believe it possible for music to drive away
the pestilence. Antiquity, however, as mentioned
above, relates that Thaletas, a famous lyric
poet, contemporary with Solon, was gifted
with this power; but it is impossible to
render the fact credible, without qualifying
it by several circumstances omitted in the
relation. In the first place, it is certain,
that this poet was received among the Lacedemonians
during the plague, by command of an oracle:
that by virtue of this mission, all the poetry
of the hymns which he sung, must have consisted
of prayers and supplications, in order to
avert the anger of the gods against the people,
whom he exhorted to sacrifices, expiations,
purifications, and many other acts of devotion,
which, however superstitious, could not fail
to agitate the minds of the multitude, and
to produce nearly the same effects as public
fasts, and, in catholic countries, processions,
as at present, in times of danger, by exalting
the courage, and by animating hope. The disease
having, probably, reached its highest pitch
of malignity when the musician arrived, must
afterwards have become less contagious by
degrees; till, at length, ceasing of itself,
by the air wafting away the seeds of infection,
and recovering its former purity, the extirpation
of the disease was attributed by the people
to the music of Thaletas, who had been thought
the sole mediator, to whom they owed their
happy deliverance.
This is exactly what Plutarch means, who
tells the story; and what Homer meant, in
attributing the curation of the plague among
the Greeks, at the siege of Troy, to music:
With hymns divine the joyous banquet ends,
The Poeans lengthen'd till the sun descends:
The Greeks restor'd, the grateful notes prolong;
Apollo listens and approves the song.[120]
For the poet in these lines seems only to
say, that Apollo was rendered favourable,
and had delivered the Greeks from the scourge
with which they were attacked, in consequence
of Chriseis having been restored to her father,
and of sacrifices and offerings.
M. Burette thinks it easy to conceive, that
music may be really efficacious in relieving,
if not in removing, the pains of sciatica;
and that independent of the greater or less
skill of the musician. He supposes this may
be effected in two different ways: first,
by flattering the ear, and diverting the
attention; and, secondly, by occasioning
oscillations and vibrations of the nerves,
which may, perhaps, give motions to the humours,
and remove the obstructions which occasion
this disorder. In this manner the action
of musical sounds upon the fibres of the
brain and animal spirits, may sometimes soften
and alleviate the sufferings of epileptics
and lunatics, and calm even the most violent
fits of these two cruel disorders. And if
antiquity affords examples of this power,
we can oppose to them some of the same kind
said to have been effected by music, not
of the most exquisite sort. For not only
M. Burette, but many modern philosophers,
physicians, and anatomists, as well as ancient
poets and historians, have believed, that
music has the power of affecting, not only
the mind, but the nervous system, in such
a manner as will give a temporary relief
in certain diseases, and, at length, even
operate a radical cure.
In the Memoirs of the Academy of Sciences
for 1707 and 1708, we meet with many accounts
of diseases, which, after having resisted
and baffled all the most efficacious remedies
in common use, had, at length, given way
to the soft impressions of harmony. M. de
Mairan, in the Memoirs of the same Academy,
1737, reasons upon the medicinal powers of
music in the following manner:--"It
is from the mechanical and involuntary connexion
between the organ of hearing, and the consonances
excited in the outward air, joined to the
rapid communication of the vibrations of
this organ to the whole nervous system, that
we owe the cure of spasmodic disorders, and
of fevers attended with a delirium and convulsions,
of which our Memoirs furnish many examples."
The late learned Dr. Branchini, professor
of physic at Udine, collected all the passages
preserved in ancient authors, relative to
the medicinal application of music, by Asclepiades;
and it appears from this work that it was
used as a remedy by the ancient Egyptians,
Hebrews, Greeks, and Romans, not only in
acute, but chronical disorders. This writer
gives several cases within his own knowledge,
in which music has been efficacious; but
the consideration as well as the honour of
these, more properly belong to _modern_ than
to ancient music.
Music, of all arts, gives the most universal
pleasure, and pleases longest and oftenest.
Infants are charmed with the melody of sounds,
and old age is animated by enlivening notes.
The Arcadian shepherds drew pleasure from
their reeds; the solitude of Achilles was
cheered by his lyre; the English peasant
delights in his pipe and tabor; the mellifluous
notes of the flute solace many an idle hour;
and the charming of snakes and other venomous
reptiles, by the power of music, is well
attested among the Indians. "Music and
the sounds of instruments," says Vigneul
de Marville, "contribute to the health
of the body and mind; they assist the circulation
of the blood, they dissipate vapours, and
open the vessels, so that the action of perspiration
is freer." The same author tells a story
of a person of distinction, who assured him,
that once being suddenly seized with a violent
illness, instead of a consultation of physicians,
he immediately called a band of musicians,
and their violins acted so well upon his
inside, that his bowels became perfectly
in tune, and in a few hours were harmoniously
becalmed.
Farinelli, the famous singer, was sent for
to Madrid to try the effect of his magical
voice on the king of Spain. His Majesty was
absorbed in the deepest melancholy; nothing
could excite an emotion in him; he lived
in a state of total oblivion of life; he
sat in a darkened chamber, entirely given
up to the most distressing kind of madness.
The physicians at first ordered Farinelli
to sing in an outer room; and for the first
day or two this was done, without producing
any effect on the royal patient. At length
it was observed, that the king, awakening
from his stupor, seemed to listen; on the
next day tears were seen starting from his
eyes: the day after he ordered the door of
his chamber to be left open, and at length
the perturbed spirit entirely left our modern
Saul, and the _medicinal_ music of Farinelli
effected what medicine itself had denied.
"After food," says Sir William
Jones,[121] "when the operations of
digestion and absorption gives so much employment
to the vessels, that a temporary state of
mental repose, especially in hot climates,
must be found essential to health, it seems
reasonable to believe that a few agreeable
airs, either heard or played without effort,
must have all the good effects of sleep,
and none of its disadvantages; putting, as
Milton says, '_the soul in tune_' for any
subsequent exertion; an experiment often
made by myself. I have been assured by a
credible witness, that two wild antelopes
often used to come from their woods to the
place where a more savage beast, Serajuddaulah,
entertained himself with concerts, and that
they listened to the strains with the appearance
of pleasure, till the monster, in whose soul
there was no music, shot one of them to display
his archery." A learned native told
Sir William Jones that he had frequently
seen the most venomous snakes leave their
holes upon hearing tunes on a flute, which,
as he supposed, gave them peculiar delight.
Of the surprising effects of music, the two
following instances, with which we shall
close these remarks, are related in the history
of the Royal Academy of Society of Paris.
A famous musician, and great composer was
taken ill of a fever, which assumed the continued
form, with a gradual increase of the symptoms.
On the second day he fell into a very violent
delirium, almost constantly accompanied by
cries, tears, terrors, and a perpetual watchfulness.
The third day of his delirium one of those
natural instincts, which make, as it is said,
sick animals seek out for the herbs that
are proper to their case, set him upon desiring
earnestly to hear a little concert in his
chamber. His physician could hardly be prevailed
upon to consent to it. On hearing the first
modulations, the air of his countenance became
serene, his eyes sparkled with a joyful alacrity,
his convulsions absolutely ceased, he shed
tears of pleasure, and was then possessed
for music with a sensibility he never before
had, nor after, when he was recovered. He
had no fever during the whole concert, but,
when it was over, he relapsed into his former
condition.
The fever and delirium were always suspended
during the concert, and music was become
so necessary to the patient, that at night
he obliged a female relation who sometimes
sat up with him, to sing and even to dance,
and who, being much afflicted, was put to
great difficulty to gratify him. One night,
among others, he had none but his nurse to
attend him, who could sing nothing better
than some wretched country ballads. He was
satisfied to put up with that, and he even
found some benefit from it. At last ten days
of music cured him entirely, without other
assistance than of being let blood in the
foot, which was the second bleeding that
was prescribed for him, and was followed
by a copious evacuation.
This account was communicated to the Academy
by M. Dodart, who had it well authenticated.
The second instance of the extraordinary
effect of music is related of a dancing-master
of Alais, in the province of Languedoc. Being
once over-fatigued in Carnival time by the
exercise of his profession, he was seized
with a violent fever, and on the fourth or
fifth day, fell into a lethargy, which continued
upon him for a considerable time. On recovering
he was attacked with a furious and mute delirium,
wherein he made continual efforts to jump
out of bed, threatened, with a shaking head
and angry countenance, those who attended
him, and even all that were present; and
he besides obstinately refused, though without
speaking a word, all the remedies that were
presented to him. One of the assistants bethought
himself that music perhaps might compose
a disordered imagination. He accordingly
proposed it to his physician, who did not
disapprove the thought, but feared with good
reason the ridicule of the execution which
might still have been infinitely greater,
if the patient should happen to die under
the operation of such a remedy.
A friend of the dancing master, who seemed
to disregard the caution of the physician,
and who could play on the violin, seeing
that of the patient hanging up in the chamber,
laid hold of it, and played directly for
him the air most familiar to him. He was
cried out against more than the patient who
lay in bed, confined in a straight jacket;
and some were ready to make him desist; when
the patient, immediately sitting up as a
man agreeably surprised, attempted to caper
with his arms in unison with the music; and
on his arms being held, he evinced, by the
motion of his head, the pleasure he felt.
Sensible, however, of the effects of the
violin, he was suffered by degrees to yield
to the movement he was desirous to perform,--when,
strange as it may appear, his furious fits
abated. In short, in the space of a quarter
of an hour, the patient fell into a profound
sleep, and a salutary crisis in the interim
rescued him from all danger.
FOOTNOTES:
[116] Dr. Burney's History of Music.
[117] It has been asserted by several moderns,
that deaf people can hear best in a great
noise; perhaps to prove that Greek noise
could do nothing which the modern cannot
operate as effectually: and Dr. Willis in
particular tells us of a lady who could hear
only while a drum was beating, in so much
that her husband, the account says, hired
a drummer as her servant, in order to enjoy
the pleasures of her conversation.
[118] Many of the ancients speak of music
as a recipe for every kind of malady, and
it is probable that the Latin was _praecinere_,
to charm away pain, _incantare_ to enchant,
and our own word _incantation_, came from
the medical use of song.
[119] M. Burette, with Dr. Mead, Baglivi,
and all the learned of their time throughout
Europe, seem to have entertained no doubt
of this fact, which, however, philosophical
and curious enquirers have since found to
be built upon fraud and fallacy. Vide Serrao,
_della Tarantula o vero falangio di Puglia._
[120] Pope's translation of the Iliad, Book
1.
[121] See a curious Dissertation on the musical
modes of the Hindoos by Sir W. Jones.
CHAPTER XV.
PRESAGES, PRODIGES, PRESENTIMENTS, ETC.
The common opinion of comets being the presages
of evil is an old pagan superstition, introduced
and entertained among Christians by their
prejudice for antiquity; and which Mr. Bayle
says is a remnant of pagan superstition,
conveyed from father to son, ever since the
first conversion from paganism; as well because
it has taken deep root in the minds of men,
as because Christians, generally speaking,
are as far gone in the folly of finding presages
in every thing, as infidels themselves. It
may be easily conceived how the pagans might
be brought stedfastly to believe that comets,
eclipses, and thunderstorms, were the forerunners
of calamities, when man's strong inclination
for the marvellous is considered, and his
insatiable curiosity for prying into future
events, or what is to come to pass. This
desire of peeping into futurity, as has already
been shown, has given birth to a thousand
different kinds of divination, all alike
whimsical and impertinent, which in the hands
of the more expert and cunning have been
made most important and mysterious tools.
When any one has been rogue enough to think
of making a penny of the simplicity of his
neighbours, and has had the ingenuity to
invent something to amuse, the pretended
faculty of foretelling things to come, has
always been one of the readiest projects.
From hence always the assumption of judiciary
astrology. Those who first began to consult
the motions of the heavens, had no other
design in view, than the enriching their
minds with so noble a knowledge; and as they
had their genius bent on the pursuit of useful
knowledge, they never dreamed of converting
astrology or a knowledge of the stars to
the purpose of picking the pockets of the
credulous and ignorant, of whose blind side
advantage was taken by these sideral sages
to turn them to account by making them believe
that the doctrine of the stars comprehended
the knowledge of all things that were, or
are, or ever shall be; so that every one,
for his money, might come to them and have
their fortune told.
The better to gull the world, the Star-gazers
assert that the heavens are the book in which
God has written the destiny of all things;
and that it is only necessary to learn to
read this book, which is simply the construction
of the stars, to be able to know the whole
history of what is to come to pass. Very
learned men, Origen and Plotinus among the
rest, were let into the secret, and grew
so fond of it, that the former,[122] willing
to support his opinion by something very
solid, catches at the authority of an Apocryphal
book, ascribed to the patriarch Joseph, where
Jacob is introduced speaking to his twelve
sons: "I have read in the register of
heaven what shall happen to you and your
children."[123] But comets were the
staple commodity that turned principally
to account. In compliance, however, with
the impressions of fear which the strangeness
and excessive length of these stars made
upon mankind, the Astrologers did not hesitate
to pronounce them of a malign tendency; and
the more so when they found they had, by
this means, made themselves in some degree
necessary, in consequence of the impatient
applications that were made to them as from
the mouth of an oracle, what particular disaster
such and such a comet portended.
Eclipses furnished more frequent occasions
for the exercise of their talent. From this
worthy precedent of Judicial Astrology, others
took the hint and invented new modes of divination,
such as Geomancy, Chiromancy, Onomancy, and
the like; till the world by degrees became
so overrun with superstition, that the least
trifle was converted into a presage or presentiment;
and the more so when this kind of knowledge
became the business of religion; and when
the substance of divine worship consisted
in the ordinances of Augurs who, to make
themselves necessary in the world, were obliged
to keep up and quicken men's apprehensions
of the wrath of God, took special care to
cultivate comets, and bring it into a proverb,
that "so many comets so many calamities."
They knew, as Livy expresses it, that it
was best to fish in troubled waters, where,
speaking of a contagious distemper, which,
from the country villages, spread over the
city, occasioned by an extraordinary drought
in the year of Rome 326, he observes how,
at last, it infected the mind,[124] by the
management of those who lived in the superstition
of the people; so that nothing was to be
seen or heard except some new fangled ceremony
or other in every corner. "The devil,"
as Bayle says, "who had a hopeful game
on't, and saw superstition the surest way
to get himself worshipped under the name
of the false gods, in a hundred various ways,
all criminal and abominable in the sight
of the sovereign Lord of heaven and earth,
never failed, on the appearance of any rare
meteor, or uncommon star, to exert his imposing
arts, and make idolaters believe, they were
the signs of divine wrath, and that they
were all undone unless they appeased their
gods by sacrifices of men and brute beasts."
Politicians have also lent a helping hand
to give presages a reputation, as an excellent
scheme, either to intimidate the people,
or to raise their drooping spirits. Had the
Roman soldiers been free thinkers, Drusus,
the son of Tiberius, had not been so fortunate
as to quell a desperate mutiny among the
legions of Pannonia, who utterly refused
to obey his commands; but an eclipse, which
critically intervened, broke their refractory
spirits to such a degree, that Drusus, who
managed their panic fear with great dexterity
and address, did what he liked with them.
An eclipse of the moon put the army of Alexander
the Great into such a consternation, some
days before the battle of Arbela, that the
soldiers, under the impression that heaven
was against them, were very reluctant to
advance; and their devotion turning to downright
disobedience, Alexander commanded the Egyptian
astrologers, who were the deepest versed
in the mystery of the stars, to give their
opinions of this eclipse in the presence
of all the officers of his army. Without
giving themselves much trouble to explain
the physical cause which it was their interest
to conceal from the people, the wise men
declared that the sun was on the side of
the Grecians, and the moon for the Persians;
and that this planet was never in an eclipse,
but it threatened them with some mighty disaster:
of this they quoted several ancient examples
among the kings of Persia, who, after an
eclipse, had always found their gods unpropitious
in the day of battle. "Nothing,"
says Quintus Curtius,[125] "is so effectual
as superstition for keeping the vulgar under.
Be they ever so unruly and inconstant, if
once their minds are possessed with the vain
visions of religion, they are all obedience
to the soothsayer, whatever becomes of the
general." The answer of the Egyptian
astrologers being circulated among the soldiers,
restored their confidence and their courage.
On another occasion Alexander, just before
he passed the river Granicus, observing the
circumstance of time, which was the month
Desius, reckoned unfortunate to the Macedonians
from all antiquity, it made the soldiers
melancholy; he immediately ordered this dangerous
month to be called by the name of that which
preceded it, well knowing what power and
influence vain religious scruples have over
little and ignorant minds. He sent private
orders to Aristander his chief soothsayer,
just offering up a sacrifice for a happy
passage, to write on the liver of the victim
with a liquor prepared for that purpose,
that the gods had "granted the victory
to Alexander." The notice of this miracle
filled the men with invincible ardour; and
now they rent the air with acclamations,
exclaiming that the day was their own, since
the gods had vouchsafed them such plain demonstrations
of their favour. The history, indeed, of
this mighty conqueror, affords more such
examples of artifice, though he always affected
to conquer by mere dint of bravery. But what
is still more extraordinary, this very hero,
who palmed so often such tricks upon others,
was himself caught in his turn, as being
well as exceedingly superstitious by fits.
We say nothing of Themistocles,[126] who,
in the war between Xerxes and the Athenians,
despairing to prevail upon his countrymen
by force of reasoning to quit their city,
and betake themselves to sea, set all the
engines of religion to work; forged oracles,
and procured the priests to circulate among
the people, that Minerva had fled from Athens,
and had taken the way which led to the port.
Philip of Macedon, whose talent lay in conquering
his enemies by good intelligence, purchased
at any price, had as many oracles at command
as he pleased; and hence Demosthenes justly
suspecting too good an understanding between
Philip and the Delphian priestess, rallied
her with so much acrimony upon her partiality
to that prince. It is equally obvious how
the same reasons of state, which kept up
the popular superstition for other prodigies,
should take care to encourage it with regard
to comets and other celestial appearances.
Panegyrists have also done their parts to
promote the superstition of presages, as
well as the flattering of poets and orators.
When a hero is to be found and extolled,
they exclaim, that _all nature adores him;
that she exerts her utmost powers to serve
him; that she mourns at his misfortunes,
promises him long before hand to the world;
and when the world, by its sins, is unworthy
to possess him longer, heaven, which calls
him home, hangs out new lights, etc._ With
this hyperbole M. Balzac regaled Cardinal
Richelieu, adding, that _to form such a minister,
universal nature was on the stretch; God
gives him first by promise, and makes him
the expectation of ages_. For this he was
attacked by the critics, but he defended
himself; alleging, that other panegyrics
had gone some notes higher: he, for example,
among the ancients, who said of certain great
souls that _all the orders of heaven were
called together to fancy a fine destiny for
them_, and that illustrious nation who wrote
that _the eternal mind was wrapt in deep
contemplation, and big with the vast design,
when it conceived such a genius as Cardinal
Hippolito d'Este_. Why could not this same
writer have thought of one example more,
such as that of the priest who told the Emperor
Constantine that _divine Providence, not
content with qualifying him for the empire
of the world, had formed virtues in his soul,
which should entitle him to reign in heaven
with his only son_. Thus have flatterers
seized the most surprising natural effects
to enhance their hero's glory, and make their
court to great men. The poets of the time
of Augustus vied with each other in persuading
the world that the murder of Julius Caesar
was the cause of all the prodigies that followed.
Horace, for instance, in one of his odes,
attempts to prove that the overflowings of
rivers were reckoned among bad presages;
and pretends that the Tiber had not committed
all those ravages, but in complaisance to
his wife Ilia, who was bent on the death
of his kinsman Caesar; and that all the other
calamities which subsequently afflicted or
threatened the Roman empire, were the consequences
of his assassination. If Virgil may be credited,[127]
the sun was so troubled at the death of Caesar
that it went into deep mourning, and so obscured
his beams, that the world was alarmed lest
it never should appear again. In the mean
time, no sooner was the comet observed, which
followed this murder, than another set of
flatterers pretended that it was Caesar's
soul received into the order of the Gods;
and they dedicated a temple[128] to the comet,
and set up the image of Caesar with a star
on his forehead.
It appears from the sermons of the ancient
fathers, that the Christians of that time
believed they gave great relief to the moon
in an eclipse, by raising hideous shouts
to the skies, which they imagined recovered
her out of her fainting fit, and without
which she must inevitably have expired. St.
Ambrose, the author of the 215th sermon _de
tempore_, bound up with those of St. Austin,
and St. Eloy, Bishop of Noyon, declaim particularly
against this abuse. It appears also from
the Homilies of St. Chrysostom, St. Basil,
St. Austin, and others, that the Christians
of their days drew several kinds of presages
from persons sneezing at critical times;
from meeting a cat, a dog, or an ill-looking
(squinting) woman, a maiden, one blind of
an eye, or a cripple; on being caught by
the cloak on stepping out of a door, or from
a sudden catch in one's joint or limb.
St. Eloy tells his people plainly, that whoever
pays attention to what he meets at his first
going out or coming in, or to any particular
voice, or to the chirping of a bird, is so
far a Pagan. Indeed, all these, and innumerable
others of the same description of superstitious
among Christians, are remnants of ancient
paganism; as they have been denounced by
the censures of popes, provincial councils,
synodical decrees, and other grave authorities.
