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CHAPTER IX FROM PAGANISM TO CHRISTIANITY SEEING
that it affects ourselves so considerably, we are in the habit of
proclaiming
the introduction of Christianity as the greatest revolution in history
— a
claim which will be more capable of demonstration when a few more
thousand
years have passed, and a few more religions have waxed and waned. At
least, the
mind of the cultured "Christian" of to-day varies little in its
outlook — save in so far as it is
affected by modern material discoveries — from that of the cultured
"Pagan" of Imperial Rome, much less, indeed, than do either of them
from the earnest Early Christian. The ovine tendency of human nature
makes it
inevitable that a few sincere believers — whatever their belief — will
always
attain a comet-like tail of followers, hypnotised by their earnestness,
and
themselves understanding very little about it. However it may have been
with
the small band of early Christians — whose belief was given reality by
their
sufferings in its cause — one may be sure that the ideas of the sixth
century
Christian in the village street upon Heaven, Hell, and their denizens,
differed
only in the change of a few names, and the addition of some intolerance
from
those of his pagan ancestor six centuries before. His spiritual
advisers bade
him worship the names of Christ, St. John, and St. Peter, in place of
Apollo,
Mercury, or Mars, and he, troubling his head about very little but his
means of
daily livelihood, accepted the change without demur. Meanwhile his mind
— such
as it was — worked along its old lines. As in all great religious
movements, we
find no sudden or violent change — except, of course, in individual
cases — the
older ideas were abandoned, in name, though only very slowly, and the
change
from Diana to Christ, so far as it affected the great bulk of
worshippers, was
mentally imperceptible. There were
many Christians before Christ, just as there were many pagans after the
death
of Paganism. For centuries the new ideas, afterwards called Christian,
had been
fermenting in the minds of thoughtful pagans. The spirit of the age
called for
their crystallisation in a leader and the call of the West again
received its
answer from the East. But just as Naaman, a believer in the God of
Israel, was
yet permitted to bow down in the house of Rimmon — or as the theory and
practice of modern Socialism are time after time directly contrary —
so, save
for martyrs and enthusiasts — the Tolstoys of their age — the general
public
accepted Christianity as filling up awkward gaps in their earlier
beliefs
rather than as superseding them altogether. Roman
witchcraft — continually reinforced from the Orient — grew in
importance as
faith in the greater gods decreased. Frowned upon by the police, as
being
contrary to public order, it was thus liable to be confounded with
Christianity
— which was forbidden on similar grounds —
both alike being practised in secret and penalised if brought too
prominently into public notice. Christianity, as being the more
aggressive, was
more severely repressed — and was accordingly destined to more success.
And it
was reserved for the successful Christian to prove upon his former
companions
in misfortune the utter uselessness of persecution. Just as we may
thank the
pagan persecutor that we now live in the Christian era, so the
mediaeval — and
modern — witch owed much of her existence to the persevering efforts of
the
early Christian towards the suppression of witchcraft and the witch. It
was
natural — and indeed praiseworthy — that the prominent features of
paganism
should be relegated to the realms of darkness by the successors to the
pagan
empire — the god of one religion inevitably becomes the devil of its
supplanter. But whereas it was easy enough to lump together satyr,
faun,
centaur and siren, as varieties of demon, the witch was on different
footing.
She really existed, for one thing — in so far as that she was of flesh
and
blood at any rate — and she exercised more personal functions than any
number
of divinities. Everyone was ready to acclaim reforms which did not
interfere
with his own comfort — and the witch was a fireside necessity. She was
family
doctor, lawyer, and spiritual director — and payer-off of your old
scores to
boot — a factor in your life the loss of which could be compensated by
no
amount of religion. Also she stood for tradition, "the good old
times," the respectability of unchanging conservatism. Christianity —
novel and iconoclastic — might make head among the inconstant
townsfolk, always
ready for some new thing; the provinces, the village, the lonely
farmhouse or
the fishing hamlet clung tenaciously to what had been good enough for
their
grandfathers — as, indeed, they have been doing ever since. Nevertheless,
from the great cities the creed of Christ spread slowly to the villages
—
suffering many modifications before it reached them. Delivered straight
from
the lips of a Church father, Christian doctrine might be rigid and
direct
enough. Passed from mouth to mouth, ignorant, or understanding, they
might
reach the distant flock so diluted as to have opportunity for
compromise with
time-honoured precedent — and what more so than witchcraft. You might —
if you
were an open-minded husbandman — conceive that you had been mistaken in
seeing
fauns dancing where the sunlight glinted down through tossing leaves,
or in
hearing the voices of nymphs in the chattering of a brook; but a witch
— whom
you could see, touch, hear, who had cured your toothache and revenged
you on
your dishonest neighbour — she took a great deal of explaining away.
Wicked she
might be, getting her power from unholy compact with the Evil One —
burn, slay,
persecute her by all means — if it would please Heaven — but to
disbelieve in
her altogether, that were asking too much of a plain man. How, indeed,
could
you expect it of him when the very Emperors proved by their edicts the
openness
of their minds. A Marcus Aurelius not only studied magic, but
persecuted
Christians — slaying, among others, the venerable Polycarp. An Augustus
might
feel called upon to take police measures against witches; an Aurelian
rebuked
the Senate for not consulting the Sibylline books when the barbarians
threatened the gates of Rome. "One might imagine," he said,
"that we were assembled in a Christian church, rather than in the
temple
of all the gods." Where an Elagabalus renewed old superstitions and
introduced yet others, a Constantine executed his favourite for seeking
to
influence the weather. The
personal predilections of the Emperors did but reflect the many and
involved
influences at work during the first four centuries after Christ. Apart from
the enduring influx of Eastern practices and superstitions,
Neo-Platonism was
responsible for the revival of belief in the supernatural as apart from
the
divine. The Alexandrian school, discarding the old systems of
philosophy,
converted its study into that of magic. The barbarians, again, were
everywhere
astir. The long warrings between Rome and the Germans culminated in the
9th
year of the new era when the German Herman by his great victory over
Varus
brought about the eventual liberation of his country. In 259 A.D. the
Emperor
Gallienus married a barbarian princess and before the close of the
third
century A.D. the Empire had become largely "barbarised" by the Goths
and Vandals who did it military service, and who, incidentally, served
to
bolster up paganism and to introduce new features into it. The Teutonic
witch
met her Roman sister, and introduced her to darker, grimmer, and more
vigorous
conceptions of her art. The dreadful pestilence which, in the third
century,
ravaged the Empire gave a new popularity to the black arts, and the
Roman witch
was never more sought after than in the years preceding the last and
most
violent persecution of the Christians at the hands of Diocletian. Persecuted
or petted, the witch was never able to progress in the good opinion of
the
Christian, whose protest against her existence was steady and constant
whatever
his own fate or condition. As soon as
the last of his own persecutors had laid aside the sword, he at once
seized it
and set to harassing the witch with a deserving vigour which has never
altogether relaxed. Whereas
the pagan had chastised the witch with rods for injuring man, the
Christian set
about her with scorpions as an enemy of God. Nor was the exalted
testimony of
the Fathers lacking to inspire his energies. Tertullian, in the second
century,
declared the world to be over-run with evil spirits, including among
them all
heathen gods, whether amiable or the reverse, from Hebe to Hecate.
Origen, in
his third book on Job, mentions that enchantments are sometimes of the
devil.
Saint Augustine, in "De Civitate Dei," has no doubt that demons and
evil spirits have connection with women. The earliest ecclesiastical
decree
bearing on the subject is that of Ancyra, in 315 A.D., by which
soothsayers are
condemned to five years' penance. In 525 the Council of Auxerre
prohibited all
resort to soothsayers. Witchcraft, which thus took upon its shoulders
all the
enormities of paganism, attained an importance it had never before
possessed.
The plain man began to realise that his family witch was a more
important person
than he had hitherto believed. If not herself of semi-infernal birth,
he had it
on Saint Augustine's authority, as aforesaid, that she was in all
probability
the mistress of a sylvan, faun, or other variety of devil, and that her
offspring were themselves no less diabolical. Naturally
enough they increased and multiplied, so that
between corporeal and spiritual devils the world was over-populated.
The
Messalians, indeed, went so far as to make spitting a religious
exercise — in
the hope of casting out the devils inhaled at every breath; and the
common
superstition concerning sneezing has the same origin. It might almost
be said,
indeed, that in those early days devils filled, and to admiration, the
part now
played by the microbe in every-day life. It is to
be feared that, except by those who seriously studied the question, the
existence of so many devils of one kind or another did not cause such
general
uneasiness as the clergy might desire — very much as now happens when
the
medical world is appalled by the discovery of some new microbe in
strawberry,
telephone receiver, or shirt-cuff. The plain man accepted them, and
having
after some centuries discovered that they made little practical
difference to
his life, ceased to feel more than a languid interest in even the most
appalling new varieties discovered by saintly specialists. Their
constant
insistence upon the inherent wickedness of humanity and the almost
insuperable
dangers which assail the Christian on all sides lost something of their
freshness in time, one may suppose, and were succeeded by a certain
weariness.