And, though there were not such a cloud of
witnesses, there would be no difficulty in
proving the disease of pagan origin. For,
independent of those who preached the gospel
of our Saviour, having never promulgated
such notions, we learn from several ancient
authorities, that the Gentiles had all these
superstitions in the highest regard. It was
one general opinion among them, that the
eclipses of the moon were the consequence
of certain magic words by which sorcerers
could wrench her from the skies, and drag
her near enough the earth to cast a frothy
spittle on their herbs--one of the principal
ingredients in their incantations. To rescue
the moon from the supposed torture she was
in, and to frustrate the charm, it was necessary
to prevent her from hearing the magic words,
by drowning in noise and hideous outcries,
for which purpose the people used to assemble
during an eclipse of the moon with _rough_
music, such as frying pans, brazen vessels,
old tin kettles, etc. According to Pietro
della Voile, the Persians keep up the same
ridiculous ceremony to this day. It is likewise,
according to Tavernier, observed in the kingdom
of Tunquin, where they imagine the moon to
be, at that time, struggling with a dragon.
It is to the same source that we owe the
imaginary raging heat of the dog-star--the
pretended presages of several evils ascribed
to eclipses, and all the allusions of astrology.
In a treatise written by Abogard, Bishop
of Lyons, in 833, composed to undeceive a
world of people, who were persuaded that
there were enchanters who could command thunder,
and hail, and tempest, to destroy the fruits
of the earth; and that they drove a great
trade by this mystery with the people of
a certain country called Magonia, who came
once a year, sailing in large fleets through
the air, to freight with the blighted corn,
for which they paid down ready money to the
enchanters. So little was this matter doubted,
that one day the bishop had enough to do
to save three men and a woman from being
stoned to death, the people insisting they
had just fallen overboard from one of these
aerial ships.
We do not here examine whether, in those
days, the people literally were more superstitious
and credulous than in the days of paganism.
It is enough to say, that they were of very
easy belief; and hence men began to write
their histories in the style of romance,
mixing up a thousand fables with the deeds
of great men, such as Roland, nephew to Charlemagne;
which so suited the taste of the age, that
no book would afterwards go down in any other
style--witness, for instance, the Manual
of Devotions by James de Voragine, archbishop
of Genoa, composed towards the latter end
of the thirteenth century; and in which Melchior
Canus, a learned Spanish bishop, is so scandalized
in his eleventh book of Common Places. Another
doctor of divinity,[129] speaking of the
depraved state of the times, says, "It
was the error, or rather folly, of some of
the ancients, to think, that in writing the
actions of illustrious men, the style must
sink, unless they mixed up with it the ornaments,
for so they called them, of poetical fiction,
or something of this sort; and, consequently,
thus blended truth with fable." This
being the prevailing fashion of the times,
we are inclined to believe, that in the histories
of the crusades, many apocryphal subjects
are introduced, which ought, consequently,
to be read _cum grano salis_. This is decidedly
the opinion of Pere Maimbourg,[130] who,
after the relation of the battle of Iconium,
won by Frederick of Barbarossa, 1190, says,
"What was chiefly wonderful after this
battle, was the conqueror's sustaining little
or no loss, which most people ascribed to
the particular protection of St. Victor and
St. George, names oftenest invoked in the
Christian army, which many of them said they
saw engaging at the head of the squadrons.
Whether in reality there might be something
in it extraordinary, which has often happened,
as the Scriptures inform us; or whether,
by often hearing of celestial squadrons appearing
at the battle of Antioch in the first crusade,
warm imaginations possessed with the belief,
and penetrated with these ideas, formed new
apparitions of their own, but sure it is,
that one Louie Helfenstein, a gentleman of
reputation, and far from a visionary, affirmed
to the emperor, on his oath, and on the vow
of a pilgrim devoted to the holy sepulchre
and the crusade, that _he often saw St. George
charge at the head of the squadrons, and
put the enemy to flight_; which was afterwards
confirmed by the Turks themselves, owning
that they saw some troops in white charge
in the first ranks in the Christian army,
though there were really none of that livery.
No one, I know, is bound (continues P. Maimbourg)
to believe visions of this kind, subject
for the most part to notorious illusion:
but I know too, that an historian is not
of his own authority, to reject them, especially
when supported by such remarkable testimony.
"And though he be at liberty to believe
or not, yet he has no regret, by suppressing
them, to deprive the reader of his liberty,
when he meets with passages of this kind,
of judging as he thinks fit." This reflection
(says Bayle) from so celebrated an historian,
not suspected of favouring the Hugonot incredulity,
is a strong presumption on my side.
The abuse of presentiments has been carried
to the very Scriptures. We are told, that
the manner of Tamerlane giving his blessing
to his two sons, by bowing down the head
of the elder, and chucking the youngest under
the chin, was a presage of the elevation
of the latter in prejudice to the former,
was grounded on the 48th chapter of Genesis,
where Jacob is represented laying his right
hand on the head of the younger, forseeing
by inspiration that he would be the greater
of the two. Meanwhile there is a difference
between the two benedictions. The Tartar,
wholly destitute of the knowledge of future
events, did not diversify the motion of his
hands, on purpose to establish a presage;
and God never vouchsafing this knowledge
to infidels, did not guide his hands in a
particular manner to form a presage of what
should befal his children;--whereas Jacob,
on the contrary, filled with the spirit of
prophecy, whereby he saw the fortunes of
his children, directed his words and actions
according to this knowledge; by which means
both became presages.
Presages, presentiments, and prodigies, might
be multiplied ad infinitum. Whoever reads
the Roman historians will be surprised at
their number, and which frequently filled
the people with the most dreadful apprehensions.
It must be confessed, that some of these
seem altogether supernatural; while much
the greater part only consist of some of
the uncommon productions of nature, which
superstition always attributed to a superior
cause, and represented as the prognostications
of some impending misfortunes. Of this class
may be reckoned the appearance of two suns;[131]
the nights illuminated by rays of light;
the views of fighting armies; swords and
spears darting through the air; showers of
milk, of blood, of stones, of ashes, or of
fire; and the birth of monsters, of children,
or of beasts who had two heads; or of infants
who had some feature resembling those of
the brute creation. These were all dreadful
prodigies which filled the people with inexpressible
astonishment, and the whole Roman empire
with an extreme perplexity; and whatever
unhappy event followed, repentance was sure
to be either caused or predicted by them.
FOOTNOTES:
[122] Euseb. Praep. Evang. l. 6. c. 9.
[123] Legi in tabulis coeli quaecunque contingent
vobis et Feliis vestris.
[124] Nec corpora modo affecta tabo, sed
animos quoque multiplex religio, et pleraque
externa invasit, novos ritus sacrificando
vaticinandoque, inferentibus in domos, quibus
quaestui sunt capti superstitione animi.
L. 4, dec. 1.
[125] Tacit, Annal. lib. 1, et ib. 4, cap.
10.
[126] Plutarch in his life.
[127] Georg. l. 1.
[128] Suetonius in vita Caesaris.
[129] Petseus, in Galfredo Monimetensi.
[130] Hist. Crusade, l. 5.
[131] Nothing is more easy than to account
for these productions, which have no relation
to any events, no more than comets, that
may happen to follow them. The appearance
of two suns has frequently happened in England,
as well as in other places, and is only caused
by the clouds being placed in such a situation
as to reflect the image of that luminary;
nocturnal fires, inflamed spears, fighting
armies, were no more than what we call aurora
borealis, northern lights, or inflamed vapours
floating in the air; showers of stones, of
ashes, or of fire, were no other than the
effects of the eruptions of some volcano
at a considerable distance. Showers of milk
were only caused by some quality in the air
condensing and giving a whitish colour to
the water, etc.
CHAPTER XVI.
PHENOMENA OF METEORS, OPTIC DELUSIONS, SPECTRA,
ETC.
The meteors known to the ancients were called
[Greek: Lampdes Pithoi] Bolides, Faces, Globi,
etc. from particular differences in their
shape and appearance, and sometimes under
the general term of comets. In the Philosophical
Transactions, they are called, indiscriminately,
fire-balls, or fiery meteors; and names of
similar import have been applied to them
in the different languages of Europe. The
most material circumstances observed of such
meteors may be brought under the following
heads: 1. Their general appearance. 2. Their
path. 3. Their shape or figure. 4. Their
light and colour. 5. Their height. 6. The
noise with which they are accompanied. 7.
Their fire. 8. Duration, 9. Their velocity.
Under these different heads meteors have
been investigated by the scrutinizing of
philosophy, and many superstitious notions,
long entertained concerning them, entirely
exploded. Meteoric phenomena, it has been
demonstrated, all proceed from one common
cause--irregularity in the density of the
atmosphere. When the atmospheric fluid is
homogenous and of equal density, the rays
of light pass without obstruction or alteration
in their shape or direction; but when they
enter from a rarer into a denser medium,
they are refracted or bent out of their course;
and this with greater or less effect according
to the different degrees of density in the
media, or the deviation of the ray from the
perpendicular. If the second medium be very
dense in proportion, the ray will be both
refracted and reflected; and the object from
which it proceeds, will assume a variety
of grotesque and extraordinary shapes, and
it will sometimes appear as in a reflection
from a concave mirror, dilated in size, and
changed in situation.
The following striking effects are known
to proceed from this simple cause.
The first is the mirage, seen in the desert
of Africa. M. Monge, a member of the National
Institute, accompanied the French army into
Egypt. In the desert, between Alexandria
and Cairo, the mirage of the blue sky was
inverted, and so mingled with the sand below,
as to impart to the desolate and arid wilderness
an appearance of the most rich and beautiful
country. They saw, in all directions, green
islands, surrounded with extensive lakes
of pure and transparent water. Nothing could
be conceived more lovely and picturesque
than this landscape. On the tranquil surface
of the lakes, the trees and houses, with
which the islands were covered, were strongly
reflected with vivid hues, and the party
hastened forward to enjoy the cool refreshments
of shade and stream, which these populous
villages preferred to them. When they arrived,
the lake, on whose bosom they floated, the
trees, among whose foliage they were embowered,
and the people who stood on the shore inviting
their approach, had all vanished, and nothing
remained but an uniform and irksome desert
of sand and sky, with a few naked huts and
ragged shrubs. Had they not been undeceived
by their nearer approach, there was not a
man in the French army who would not have
sworn, that the visionary trees and lakes
had a real existence in the midst of the
desert.
The same appearance precisely was observed
by Dr. Clarke at Raschid, or Rosetta. The
city seemed surrounded by a beautiful sheet
of water, and so certain was his Greek interpreter,
who was acquainted with the country, of this
fact, that he was quite indignant at an Arab,
who attempted to explain to him, that it
was a mere optical delusion. At length, they
reached Rosetta in about two hours, without
meeting any water; and, on looking back on
the sand they had just crossed, it seemed
to them, as if they had just waded through
a vast blue lake.
A similar deception takes place in northern
climates. Cities, battlements, houses, and
all the accompaniments of populous places,
are seen in desolate regions, where life
goes out, and where human foot has never
trod. When approached they vanish, and nothing
remains but a rugged rock, or a misshapen
iceberg.
Captain Scoresby, in his voyage to the arctic
regions, on the coast of East Greenland,
constantly saw those visionary cities, and
gives some highly curious plates of the appearances
they presented. They resembled the real cities
seen on the coast of Holland, where towers,
and battlements, and spires, "bosomed
high in tufted trees," rise on the level
horizon, and are seen floating on the surface
of the sea. Among the optic deceptions noticed
by Captain Scoresby, was one of a very singular
nature. His ship had been separated by the
ice, from that of his father for some time;
and he was looking for her every day, with
great anxiety. At length, one evening, to
his utter astonishment, he saw her suspended
in the air in an inverted position, traced
on the horizon in the clearest colours, and
with the most distinct and perfect representation.
He sailed in the direction in which he saw
this visionary phenomenon, and actually found
his father's vessel by its indication. He
was divided from him by immense masses of
icebergs, and at such a distance that it
was quite impossible to have seen the ship
in her actual situation, or seen her at all,
if her spectrum, or image, had not been thus
raised several degrees above the horizon
into the sky, by this most extraordinary
refraction, in the same manner as the sun
is often seen, after he is known to have
set, and actually sunk far below the line
of direct vision.
The _Fata Morgana_ are further illustrations
of this optic delusion. This phenomenon is
seen at the Pharo of Messina, in Sicily,
under certain circumstances. The spectator
must stand with his back to the east, on
an elevated place behind the city, commanding
a view of the bay, and having the mountains,
like a wall, opposite to him, to darken the
back ground of the picture; no wind must
be abroad to ruffle the surface of the sea;
and the waters must be pressed up by currents,
as they sometimes are, to a considerable
height in the middle of the strait, and present
a slight convex surface. When all these circumstances
occur, as soon as the sun rises over the
heights of the Calabrian shore, and makes
an angle of 45 degrees with the horizon,
all the objects on the shore at Reggio are
transferred to the middle of the strait,
and seen distinctly on the surface of the
water, forming an immoveable landscape of
rocks, trees, and houses, and a moveable
one of men, horses, and cattle; these are
formed into a thousand separate compartments,
presenting most beautiful and ever varying
pictures of animate and inanimate nature,
on the swelling surface of the water, broken
by the currents, present separate plates
of convex mirrors to reflect them; they then
as suddenly disappear, as the broad aquatic
mirror of the current passes on.
Sometimes the atmosphere is so dense that
the objects are seen, like Captain Scoresby's
ship, snatched up into the regions of the
air, thirty or forty feet above the level
of the sea; and in cloudy weather, nearer
to the surface, bordered with vivid prismatic
colours. Sometimes colonades of temples and
churches, with cross-crowned spires, are
all represented as floating on the sea, and
by a sudden change of representation, the
pillars are curved into arcades, and the
crosses are bent into crescents, and all
the edifices of the floating city undergo
the most extraordinary and fantastic mutations.
All these images are so distinct, and produce
objects seemingly as palpable as they are
visible, as sensible to touch as to sight,
that the people of the country are firmly
persuaded of their reality. They consider
the edifices as the enchanted palaces of
the fairy Morgana, and the moving objects
as living things which inhabit them. Whenever
the optic phenomenon occurs, they meet together
in crowds, with an intense curiosity, mixed
with awe and apprehension, which is not removed
by an acquaintance with those natural causes,
by which Mr. Swinburn and other foreign travellers,
who have witnessed the scene, are able to
account for it.
The lakes of Ireland are equally susceptible
of producing those vivid delusions, and the
imagination of the people, as lively as that
of the Sicilians, clothes them with an equal
reality. There is scarcely a loch in that
country, in which the remains of cities have
not been at various times discovered; and
many men have been met with who would solemnly
swear they saw, and who no doubt did see,
representations of them in certain states
of the atmosphere. The most celebrated is
that which occurs on the lake of Killarney.
This romantic sheet of water is bounded on
one side by a semi-circle of rugged mountains,
and on the other by a flat morass, and the
vapour generated in the mass, and broken
by the mountains, continually represent the
most fantastic objects; and often those on
shore are transferred to the water, like
the Fata Morgana.
Many of the rocks are distinguished for their
marked and lengthened echoes, and the structure,
which in acoustics reflects sounds to the
ear, from a point from whence they did not
come, reflects images on the eye, from a
place very different from where the objects
stood which produced them. Frequently men
riding along shore, are seen as if they were
moving across the lake, and this has given
rise to the story of O'Donougho. This celebrated
chieftain was, according to the tradition
of the country, endued with the gift of magic;
and, on one occasion, his lady requested
him to change his shape, that she might see
a proof of it. He complied, on condition
that she would not be terrified, as such
an effect on her must prove fatal to him.
Her mind failed her, however, in the experiment,
and at the sight of some horrible figure
he assumed, she shrieked, and he disappeared
through the window of his castle, which overhung
the lake. From that time he continues an
enchanted being, condemned to ride a horse,
shod with silver, over the surface of the
lake, till his horse's shoes are worn out.
On every May morning he is visible, and crowds
assemble on the shore to see him. Many affirm
they have seen him; and one person relates
many particulars of his apparition, that
the deception must have proceeded from some
real object, a man riding along shore, and
transferred to the middle of the water, by
the optic delusion of the Fata Morgana.
But perhaps the most wonderful, and apparently
preternatural effect arising from this cause,
is the _spectre of the Hartz Mountains_ in
Hanover. There is one particular hill, called
the Brocken, in which he appears, terrifying
the credulous, and gratifying the curious
to a very high degree. The most distinct
and interesting account is given by Mr. Hawe,
who himself was a witness to it. He had climbed
to the top of the mountain thirty times,
and had been disappointed, but he persevered,
and was at length highly gratified. The sun
rose about four o'clock in a serene sky,
free from clouds, and its rays passed without
obstruction, over another mountain, called
the Heinschoe. About a quarter past five
he looked round to see if the sky was clear,
and if there was any chance of his witnessing
what he so ardently wished, when suddenly
he saw the Achtermanshoe, a human figure
of monstrous size turned towards him, and
glaring at him. While gazing on this gigantic
spectre with wonder mixed with an irrepressible
feeling of awe and apprehension, a sudden
gust of wind nearly carried off his own hat,
and he clapped his hand to his head to detain
it, when to his great delight the colossal
spectre did the same. He then changed his
body into a variety of attitudes, all which
the figure exactly imitated, but at length
suddenly vanished without any apparent cause,
and again as suddenly appeared. He called
the landlord of the inn, who had accompanied
him, to stand beside him, and in a little
time two correspondent figures, of dilated
size, appeared on the opposite mountain.
They saluted them in various ways by different
movements of their bodies, all which the
giants returned with perfect politeness,
and then vanished. A traveller now joined
Mr. Hawe and the innkeeper, and they kept
steadily looking for their aerial friends,
when they suddenly appeared again three in
number, who all performed exactly the same
movements as their correspondent spectators.
Having continued thus for some time, appearing
and disappearing alternately, sometimes faintly,
and sometimes more distinct, they at length
faded away not again to return. They proved,
however, that the preternatural spectre,
which had so long filled the country with
awe and terror, was no unreal being, still
less an existence whose appearance suspended
the ordinary laws of God and Nature; that,
on the contrary, it was the simple production
of a common cause, exhibited in an unusual
manner, but as regular an effect, and as
easy to be accounted for, as the reflection
of a face in a looking glass.
This constitution of the atmosphere, and
its capability of dilating objects, and altering
their position by reflection and refraction,
will easily account for many phenomena which
have been considered miraculous and preternatural
in early ages, by the ignorant; and in our
own, by the weak and superstitious. Such
was probably the origin of the crosses seen
by Constantine and Constantius in the first
ages of Christianity, and such was that of
the cross which appeared in the sky in France,
to which so many bore attestation. A large
cross of wood, painted red, had been erected
beside the church, as a part of the ceremony
they were performing. In the winter, when
the air is most frequently condensed by cold,
and its different strata of various degrees
of tenacity, on a clear evening after rain,
when particles of humidity, still floating
in the air gives it greater power of reflection
and refraction, when the sun was setting,
and his horizontal beams found most favourable
to produce meteoric phenomena, the spectrum
of this wooden cross was cast on the concave
surface of some atmospheric mirror, and so
reflected back to the eyes of the spectators
from an opposite place, retaining exactly
the same shape and proportions, but dilated
in size, and changed in position; and it
was moreover tinged with red, the very colour
of the object of which it was the reflected
image. This delusive appearance continued
till the sun was so far sunk below the horizon,
as to afford no more light to illumine the
object, and the image ceased when the rays
were no longer distinctly reflected.
CHAPTER XVII.
ELUCIDATION OF SOME ANCIENT PRODIGIES.
Many of the prodigies recorded by the ancients,
admit of a natural explanation; and an attentive
examination will show that a small number
of causes, which may be discerned and developed,
will serve for the explanation of nearly
the whole of them. There are two reasons
for our believing accounts of prodigies:--
1. The number and agreement of these accounts,
and the confidence to which the observers
and witnesses are entitled.
2. The possibility of dissipating what is
wonderful, by ascertaining any one of the
principal causes which might have given to
a natural fact a tinge of the marvellous.
Now, as regards the first reason, the ancients
have recorded various occurrences: for instance,
a shower of quicksilver at Rome is mentioned
by Dion Cassius, in the year 197 of our era,
and a similar event is related under the
reign of Aurelian. If we attend to phenomena
taking place in our time, such as a shower
of blood, tremendous hail stones weighing
a pound each, and containing a stone within
them; showers of frogs, and other almost
unaccountable occurrences, we must consign
them to, "the annals in which science
has inserted the facts, she has recognized
as such, without as yet pretending to explain
them."
Respecting the second reason, the deceptive
appearance which nature sometimes assumes,
the exaggeration, almost unavoidable, by
partially informed observers, of the details
of a phenomenon, or its duration; improper,
ill-understood, or badly translated expressions,
figurative language, and a practical style;
erroneous explanations of emblematical representations;
apologues and allegories adopted as real
facts. Such are the causes, which, singly
or together, have frequently swollen with
prodigious fictions the page of history;
and it is by carefully removing this envelope,
that elucidations must be sought of what
has hitherto been improperly and disdainfully
rejected. A few examples will illustrate
these several positions.
The river Adonis being impregnated, during
certain seasons, with volumes of dust raised
from the red soil of that part of Mount Libanus
near which it flows, gave rise to the fable
of the periodical effusion of the blood of
Adonis. There is a rock near the Island of
Corfu, which bears the resemblance of a ship
under sail: the ancients adapted the story
to the phenomenon, and recognised in it the
Phenician ship, in which Ulysses returned
to his country, converted into stone by Neptune,
for having carried away the slayer of his
son Polyphemus. A more extensive acquaintance
with the ocean, has shown that this appearance
is not unique; a similar one on the coast
of Patagonia, has more than once deceived
both French and English navigators; and rock
Dunder, in the West Indies, bears a resemblance,
at a distance equally illusive. There is
another recorded by Captain Hardy, in his
recent travels in Mexico, near the shore
of California; and the "story of the
flying Dutchman," is founded on a similar
appearance at the Cape of Good Hope, connected
with a tradition which has been long current
there among the Dutch colonists. Another
instance is afforded by the chimaera, the
solution of which enigma, as given by Ovid,
is so fully substantiated by the very intelligent
British officer who surveyed the Caramania
a few years since. Scylla the sea monster,
which devoured six of the rowers of Ulysses,
M. Salverte, a recent compiler on the marvellous,
is tempted to regard as an overgrown polypus
magnified by the optical power of poetry,
though we are disposed to give the credit
to an alligator, or its mate, a crocodile;
and this occurrence is not so fictitiously
represented, as it is supposed to be.
MAGICAL PRETENSIONS OF CERTAIN HERBS, ETC.
In the enumeration of plants possessing magical
properties, Pliny mentions those which, according
to Pythagoras, have the property of concealing
water. Elsewhere, without having resource
to magic, he assigns to hemp an analogous
quality. According to him, the juice of this
plant poured into water becomes suddenly
inspissated and congealed. It is probable
enough, that he indicated a species of mallow,
the hemp-leaved marsh-mallow, of which the
mucilaginous juice produces this effect to
a certain point, and an effect which may
also be obtained from every vegetable as
rich in mucilage.
Of vegetable productions, many produce intoxicating
effects, such as berries of the night-shade,[132]
scammony, and various species of fungi. These
unquestionably have been made subservient
to demonological purposes, which, with the
ignorant, have passed off for supernatural
agency. The priests, to whom the little comparative
learning of the dark ages attached, knew
well how to impose upon the credulous: but
imposition was not always their object; an
extent of benevolence prevailed which contemplated
the relief of their fellow creatures afflicted
with sickness.
It was maintained by the Egyptians that,
besides the gods, there were many demons
which communicated with mortals, and which
were often rendered visible by certain ceremonies
and songs; that genii exercised an habitual
and powerful influence over every particle
of matter; that thirty-six of these beings
presided over the various members of the
human body; and thus, by magical incantations,
it might be strengthened, or debilitated,
afflicted with, or delivered from disease.
Thus, in every case of sickness, the spirit
presiding over the afflicted part, was first
duly invoked. But the magicians did not trust
solely to their vain invocations; they were
well acquainted with the virtues of certain
herbs, which they wisely employed in their
attempts at healing. These herbs were greatly
esteemed: such, for instance, as the _cynocephalia_,
or, as the Egyptians themselves termed the
_asyrites_,[133] which was used as a preventive
against witchcraft; and the nepenthes which
Helen presented in a potion to Menelaus,
and which was believed to be powerful in
banishing sadness, and in restoring the mind
to its accustomed, or even to greater, cheerfulness,
were of Egyptian growth. But whatever may
be the virtues of such herbs, they were used
rather for their magical, than for their
medicinal qualities; every cure was cunningly
ascribed to the presiding demons, with which
not a few boasted that they were, by means
of their art, intimately connected.
There can be no question, as attested by
the earliest records, that the ancients were
in possession of many potent remedies. Melampus
of Argos, the most ancient Greek physician
with whom we are acquainted, is reputed to
have cured one of the Argonauts of barrenness,
by exhibiting the rust of iron dissolved
in wine, for the space of ten days. The same
physician used hellebore as a purgative on
the daughters of King Proteus, who were labouring
under hypochondriasis or melancholy. Bleeding
was also a remedy of very early origin, and
said to have been first suggested by the
hypopotamus or sea horse, which at a certain
time of the year was observed to cast itself
on the sea shore, and to wound itself among
the rocks or stones, to relieve its plethora.
Podalerius, on his return from the Trojan
war, cured the daughter of Damaethus, who
had fallen from a height, by bleeding her
in both arms. Opium, the concrete juice of
the poppy, was known in the earliest ages;
and probably it was opium that Helen mixed
with wine, and gave to the guests of Menelaus,
under the expressive name of _Nepenthe_,
to drown their cares, and encrease their
hilarity. This conjecture, in a considerable
degree, is supported from the fact, that
Homer's Nepenthe was procured from the Egyptian
Thebes, whence the tincture of opium, according
to the nomenclature of the pharmacopeia about
fifty years ago, and still known by this
name in the older writers; and, if Dr. Darwin
may be credited, the Cumaean Sybil never
sat on the portending tripod without first
swallowing a few drops of juice of the cherry-laurel.
There is every reason to believe that the
Pagan priesthood were under the influence
of some narcotic preparation during the display
of their oracular power, but the effects
produced would seem rather to resemble those
of opium, or perhaps of stramonium, than
of prussic acid, which the cherry-laurel
water is known to contain.
The priests of the American Indians, says
Monardur, whenever they were consulted by
the chief gentlemen, or _caciques_, as they
are called, took certain leaves of the tobacco,
and cast them into the fire, and then received
the smoke thus produced by them into their
mouths, which caused them to fall upon the
ground. After having remained in this position
for some time in a state of stupor, they
recovered, and delivered the answers, which
they pretended to have received during the
supposed intercourse with the world of spirits.
The narcotic, or sedative influence of the
garden radish, was known in the earliest
times. In the fables of antiquity we read,
that, after the death of Adonis, Venus, to
console herself, and repress her desires,
lay down upon a bed of lettuces. The sea
onion, or squill, was administered by the
Egyptians, in cases of dropsy, under the
mystic title of the eye of Typhon. The practices
of incision and scarification, were employed
in the Greek camp at the siege of Troy; and
the application of spirits to wounds, was
likewise understood; for we find Nestor applying
a poultice compounded of cheese, onion, and
meal, mixed up with the wine of Pramnos,
to the wounds of Machaon.
To bring some inactive substance into repute,
as promising some extraordinary, nay, wonderful
medicinal properties, requires only the sanction
of a few great names; and when once established
on such a basis, ingenuity, argument, and
even experiment, may open their otherwise
powerful batteries in vain. In this manner
all the quack medicines, ever held in any
estimation, got into repute. And the same
vulgar prejudice, which induces people to
retain an accustomed remedy upon bare assertion
and presumption, either of ignorance or partiality,
will, in like manner, oppose the introduction
of any innovation in practice with asperity,
and not unfrequently with a quantum sufficit
of scrutiny and abuse, unless, indeed, it
be supported by authorities of still greater
weight and consideration.
The history of many articles of diet, as
well as medicine, amply prove how much their
reputation and fate have depended upon some
authority or other. Ipecacuanha had been
imported into England for many years, before
Helvetius, under the patronage of Louis XIV,
succeeded in introducing it into practice
in France; and, to the Queen of Charles II.,
we are indebted for the introduction of that
popular beverage, tea, into England. Tobacco
has suffered as many variable vicissitudes
in its fame and character. It has been successively
opposed and commended by physicians, condemned
and praised by priests and kings, and proscribed
and protected by governments, until, at length,
this once insignificant production of a little
island, has succeeded in propagating itself
through every climate and country. Nor is
the history of the potatoe less remarkable
or less strikingly illustrative of the imperious
influence of authority. This valuable plant,
for upwards of two centuries, received an
unprecedented opposition from vulgar prejudice,
which all the philosophy of the age was unable
to dissipate, until Louis XIV. wore a bunch
of the flowers of the potatoe, in the midst
of his court, on a day of mirth and festivity.
The people then, for the first time, obsequiously
acknowledged its utility, and began to express
their astonishment at the apathy which had
so long prevailed with regard to its general
cultivation.
Another instance may be furnished of overbearing
authority, in giving celebrity to a medicine,
or in depriving it of that reputation to
which its virtues entitle it, is seen in
the history of the Peruvian bark. This famed
medicine was imported into Spain by the Jesuits,
where it remained seven years, before a trial
was given to it. A Spanish priest was the
first to whom it was administered, in the
year 1639, and even then its use was extremely
limited; and it would undoubtedly have sunk
into oblivion, but for the supreme power
of the church of Rome, under whose protecting
auspices it gained a temporary triumph over
the passions and prejudices which opposed
its introduction. Pope Innocent X. at the
intercession of the Cardinal de Lugo, who
was formerly a Spanish Jesuit, ordered the
bark to be duly examined, and on the favourable
report, which was the result of this examination,
it immediately rose into high favour and
celebrity.
The root of the male fern, a nostrum for
the cure of the tape worm, was secretly retailed
by Madame Noufleur. This secret was purchased
by Louis XV. for a considerable sum of money.
It was not until this event that the physicans
discovered, that the same remedy had been
administered in the same complaint by Galen.
The history of popular remedies in the cure
of gout, is equally illustrative of this
subject. The Duke of Portland's celebrated
powder was nothing less than the _deacintaureon_
of Caelius Aurelianus, or the _antidotus
et duobus centaurae generibus_ of Aetius,
the receipt for which, a friend of his grace
brought with him from Switzerland, into which
country, in all likelihood, it had been introduced
by the early medical writers, who had transcribed
it from the Greek volumes, soon after their
arrival into the western part of Europe.[134]
The active ingredient of a no less celebrated
preparation for the same complaint, the _Eau
medicinale_ de Husson, a medicine brought
into fashion by M. de Husson, a military
officer in the service of Louis XVI has been
discovered to be the meadow saffron. Upon
searching after and trying the properties
of this herb, it was observed that similar
effects in the cure of the gout were ascribed
to a certain plant, called hermodaclyllus,
by Oribasius (an eminent physician of the
4th century) and Aetius, who flourished at
Alexandria towards the end of the 5th century,
but more particularly by Alexander of Tralles,
a physician of Asia Minor, whose prescription
consisted of hermodaclyllus, ginger, pepper,
cummin seed, aniseed, and scammony, which
he says will enable those who take it to
walk immediately. On an inquiry being immediately
set on foot for the discovery of this unknown
plant, a specimen of it was procured at Constantinople,
and it actually did turn out to be a species
of meadow saffron, the colchicum autumnale
of Linnaeus.
The celebrated fever powder of Dr. James
was evidently not his original composition,
but an Italian nostrum, invented by a person
of the name of Lisle; a receipt for the preparation
of which is to be found at length in Colborne's
complete English Dispensary for the year
1756. The various secret preparations of
opium which have been extolled as the discovery
of modern days, may be recognised in the
works of ancient authors. The use of prussic
acid in the cure of consumptions, lately
suggested by M. Magendie, at Paris, is little
more than the revival of the Dutch practice
in this disorder; for Linnaeus informs us,
that distilled laurel water was frequently
used in the cure of pulmonary consumption.[135]
We shall conclude these observations with
a few remarks on what are termed _patent
medicines, nostrums_, or _quack medicines_,
and their boasted pretensions in general.
There is, in fact, but one state of perfect
health, yet the deviations from this state,
and the general species of diseases are almost
infinite. Hence it will easily be understood,
that in the classes of medical remedies,
there must likewise he a great variety, and
that some of them are even of opposite tendencies.
Such are both the warm and cold bath considered
as medical remedies. Though opposite to each
other in their sensible effects, each of
them manifests its medical virtues, yet only
in such a state of the body as will admit
of using it with advantage. From these premises,
it is evident that an universal remedy, or
one that possesses healing powers for the
_cure of all diseases_, is, in fact, a non-entity,
a mere delusion, the existence of which is
physically impossible, as the mere idea of
such a thing involves a contradiction. How,
for instance, can it he conceived, that the
same remedy should be capable of restoring
the tone of the muscular fibres, when they
are relaxed, and also have the power of relaxing
them when they are too rigid; that it should
coagulate the fluids when in a state of resolution,
and again attenuate them when they are too
viscid; that it should moderate the nerves
when in a state of preturnatural sensibility,
and likewise restore them to their proper
degree of irritability when they are in a
contrary state.
The belief in an universal remedy has long
been abandoned, even among the vulgar, and
long exploded in those classes of society,
which are not influenced by prejudice, or
tinctured with fanaticism. It is, however,
sincerely to be regretted, that the daily
press continues to be inundated with advertisements;
and that the lower, and less informed class
of the community, are still imposed upon
by a set of privileged impostors, who frequently
puzzle the intelligent to decide, whether
the impudence or the industry with which
they endeavour to establish the reputation
of their respective poisons, be the most
prominent feature in their character. In
illustration of this last observation, it
may further be observed, that most of the
nostrums advertised as cough drops, etc.,
are preparations of opium, similar, but inferior,
to the well-known paregoric elixir of the
shops, but disguised and rendered more deleterious
by the addition of heating and aromatic gums.
The injury which may be occasioned by the
indiscriminate employment of such medicines
might be very serious and irremediable, as
is well known to every person possessing
the smallest portion of medical knowledge.
The boasted, though groundless pretensions
of certain illiterate empirics to cure diseases
which have eluded the skill and penetration
of the faculty, is another absurdity into
which people of good common sense have been
most woefully entrapped. The lessons of experience
ought to prove the most useful, as purchased
at the greatest trouble and expense; but
if people choose to run over a precipice
with their eyes open, they leave themselves
nothing to regret, and the public less to
lament, by their fall.
It was justly observed by the sagacious and
intelligent Bacon, "that a reflecting
physician is not directed by the opinion
which the multitude entertain of a favourite
remedy, but that be must be guided by a sound
judgment; and consequently, he is led to
make very important distinctions between
those things which only by their name pass
for medical remedies, and others, which in
reality possess healing powers." We
avail ourselves of the quotation, as it indirectly
censures the conduct of certain medical practitioners,
who do not scruple to recommend what are
vulgarly called patent and other quack preparations,
the composition of which is carefully concealed
from the public. Having acquired their unmerited
reputation by mere chance, and being supported
by the most refined artifices, in order to
delude the unwary, we are unable to come
at the evidence of perhaps nine tenths of
those who have experienced their fatal effects,
and who are now no longer in a situation
to complain.
From universal remedies or panaceas, to nostrums
and specifics, such, for instance, as pretend
to cure the _same_ disease in every patient,
is easy and natural. With the latter also,
impositions of a dangerous tendency are often
practised. It may be asked how far they are
practicably admissible, and in what cases
they are wholly unavailing? The answer is
not difficult. In those diseases, which in
every instance depend upon the same cause,
as in agues, the small-pox, measles, and
many other contagious distempers, the possibility
of specifics, in a limited sense, may be
rationally, though hypothetically admitted.
But in either maladies, the causes of which
depend on a variety of other concurrent circumstances,
and the cure of which in different individuals,
frequently requires very opposite remedies,
as in dropsy, various species of colds, the
almost infinite variety of consumptions,
etc. a specific remedy is an imposition upon
the common sense of mankind. Those who are
but imperfectly acquainted with the various
causes from which the same disorder originates
in different individuals, can never entertain
such a vulgar and dangerous notion. They
will easily perceive, how much depends upon
ascertaining with precision, the seat and
cause of the complaint, before any medicine
can be presented with safety or advantage:--even
life and death are, we are sorry to add,
too often decided by the first steps. Different
constitutions, different symptoms, and stages
of disease, all require more or less a separate
consideration. What is more natural than
to place confidence in a remedy, which has
been known to afford relief to others in
the same kind of disposition? The patient
anxiously enquires after a person who has
been afflicted with the same malady; he is
eager to know the remedy that has been used
with success; his friend or neighbour imparts
to him the wished for intelligence; he is
determined to give the medicine a fair trial,
and takes it with confidence. From what has
been stated, it will not be difficult to
conceive, that if his case does not exactly
correspond with that of his friend, any _chance_
remedy may prove extremely dangerous, if
not fatal.
Hence it becomes evident, that the results
are not to be depended upon, nor the chance
risked. The physician is obliged to employ
all his sagacity, supported by his own experience,
as well as by that of his predecessors; and
yet he is often under the necessity of discovering,
from the progress of the disease, what he
could not derive from the minutest research.
How then can it be expected, that a novice
in the art of healing should be more successful,
when the whole of his method of cure is either
the impulse of the moment, or the effect
of his own credulity? It may be therefore
truly said, that life and death are frequently
entrusted to chance!
The late Dr. Huxham, a physician of some
eminence in his day, when speaking of Asclepiades,
the Roman empiric, says: "This man from
a _declaimer_ turned _physician_, and set
himself up to oppose all the physicians of
his time; and the novelty of the thing bore
him out, as it frequently doth the quacks
of the present time; and ever _will while
the majority of the world are fools_."
In another place, he curiously contrasts
the too timid practice of some regular physicians,
with the hazardous treatment, which is the
leading feature of quacks: "The timid,
low, insipid practice with some, is almost
as dangerous as the bold, unwarranted empiricism
of others; time and opportunity, never to
be regained, are often lost by the former;
while with the latter, by a _bold push_,
you are sent off the stage in a moment."
From what has been said, it may confidently
be asserted, that a universal remedy still
remains as great a desideratum as the philosopher's
stone; and either can only obtain credit
with the weak-minded, the credulous, or the
fanatic. One of the most unfortunate circumstances
in the history of such medicines, is the
insinuating and dangerous method, by which
they are puffed into notice. And as we have
little of the beneficial effects which they
daily must produce, by being promiscuously
applied, people attend only to the extraordinary
instances, perhaps not one in fifty, where
they have afforded a temporary or apparent
relief. It is well known, that the more powerful
a remedy is, the more permanent and dangerous
must be its effects on the constitution;
especially if it be introduced like many
patent medicines, by an almost indefinite
encrease of the dose. There is another consideration,
not apt to strike those who are unacquainted
with the laws of the animal economy. When
it is intended to bring about any remarkable
change in the system of an organized body,
such means are obliged to be employed as
may contribute to produce that change without
affecting too violently the living powers,
or without carrying their action to an improper
length. Indeed, the patient may be gradually
habituated to almost any stimulus, but at
the expence of a paralytic stroke on an impaired
constitution. Such are among the melancholy
effects of imposture and credulity! "Were
it possible," says a learned authority,
"to collect all the cases of sacrifices
to the mysterious infatuation, it is probable
that their number would exceed the enormous
havoc made by gunpowder or the sword."
Another reputable writer makes the following
terse remark on this subject: "As matters
stand at present," says he, "it
is easier to cheat a man out of his life,
than of a shilling: and almost impossible
either to detect or punish the offender.
Notwithstanding this, people still shut their
eyes, and take every thing upon trust, that
is administered by any pretender to medicine,
without daring to ask him a reason for any
part of his conduct. Implicit faith, every
where else the object of ridicule, is still
sacred here."
FOOTNOTES:
[132] The berries of the belladonna or deadly
nightshade, produce, when eaten, a furious
madness, followed by sleep, which lasts for
twenty-four hours. Such drugs as produce
mental stupefaction, without impairing the
physical powers, may have given rise to the
accounts of men being transformed into brutes,
so frequent in what are denominated the fabulous
writers, while the evanescent but exquisite
joys of an opposite description, an anticipation
of what implicit obedience would ensure them
for ever, produced blind, furious, devoted
adherents to any philosophical speculator,
who would venture to try so desperate an
experiment.
[133] The Rowan tree or Mountain ash, is
used by the Scottish peasantry with the same
view; and a small twig of it is sewed up
in the cow's tail, to preserve the animal
and its produce from the influence of witches
and warlocks.
[134] See Pharmacologia, by Dr. Paris.
[135] Vide "Amenetates Academicae,"
vol. 4.
CHAPTER XVIII.
THE PRACTICE OF OBEAH, OR NEGRO WITCHCRAFT--CHARMS--THEIR
KNOWLEDGE OP VEGETABLE POISONS--SECRET POISONING.
Obeah, a pretended sort of witchcraft, arising
from a superstitious credulity, prevailing
among the negroes, has ever been considered
as a most dangerous practice, to suppress
which, in our West India colonies, the severest
laws have been enacted. The Obeah is considered
as a potent and most irresistible spell,
withering and paralyzing, by indiscribable
terrors and unusual sensations, the devoted
victim. One negro who desires to be revenged
on another, and is afraid to make an open
and manly attack on his adversary, has usually
recourse to this practice. Like the witches'
cauldron in Macbeth, it is a combination
of many strange and ominous things. Earth
gathered from a grave, human blood, a piece
of wood fastened in the shape of a coffin,
the feathers of the carion crow, a snake
or alligator's tooth, pieces of egg-shell,
and other nameless ingredients, compose the
fatal mixture. The whole of these articles
may not be considered as absolutely necessary
to complete the charm, but two or three are
at least indispensable.[136]
It will of course be conceived, that the
practice of OBEAH can have little effect,
unless a negro is conscious that it is practised
upon him, or thinks so;[137] for, as the
whole evil consists in the terrors of a superstitious
imagination, it is of little consequence
whether it be practised or not, if he only
imagines that it is. But if the charm fails
to take hold of the mind of the proscribed
person, another and more certain expedient
is resorted to--the secretly administering
of poison to him. This saves the reputation
of the sorcerer, and effects the purpose
he had in view.