Granted that Christianity was the one sure road to salvation in the
next world,
it was so difficult to follow without stumbling that few, if any, could
hope to
arrive at the goal, save by some such lucky accident as a martyrdom.
Christianity was thus bound, in practice, if not in theory, to come to
some
working agreement with the old, comfortable pagan customs it had
superseded.
Certain of the more popular pagan customs and festivals found their way
into
Christian observance, certain popular deities were baptised and became
Christian saints. A familiar instance of this occurs in the case of
Saint
Walpurg. In Christian hagiology she occurs as a virgin saint, and as
having
accompanied Saint Boniface upon his missionary travels — all of which
would
seem to show that pious scandal-mongering was less rife in contemporary
religious circles than is the case to-day. In folk-lore we find many
wells and
springs associated with her and thus acquiring valuable medicinal
qualities.
The oil exuded from her bones upon Walpurgis-nacht was
valued as relieving the pangs of toothache and of childbirth. Potent in
the
cure of hydrophobia, the dog is included among her pictorial
attributes, while
she is also represented as bearing in her hand either oil or ears of
corn — the
symbols of agricultural fertility. The festivals and rejoicings which
took
place upon Walpurgis-nacht, with their special connection with
witchcraft,
would further seem to show that Walpurg before she became a Christian
saint had
a long history as a mother-goddess. In the same manner in the cult of
the
Virgin may be found traces of that worship of Diana which for 600 years
persisted side by side with Christianity, and is far from being
altogether
extinct in Italy even to-day. As may
readily be understood, these paganising tendencies were not favourably
regarded
by the fathers. In the year 600 A.D. St. Eligius felt called upon to
forbid
dancing, capering, carols, and diabolical songs upon the festival of
Saint
John. A statute of Saint Boniface forbids choruses of laymen and
maidens to
sing and feast in the churches. As the Church increased in power, many
such
practices — as, for example, the dancing of women round sacred trees
and wells,
with torches or candles in their hands, the common meal, the choral
song and
sacrifice — were roundly forbidden as witchcraft, the uprooting of
which the
Church at last felt capable of taking seriously in hand. This was
indeed become
a matter almost of life and death, for the Church found itself in many
ways in
acute competition with the witch, the one attaining by lawful means
similar
results to those achieved by the other through the assistance of Satan.
And
just as Adam, upon learning that the apple was forbidden to him,
immediately
hungered after it to the exclusion of all other fare, so the public
showed
itself more eager to obtain the forbidden services of the witch than
those of
the legitimate practitioner. So much was this the case that the Church
was sometimes
forced to resort to other means than persecution to show itself capable
of
competing against the witch with her own weapons. Occasionally, it must
be
confessed, these methods suggested rather the American Trust magnate
than the
fair competitor, as, for instance, the case of the Blocksberg. This
hill was a
place of considerable importance to witches, providing a large choice
of
magical herbs as the raw material for their trade in weather-charms.
These
could, however, be gathered only upon the eve of Saint John and during
the
ringing of the neighbouring church-bells. The ecclesiastical
authorities,
becoming aware of this, gave orders that the bells should be rung only
for the
shortest possible period on that date — a proceeding the unfairness of
which could
only have been exceeded by not ringing the bells at all.
Another
story of the kind, quoted by Mr. Lecky, shows that, even in fair and
open
competition, holy water could hold its own against the most powerful of
black
magic. A certain Christian, Italicus by name, was addicted to
horse-racing at
Gaza. One of his most dangerous and constant competitors was a pagan
Duumvir.
This latter, being versed in the black arts, therewith "doped" his
horses so successfully that he invariably won. Italicus, being
prohibited from
following his example, at last appealed to Saint Hilarion, exhorting
him to
uphold the honour of the Church by some signal display of supernatural
power.