An OBEAH man or woman (for it is practised
by both sexes) is a very dangerous person
on a plantation; and the practice of it is
made felony by law, punishable with death
where poison has been administered, and with
transportation where only the charm has been
used. But numbers have, and may be swept
off, by its infatuation, before the crime
is detected; for, strange as it may appear,
so much do the negroes stand in awe of those
_Obeah_ professors, so much do they dread
their malice and their power, that, though
knowing the havoc they have made, and are
still making, they are afraid to discover
them to the whites; and, others perhaps,
are in league with them for sinister purposes
of mischief and revenge.
A negro, under the infatuation of Obeah,
can only be cured of his terrors by being
made a Christian: refuse him this boon, and
he sinks a martyr to imagined evils. A negro,
in short, considers himself as no longer
under the influence of this sorcery when
he becomes a christian. And instances are
known of negroes, who, being reduced by the
fatal influence of Obeah to the lowest state
of dejection and debility, from which there
were little hopes of recovery, have been
surprisingly and rapidly restored to health
and cheerfulness by being baptized christians.
The negroes believe also in apparitions,
and stand in great dread of them, conceiving
that they forbode death, or some other great
evil, to those whom they visit; in short,
that the spirits of the dead come upon the
earth to be revenged on those who did them
evil when in life. Thus we see, that not
only from the remotest antiquity, but even
among slaves and barbarians, the belief in
supernatural agencies has been a popular
creed, not, in fact, confined to any distant
race or tribe of people; and, what is still
more surprising, there is a singular and
most remarkable identity in the notion or
conception of their infernal ministry.
In the British West Indies, the negroes of
the windward coast are called _Mandingoes_,
a name which is here taken as descriptive
of a peculiar race or nation. There seems
reason, however, to believe, that a _Mandingo_
or _Mandinga_-man, is properly the same with
an Obi-man. A late traveller in Brazil gives
us the following anecdotes of the _Mandinga_
and _Mandingueiro_ of the negroes in that
country. "One day," says Mr. Koster,
"the old man (a negro named Apollinario)
came to me with a face of dismay, to show
me a ball of leaves, tied up with a plant
called _cypo_, which he had found under a
couple of boards, upon which he slept, in
an out-house. The ball was about the size
of an apple. I could not imagine what had
caused his alarm, until he said that it was
_Mandinga_ which had been set for the purpose
of killing him; and he bitterly bewailed
his fate, that at his age, any one should
wish to hasten his death, and to carry him
from this world, before our lady thought
fit to send him. I knew that two of the black
women were at variance, and suspicion fell
upon one of them, who was acquainted with
the old _Mandingueiro_ of Engenho Velho;
therefore she was sent for. I judged that
the _Mandinga_ was not set for Apollonario,
but for the negress whose business it was
to sweep the out-house. I threatened to confine
the suspected woman at Gara unless she discovered
the whole affair. She said the Mandinga was
placed there to make one of the negresses
dislike her fellow-slaves, and prefer her
to the other. The ball of _Mandinga_ was
formed of five or six kinds of leaves of
trees, among which was the pomegranate leaf;
there were likewise two or three bits of
rag, each of a peculiar kind; ashes, which
were the bones of some animals; and there
might be other ingredients besides, but these
were what I could recognize. This woman either
could not from ignorance, or would not give
any information respecting the several things
of which the ball was composed. I made this
serious matter of the _Mandinga_, from knowing
the faith which not only many of the negroes
have in it, but also some of the mulatto
people. There is another name for this kind
of charm; it is called _feitico_, and the
initiated are called _feiticeros_; of these
there was formerly one at the plantation
of St. Joam, who became so much dreaded,
that his master sold him to be sent to Maranham."
Speaking of the green-beads (_contas verdas_)
which are another object of superstition
in South America, and of the reliance placed
upon them by the Valentoens, a lawless description
of persons among the colonists of Brazil;
the same author gives us this further view
of the _Mandingueiros_ and their charms.
"These men," says he, "wore
on their necks strings of green beads, which
had either come from the coast of Africa,
bearing the wonderful property of conveying
in safety their possessors through all descriptions
of perils, or were charmed by the Mandingueiros,
African sorcerers, who had been brought over
to the Brazils as slaves, and in secret continued
the prohibited practice of imparting this
virtue to them. Vincente had been acquainted
with some of the men, and was firmly persuaded
of the virtues of the green beads. When I
expressed my doubts of the efficacy of the
beads, against a musket ball well directed,
his anger rose; but there was pity mingled
with it."
Labat brings these stones from the Orellana,
or river of the Amazons. "I was informed,"
says our author, "that _Contas verdas_
came from Africa; but some have found their
way from the Orellana, and been put into
requisition by the _Mandingueiros_."
Mr. Southey has also given an account of
the "green stones of the Amazons,"
in his history of Brazil, vol. 1. p. 107.
In another place, some traveller presents
us with the _Mandingueiros_ in the new character
of charmer of snakes. "The Mandingueiros
are famous, among other feats, for handling
poisonous snakes, and can, by particular
noises or tunes, call those reptiles from
their holes, and make them assemble around
them. These sorcerers profess to render innoxious
the bites of snakes, to persons who submit
to their charms and ceremonies. One of the
modes which is adopted for this purpose,
is that of allowing a tame snake to crawl
over the head, face, and shoulders of the
person who is to be _curado do cobras_, cured
of snakes, as they term it. The owner of
the snake repeats a certain number of words
during the operation, of which, the meaning,
if they contain any, is only known to the
initiated. The rattle-snake is said to be,
above all other species, the most susceptible
of attention to the tunes of the Mandingueiros."
The above accounts I should not have related
upon the authority of one or two authors,
I have heard them repeated by several individuals,
and even some men of education have spoken
of the reputed efficacy of the tame snakes
of the Mandingueiros, as if they were somewhat
staggered in their belief of it. "These
men do certainly play strange tricks and
very dexterously." The same writer also
observes, "One of the negroes whom I
had hired with the plantation of Jaguaribi,
had one leg much thicker than the other.
This was occasioned, as he told me, by the
bite of a rattlesnake; he said he had been
_cured_ from the bites of snakes by a certain
_curador de cobra_, or Mandingueiro, and
had therefore not died; but that as the 'moon
was strong,' he had not escaped receiving
some injury from the bite."
Beaver, in his African Memoranda, says, "There
is another sort of people who travel about
in the country, called Mandingo-men, (these
are Mahommedans;) they do not work; they
go from place to place, and when they find
any chiefs or people, whom they think they
can make anything of, they take up their
abode sometime with them, and make _gree-grees_,
and sometimes cast seed from them for which
they make them pay."
On this, and other occasion, the word _gree-gree_
is applied to a house whence oracles are
delivered: but it is also used for a charm
or obi. "They themselves," (the
natives of the coast) says the author, last
quoted, "always wear _gree-grees_, or
charms, which they purchase of the _Mandingoes_,
to guard them against the effects of certain
arms, or of poison, and on which they place
the utmost reliance. They have one against
poison; another against a musket; another
against a sword; and another against a knife;
and, indeed, against almost every thing that
they think can hurt them. Mandingo priest,
or _gris gris_ merchant, that is, a seller
of charms, which carried about a person,
secure the wearer from any evils,--such as
poison, murder, witchcraft, etc. To this
priest I had made some handsome presents,
and he, in return, gave me twelve gris gris,
and assured me that they would inevitably
secure me from all danger, at the same time
he gave me directions how to dispose of them.
Some were to be carried about my person;
one secretly placed over each archway; another
kept under my pillow, and another under the
door of the house I was then building."
The Byugas hold these people in great reverence,
and say that they 'talk with God.'
Mr. Long, in his history of the West Indies,
states that, under the general name of Obi-men
is also included the class of _Myal_ men,
or those who, by means of a narcotic poison,
made with the juice of an herb
(said to be the branched Calalue, a species
of solanum) which occasions a trance of a
certain duration, endeavour to convince the
deluded spectators of their power to reanimate
dead bodies.
Additional particulars of this superstition
preserved by Labat, Edwards, and others,
are to be joined with those now produced;[138]
but after all, the questions to be solved
are, whether Obi, Mandinga, and _gree gree_,
are usually words of similar import, and
whether those who are conversant in them
are all alike, priests of one system of religious
faith and worship, or whether the one does
not belong to the worship of a good power,
and the other to that of an evil one.
It is remarkable, that while the Etymology
of _Obi_ has been sought in the names of
ancient deities of Egypt, and in that of
the serpent in the language of the coast,
the actual name of the evil deity or _Devil_,
in the same language, appears to have escaped
attention. That name is written by Mr. Edwards,
_Obboney_; and the bearer of it is described
as a malicious deity, the author of all evil,
the inflictor of perpetual diseases, and
whose anger is to be appeased only by human
sacrifices. This evil deity is the Satan
of our own faith; and it is the worship of
Satan which, in all parts of the world constitutes
the essence of sorcery.
If this name of _Obboney_ has any relation
to the Ob of Egypt, and if the Ob, both anciently
in Egypt, and to this day in the west of
Africa, signifies "a serpent,"
what does this discover to our view, but
that Satan has the name of _serpent_ among
the Negro nations as well as among those
of Europe? As to how it has happened that
the serpent, which, in some systems, is the
emblem of the good spirit, is in others the
emblem of the evil one, that is a topic which
belongs to a more extensive enquiry. This
is enough for our present satisfaction to
remember that the profession of, and belief
in sorcery or witchcraft, supposes the existence
of two deities, the one, the author of good,
and the other the author of evil; the one
worshipped by good men for good things, and
for good purposes: and the other by bad men
for bad things and purposes; and that this
worship is sorcery and the worshippers sorcerers.
It will be seen above, that since African
charms are to prevent evil, and others to
procure it, the first belong to the worship,
and are derived from the power, of the good
spirit; and the second are from the opposite
source. It is to be concluded, then, that
the superstition of _Obi_ is no other than
the practice of, and belief in the worship
of _Obboney_ or _Oboni_, the evil deity of
the Africans, the serpent of Africa and of
Europe, and the old serpent and Satan of
the scriptures; and that the witchcraft of
the negroes is evidently the same with our
own. It might indeed be further shown, that
the latter have their temporary transformations
of men into alligators, wolves, and the like,
as the French have their loups-garoux, the
Germans their war-wolves, wolf-men, and the
rest.[139]
The negroes practising obeah are acquainted
with some very powerful vegetable poisons,
which they use on these occasions, and by
which they acquire much extensive credit.
Their fetiches are their household gods,
or domestic divinities; one of whom is supposed
to preside over a whole province, and one
over every family. This idol is a tree, the
head of an ape, a bird, or any such thing,
as their fancy may suggest. The negroes have
long been held famous in the act of secret
or slow poisoning.
If doubts and difficulties envelope the discovery
of poisons, whose distinguishing character
is the rapidity of these effects, how much
greater must be the uncertainty when we are
required to ascertain the administrations
of what are called slow poisons. This subject,
indeed, is so closely entwined with popular
superstitions, that it is difficult to separate
truth from falsehood. In Italy, for example,
it was formerly said, that poisons were made
to destroy life at any stated period--from
a few hows to a year. This, however, turns
out to be a mere fiction; and, it is well
understood, that we know of no substances
that will produce death at a determinate
epoch. The following case of the late Prince
Charles of Augustenburgh, nevertheless, shows
that the idea of slow poison is still very
prevalent, even among the physicians of continental
Europe.
Prince Charles of Augustenburgh, Crown Prince
of Sweden, and the predecessor of Bernadotte,
in that station, fell dead from his horse
on the 22nd of May, 1810, while reviewing
troops in Scania. His death, during that
stormy period of public affairs, excited
great attention, and an opinion soon spread
abroad that he had been poisoned. The king
ordered a judicial investigation; and it
appeared that Dr. Rossi, the physician of
the late Prince, had, without directions,
proceeded to inspect the body twenty-four
hours after death; that he had performed
this operation with great negligence, omitting
many things which the law presented, which
the assisting physicians proposed, and which
were essential to render it satisfactory;
and finally, that the coats of the stomach,
instead of being preserved and submitted
to chemical analysis were, according to his
own acknowledgment, thrown away. The royal
tribunal adjudged him to be deprived of his
appointment, and to be banished from the
kingdom. This decision would not of course,
diminish the suspicion already excited; and
among other physicians, who were consulted
on the case, M. Lodin, professor of Medicine
at Lynkoping, presented two memoirs, in which
he stated it as his opinion, that a _slow
poison_ of a vegetable nature, and probably
analogous to the _aqua tofania_, had been
administered to the Prince, and that this
had caused the apopletic fit of which he
died. His reasons were:
1. That the Prince had always enjoyed good
health previous to his arrival in Sweden,
and, indeed, had not been ill, until after
eating a cold pie at an inn, in Italy. He
was shortly after seized with violent vomiting,
while the rest of the company experienced
no ill effects.
2. The Prince was naturally very temperate.
3. Ever since he arrived in Sweden he had
experienced a loss of appetite, with cholic
and diarrhoea; and
4. That on dissection, the spleen was found
of a black colour and in a state of decomposition,
and the liver indurated and dark coloured.
Whilst during life he had experienced no
symptoms corresponding to these appearances.
Dr. Lodin confessed, however, that he was
unacquainted with the effects that indicate
the administration of a slow poison, but
thought the previous symptoms were such as
might be expected from it.
For the credit of the profession, this conjectural
opinion met with decided reprobation from
other medical men. It appeared that the Prince
had, for several days previously, been subject
to giddiness and pain in the head, and that
all the symptoms were readily referable to
a simple case of apoplexy, while the appearances
on dissection showed that rapid tendency
to putrefaction, which is frequently observed
in similar cases.
The public are highly indebted to professor
Beckman for a very elaborate article, in
which he has concentrated nearly all that
is known concerning _secret poisoning_. Of
this we shall here present our readers with
an abstract, as peculiarly adapted to the
demonology of medicine, aided with some facts
from other sources.
Professor Beckman considers it unquestionable,
that the ancients were acquainted with this
kind of poison, and thinks that it may be
proved from the testimony of Plutarch, Quintilian,
and other respectable authors. The former
states that a slow poison, which occasioned
heat, a cough, spitting of blood, a consumption,
and weakness of intellect, was administered
to Aratus of Sicyon. Theophrastus speaks
of a poison prepared from aconite, which
could be moderated in such a manner as to
have effect in two or three months, or at
the end of a year or two years; and he also
relates, that Thrasyas had discovered a method
of preparing from other plants a poison which,
given in small doses, occasioned a certain
but easy death, without any pain, and which
could be kept back for a long time without
causing weakness or corruption. The last
poison was much used at Rome, about two hundred
years before the christian era. At a later
period, a female named Locusta, was the agent
in preparing these poisons, and she destroyed,
in this way, at the instigation of Nero,
Britannicus, son of Agrippina.
The Carthagenians seem also to have been
acquainted with this act of diabolical poisoning;
and they are said, on the authority of Aulus
Gellius, to have administered some to Regulus,
the Roman general. Contemporary writers,
however, it must be added, do not mention
this.
The principal poisons known to the ancients
were prepared from plants, and particularly
aconite, hemlock, and poppy, or from animal
substances; and among the latter none is
more remarkable than that obtained from the
sea-hare (_Lepus marinus_ or _Apylsia depilans_
of the system of nature). With this, Titus
is said to have been dispatched by Domitian.
They do not seem to have been acquainted
with the common mineral poisons.
In the year 1659, during the pontificate
of Alexander VII, it was observed at Rome,
that many young women became widows, and
that many husbands died when they became
disagreeable to their wives. The government
used great vigilance to detect the poisoners,
and suspicion at length fell upon a society
of young wives, whose president appeared
to be an old woman, who pretended to foretel
future events, and who had often predicted
very exactly the death of many persons. By
means of a crafty female their practices
were detected; the whole society were arrested
and put to the torture, and the old woman,
whose name was Spara, and four others, were
publicly hanged. This Spara was a Sicilian,
and is said to have acquired her knowledge
from Tofania at Palermo.
Tophania, or Tofania, was an infamous woman,
who resided first at Palermo and afterwards
at Naples. She sold the poison which from
her acquired the name of Aqua della Toffana
(it was also called _Acquetta di Napoli_,
or _Acquetta_ alone), but she distributed
her preparation by way of charity to such
wives as wished to have other husbands. From
four to six drops were sufficient to destroy
a man; and it was asserted, that the dose
could be so proportioned as to operate in
a certain time. Labat says, that Tofania
distributed her poison in small glass phials,
with this inscription--_Manna of St. Nicholas
of Bavi_, and ornamented with the image of
the saint. She lived to a great age, but
was at last dragged from a monastery, in
which she had taken refuge, and put to the
torture, when she confessed her crimes and
was strangled.
In no country, however, has the art of poisoning
excited more attention than it did in France,
about the year 1670. Margaret d'Aubray, wife
of the Marquis de Brinvillier, was the principal
agent in this horrible business. A needy
adventurer, named Godin de St. Croix, had
formed an acquaintance with the Marquis during
their campaigns in the Netherlands--became
at Paris a constant visitor at his house,
where in a short time he found means to insinuate
himself into the good graces of the Marchioness.
It was not long before this Marquis died;
not, however, until their joint fortune was
dissipated. Her conduct, in openly carrying
on this amour, induced her father to have
St. Croix arrested and sent to the Bastile.
Here he got acquainted with an Italian, of
the name of Exili, from whom he learnt the
art of preparing poisons.
After a year's imprisonment St. Croix was
released, when he flew to the Marchioness
and instructed her in the art, in order that
she might employ it in bettering the circumstances
of both. She assumed the appearance of a
nun, distributed food to the poor, nursed
the sick in the Hotel Dieu, and tried the
strength of her poisons, undetected, on these
hapless wretches. She bribed one Chaussee,
St. Croix's servant, to poison her own father,
after introducing him into his service, and
also her brother, and endeavoured to poison
her sister. A suspicion arose that they had
been poisoned, and the bodies were opened,
but no detection followed at this time. Their
villainous practices were brought to light
in the following manner:--St. Croix, when
preparing poison, was accustomed to wear
a glass mask; but, as this happened once
to drop off by accident, he was suffocated
and found dead in his laboratory. Government
caused the effects of this man, who had no
family, to be examined, and a list of them
to be made out. On searching them, there
was found a small box, to which St. Croix
had affixed a written paper containing a
request, that after his death "it might
be delivered to the Marchioness de Brinvillier,
who resides in the street Neuve St. Paul,
as every thing it contains concerns her,
and belongs to her alone; and as, besides,
there is nothing in it that can be of use
to any person except her; and in case she
shall be dead before me, to burn it, and
every thing it contains; without opening
or altering any thing; and in order that
no one may plead ignorance, I swear by God,
whom I adore, and all that is most sacred,
that I advance nothing but what is true.
And if my intentions, just and reasonable
as they are, be thwarted in this point, I
charge their consciences with it, both in
this world and the next, in order that I
may unload mine, protesting that this is
my last will. Done at Paris, this 25th May,
in the afternoon, 1672. _De Sainte Croix_"
Nothing could he a greater inducement to
have it opened, than this singular petition,
and that being done, there was found in it
a great abundance of poisons of every kind,
with labels, on which their effects proved,
by experiments on animals, were marked. The
principal poison, however, was corrosive
sublimate. When the Marchioness heard of
the death of her lover and instructor, she
was desirous to have the casket, and endeavoured
to get possession of it by bribing the officers
of justice; but as she failed in this, she
quitted the kingdom. La Chaussee, however,
continued at Paris, laid claim to the property
of St. Croix, was seized and imprisoned,
confessed more acts of villainy than was
suspected, and was in consequence broke alive
upon the wheel, in
1673,--The Marchioness fled to England, and
from thence to Liege, where she took refuge
in a convent. Desgrais, an officer of justice,
was dispatched in pursuit of her, and having
assumed the dress of an Abbe, contrived to
entice her from this privileged place. Among
her effects at the convent there was found
a confession, and a complete catalogue of
all her crimes, in her own hand-writing.
She was taken to Paris, convicted, and on
the 16th of July, 1676, publicly beheaded,
and afterwards burnt.
The practice of poisoning was not, however,
suppressed by this execution, and it was
asserted, that confessions of a suspicious
nature were constantly made to the priests.
A court for watching, searching after, and
punishing prisoners was at length established
in 1697, under the title of _chambre de poison_,
or _chambre ardente_. This was shortly used
as a state engine, against those who were
obnoxious to the court, and the names of
individuals of the first rank, both male
and female, were prejudiced. Two females,
la Vigreux and la Voison were burnt alive,
by order of this court, in February, 1680.
But it was abolished in the same year.
Professor Beckman relates the following,
as communicated to him by Linnaeus: "Charles
XI, King of Sweden, having ruined several
noble families by seizing on their property,
and having, after that, made a journey to
Torneo, he fell into a consumptive disorder,
which no medicine could cure. One day he
asked his physician in a very earnest manner
what was the cause of his illness. The physician
replied, 'Your Majesty has been loaded with
too many maledictions.'--'Yes,' returned
the king, 'I wish to God that the reduction
of the nobilities' estates had not taken
place, and that I had never undertaken a
journey to Torneo.' After his death his intestines
were found to be full of small ulcers."
There has been a great diversity of opinions
as to the nature of these poisons. That prepared
by Tofania appears to have been a clear insipid
water, and the sale of aqua fortis was for
a long time forbidden in Rome, because it
was considered the principal ingredient.
This, however, is not probable.
In Paris, the famous _poudre de succession_
(also a secret poison) was at one time supposed
to consist of diamond dust, powdered exceedingly
fine; and at another time, to contain sugar
of lead as the principal ingredient. Haller
was of this last opinion. In the casket of
St. Croix were found sublimate, opium, regulus
of antimony, vitriol, and a large quantity
of poison ready prepared, the principal ingredients
of which the physicians were not able to
detect. Garelli, physician to Charles VI,
King of the Two Sicilies, at the time when
Tofania was arrested, wrote to the celebrated
Hoffman, that the Aqua Tofania was nothing
else than crystallized arsenic, dissolved
in a large quantity of water by decoction,
with the addition, (but for what purpose
we know not) of the herb _Cymbalaria_, (probably
the _Antirrhinum Cymbalaria_). And this information
he observes, was communicated to him by his
imperial majesty himself, to whom the judicial
procedure, confirmed by the confession of
the criminal, was transmitted. But it was
objected to this opinion, that it differed
from the ordinary effects of arsenic, in
never betraying itself by any particular
action on the human body.
The Abbe Gagliani, on the other hand, asserts
that it is a mixture of opium and cantharides,
and that the liquor obtained from its composition,
is as limpid as rock water, and without taste.
Its effects are slow, and almost imperceptible.
Beckman appears to favour this idea, and
suggests that a similar poison is used in
the East, under the name of _powst_, being
water that had stood a night over the juice
of poppies. It is given to princes, whom
it is wished to despatch privately; and produces
loss of strength and understanding, so that
they die in the end, torpid and insensible.[140]
The following extract will show that secret
poisoning has penetrated into the forests
of America. "The celebrated chief, _Blackbird_
of the Omawhaws, gained great reputation
as a medicine man; his adversaries fell rapidly
before his potent spells. His medicine was
arsenic, furnished him for this purpose by
the villainy of the traders."[141]
FOOTNOTES:
[136] Various etymologies have been suggested
for the word obi. Mr. Long, in a paper transmitted
several years since, by the agents of Jamaica
to the Lords of the Committee of Privy Council,
and by the latter subjoined to the report
on the slave trade, expresses himself on
this subject as follows: "From the learned
Mr. Bryant's commentary on the word OPH,
we obtain a very probable etymology of the
term; 'a serpent,' in the Egyptian language,
was called _Aub_ or _Ob_." '_Obion_,'
is still the Egyptian name of a serpent.'
'Moses, in the name of God, forbids the Israelites
to inquire of the demon _Ob_, which is translated
in our Bible, charmer or wizzard, _Divinator
aut sorcilegus_.' The woman of Endor is called
_Oub_ or _Ob_, translated Pythonissa; and
_Oubaois_ (he cites Horus Apollo) was the
name of the Basilisk or royal serpent, emblem
of the sun, and an ancient oracular deity
of Africa. Their etymology, if admitted,
connects the modern superstitions of the
west of Africa, with the ancient ones of
the east of that continent, from which source
they have also been spread in Europe. They
are humble parts of the great system which
is adorned with the fables of Osiris and
Isis; and they comprise not only the Obi
of Africa, but the witchcraft of our own
country. That superstition is every where
connected with the worship of the serpent,
and with the moon and the cat. Skulls and
teeth of cats are among the principal ingredients
of the African charms or _Obies_.
[137] Mr. Long gives the following account
of the furniture of the house of an Obi-woman,
or African witch in Jamaica: "The whole
inside of the roof, (which was of thatch)
and every crevice of the walls were stuck
with the implements of her trade, consisting
of rags, feathers, bones of cats, and a thousand
other articles. Examining further, a large
earthen pot or jar, close covered, contained
a prodigious quantity of round balls of earth
or clay, of various dimensions, large and
small, whitened on the outside, and variously
compounded, some with hair and rags, or feathers
of all sorts, and strongly bound with twine:
others blended with the upper section of
the skulls of cats, or set round with cats'
teeth and claws, or with human or dogs' teeth,
and some glass beads of different colours.
There were also a great many egg-shells filled
with a viscous or gummy substance, the qualities
of which were neglected to be examined; and
many little bags filled with a variety of
articles, the particulars of which cannot,
at this distance of time, be recollected."
Shakespeare and Dryden, have left us poetical
accounts of the composition of European _Obies_
or charms, with which, and with more historical
descriptions, the above may be compared.
The midnight hours of the professors of Obi,
are also to be compared with the witches
of Europe. Obi, therefore, is the serpent-worship.
The Pythoness, at Delphos, was an Obi-woman.
With the serpent-worship is joined that of
the sun and moon, as the governors of the
visible world, and emblems of the male and
female nature of the godhead; and to the
cat, on account of her nocturnal prowlings,
is ascribed a mysterious relationship to
the moon. The dog and the wolf, doubtless
for the same reason, are similarly circumstanced.
[138] The superstition of Obi was never generally
remarked upon in the British West Indies
till the year 1760, when, after an insurrection
in Jamaica, of the Coromantyn or Gold Coast
negroes, it was found that it had been made
an instrument for promoting that disturbance.
An old Coromantyn negro, the chief instigator
and oracle of the insurgents of the parish
of St. Mary, in which the insurrection broke
out, who had administered the _Fetiche_ or
solemn oath to the conspirators, and furnished
them with a magical preparation, which was
to make them invulnerable, was at that time
apprehended and punished, and a law was enacted
for the suppression of the practice, under
which several examples were made, but without
effecting for many years, any diminution
of the evil sought to be remedied.
[139] In Kosters's travels in Brazil, we
read of a negro who was reported by one of
his fellows to become occasionally _lobas
homen_ or wolf-man. "I asked him,"
said the author, "to explain; when he
said, that the man was at times transformed
into an animal, of the size of a calf with
the figure of a dog;" and in the African
memoranda is an account of a negro who professed
and even believed to have the power of transforming
himself into an alligator, in which state
he devoured men. Upon being questioned by
Captain Beaver, he answered, "I can
change myself into an alligator, and have
often done it." But though these may
be genuine African superstitions, and not
such as have been introduced by the Portuguese,
yet it is certain there is no part of Europe
to which they do not equally belong.
[140] Beckman, vol 1, p. 74 to 103.
[141] See Major Long's expedition, vol. 1.
p. 226.
CHAPTER XIX.
ON THE ORIGIN AND SUPERSTITIOUS INFLUENCE
OP RINGS.
The ancient magicians, among other pretended
extraordinary powers of accomplishing wonderful
things by their superior knowledge of the
secret powers of nature, of the virtues of
plants and minerals, and of the motions and
influence of the stars, attached no small
degree of mystic importance to rings, the
origin of which, their matter and uses, together
with the supposed virtues of the stones set
in them, afford a subject squaring so much
with our design, and so deserving of notice
from the curious, that no apology need be
made for discoursing on them.
According to the accounts of the heathen
mythologists, Prometheus, who, in the first
times, had discovered a great number of secrets,
having been delivered from the charms, by
which he was fastened to mount Caucasus for
stealing fire from heaven, in memory or acknowledgment
of the favour he received from Jupiter, made
himself of one of those chains, a ring, in
whose collet he represented the figure of
part of the rock where he had been detained--or
rather, as Pliny says, set it in a bit of
the same rock, and put it on his finger.
This was the first ring and the first stone.
But we otherwise learn, that the use of rings
is very ancient, and the Egyptians were the
first inventors of them; which seems confirmed
by the person of Joseph, who, as we read
(Genesis, chap, xi.) for having interpreted
Pharoah's dream, received not only his liberty,
but was rewarded with his prince's ring,
a collar of gold, and the superintendancy
of Egypt.
Josephus, in the third book of Jewish antiquities
says, the Israelites had the use of them
after passing the Red Sea, because Moses
at his return from Mount Sinai, found that
they had forged the golden calf from their
wives' rings, enriched with precious stones.
The same Moses, upwards of 400 years before
the wars of Troy, permitted the priests he
had established, the use of gold rings, enriched
with precious stones. The high priest wore
upon his ephod, which was a kind of camail,
rich rings, that served as clasps; a large
emerald was set and engraved with mysterious
names. The ring he wore on his finger was
of inestimable value and celestial virtue.
Had not Aaron, the high priest of the Hebrews,
a ring on his finger, whereof the diamond,
by its virtues, operated prodigious things?
For it changed its vivid lustre into a dark
colour, when the Hebrews were to be punished
by death for their sins. When they were to
fall by the sword it appeared of a blood
colour; if they were innocent it sparkled
as usual.
It is observable that the ancient Hebrews
used rings even in the time of the wars of
Troy. Queen Jezebel, to destroy Nabath, as
it is related in the first Book of Kings,
made use of the ring of Ahab, King of the
Israelites, her husband, to seal the counterfeit
letters that ordered the death of that unfortunate
man. Did not Judah, as mentioned in the
38th chapter of Genesis, abuse his daughter-in-law,
Thamar, who had disguised herself, by giving
her his ring and bracelets, as a pledge of
the faith he had promised her?
Though Homer is silent in regard to rings,
both in his Iliad and Odyssey, they were,
notwithstanding, used in the time of the
Greeks and Trojans; and from them they were
received by several other nations. The Lacedemonians,
as related by Alexander, ab. Alexandro, pursuant
to the orders of their king, Lycurgus, had
only iron rings, despising those of gold;
either their king was thereby willing to
retrench luxury, or to prohibit the use of
them.
The ring was reputed, by some nations, a
symbol of liberality, esteem, and friendship,
particularly among the Persians, none being
permitted to wear any, except they were given
by the king himself. This is what may also
be remarked in the person of Apollonius Thyaneus,
as a token of singular esteem and liberality,
received one from the great Iarchas, prince
of the Gymnosophists, who were the ancient
priests of India and dwelt in forests, as
our ancient bards and druids, where they
applied themselves to the study of wisdom,
and to the speculation of the heaven and
stars. This philosopher, by the means of
that ring, learned every day the secrets
of nature.
Though the ring found by Gyges, shepherd
to the King of Lydia, has more of fable than
of truth in it, it will not, however, be
amiss, to relate what is said concerning
Herodotus, Coelius, after Plato and Cicero,
in the third book of his Offices. This Gyges,
after a great flood, passed into a very deep
cavity in the earth, where having found in
the belly of a brazen horse, with a large
aperture in it, a human body of enormous
size, he pulled from off one of the fingers
a ring of surprising virtue; for the stone
on the collet rendered him who wore it invisible,
when the collet was turned towards the palm
of the hand, so that the party could see,
without being seen, all manner of persons
and things. Gyges, having made trial of its
efficacy, bethought himself that it would
be a means for ascending the throne of Lydia,
and for gaining the Queen by it. He succeeded
in his designs, having killed Candaules,
her husband. The dead body this ring belonged
to was that of an ancient Brahman, who, in
his time, was chief of that sect.
The rings of the ancients often served for
seals. Alexander the Great, after the death
and defeat of Darius, used his ring for sealing
the letters he sent into Asia, and his own
for those he sent to Europe. It is customary
in Rome for the bridegroom to send the bride,
before marriage, a ring of iron, without
either stone or collet, to denote how lasting
their union ought to be, and the frugality
they were to observe together; but luxury
herein soon gained ground, and there was
a necessity for moderating it. Caius Marius
did not wear one of gold till his third consulship;
and Tiberius, as Suetonius says, made some
regulations in the authority of wearing rings;
for, besides the liberty of birth, he required
a considerable revenue, both on the father
and grandfather's side.
In a Polyglot dictionary, published in the
year 1625, by John Minshew, our attention
was attracted by the following observations,
under the article "RINGFINGER.--Vetus
versiculus singulis digitis Annulum trebuens
Miles. Mercator. Stultus. Maritus. Amator.
Pollici adscribitur Militi, seu Doctor. Mercatorem
a pollice secundum, stultorum, tertium. Nuptorum
vel studiosorum quartum. Amatorum ultimum."
By which it appears, that the fingers on
which annuli were anciently worn were directed
by the calling, or peculiarity of the party.
Were it
A soldier, or doctor, to him was assigned
the thumb. A sailor, the finger next the
thumb. A fool, the middle finger. A married
or diligent person, the fourth or ring finger.
A lover, the last or little finger.
The medicinal or curative power of rings
are numerous and, as a matter of course,
founded on imaginary qualities. Thus the
wedding ring rubbing upon that little abscess
called the stye, which is frequently seen
on the tarsi of the eyes, is said to remove
it. Certain rings are worn as talismans,
either on the fingers or suspended from the
neck; the efficacy of which may be referred
to the effects usually produced by these
charms.
CHAPTER XX.
CELESTIAL INFLUENCES--OMENS--CLIMACTERICS--PREDOMINATIONS--LUCKY
AND UNLUCKY DAYS--EMPIRICS, &C.
Astrologers, among other artifices, have
used their best endeavours, and employed
all the rules of their art, to render those
years of our age, which they call climacterics,
dangerous and formidable.
The word climacteric is derived from the
Greek, which means by a scale or ladder,
and implies a critical year, or a period
in a man's age, wherein, according Ficinusological
juggling, there is some notable alteration
to arise in the body, and a person stands
in great danger of death. The first climacteric
is the seventh year of a man's life; the
others are multiples of the first, as 21,
49, 56, 63, and 84, which two last are called
the grand climacterics and the danger more
certain. The foundation of this opinion is
accounted for by Mark Ficimis as follows:--There
is a year, he tells us, assigned for each
planet to rule over the body of a man, each
of his turn; now Saturn being the most _maleficient_
(malignant) planet of all, every seventh
year, which falls to its lot, becomes very
dangerous; especially those of sixty-three
and eighty-four, when the person is already
advanced in years. According to this doctrine,
some hold every seventh year an established
climacteric; but others only allow the title
to those produced by multiplication of the
climacterical space by an odd number,
3, 5, 7, 9, &c. Others observe every
ninth year as a climacteric.
Climacteric years are pretended, by some,
to be fatal to political bodies, which, perhaps,
may be granted, when they are proved to be
so more than to natural ones; for it must
be obvious that the reason of such danger
can by no means be discovered, nor the relation
it can have with any other of the numbers
above mentioned.
Though this opinion has a great deal of antiquity
on its side; Aulus Gellius says--it was borrowed
from the Chaldeans, who possibly might receive
it from Pythagoras, whose philosophy teemed
much in numbers, and who imagined a very
extraordinary virtue in the number 7. The
principal authors on climacterics are--Plato,
Cicero, Macrobius, Aulus Gellius. Among the
ancients--Argal, Magirus, and Solmatheus.
Among the moderns--St. Augustine, St. Ambrose,
Beda and Boethius, all countenance the opinion.
There is a work extant, though rather scarce,
by Hevelius, under the title of _Annus Climactericus_,
wherein he describes the loss he sustained
by his observatory, &c. being burnt;
which it would appear happened in his grand
climacteric, of which he was extremely apprehensive.
Astrologers have also brought under their
inspection and controul the days of the year,
which they have presumed to divide into _lucky_
and _unlucky_ days; calling even the sacred
scriptures, and the common belief of christians,
in former ages, to their assistance for this
purpose. They pretend that the fourteenth
day of the first month was a blessed day
among the Israelites, authorised, as they
pretend, by the several passages out of Exodus,
v. 18:--
"In the first _month_, on the fourteenth
day of the month at even, ye shall eat unleavened
bread, until the one and twentieth day at
even," v.
40. Now, the sojourning of the children of
Israel, who dwelt in Egypt, was four hundred
and thirty years.
41. "And it came to pass, at the end
of the four hundred and thirty years, even
the self same day it came to pass, that all
the hosts of the Lord went out from the land
of Egypt."
42. "It is a night to be much observed
unto the Lord for bringing them out of the
land of Egypt; that is that night of the
Lord to be observed of all the children of
Israel, in their generations."
51. "And it came to pass, the self same
day, that the Lord did bring the children
of Israel out of the land of Egypt by their
armies." Also _Leviticus, chap. 23,
v. 5._ "In the fourteenth day of the
first month at even, is the Lord's passover."
_Numbers, chap. 28, v. 10._ "Four hundred
and thirty years being expired of their dwelling
in Egypt, even in the self same day they
departed thence."
With regard to evil days and times, Astrologers
refer to _Amos. chap. 5, v. 13._ "Therefore,
the prudent shall keep silence in that time,
for it is an evil time," and _chap.
6, v. 3_, "Ye that put far away the
evil day, and cause the seat of violence
to come near;" also _Psalm 37, v.
19_, "They shall not be ashamed in the
evil time; and in the days of famine, they
shall be satisfied;" and _Jeremiah,
chap. 46, v. 21_, "Also her hired men
are in the midst of her, like fatted bullocks,
for they are also turned back and are fled
away together; they did not stand because
the day of their calamity was come upon them,
and the time of their visitation." And
to _Job_ cursing the day of his birth, from
the first to the eleventh verse. In confirmation
of which may also be quoted a calendar, extracted
out of several ancient Roman Catholic prayer
books, written on vellum, before printing
was invented, in which were inserted the
unfortunate days of each month, which it
would be superfluous to cite here.[142]
Roman History sufficiently proves that the
nature of lucky and unlucky days owes its
origin to Paganism; where it is mentioned,
that that very day four years, the civil
wars were begun by Pompey, the father; Caesar
made an end of them with his son, Cneius
Pompeius being slain; and that the Romans
counted the 13th of February an unlucky day,
because, on that day they were overthrown
by the Gauls at Alba; and the Fabii attacking
the city of the Recii, were all slain, with
the exception of one man; also from the calendar
of Ovid's "Fastorum," _Aprilis
erat mensis Graecis auspicatissimus_; and
from Horace, Book 2nd, Ode 13, cursing the
tree that had nearly fallen upon it; _ille
nefasto posuit die_.
The Pagans believed there were particular
months and days which carried something fatal
in them; those, for instance, upon which
the state perhaps had lost a great battle;
and under this impression, they never undertook
any enterprise on these days and months.
The twenty-fourth of February in the Bisextile
years was considered so unlucky, that Valentinian
(_Ammiam. Marcell. lib. 26. cap. 1._) being
elected Emperor upon it, durst not appear
in public under the apprehension of suffering
the fatality of the day. Many other particular
days might be quoted upon which generals
of armies have constantly been favoured with
fortune. Timoleon (_Corn. Nepos_) won all
his famous battles on his birthday. Soliman
(_Duverdier. Hist. des Turcs_) won the battle
of Mohac, and took the fortress of Belgrade,
and, according to some historians, the Isle
of Rhodes, and the town of Buda on the 26th
of August. But we find, in like manner, the
same day lucky and unlucky to the same people.
Ventidius, at the head of the Roman army,
routed the Parthians, and slew their young
king Pacorus who commanded them, on the same
day that Crassus, another Roman general,
had been slain, and his whole army cut in
pieces by the same people. Lucullus having
attacked Tigranes, king of Armenia, notwithstanding
the vain scruples of his officers, who desired
him to beware fighting on that day, which
was noted in the Roman calendar as an unlucky
one, ever since the fatal overthrow of the
Romans by the Cimbri; but he, (Lucullus)
despising the superstition, gained one of
the most memorable battles recorded in Roman
history, and changed the destiny of the day
as he promised those who would have dissuaded
him from the enterprise. And Valentinian's
unlucky day was that on which Charles V,
another Roman Emperor, promised himself the
best good fortune. Friday is deemed on unlucky
day for engaging in any particular business,
and there are few, if any, captains of ships
who would sail from any port, on this day
of the week for their destination.
The fishermen who dwell on the coasts of
the Baltic never use their nets between All-saints
and St Martin's; they would then be certain
of not taking any fish through the whole
year: they never fish on St Blaise's day.
On Ash Wednesday the women neither sew nor
knit, for fear of bringing misfortune upon
their cattle. They contrive so as not to
use fire on St. Laurence's day; by taking
this precaution they think themselves secure
against fire for the rest of the year.
This prejudice of lucky and unlucky days
has existed at all times and in all nations;
but if knowledge and civilization have not
removed it, they have at least diminished
its influence. In Livonia, however, the people
are more than ever addicted to the most superstitious
ideas on this subject. In a Riga journal
(_Rigaische Stadblatter_, No. 3657, anno
1822, edited by M. Sontag) there are several
passages relative to a letter from heaven,
and which is no other than a catalogue of
lucky and unlucky days. This letter is in
general circulation; every body carries it
about him, and though strictly forbidden
by the police, the copies are multiplied
so profusely as to increase the evil all
attempts to destroy which have hitherto failed.
Among the country people this idea is equivalent
to the doctrine of fatality; and if they
commit faults or even crimes, on the days
which are marked as unlucky, they do not
consider themselves as guilty, because they
were predestined.