The saint, after some hesitation, complied, and presented Italicus with
a bowl
of specially consecrated holy-water. At the start of the next race
Italicus
liberally besprinkled his team, whereupon they drew his chariot to the
winning-post with supernatural rapidity. The Duumvir's horses, on the
other
hand, faltered and staggered, as though belaboured by an unseen hand —
and,
needless to say, lost the race. Whether the Duumvir appealed to the
contemporary Jockey Club to disqualify the winning team, and, if so,
with what
result, we are not informed. Considering
the vast and ever-increasing population of witches and demons, it
seemed an
almost hopeless task to exterminate them altogether. Nor indeed was it
until
after the thirteenth century that the Church attempted the task on any
universal scale. If an individual witch was unlucky enough to fall into
priestly hands, her fate was likely to be unhappy — but in the early
days of
the faith the priest felt himself capable of triumphing over her by
less
material weapons. Only, as priests could not be everywhere, and the
number of
witches so largely exceeded their own, means were provided whereby even
the
layman might withstand them. Thus burning sulphur was very efficacious
in the
driving out of devils, the subtlety (!) of its odour having great power
of
purification. The gall of a black dog put in perfume was another
acknowledged
recipe, as was the smearing of his blood upon the walls of the infested
house. It is
noteworthy, and a fact that vouches strongly for the sincerity of the
early
Church, that although she thus practised what was nothing less than
sanctified
witchcraft, she never attempted one of the most frequent and popular of
witchpractices — the foretelling of the future, so far, at any rate, as
this
world was concerned. It is true that the Christian's earthly future,
being but
an uncomfortable preliminary to posthumous joys, might be more happily
left
unforetold. Yet many of them did not altogether despise the pleasures
of this
life, and were very willing to pay for an anticipatory glimpse of any
likely to
be encountered. Familiarity
in some measure breeding contempt, the public in these early days thus
regarded
neither witch nor demon with the dread and hatred so manifest in the
fifteenth
century and onwards. For one thing, faith in the power of the Church
was more
implicit. To dally with the forbidden had all the fascination of a
sport with a
spice of danger in it, when you knew that at any time a power vastly
greater
than those of evil was ready to step in to protect you from the
consequences of
your over-rashness. Before the name of a fairly efficient saint the
most
powerful demon must bend his head, especially with holy water anywhere
in the
neighbourhood. If you fell under the power of a witch it could only be
through
neglecting to take proper precautions or to employ someone else to do
so for a
moderate fee. Our own Anglo-Saxon forefathers showed a very nice spirit
of
prudence in such matters — as in the famous meeting between Ethelbert
King of
Kent and Saint Augustine, held, by royal command, in the open air, lest
the
missionary, being under a roof, might practise unlawful arts upon the
King. The
witch, in a word, was everywhere, but so were the necessary antidotes —
some of
them of the simplest. Thus, in the story of Hereward we learn how the
Wise
Woman of Brandon, near Ely, anathematised the hero from a wooden
scaffolding.
To be really efficacious her curses must be thrice repeated, but before
she had
time to do this the scaffold was set on fire by Hereward's followers,
and the
Wise Woman perished miserably. The witch, in fact, like her gossip the
Devil,
always comes off second best in folk-lore where she is matched against
the
truly virtuous — a comforting reflection for everybody, however ominous
for
their friends. She was
still to some extent a shadowy personality, of shifting and indefinite
attributes. Although in 696 the Council of Berkhampstead decreed that
any
person sacrificing to the Devil should be punished — a clear enough
reference
to witches — it was not until some centuries later that the conception
of the
witch definitely crystallised into its modern form of a woman carrying
out an
actual compact with Satan, working miracles by his power, and
frequently
transported through the air to pay him homage at Sabbath gatherings.
Until then
the Church may be said to have been obtaining and sifting evidence,
building up
a formidable mass of precedent and tradition, to be employed with
deadly effect
when witchcraft was definitely branded as heresy. Whether or
no the sins of witch and sorcerer be definitely codified, it is the
duty of the
lawgiver to provide for all contingencies; and just as Justinian
devoted part
of his code to dealing with witchcraft, so Charlemagne, two centuries
and a
half later, enacted new and stringent laws for the abatement of sorcery
— as in
the Capitular of 789, wherein supernatural meteorology is forbidden.