The flight of certain birds, or the meeting
of certain animals on their first going out
in the morning, are with them good or bad
omens. They do not hunt on St. Mark's, or
St. Catherine's day, on penalty of being
unsuccessful all the rest of the year. It
is a good sign to sneeze on Christmas day.
Most of them are so prepossessed against
Friday, that they never settle any important
business, or conclude a bargain on that day;
in some places they do not even dress their
children. They do not like visits on Thursdays,
for it is a sign they shall have troublesome
guests the whole week.
In some districts of Esthonia, up the Baltic,
when the shepherd brings his flocks back
from the pasture, in spring for the first
time, he is sprinkled with water from head
to foot under the persuasion that this makes
the cattle thrive. The malignity of beasts
of prey is believed to be prevented by designating
them not by their proper names, but by some
of their attributes. For instance, they call
the fox _hallkuhl_ (grey coat) the bear,
_layjatyk_ (broad-foot), etc. etc. They also
fancy that they can oblige the wolf to take
another direction by strewing salt in his
way. The howling of wolves, especially at
day-break, is considered a very bad omen,
predicting famine or disease. In more ancient
times, it was imagined that these animals,
thus asked their god to give them food, which
he threw them out of the clouds. When a wolf
seizes any of their cattle, they can oblige
him to quit his prey, by dropping a piece
of money, their pipe, hat, or any other article
they have about them at the time. They do
not permit the hare to be often mentioned,
for fear of drawing it into their corn-fields.
To make hens lay eggs, they beat them with
an old broom. In families where the wife
is the eldest child of her parents, it has
been observed that they always sell the first
calves, being convinced, that, if kept, they
would not thrive. To speak of insects or
mischievous animals at meal-times, is a sure
way to make them more voracious.
If a fire breaks out, they think to stop
its fury by throwing a black hen into the
flames. This idea, of an expiatory sacrifice,
offered to a malevolent and tutelary power,
is a remnant of paganism. Various other traces
of it are found among the Esthonians; for
instance, at the beginning of their meals,
they purposely let fall a piece of new bread,
or some drops of liquor from a bottle as
an offering to the divinity.
It is very offensive to the peasants, for
any one to look into their wells; they think
it will cause the wells to dry up.
When manna is carried into the fields, that
which falls from the cart is not gathered
up, lest mischievous insects and blights
come upon the corn.
When an old house is quitted for a new one
they are attentive in noting the first animal
that dies. If it be an animal with hairy
feet, the sign is good; but if with naked
feet, some fowl, for instance, there will
be mourning in the house; it is a sign of
misery and bad success in all their undertakings.
These, with a scrupulous adherence to lucky
and unlucky days, are the prevailing popular
superstitions in the three duchies; a great
number of which, especially among the Esthonians,
are connected with their ancient mythology.
In reading that pleasant volume, by the late
Sir Humphrey Davy, entitled _Salmonia_, it
is impossible not to be struck with his remark
respecting omens, which is here briefly noticed,
with an account of others, which it is imagined
have not yet found their way far into print,
in order to account for such seeming absurdities.
"The search after food,[143] as we agreed
on a former occasion, is the principal cause
why animals change their places. The different
tribes of wading birds always migrate when
rain is about to take place; and I remember
once in Italy, having been long waiting,
in the end of March, for the arrival of double
snipe, in the campagna of Rome; a great flight
appeared on the third of April, and the day
after, heavy rain set in, which greatly interfered
with my sport. The vulture, upon the same
principle, follows armies; and I have no
doubt that the augury of the ancients was
a good deal founded upon the observation
of the instinct of birds. There are many
superstitions of the vulgar owing to the
same source. For anglers, in spring, it is
always unluckly to see single magpies; but
two may always be regarded as a favourable
omen; and the reason is, that in cold and
stormy weather, one magpie alone leaves the
nest in search of food, the other remaining
sitting upon the eggs of the young ones:
but, when two go out together, it is only
when the weather is mild and warm, and favourable
for fishing.
"This reasoning will, in general, be
found correct, and may be applied to solve
many of the superstitions in the country;
but the case of the magpie is entitled to
a little more consideration. The piannet,
as we call her in the North of England, is
the most unlucky of all birds, to see singly
at any time; this, however, does not often
happen, except a short time during incubation;
they either appear in pairs or in families;
but even this last appearance is as alarming
to our grandmothers. The following distich
shows what each forbodes:--'One sorrow, two
mirth, three a wedding, four death.' This
bird, indeed, appears to have taken the same
place with us, as an omen of evil, that the
owl had amongst the ancients. The nurse is
often heard to declare that she has lost
all hopes of her charge when she has observed
a piannet on the house-top.
"Another prejudice, indulged even by
our good wives, is that of destroying the
feathers of the pigeon instead of saving
them to stuff beds, etc. They say, that if
they were to do so, it would only prolong
the sufferings of the death-bed; and when
these are more than usually severe, it is
attributed to this cause, and the reason
given 'because the bird has no gall' is to
them quite conclusive, but to me, perfectly
irrelevant and unsatisfactory. A belief amongst
boys, that to harm or disturb the nests of
the redbreast or swallow is unlucky, appears
very general throughout the kingdom; and
the keen bird-nester, who prides himself
on the quantity of eggs blown and strung
bead-fashion, here often gets mortified by
finding his trophies destroyed by the housewife
who considers their presence as affecting
the safety of her crokery ware. This belief
may have been encouraged, if not invented,
for a humane purpose: but how are we to account
for the efficacy of the Irish stone in curing
swellings caused by venomous reptiles, by
merely being rubbed upon the part affected?
The fullest faith in the practice appears
to have prevailed in the country at no distant
period, and is yet far from extinct. The
swallow and the cuckoo are generally hailed
as harbingers of spring and summer, but,
perhaps, many of our readers are not aware
that it is only lucky to hear the cuckoo,
for the first time in the season, upon soft
ground in contradistinction to hard roads,
and with money in the pocket, which the youngster
is sagely advised to be sure then to turn
over. Perhaps the season of the year may
satisfactorily explain all these observances.
Several superstitious customs are mentioned
regarding bees, some of which are not practised
in the north; yet it is fully believed that
the death of the stock of hives too often
foretells the flitting of the bee-master.
Wet cold years, unfavourable to the insects,
are also equally so to the farmer upon thin
clays, which border the moors, where bees
are mostly kept. Has the use of the mountain
ash, 'rowan tree' [Pyrus aucuparia, _Gaertner_,]
as a charm against witchcraft, ever been
accounted for? The belief in its efficacy
must be very old if we are to credit some
of Shakspeare's commentators, who give this
word as the true reading in Macbeth, instead
of 'Aroint thee, witch!'
"It often happens that the careless
observer has, for the first time, his attention
called forcibly to some appearance of nature
by accidental circumstances: if at all superstitious,
he immediately prognosticates the most disastrous
consequences from that which a little observation
would have convinced him was but a phenomenon
a little more conspicuous than usual. The
northern lights are said to have caused much
consternation when first observed; and they
have lately been viewed with more than ordinary
interest, as it appears from the _Newcastle
Chronicle_, the last autumn (1830), when
they were more than usually brilliant, some
of the inhabitants of Weardale were convinced
they saw, on one occasion, very distinctly,
the figure of a man on a white horse, with
a red sword in his hand, move across the
heavens; and are, no doubt, now certain that
it foretold the present eventful times. Even
this belief may be accounted for on such
accidental coincidences, or even philosophically,
by assuming as a fact that this phenomenon
is the result of an electrical change in
the atmosphere, and that such a change usually
precedes rain. Now, if such happen in spring
or in summer, and before such a quantity
of rain as is found to affect the harvest,
it may too often betoken scarcity, discontent,
and turbulence, as such are the times when
all grievances, either real or imaginary,
are brought forward for redress. The origin
of the superstition of sailors, of nailing
a horse-shoe to the mast, is to me unaccountable,
unless it may have been, like the following
trial of the credulity of the superstitious
by some person for amusement:--Sailors sometimes
make a considerable pecuniary sacrifice for
the acquisition of a child's caul, the retaining
of which is to infallibly preserve them from
drowning.
"Some years ago, a pretty wide district
was alarmed by an account of the beans [Faba
vulgaris var. equina] being laid the wrong
way in the pod that year, which most certainly
foreboded something terrible to happen in
a short time, and this produced much consternation
amongst those who allow their imaginations
to run riot. The whole of the terrible omen
was this: the eye of the bean was in the
pod towards the apex, instead of being towards
the footstalk, as might appear at first sight
to be its natural position; and some were
scarcely convinced that this was the natural
position of the beans in the pod ever since
the creation, even on being shown the pod
of the preceding year with the seed in the
same position.
"As yet, however, I fear we must sum
up in the words of Davy:--
"_Phys._ But how can you explain such
absurdities as Friday being an unlucky day,
and the terror of spilling salt, or meeting
an old woman?
"_Poiet_. These, as well as the omens
of death-watches, dreams, etc. are founded
upon some accidental coincidences; but spilling
of salt, on an uncommon occasion, may, as
I have known it, arise from a disposition
to apoplexy, shown by an incipient numbness
in the hand, and may be a fatal symptom;
and persons dispirited by bad omens sometimes
prepare the way for evil fortune, for confidence
of success is a great means of insuring it.
The dream of Brutus before the battle of
Philippi probably produced a species of irresolution
and despondency which was the principal cause
of his losing the battle; and I have heard
that the illustrious sportsman, to whom you
referred just now, was always observed to
shoot ill, because he shot carelessly, after
one of his dispiriting omens.
"_Hal._ I have in life met with a few
things which I have found it impossible to
explain, either by chance coincidences, or
by natural connections, and I have known
minds of a very superior class affected by
them--persons in the habit of reasoning deeply
and profoundly."
The number of remarkable events that happened
on some particular days, have been the principal
means of confirming both pagans and Christians
in their opinions on this subject. For instance,
Alexander who was born on the sixth of April,
conquered Darius, and died on the same day.
The Emperor Basianus Caracalla was born,
and died on the sixth day of April. Augustus
was adopted on the 19th of August, began
his consulate, conquered the Triumviri, and
died the same day. The christians have observed
that the 24th of February was four times
fortunate to Charles the fifth. That Wednesday
was a fortunate day to Pope Sixtus the fifth;
for on a Wednesday he was born, on that day
made a monk, on the same day made a general
of his order, on that day created a Cardinal,
on that day elected Pope, and also on that
day inaugurated. That Thursday was a fatal
day to Henry the eighth, King of England,
and his posterity, for he died on a thursday;
King Edward the sixth on a Thursday; Queen
Mary on a Thursday; and Queen Elizabeth on
a Thursday.
The French have observed that the feast of
Pentecoste had been lucky to Henry III, King
of France for on that day he was born, on
that day elected King of Poland, and on that
day he succeeded his brother Charles IX,
on the throne of France.
There are critical days observed by physicians,
in continued fevers, a doctrine which has
been confirmed by the united testimony of
De Haen and Cullen; and these are the 3rd.
5th. 7th. 9th. 11th. 14th. 17th. and
20th. By critical days are meant, any of
the above days, on which the fever abates
or terminates favourably, or on which it
is exacerbated or terminates fatally.
Natural astrology is confined to the study
of exploring natural effects, in which sense
it is admitted to be a part of natural philosophy.
It was under this view that Mr. Goad, Mr.
Boyle, and Dr. Mead, pleaded for its use.
The first endeavours to account for the diversity
of seasons from the situations, habitudes
and motions of the planets: and to explain
an infinity of phenomena by the contemplation
of the stars. The Honourable Mr. Boyle admitted,
that all physical bodies are influenced by
the heavenly bodies; and Doctor Mead's opinion,
in his treatise concerning the power of the
sun and moon, etc. is in favour of the doctrine.
But these predictions and influences are
ridiculed and entirely exploded by the most
esteemed modern philosophers, of which the
reader may have a learned specimen in Rohault's,
Tractat. Physic, part II. c. 27.
The diseases of men, women, and children
were supposed at times to be more immediately
caused by the influence of the seven planets.
In order to comprehend this exploded doctrine,
we shall here set down the pretended governing
and days, at what time they are supposed
to have the most influence:
[Symbol: Sol] Sol, or the sun governs on
Sunday. [Symbol: Luna] Luna, or the moon,
Monday. [Symbol: Mars] Mars, Tuesday. [Symbol:
Mercury] Mercury, Wednesday. [Symbol: Jupiter]
Jupiter, Thursday, [Symbol: Venus] Venus.
Friday. [Symbol: Saturn] Saturn, Saturday.
Saturn reigning, is said to cause cold diseases,
as the gout, leprosy, palsy, quartan agues,
dropsies, catarrhs, colds, rheumatisms, etc.
Jupiter causes cramps, numbness, inflammations
of the liver, head-aches, pains in the shoulders,
flatulency, inflammatory fevers, and all
diseases caused by putrefaction, apoplexy,
and quinsies.
Mars, acute fevers and tartan agues, continual
and intermitting fevers, imposthumes, erisepelas,
carbuncles, fistulas, dysentery, and similar
hot and dry diseases.
Sol causes rheums in the eyes, coldness in
the stomach and liver, syncope, catarrhs,
pustular eruptions, hysterics, eruptions
on the lower extremities.
Venus causes sores, lientery, hysteria, sickness
at the stomach, from cold and moist causes,
disorders of the liver and lungs.
Mercury causes hoarseness and distempers
in the senses, impediments in the speech,
falling sickness, coughs, jaundice, vomiting,
catarrhs.
The moon causes palsy, cholic, dropsy, imposthumes,
dysenteries, and all diseases arising from
obstructed circulation.
The means laid down for the prevention of
these diseases are rational enough, at least
some of them, such as temperance, moderate
bleeding
(whether or not indicated we are not told,)
the use of laxatives at seasonable times,
when a friendly planet, opposite to the malignant
planet you were born under, has dominion,
by which the effect of its influence will
be much abated, and a power given to nature
to oppose its malevolency, which, "if
well heeded, may be a main prevention of
dangerous diseases." Thus every planet
in the heavens carries with it a diseased
aspect, without, as it would appear, possessing
any repelling or sanative powers to correct
or ward off the sickly influence it is supposed
to entertain over the life and limbs of frail
mortals; that, in the sense of this absurd
doctrine, or rather jargon, when Jupiter
has dominion, it will be necessary to bleed
and take calomel to guard against (not to
attack it when it has taken place) inflammation
of the liver; and when Mars presides, to
send immediately for Van Butchel to frighten
away an imaginary fistula--absurd and ridiculous
nonsense, too prevalent even at the present
day; for what can bleeding and physicking
at the spring and fall of the year be called
but operations without reason, under suppositious
stellar influence. "Observe also to
gather all your physic herbs in the hour
of the friendly planet, that temporises with
what you were born under, and in so doing
they will have more strength, power, and
virtue to operate in the medicines; but neither
physic nor bleed on the third of January,
the last of April, the first of July, the
first of August, and the last and second
day of October; for those astrologers, with
whom physicians join, conclude it perilous,
by reason of the bad influence then reigning;
and if it change not the distemper into another
worse, it will augment it, and put the party
in great danger of death, _if he or she in
this case be not lucky to escape_."
It would be a waste of words to offer a single
comment on such egregious stuff--"do
not bleed on the third of January,"
nor on such and such a day, (as if there
could be stated times for bleeding beyond
those which are indicated by the presence
of disease, and requiring such evacuation,)
is a practice we believe peculiar only to
astrologers, and those who believe in such
demonological cant. It is no less, however,
a singular fact that men distinguished in
every other respect for their learning, should
most particularly have indulged in the superstition
of judicial astrology. At the present time
a belief in such subjects can only exist
with those who may be said to have no belief
at all; for mere traditional sentiments can
hardly be said to amount to a belief.
It was astronomy that gave rise to judicial
astrology, which, offering an ample field
to enthusiasm and imposture, was eagerly
pursued by many who had no scientific purpose
in view. It was connected with various juggling
tricks and deceptions, affected an obscure
jargon of language, and insinuated itself
into every thing in which the hopes and fears
of mankind were concerned. The professors
of this pretended science were at first generally
persons of mean education, in whom low cunning
supplied the place of knowledge. Most of
them engaged in the empirical practice of
physic, and some through the credulity of
the times, even arrived at a degree of eminence
in it; yet although the whole foundation
of their art was folly and deceit, they nevertheless
gained many proselytes and dupes, both among
the well-informed and the ignorant.
About the middle of the seventeenth century,
the passion for horoscopes and expounding
the stars prevailed in France among people
of the first rank. The new-born child was
usually presented naked to the star-expounder,
who read the first lineaments on its forehead,
and the transverse lines in its hands, and
thence wrote down its future destiny. It
has been reported of several persons famous
for their astrological skill, that they have
suffered a voluntary death merely to verify
their own predictions. It is curious to observe
the shifts to which these wise men were frequently
put when their predictions were not verified.
Great winds at one time were predicted by
a famous adept in the art, but no unusual
storms having happened, to save the reputation
of the art, the prediction was applied figuratively
to some revolutions in the state, of which
there were instances enough at that time.
The life of the famous Lilly the astrologer,
and the Sidrophel of Butler, written by himself,
is a curious work, containing much artless
narrative, but at the same time, so much
palpable imposture, that it is difficult
to know when he is speaking what he really
believes to be the truth. In a sketch of
the state of astrology in his day, the adepts
whose characters he has drawn were the lowest
miscreants of the town. They all, indeed,
speak of each other as rogues and impostors;
among whom were Booker, George Wharton, and
Gadbury, who gained a livelihood by practising
on the credulity of even men of learning
so late as 1650 to the 18th century. In Ashmole's
life an account of these artful impostors
may be read. Most of them had taken the air
in the pillory, and others had conjured themselves
up to the gallows.
To the astrologers of the 17th century, the
quacks and impostors of the beginning of
the 19th are only equal. Quackery and astrology,
the latter of which often served as a mask
to the former, appear to have been at one
time a kind of Castor and Pollux; quackery,
however, it would seem has outlived astrology,
for there are more who would swallow the
nostrum of the quack than the flatulent bolus
of the fortune-tellers. Both still have their
votaries. One Grigg, a poulterer in Surrey,
was set in the pillory at Croyden, (Temp.
Edw. IV,) and again in the Borough, for cheating
people out of their money by pretending to
cure them with charms, by simply looking
at the patients, or by practices still more
absurd and questionable. Of such doctors
there is no lack. This kind of practice offers
one of the finest fields for deception of
any species of empirical delusion held out
to the public at the present day. Such indeed
is the infatuation and credulity of the ignorant
that, we are confidently assured, a notorious
German quack had within one year so many
half-guinea applications that he netted L2000;
and that the glass bottles in which the precious
nostrums were conveyed from the sanctum sanctorum
of the mendacious empiric in high Germany,
who made his debut in this country by hawking
about Dutch drops, amounted to as many two-pences.
To those of either sex, who are weak-minded
enough to trust their lives to the rash artifices
of an ignorant pretender who affects to discover
an occult quality in the constitution of
the patient denoting the existence of some
internal complaint beyond that which less
equivocal symptoms sufficiently present to
the eye and knowledge of the regular practitioner--we
can only say that we conceive them to be
justly punished in the loss of their money,
and the consequent ruin of their health.
In Stow's Chronicle we find that one of these
said gentlemen was set on horseback, his
face towards the tail, which he held in his
hand in the manner of a bridle, while with
a collar significative of his offence, dangling
about his neck, he made a public entree into
the city of London, conducted by Jack Ketch,
who afterwards did himself the honour of
scourging and branding the impostor, previous
to banishment, which completed his sentence.
In the reign of James I, a terrible sweep
was made among the quacks and advertising
gentry. The council dispatched a warrant
to the magistrates of the city of London,
to take up all reputed quacks, and bring
them before the censors of the college, to
examine how properly qualified they were
to be trusted, either with the limbs or lives
of his majesty's lieges. This is all that
is required at the present day. Let the legislature
controul this department instead of the college
of physicians, who, as a body, can boast
of as large an allowance of licensed ignorance
as any corporate set of men in existence.
We say nothing of surgery, for this branch
of knowledge leaves the world generally something
to look at, hence so few pretenders to it;
but physic buries all its blemishes with
the unfortunate victim.
The country, even in this age of progressing
wisdom, is deluged with quack medicines,
which credulous people say are not directed
against the constitution, but only against
the pocket, and that they are too insipid
to do either good or harm; but were this
the case, there would have been no occasion
for the exemplary punishments with which
it is recorded quacks of all sorts have at
various times been visited. Be it known,
there can be no such thing invented by man
as an universal remedy to prevent or cure
all kinds of diseases; because that which
would agree with one constitution would disagree
with another differently organised; and a
quack nostrum, such as we see daily advertised,
may certainly agree at one stage of a disease,
but might go far in killing the patient at
another. Besides, all these boasted specifics
have been found to be either inert, ineffectual,
or dangerous, and every pretender to them,
in times less enlightened by the general
march of intellect, has been convicted either
of gross ignorance or dishonesty. No one
can vouch with certainty for any particular
kind of medicine,--that it will agree with
this or that individual, until acquainted
with his peculiar constitution; consequently
it is the height of absurdity to prescribe
physic for a man without a knowledge of such
circumstances to direct him. Amulets, talismans,
charms, and incantations, are innocent and
innoxious, and may impose only on credulity
without any other untoward consequence, leaving
the patient in the same state in which he
was found; but so much cannot be said for
quacks and quack-medicines which frequently
remove their deluded victims far beyond the
reach of either physic or philosophy.
Butler is said to be the author of the following
character of a quack; and who can read it
without being astonished at the prophetic
intelligence with which it abounds, and which,
unfortunately, admits of a too close analogy
with some very recent and untoward events,
in the annals of modern empiricism. "He
is a medicine-monger, probationer of receipts,
and Doctor Epidemic; he is perpetually putting
his medicines upon their trial, and very
often finds them GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER,
but still they have some trick or other to
come off, and avoid burning by the hand of
the hangman. He prints his trials of skill,
and challenges death at so many several weapons;
that, though he is sure to be foiled by every
one, he cares not: for, _if he can but get
money, he is sure to get off_; for it is
but posting up diseases for poltroons in
all the public places of the town, and daring
them to meet him again, and his credit stands
as fair with the rabble, as ever it did.
He makes nothing
* * * * * * * * * * *;--but will undertake
to cure them and tie one hand behind him,
with so much ease and freedom, that his patients
may surfeit and get drunk as often as they
please, and follow their business without
any inconvenience to their health or occasions;
and recover with so much secrecy, that they
shall never know how it comes about. He professes
"no cure no pay," as well he may,
for if nature does the work, he is paid for
it; if not, he neither wins nor loses; and
like a cunning rook lays his bets so artfully,
that, let the chance be what it will, he
either wins or saves. He cheats the rich
for their money, and the poor for charity,
and, if either succeed, both are pleased,
and he passes for a very just and conscientious
man: for as those that pay nothing ought
at least to speak well of their entertainments,
their testimony makes way for those who are
able to pay for both. He finds he has no
reputation among those that know him, and
fears he is never like to have, and, therefore,
posts up his bills, to see if he can thrive
better amongst those who know nothing of
him. He keeps his post continually, and will
undertake to maintain it against all the
plagues of Egypt. He sets up his trade upon
a pillar, or the corner of a street--These
are his warehouses, where all he has is to
be seen, and a great deal more; for he that
looks further finds nothing at all."
ABSURDITIES OF PARACELSUS, AND VAN HELMONT.
Although some of the first chemists were
men of sense and learning, yet after that
chemistry began to be fashionable and much
in vogue, there were some of its professors,
who although men of an uncommon turn of genius,
were as great enthusiasts, both in the chemical
and medical arts, as any other men ever were
in religion. They not only pretended to transmute
some of the baser metals into gold, contrary
to the nature of things--and if they could
have succeeded in that impossible work, it
would have rendered gold as plentiful, cheap,
and less valuable than iron, because it is
less fit for instruments and mechanical uses--but
they also pretended infallibly to cure all
diseases, by some of their new invented chemical
machines;--a thing equally as impossible
as the other, and shewed their ignorance
of the causes and nature of diseases. As
those who are the most ignorant are generally
the greatest boasters, we find that none
of them were more so, than that vain, boasting,
paradoxical enthusiast Paracelsus, who had
acquired great riches by curing a certain
disease with a mercurial ointment, the knowledge
of which secret he is said to have stolen
from Jacobus Berengarius, of Caipo, in his
travels thither. He was withal so illiterate,
that he said philosophy could be taught in
no language but high Dutch; but the true
reason was, that he neither understood philosophy
nor any other language. He also boasted that
he was in possession of a nostrum which would
prolong man's life to the age of Methusaleh,
though he died himself at the age of forty-seven.
He lived in the fifteenth century. The cures
he wrought were deemed so surprising in that
age, that he was supposed to have recourse
to supernatural aid. In a picture of him
at Lumley Castle, he is represented in a
close black gown, with both hands on a great
sword, on whose hilt is inscribed the word
Azot. This was the name of his _familiar_
spirit, that he kept imprisoned in the pummel,
to consult on emergent occasions. The circumstance
is thus alluded to by Butler:--
Bombastes kept the Devil's Bird Shut in the
pummel of his sword; And taught him all the
cunning pranks, Of past and future mountebanks.
Paracelsus was succeeded by his scholar van
Helmont, who had much more learning, but
was as great an enthusiast, both in the chemical
and medical arts as his master, and embraced
most of his paradoxical opinions; and, having
more technical terms, he frequently used
them rather to dazzle and confound the understandings
of his readers, than to inform their judgments.
By thus giving his writings a mystical air
of wisdom, he rendered them obscure, and
sometimes unintelligible; consequently, more
easily imposed them upon the public and vulgar,
as sublime and useful truths. He also vainly
boasted that he could cure any fever in four
days' time, by sweating the patient with
one draught of his famous nostrum, the _Praecipitatus
Diaphoreticus Paracelsi_; and further adds,
"that no man can deserve the name of
a physician, who cannot cure any fever in
four days' time." He, however, admits,
that he sometimes added a little theriaca
(treacle) and wine to it; which last, he
says, "is not only a great cordial,
but as a vehicle, is a proper messenger to
be sent on such an errand, as it knows the
road, is well received wherever it goes,
and readily admitted into the most private
apartments of the human body." Hence
we believe that wine is not only a good natured,
but an intelligent being; though it sometimes
deprives men of their senses for a time,
when they take too much of it: and hence
we see also a specimen of our author's method
of reasoning and writing.
Van Helmont, like his great master, also
boasted, that he could cure all inflammatory
and other fevers, and even a pleurisy, without
either bleeding, vomiting, purging, clysters,
or blisters; and he quarrelled so much with
the two last, that he calls clysters "a
beastly remedy," and says that blisters
were invented by a wicked spirit, whom he
calls Moloz, though Beelzebub might have
been as good a name, since Dr. Baynard wittily
observed, that he believed he was only a
great cantharid. And both Helmont and the
Doctor were so far right, that blistering
was then, as well as now, much abused; and
in truth they are much oftener applied than
is either necessary or useful.
Thus these two eminent chemists, and too
many of their followers, frequently imposed
their writings upon the unguarded reader,
and themselves upon the vulgar, for men of
profound knowledge in the medical art, and
as great adepts in chemistry: and being puffed
up with the high opinion entertained of their
new art, or new medicines, and their own
great wisdom, they rejected the philosophical
theory of medicine by Galen and Avicenna,
then so much in vogue. They were right in
doing this, and might have done great service
to mankind, if they had not set up their
own imaginary chemical theory in its place,
which was neither founded upon observations,
nature, nor reason, and had no existence
but in their own vain imaginations. Thus
they supposed a malignity which caused all
diseases, as well inflammatory as other fevers,
and which was to be forced out of the body
by sweating, with their hot therapeutics;
they, therefore, attacked all fevers with
this chemical ammunition, and attempted to
carry them with fire and storm, prescribing
the praecipitatus diaphoreticus and sweating
regimen, which must have been fatal to many,
and no doubt would have been so to many more,
if van Helmont had not allowed his patients
to dilute the medicine with a thin diet,
which rendered the calorific method less
fatal. But, as the learned Dr. Friend judiciously
remarks, if any did escape after that hot
regimen, it was through a fiery trial.
Thus the chemists, without any rational theory,
or regard to nature, and what she indicated
or did;--without duly considering how the
morbid matter, which caused the disease,
was to be concocted and fitted to be carried
off by some critical evacuation; or how to
assist nature to bring that crisis on, according
to the Hippocratic method;--without considering
the benefit of the rational, cooling, antiphlogistic
practice of the Arabians--they introduced
their sudorific regimen instead; and this
regimen was soon after brought into use in
England, and most other countries, where
it continued to be the practice for many
years afterwards, as may be seen by the authors
of those times, until the judicious and honest
Dr. Sydenham wisely rejected and exploded
it, introducing the rational method of Hippocrates
and the cooling regimen of the Arabians,
which he seems rather to have taken _ex ipsa
re et ratione_ from nature and reason, than
from the works of the Arabian physicians,
with which he appears not to have been acquainted,
as he never mentions them.
Van Helmont had several other famous nostrums,
with which he pretended to perform wonders,
as quacks have done in all ages, and as some
do now: for empiricism was never more in
fashion than at the present day, and the
chemical art has supplied them with many
more arcana and nostrums than the ancients
had in all their antidotes and theriacas,
etc. since chemistry was made subservient
to medicine. Van Helmont, nevertheless was
a learned man, and acquired a great name
and reputation, at least for some time; but,
as neither his theory nor his practice were
founded on nature and reason, nor conformable
to them, the more judicious physicians soon
saw their errors, as well as the fallacy
of his new invented chemical terms and unmeaning
phrases, which only contained the shadow
and not the substance of the medical science;
therefore both his chemical theory and hot
regimen, together with his writings, sunk
soon after his death, into a state of merited
oblivion.
Notwithstanding that the science of chemistry
was greatly improved by these extraordinary
men, who invented or discovered many useful
remedies, which they introduced into the
practice of medicine in a no less extraordinary
manner, and thereby pointed out the way for
others to follow them; yet we must allow
that the more able and learned chemists have
greatly enriched and improved the materia
medica since, by making many curious experiments,
and thereby discovering several new and very
efficacious medicines, not only from the
semi-metals, mercury and antimony, and the
various chemical preparations from them,
but from the more perfect metals, and some
other mineral bodies, as well as from a great
variety of remedies which are prepared both
from vegetable and animal substances, as
salts, oils, essences, spirits, tinctures,
elixirs, extracts and many more needless
here to be mentioned, but all of which are
known to physicians. For all these we are
indebted to the chemists who first invented
and introduced them into practice; although
the use and application, as well as the methods
of administering them to the sick, to cure
various other diseases than those they were
first used for, has been greatly improved
by several learned and ingenious physicians.
FOOTNOTES:
[142] See Demonologia, by J. S. F. p. 40.
[143] See Magazine of Natural History, April,
1830.
CHAPTER XXI.
MODERN EMPIRICISM.
In one respect we have but very little occasion
to extol our own enlightened age at the expence
of those ages which are so frequently and
justly termed _dark_. We allude to the bold
and artful designs of imposture, and particularly
_medical imposture_. Daily are seen illiterate
and audacious empirics sporting with the
lives of a credulous public, that seem obstinately
resolved to shut their ears against all the
suggestions of reason and experience. The
host of empirics, mountebanks, and self-dubbed
hygeists, which infest the metropolis, and
the tinctures, cordials, pills, balms, and
essences, so much extolled by their retailers,
and swallowed by the public, are indeed so
many proofs of the credulity of the age,
that to say the least, the march of intellect
has evidently made a _faux-pas_ in this direction.
The celestial beds, the enchanting magnetic
powers introduced into this country by Messmer,
a German quack, and his numerous disciples,
the prevailing indifference to all dietetic
precepts, the singular imposition practised
on many females, in persuading them to wear
the inert acromatic belts, the strange infatuation
of the opulent in paying five guineas for
a pair of _metallic tractors_, not worth
sixpence, the tables for blood-letting, and
other absurdities still inserted in popular
almanacs, (against all the rules of common
sense)--all these yield in nothing to the
absurdities and superstitious notions conveyed
through the medium of astrology, dreams,
and other ludicrous though by far more imposing
and interesting channels. The temple of the
gulls is now thronged with votaries as much
as that of superstition formerly was; human
reason is still a slave to the most tyrannical
prejudices; and certainly, there is no ready
way to excite general attention and admiration,
than to deal in the mysterious and the marvellous.
The visionary system of Jacob Boehman has
latterly been revived in some parts of Germany.
The ghosts and apparitions which had disappeared
from the times of Thomasius and Swedenborg,
have again left their graves, to the great
terror of fanaticism. New prophets announce
their divine mission, and, what is worse,
find implicit believers! The _inventors_
of _secret_ medicines are rewarded by patents,
and obtain no small celebrity; while some
of the more conscientious, but less fortunate
adepts, endeavour to amuse the public with
popular systems of medicine.
One of the most dazzling and successful inventors
in modern times, was Messmer, who commenced
his career of medical knight-errantry at
Vienna. His house was the focus of high life,
the rendezvous of the gay, where the young
and opulent were enlivened and entertained
with continual concerts, routs, and illuminations.
At a great expence, he imported into Germany
the first _Harmonica_ from this country:
he established cabinets of natural curiosities,
and laboured constantly and secretly in his
chemical laboratory; so that he acquired
the reputation of being a great alchemist,
a philosopher studiously employed in the
most useful and important researches. In
1766, he first publicly announced the object
and nature of his secret labours:--all his
discoveries centered in the _magnet_, which,
according to his hypothesis, was the best
and safest remedy hitherto proposed against
all diseases incident to the human body.
This declaration of Messmer excited very
general attention; the more so as about the
same time he established a hospital in his
own house, into which he admitted a number
of patients _gratis_. Such disinterestedness
procured, as might be expected, no small
addition to his fame. He was, besides, fortunate
in gaining over many celebrated physicians
to his opinions, who lavished the greatest
encomiums on his new art, and were instrumental
in communicating to the public a number of
successful experiments. This seems to have
surpassed the expectations of Messmer, and
induced him to extend his original plan further
than it is likely he first intended. We find
him soon after assuming a more dogmatical
and mysterious air, when, for the purpose
of shining exclusively, he appeared in the
character of a _magician_:--his pride and
egotism would brook neither equal nor competitor.
The common loadstone, or mineral magnet,
which is so well known, did not appear to
him sufficiently important and mysterious--he
contrived an unusual one, to the effect of
which he gave the name of '_animal magnetism_'.
After this, he proceeded to a still holder
assumption, everywhere giving it out, that
the inconceivable powers of this subtile
fluid were centered in his own person. Now,
the mona-drama began; and Messmer, at once
the hero and chorus of the piece, performed
his part in a masterly manner. He placed
the most nervous, hysteric, and hypocondriac
patients opposite to him; and by the sole
act of stretching forth his finger, he made
them feel the most violent shocks. The effects
of this wonderful power excited universal
astonishment; its activity and penetration
being confirmed by unquestionable testimonies,
from which it appeared, that blows similar
to those given by a blunt iron, could be
imparted by the operator, while he himself
was separated by two doors, nay, even by
thick walls. The very looks of this prince
of jugglers had the power to excite painful
cramps and twitches in his credulous and
predisposed patients.
This wonderful tide of success instigated
his indefatigable genius to bolder attempts,
especially as he had no severe criticism
to apprehend from the superstitious multitude.
He roundly asserted things of which he offered
not the least shadow of proof; and for the
truth of which he had no other pledge to
offer but his own high reputation. At one
time he could communicate his magnetic power
to paper, wool, silk, bread, leather, stones,
water, etc., at another he asserted that
certain individuals possessed a greater degree
of susceptibility for this power than others.
It must be owned, however, that many of his
contemporaries made it their business to
encounter his extravagant pretensions, and
refute his dogmatical assertions with the
most convincing arguments. Yet, he long enjoyed
the triumph of being supported by blind followers,
and their increasing number completely overpowered
the suffrages of reason.
Messmer, at length perceived that in his
native country, he should never be able to
reach the point which he had fixed upon,
as the termination of his magnetical career.
The Germans began to discredit his pompous
claims; but it was only after repeated failures
in some promised cures, that he found himself
under the necessity of seeking protection
in Paris. There he met with a most flattering
reception, being caressed, and in a manner
adored by a nation which has always been
extravagantly fond of every new thing, whimsical
and mysterious. Messmer well knew how to
turn this natural propensity to the best
advantage. He addressed himself particularly
to the weak; to such as wished to be considered
men of profound knowledge, but who, when
they were compelled to be silent from real
ignorance, took refuge behind the impenetrable
shield of mystery. The fashionable levity,
the irresistible curiosity, and the peculiar
turn of the Parisians, ever solicitous to
have something interesting for conversation,
to keep their active imagination in play,
were exactly suited to the genius and talents
of the inventor of animal magnetism. We need
not wonder, therefore, if he availed himself
of their moral and physical character, to
ensure a ready faith in his doctrines, and
success to his pretended experiments: in
fact, he found friends and admirers wherever
he made his appearance. His first advertisement
was couched in the following high-sounding
terms:
"Behold a discovery which promises unspeakable
advantages to the human race, and immortal
fame to its author! Behold the dawn of an
universal revolution! A new race of men shall
arise, shall overspread the earth, to embellish
it by their virtues, and render it fertile
by their industry. Neither vice nor ignorance,
shall stop their active career; they will
know our calamities only from the records
of history. The prolonged duration of their
life will enable them to plan and accomplish
the most laudable undertakings. The tranquil,
the innocent gratifications of that primeval
age will be restored, wherein man laboured
without toil, lived without sorrow, and expired
without a groan! Mothers will no longer be
subject to pain and danger during their pregnancy
and child-birth: their progeny will be more
robust and brave; the now rugged and difficult
path of education will be rendered smooth
and easy; and hereditary complaints and diseases
will be for ever banished from the future
auspicious race. Fathers rejoicing to see
their posterity of the fourth and fifth generations,
will only drop like fruit fully ripe, at
the extreme point of age! Animals and plants,
no less susceptible of the magnetic power
than man, will be exempt from the reproach
of barrenness and the ravages of distemper.
The flocks in the fields, and the plants
in the gardens, will be more vigorous and
nourishing, and the trees will bear more
beautiful and grateful fruits. The human
race, once endowed with this elementary power,
will probably rise to still more sublime
and astonishing effects of nature: who indeed
is able to pronounce, with certainty, how
far this salutary influence may extend?"
"What splendid promises! What rich prospects!
Messmer, the greatest of philosophers, the
most virtuous of men, the physician of mankind,
charitably opens his arms to all his fellow-mortals,
who stand in need of comfort and assistance.
No wonder that the cause of magnetism, under
such a zealous apostle, rapidly gained ground,
and obtained every day large additions to
the number of its converts. To the gay, the
nervous, and the dissipated of all ranks
and ages, it held out the most flattering
promises. Men of the first respectability
interested themselves in behalf of this new
philosophy; they anticipated in idea, the
more happy and more vigorous race which would
proceed, as it were, by enchantment, from
the wonderful impulsive powers of animal
magnetism. The French were so far seduced
by these flattering appearances, as to offer
the German adventurer _thirty thousand livres_
for the communication of his secret art.
He appears, however, to have understood his
own interest better than thus to dispose
of his hypothetical property, which, upon
a more accurate investigation might be objected
to, as consisting of unfair articles of purchase.
He consequently returned the following answer
to the credulous French ministers:
"That Dr. M. considered his art of too
great importance, and the abuses it might
lead to, too dangerous for him at present
to make it public; that he must therefore
reserve to himself the time of its publication,
and mode of introducing it to general use
and observation--that he would first take
proper measures to initiate or prepare the
minds of men, by exciting in them a susceptibility
of this great power; and that he would then
undertake to communicate his secret gradually,
which he meant to do without hope of reward."
Messmer, too politic to part with his secret
for so small a premium, had a better prospect
in view; and his apparent disinterestedness
and hesitation served only to sound an over-curious
public, to allure more victims to his delusive
practices, and to retain them more firmly
in their implicit belief. Soon after this
he was easily prevailed upon to institute
a private society, into which none were admitted,
but such as bound themselves by a vow to
perpetual secrecy. These pupils he agreed
to instruct in his important mysteries, on
condition of each paying him _one hundred
louis_. In the course of six months, having
had not less than three hundred such pupils,
he realized a fortune of _thirty thousand
louis_.
It appears, however, that the disciples of
Messmer did not adhere to their engagement:
we find them separating gradually from their
professor, and establishing schools for the
propagation of his system, with a view, no
doubt, to reimburse themselves for the expenses
of their own initiation into the magnetising
art. But few of them having understood the
terms and mysterious doctrines of their foreign
master, every new adept exerted himself to
excel his fellow-labourers, in additional
explanations and inventions: others, who
did not possess, or could not spare the sum
of one hundred louis, were industriously
employed in attempts to discover the secret,
by their own ingenuity; and thus arose a
great variety of magnetical sects. At length,
however, Messmer's authority became suspected;
his pecuniary acquisitions were now notorious,
and our _humane and disinterested philosopher_
was assailed with critical and satirical
animadversions from every quarter. The fertility
of his process for medical purposes, as well
as the bad consequences it might procure
in a moral point of view, soon became topics
of common conversation, and ultimately even
excited the apprehensions of government.
One dangerous effect of magnetical associations
was, that young voluptuaries began to employ
this art, to promote their libidinous and
destructive designs.
Matters having assumed this serious aspect,
the French government, much to its credit,
deputed four respectable and unprejudiced
men, to whom were afterwards added four others
of great learning and abilities, to inquire
into, and appreciate the merits of the new
discovery of animal magnetism. These philosophers,
among whom we find the illustrious names
of Franklin and Lavoisier, recognised, indeed,
very surprising and unexpected phenomena
in the physical state of magnetized individuals;
but they gave it as their opinion, that the
powers of imagination, and not animal magnetism,
had produced these effects. Sensible of the
superior influence, which the imagination
can exert on the human body, when it is effectually
wrought upon, they perceived, after a number
of experiments and facts frequently repeated,
that _contact_, or touch, _imagination, imitation_,
and _excited sensibility_, were the real
and sole causes of these phenomena, which
had so much confounded the illiterate, the
credulous, and the enthusiastic; that this
boasted magnetic element had no real existence
in nature, consequently that Messmer himself
was either an arrant impostor, or a deluded
fanatic.