More
direct, though perhaps less efficacious, were such deterrent methods as
those
of the pious Bishop Barbatus, who in the seventh century cut down and
uprooted
a certain nut-tree famous as a meeting place for witches. It may here
be noted
that trees were at all times much favoured by the evil sisterhood, more
especially as meteorological offices. Numerous witch-oaks throughout
Germany
served for this purpose — one, at Buckenhofen, was used as a swing by
witches
attending the Walpurgis-nacht. It is something of a paradox that while
a grove
of oaks — the sacred tree of the Teutons, as is the linden of the Slavs — is a protection
against magic, particular trees should
be famous as gathering-points for witches. As the
year 1000 approached, the generally optimistic outlook upon things in
general
suffered a decline. Famine and pestilence grew always more commonplace;
the
price of corn increased unprecedentedly; starvation became the normal
condition
of millions throughout Europe; cases occurred in which children were
killed and
devoured by their famished parents; dead bodies were disinterred and
used for
food. Old prophecies had placed the end of the world in the year 1000,
and to
the miseries of hunger and disease were added those of universal
terror. The
forward movement in the Church seemed to have died away, and Christian
fervour
gave place to increased insistence on forms and ceremonies, regarded by
the
commonalty as tiresome, if necessary, duties. Small wonder that they
sought for
something which, instead of the hopeless contemplation of inherent sin,
should
provide some ray of present comfort. Here was the opportunity of the
witch, the
sorcerer, and the alchemist — and here also began the bitterest contest
between
priesthood and witchcraft. Hitherto the Church had been able to regard
such
rivals, if not with tolerance, at least with contempt. Now it had to
fight
against weapons forged in its own furnaces, appealing to that abysmal
ignorance
ordained by the priest upon his flock. If the monopoly in knowledge be
power,
its application is double-edged; the Church was forced to seek some new
means
of inspiring the fear of celestial wrath to come into those who could
imagine
no circumstances more dreadful than what they already daily endured.
The time
had come to prove that those who tampered with the forbidden must
expect a
double share of punishment — in this world as well as the next — and
that the
earthly penalty was quite as much to be dreaded as the best infernal
efforts. In 1025,
Burckhard of Worms inserts the significant question in the
confessional: — "Have you believed that
there are women
who can turn love into hate and hatred into love, or who can harm their
neighbours and seize their goods for themselves? Have you believed that
godless
women blinded by the Devil ride abroad at night with the demon Holda,
obeying
her as goddess?" Followed in due course Ethelred's decree of banishment
against witches, soothsayers, and magicians, and that of Canute, which
included
love-witchcraft as a branch of heathendom. Though the
anathemas of the Church might for a time stem the increasing tide of
witch-popularity, they were fundamentally only incentives towards a
cult which
did not include anathemas or persecution — except, indeed, those within
the
control of the humblest individual. In the twelfth century, moreover —
the
century of the Crusaders — many new influences were at work. To
counteract the
general lethargy into which the Church was sinking, the Popes availed
themselves of their knowledge of human nature. Epidemical frenzy was
aroused by
remission of penance, absolution of all sins, past, present, and to
come, and
the assurance of eternal felicity for all who took the cross. Sham
miracles and
prophecies stimulated the popular enthusiasm, and more potent than
either was
the knowledge among millions that any change they might experience must
be for
the better. But however promising at the time, the great "revival"
was fraught with danger to the Church that provoked it. New conditions
evolved
new ideas. Asia provided greater luxury for body and mind than any
hitherto
known to its European invaders. The new world thus opened before them
might be
sinful; it was at least very pleasant. Future damnation presents few
terrors to
the well-fed, and the discovery that millions existed, and in comfort,
who had
never taken off their hat to a priest in their lives — however shocking
it
might seem at first — was bound to give furiously to think. Among the
forbidden institutions upon which the Crusader found reason to
reconsider his
ideas, witchcraft took a prominent place. Anathema though it might be,
it had a
multitude of Oriental exponents, who, whatever they might have to look
for in
the next world, had little cause to complain of this. Such abominations
cried
for intelligent investigation, if only that they might be refuted, with
the
result that the Crusader returned home with the knowledge of many novel
features that might be profitably added to the Western ritual of magic.
Meanwhile in his absence his own native practitioners had not been
idle.