Meantime, this magnetic mystery had made
no small progress in Germany. A number of
periodical and other publications vindicated
its claims to public favour and attention;
and some literary men, who had rendered themselves
justly celebrated by their former writings,
now stepped forward as bold and eager champions
in support of this mystical doctrine. The
ingenious Lavater undertook long journies
for the propagation of magnetism and somnambulism:[144]
and what, manipulations and other absurdities
were not practised on hysterical young ladies
in the city of Bremen? It is farther worthy
of notice, that an eminent physician of that
place, in a recent publication, does not
scruple to rank magnetism among medical remedies!
It must, nevertheless, be confessed, that
the great body of the learned, throughout
Germany, have endeavoured, by strong and
impartial criticism, to oppose and refute
animal magnetism, considered as a medical
system. And how should it be otherwise, since
it is highly ridiculous to imagine that violent
agitations, spasms, convulsions, etc. which
are obviously symptoms of a diseased state
of body, and which must increase rather than
diminish the disposition to nervous diseases,
can be the means of improving the constitution
and ultimately of prolonging human life?
Every attentive person must have observed,
that too frequent intercourse between nervous
and hypochondriac patients is infectious;
and if this be the case, public assemblies,
for exhibiting magnetised individuals, can
neither be safe nor proper. It is no small
proof of the good sense of the people of
this country, though they have at different
times fallen into nearly similar delusions,
that the professors of animal magnetism did
not long maintain their ground; they were
soon exposed to public ridicule on the stage,
and shortly became annihilated in their own
absurdities.
Other plans for the prolongation of life,
little less absurd than animal magnetism,
which have, like every other imposture, "fretted
their hour," deserve to be noticed.
The French and Germans have long stood pre-eminent
in the empirical world, though the merit
of ingenious and more plausible emanations
of genius may fairly be attributed to the
latter. Animal magnetism; physiognomy, a
rational though fallacious science; phrenology,
a doctrine abounding with many singular manifestions,
and possessing claims not to be put down
by mere force of prejudice, are all of German
origin.
The Count St. Germain, a Frenchman, realized
large sums, by vending an artificial tea,
chiefly composed of yellow saunders, senna
leaves, and fennel seed, which was puffed
off under the specious appellation of _Tea
for prolonging life_; which, at that time,
was swallowed with such voracity all over
the continent, that few could subsist without
it. Its celebrity was of short duration,
and none ever lived long enough to realize
its effects.
The Chevalier d'Ailhoud, another brazen-faced
adventurer, presented the world with a powder,
which met with so large and rapid a sale,
that he soon accumulated money enough to
purchase a whole county. This famous powder,
however, instead of adding to the means of
securing a long and healthy life, is well
known to produce constant indisposition,
and at length to cause a most miserable death;
being composed of certain drugs of a poisonous
nature, though slow in their operation.
Count Cagliostro, styled the luminary of
modern impostors and debauchees, prepared
a very common stomach elixir, which was sold
at a most exorbitant price under the name
of "_balm of life_" It was pretended,
with the most unparalleled effrontery, that,
by the use of this medicine, the count had
lived above 200 years, and that he was rendered
invulnerable against every species of poison.
These bold assertions could not fail to excite
very general attention. During his residence
at Strasburg, while descanting, in a large
and respectable company, on the virtues of
his antidote, his pride met with a very mortifying
check. A physician who was present, and who
had taken part in the conversation, quitting
the room privately, went to an apothecary's
shop, and ordering two pills of equal size
to be made, agreeably to his directions,
suddenly appeared again before the count,
and thus addressed him:--"Here, my worthy
count, are two pills; the one contains a
mortal poison, the other is perfectly innocent;
choose one of these and swallow it, and I
engage to take that which you leave. This
will be considered as a decisive proof of
your medical skill, and enable the public
to ascertain the efficacy of your extolled
elixir." The count took the alarm, made
a number of apologies, but could not be prevailed
upon to touch the pills. The physician swallowed
both immediately, and proved by his apothecary,
that they might be taken with perfect safety,
being only made of common bread. Notwithstanding
the shame of this detection, Cagliostro still
retained numerous advocates by circulating
unfounded reports, and concealing his real
character by a variety of tricks.
The inspired father Gassner, of Bavaria,
ascribed all diseases, lameness, palsy, etc,
to diabolical agency, contending from the
history of Job, Saul, and others recorded
in sacred writ, that Satan, as the grand
enemy of mankind, has a power to embitter
and shorten our lives by diseases. Vast numbers
of credulous and weak-minded people flocked
to this fanatic, with a view of obtaining
relief which he never had the means to administer.
Multitudes of patients, afflicted with nervous
and hypochondriacal complaints, besieged
him daily; being all stimulated by a wild
imagination, eager to view and acknowledge
the works of Satan! Men eminent for their
literary attainments, even the natural philosophers
of Bavaria, were hurried away by the stream,
and completely blinded by sanctified imposture.
It is no less astonishing than true, that
so late as 1794, a Count Thun, at Leipzig,
pretended to perform miraculous cures on
gouty, hypochondriacal, and hysterical patients,
merely by the imposition of his sacred hands.
He could not however raise a great number
of disciples in a place that abounds with
so many sceptics and unbelievers.
The commencement of the nineteenth century
has been equally pregnant with imposture.
The delusions of Joanna Southcoat are too
fresh in the recollections of our readers
to require notice here; yet, strange to say,
this fanatical old woman had her adherents
and disciples; many of them, in other respects,
were keen and sensible men; nor has the delusion
altogether evaporated, though the sect is
by no means powerful or strong; the first
impressions are still retained by her half
frantic and ridiculous devotees, who are
only to be met with among the very lowest
and illiterate orders of society.
The farce of the convert of Newhall, near
Chelmsford, is of still more recent date.
Here we have a miracle performed by the holy
Prince Hohenlohe, at a distance of at least
three hundred miles from the presence of
his patient. Hearing of the wonderful cures
performed by this prince, one of the nuns
in the above convent, who had been afflicted
for a considerable length of time with a
swelling and inflammation extending from
the ball of the thumb along the fore arm,
and up as high as the armpit, wrote to Prince
Hohenlohe--having previously been attended
by the most eminent practitioners in London
without any apparent benefit--to relieve
her from her sufferings. This he willingly
undertook to do, but accompanied his consent
with an injunction that she should offer
up her prayers on a certain day (May 3,
1824,) held in reverence by the catholics,
and at a certain hour, promising that he
would be at his devotions at the same time.
All this, the afflicted nun attended to;
immediately after her prayers, she experienced
a tingling sensation along the arm, and from
that instant the cure rapidly advanced until
the diseased limb became as sound as the
other.
The days of priestcraft and superstition,
it was hoped, had been fast fleeting away
before the luminous rays of science, even
in those countries where religious juggling
had been most fostered and practised. But
for any man in this country to believe that
such a miracle can be wrought by human agency,
is of itself an awfully convincing proof
that he is ignorant of the Scriptures, and
that his own mind is likely to become a prey
to the wildest chimeras. Prince Hohenlohe's
notoriety however as a worker of miracles
was not confined to Newhall. His mighty prowess
extended to the emerald isle; and several
cures were performed at as great, or even
at a greater distance, than that wrought
at Newhall, and merely at the sound of his
orisons. We hear of no miracles being wrought
by, or upon protestants; consequently we
leave them to the gloom of the cloister,
whence they emanated, and where only they
can be of use in a cause which requires the
aid of stratagem to support it.
A taste for the marvellous seems to be natural
to man in every stage of society, and at
almost every period of life; it cannot, therefore,
be much a matter of astonishment, that, from
the earliest ages of the world, persons have
been found, who, more idle and more ingenious
than others, have availed themselves of this
propensity, to obtain an easy livelihood
by levying contributions on the curiosity
of the public. Whether this taste is to be
considered as a proof of the weakness of
our judgment, or of innate inquisitiveness,
which stimulates us to enlarge the sphere
of our knowledge, must be left to the decision
of metaphysicians; it is sufficient for our
present purpose to know that it gave rise
to a numerous class of impostors in the shape
of quacks, mountebanks, poison-swallowers,
fire-eaters, and pill-mongers.
There is another class of adepts, such as
sleight of hand performers, slack rope dancers,
teachers of animals to perform extraordinary
tricks; in short, those persons who delude
the senses, and practise harmless deceptions
on spectators, included under the common
appellation of jugglers. If these arts served
no other purpose than that of mere amusement,
they yet merit a certain degree of encouragement,
as affording at once a cheap and innocent
diversion; jugglers of this class frequently
exhibit instructive experiments in natural
philosophy, chemistry, and mechanics: thus
the solar microscope was invented from an
instrument to reflect shadows, with which
a savoyard amused a German populace; and
the celebrated Sir Richard Arkwright is said
to have conceived the idea of the spinning
machines, which have so largely contributed
to the prosperity of the cotton manufactories
in this country, from a toy which he purchased
for his child from an itinerant showman.
These deceptions have, besides, acted as
an agreeable and most powerful antidote to
superstition, and to that popular belief
in miracles, conjuration, sorcery, and witchcraft,
which preyed upon the minds of our ancestors;
and the effects of shadows, electricity,
mirrors, and the magnet, once formidable
instruments in the hands of interested persons,
for keeping the vulgar in awe, have been
stripped of their terrors, and are no longer
frightful in their most terrific forms.
ON THE TRANSFUSION OP BLOOD FROM ONE ANIMAL
TO ANOTHER.
At a time when the shortness of human life
was imputed to a distempered state of the
blood; when all diseases were ascribed to
this cause, without attending to the whole
of what relates to the moral and physical
nature of man, a conclusion was easily formed,
that a radical removal of the corrupted blood,
and a complete renovation of the entire mass
by substitution was both practicable and
effectual. The speculative mind of man was
not at a loss to devise expedients, to effect
this desirable purpose; and undoubtedly one
of the boldest, most extraordinary, and most
ingenious attempts ever made to lengthen
the period of human life was made at this
time. We allude here to the famous scheme
of _transfusion_, or of introducing the blood
of one animal into that of another. This
curious discovery is attributed to Andreas
Libavius, professor of medicine and chemistry
in the university of Halle, who, in the year
1615, publicly recommended experimental essays
to ascertain the fact.
Libavius was an honest and spirited opposer
of the Theosophic system, founded by the
bombastic Paracelsus, and supported by a
numerous tribe of credulous and frantic followers.
Although he was not totally exempt from the
follies of that age, since he believed in
the transmutation of metals, and suggested
to his pupils the wonderful power of potable
gold, yet he distinguished rational alchemy
from the fanatical systems then in repute,
and zealously defended the former against
the disciples of Galen, as well as those
of Paracelsus. He made a number of important
discoveries in chemistry, and was unquestionably
the first professor in Germany who gave chemical
lectures, upon pure principles of affinity,
unconnected with the extravagant notions
of the theosophists.
The first experiments relative to the transfusion
of the blood, appear to have been made, and
that with great propriety, on the lower animals.
The blood of the young, healthy and vigorous,
was transferred into the old and infirm,
by means of a delicate tube, placed in a
vein opened for that purpose. The effect
of this operation was surprising and important:
aged and decrepit animals were soon observed
to become more lively, and to move with greater
ease and rapidity. By the indefatigable exertions
of Lower, in England, of Dennis in France,
and of Moulz, Hoffman, and others in Germany,
this artificial mode of renovating the life
and spirits was successfully continued, and
even brought to some degree of perfection.
The vein usually opened in the arm of a patient
was resorted to for the purpose of transfusion;
into this a small tube was placed in a perpendicular
direction; the same vein was then opened
in a healthy individual, but more frequently
in an animal, into which another tube was
forced in a reclining direction; both small
tubes were then slid into one another, and
in that position the delicate art of transfusion
was safely performed. When the operation
was completed, the vein was tied up in the
same manner as on blood-letting. Sometimes
a quantity of blood was drawn from the patient,
previously to the experiment taking place.
As few persons, however, were to be found,
that would agree to part with their blood
to others, recourse was generally had to
animals, and most frequently to the calf,
the lamb, and the stag. These being laid
upon a table, and tied so as to be unable
to move, the operation was performed in the
manner before described. In some instances,
the good effects of these experiments were
evident and promising, while they excited
the greatest hopes of the future improvement
and progress of this new art. But the unceasing
abuses practised by bold and inexpert adventurers,
together with the great number of cases,
which proved unsuccessful, induced the different
governments of Europe to put an entire stop
to the practice, by the strictest prohibitions.
And, indeed, while the constitutions and
mode of living among men differ so materially
as they now do, this is, and ever must remain,
an extremely hazardous and equivocal, if
not a desperate remedy. The blood of every
individual is of a peculiar nature, and congenial
with that of the body only to which it belongs,
and in which it is generated. Hence our hope
of prolonging human life, by artificial evacuations
and injections, must necessarily be disappointed.
It must not, however, be supposed, that these,
and similar pursuits during the ages of which
we treat, as well as those which succeeded,
were solely or chiefly followed by mere adventurers
and fanatics. The greatest geniuses of those
times employed their wits with the most learned
and eminent men, who deemed it an object
by no means below their consideration.
The method of supplying good for unsound
teeth, though long laid aside, in consequence
of the danger with which the practice was
attended, by the communication of disease
from an unhealthy to a healthy person, was
at one time as much the rage as the transfusion
of blood. This practice, notwithstanding
the objections which stand opposed to it,
might, nevertheless, be adopted with success
on many occasions, could persons enjoying
a sound and wholesome state of body be found
to answer the demand, however unnatural it
may appear. A few untoward cases soon raised
the hue and cry against the continuance of
the practice, as in the transfusion of blood,
though the latter has recently been attempted
in the case of an individual exhausted by
excessive hermorrage with a success which
answered the expectation. There is little
doubt that both the transfusion of blood,
and engrafting or transplanting of teeth,
are capable, with judgment and discrimination,
of being made subservient in a variety of
cases; though the chances of general success
militate against these experiments; for it
is the unalterable plan of nature to proceed
gradually in her operations; all outrage
and extravagance being at variance with her
established laws.
FOOTNOTES:
[144] The art of exciting sleep in persons
under the influence of animal magnetism,
with a view to obtain or rather extort during
this artificial sleep, their verbal declarations
and directions for curing the diseases of
both body and mind. Such, indeed, was the
rage for propagating this mystical nonsense,
that even the pulpit was occasionally resorted
to, in order to make, not fair penitents,
but fair proselytes.
CHAPTER XXII.
THE ROSICRUCIANS OR THEOSOPHISTS.
This remarkable sect was founded upon the
doctrines of Paracelsus, during the latter
part of the sixteenth, and the beginning
of the seventeenth centuries. The society
was known by the name of the Rosencrucians
or Rosecrucians; and as it has not been without
its followers and propagators in different
shapes, even to the present time, we shall
here present the reader with a concise account
of the origin and tenets of that fanatical
sect.
The first intimation of the existence of
this order we find announced to the world
in a book published in the German language,
in the year 1614, with the following title,
"_The universal and general Reformation
of the world, together with an account of
the famous fraternity of the Rosencrucians_."
The work contains an intimation, that the
members of the society had been secretly
engaged for a century preceding, and that
they had come to the knowledge of many great
and important secrets, which, if communicated
to the world, would promote the happiness
of man.
An adventurer of the name of Christian Rosenkreuz
is said to have founded this order, in the
fourteenth century after having been previously
initiated in the sublime wisdom of the east,
during his travels in Egypt and Fez. From
what we are enabled to learn from this work,
the intention of the founder and the final
aim of the society, appear to have been the
accumulation of wealth and treasures, by
means of secrets known only to the members;
and by a proper distribution of these treasures
among princes and potentates, to promote
the grand scheme of the society, by producing
"a general revolution of all things."
In their "confession of faith,"
there are many bold and singular dogmas;
among others, that the end of the world is
at hand; that a general reformation of men
and manners will speedily take place; that
the wicked shall be expelled or subdued,
the Jews converted, and the doctrine of Christ
propagated over the whole earth. The Rosencrucians
not only believed that these events must
happen, but they also endeavoured to accelerate
them by unremitted exertions. To their faithful
votaries and followers, they promised abundance
of celestial wisdom, unspeakable riches,
exemption from disease, an immortal state
of man of ever blooming youth, and above
all the _philosopher's stone_.
Learning and improvement of the mind were,
by this order, considered as superfluous
and despised. They found all knowledge in
the Bible; this, however, has been supposed
rather a pretext to obviate a charge, which
was brought against them, of not believing
in the Christian religion. The truth is,
they imagined themselves superior to divine
revelation, and supposed every useful acquisition,
every virtue to be derived from the influence
of the Deity on the soul of man. In this,
as well as in many other respects, they appear
to be followers of Paracelsus, whom they
profess to revere as a Messenger of the divinity.
Like him, they pretend to cure all diseases;
through _faith_ and the power of the imagination,
to heal the most mortal disorders by a touch,
or even by simply looking at the patient.
The universal remedy was likewise a grand
secret of the order, the discovery of which
was promised to all its faithful members.
It would be unnecessary to enumerate any
more of such impious fancies, if the founder
of this still lurking sect, now partly revivified,
had not asserted, with astonishing effrontery,
that human life was capable of prolongation,
like a fire kept up by combustible matter,
and that he was in the possession of a secret,
which could verify this assertion. It is
evident, however, from the testimony of Libavius,
a man of unquestionable veracity, that this
doughty champion in medical chemistry, or
rather alchemy, Paracelsus, notwithstanding
his bold assertions, died as before observed,
at Sulzburgh in Germany, in the Hospital
of St. Stephen's in 1541: and that his death
was chiefly occasioned by the singular and
desolate mode of life, which he had for a
long time pursued. When a competent knowledge
of the economy of the human frame is wanting,
to enable a man to discriminate between internal
and external causes and effects, it will
be impossible to ascertain, or to counteract,
the different causes by which our health
is deranged. This evidently was the case
with Paracelsus, and many other life-prolongers
who have succeeded him; and should a fortunate
individual ever fix upon a remedy, possessing
the power of checking disease, or lengthening
out human existence (an expectation never
to be realized) he will be indebted to chance
alone for the discovery. This has been the
case in all ages, and still remains so.
Remedies, from time to time, have been devised,
not merely to serve as nostrums for all diseases,
but also for the pretended purpose of prolonging
life. Those of the latter kind have been
applied with a view to resist or check many
operations of nature, which insensibly consume
the vital heat, and other powers of life,
such as respiration, muscular irritation,
etc. Thus, from the implicit credulity of
some, and the exuberant imagination of others,
observation and experiments, however incompatible
with sound reason and philosophy, have been
multiplied, with the avowed design of establishing
proofs, or reputations of this or that absurd
opinion. In this manner have fanaticism and
imposture falsified the plainest truths,
or forged the most unfounded and ridiculous
claims; insomuch that one glaring inconsistency
has been employed to combat another, and
folly has succeeded folly, till a fund of
materials has been transmitted to posterity,
sufficient to form a concise history on this
subject. Men in all ages have set a just
value on life; and in proportion to the means
of enjoyment, this value has been appreciated
in a greater or less degree. If the gratification
of the sensual appetite formed the principal
object of living, its prolongation would
be to the epicure, as desirable as the prospect
of an existence to be enjoyed beyond the
limits of the grave, is to the moralist and
the believer.
The desire of longevity appears to be inherent
in all animated nature, and particularly
in the human race; it is intimately cherished
by us, through the whole duration of our
existence, and is frequently supported and
strengthened, not only by justifiable means,
but also by various kinds of collusion. Living
in an age when every branch of human knowledge
is reduced to popular systems; when the vigils
of reason are hallowed at the shrine of experiment
and observation;--though we behold in the
immense variety of things, the utter uselessness
of attempting to renovate a shattered constitution,
or of improving a sound one to last beyond
a certain period; we nevertheless observe
that in the inconceivable waste of elementary
particles there prevails the strictest economy.
Nothing is produced in vain, nothing consumed
without a cause. We clearly perceive that
all nature is united by indissoluble ties,
that every individual thing exists for the
sake of another, and that no one can subsist
without its concomitant. Hence we conclude,
that man himself is not an insulated being,
but a necessary link in the great chain,
which connects the universe. Nature is our
safest guide, and she will be so with greater
certainty, as we become better acquainted
with her operations, especially with respect
to those particulars which more nearly concern
our physical existence. Thus, n source of
many and very extensive advantages will be
opened; thus, we shall reach our original
destination--namely, that of living long
and in the enjoyment of sound health, to
which, if purity of morals he added, the
best hopes may be entertained of a happy
state, in a future world, where its inhabitants
never die.
THE END
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Colophon This file was acquired from Project
Gutenberg, and it is in the public domain.
It is re-distributed here as a part of the
Alex Catalogue of Electronic Texts
(http://infomotions.com/alex/) by Eric Lease
Morgan (Infomotions, Inc.) for the purpose
of freely sharing, distributing, and making
available works of great literature. Its
Infomotions unique identifier is etext10088,
and it should be available from the following
URL:
http://infomotions.com/etexts/gutenberg/dirs/1/0/0/8/10088/10088.htlm
Infomotions Man says, "Give back to
the 'Net."
|