Faithful wives were anxious to know something of their lords'
whereabouts,
safety, or, it may be, fidelity. Those who were not faithful had even
more need
of tidings as to his probable return and of means for delaying it. In
such
emergencies the services of the witch were indispensable — and priestly
prohibitions only served to advertise her powers and to increase the
number of
her suppliants. These various causes, and more particularly the last,
combined
to give witchcraft an importance in social life hitherto denied to it,
and to
draw down upon it more and more the wrath of Mother Church. She had,
indeed,
other no less pressing calls upon her attention. The long slumber of
orthodoxy
was at an end; many heresies disturbed the minds of the faithful. The
revival
of Latin literature stirred thoughts and feelings long blurred by
Church
teaching. The Crusaders were not the sole importers of Oriental ideas;
Greek
traders also, along with the drugs and perfumes of the East, brought
new
doctrines, received with dangerous tolerance. The vigorous Innocent
III.
quickly perceived the danger, and entered upon a systematic persecution
of
heretics. In 1208 a Papal Legate having been murdered by Raimond of
Toulouse —
against whom the Church had already serious cause of complaint,
Innocent at
once proclaimed a crusade, and the heretical Albigenses were involved
in the
ruin of their most powerful protector, suffering a persecution of
almost
unprecedented severity. The establishment of the Inquisition now became
a
logical necessity if the spread of heresy was to be saved, and little
time was
lost in its creation. By this
time Satan had assumed a definite form and personality in the public
mind, and
the idea that the witch obtained her powers through a compact with him,
long
sedulously inculcated, had taken root. It is true that even yet the
"Sabbath" was but a harmless servile carnival, frowned upon, indeed,
and discouraged wherever possible. Coincidentally with the rise of the
general
heresy hunt, Europe was overrun by a number of devastating epidemics.
Leprosy,
epilepsy, and every form of skin disease raged almost unchecked. They
were
attributed to many causes, from lack of faith to the consumption of
various
Eastern drugs introduced by home-faring Crusaders — though lack of food
and
cleanliness were doubtless the most active agents in spreading them
abroad.
Dirt had long been accounted almost a mark of holiness — and one so
easy of
attainment that few cared to disregard it and arouse suspicion as to
their
orthodoxy by too frequent ablutions. Medical science was at its lowest
ebb; the
priests, with keen common sense, declared skin eruptions to be
divinely-inflicted punishments, and therefore not amenable to holy
water. In
despair the unhappy sufferers turned to the witch for aid, who, by her
knowledge of herbs and simples, was qualified to alleviate, if not to
cure.
Everything seemed to conspire in thrusting forward the witch into
dangerous
prominence. The
ecclesiastical measures of repression grew always more severe. Canon
Law
decreed that soothsayers be subjected to excommunication, and enjoined
upon the
bishops to leave no stone unturned for their repression. By the
fourteenth
century the Sabbaths, under the penetrating eye of the Inquisition lost
their
harmless character and became forcing grounds of the Black Mass. The
practice
of medicine by women, however beneficial, grew more and more into
disfavour,
and year by year the attributes of the witch grew more infernal as the
material
Devil became more and more familiar in men's minds. No doubt the
increase of
witches was real as well as theoretical. Love of notoriety is of no
modern
growth — and the reputation of possessing infernal powers
satisfactorily filled
the position of the modern newspaper paragraph. This in more senses
than one —
for not only could you obtain notoriety for yourself, as does the
modern Apache
who murders for the reclame it will bring him, you could also satisfy a
grudge
against a neighbour, with no risk to yourself, by anonymously accusing
her to
the local clergy. Witchcraft, again, was open to all, without licence,
examination, or entrance fee. Poverty, the desire of solitude, a nice
taste in
invective, and a black cat or so were all the stock-in-trade required
to start
in business. The
convenience, from the Church point of view, of catching witch and
heretic in
the same net was too obvious to be disregarded. By the fourteenth
century their
connection was well established in the eyes of church and law. In
France, so
early as the thirteenth century, prosecution took place for
"vauderie," an omnibus-word which covered at once witchcraft and the
heretical practices of those Vaudois from whose name it was derived. In
Ireland,
in 1324, proceedings for witchcraft taken against Dame Alice Kyteler
and others
in the Court of the Bishop of Ossory, brought about a conflict between
Church
and State, such cases, according to English law, being tried by a
secular
tribunal. The
substitution of linen for wool in dress was an efficient factor in
abating the
ravages of skin-diseases, but their place was taken by the more
terrible Black
Death, and, in 1350, epileptic dancings, known as the Dance of Saint
Guy, broke
out with especial virulence in Germany and Flanders. These and other
diseases,
constant wars, bad harvests, and other troubles brought about a series
of
class-wars, the Jacquerie in France, and Wat Tyler's insurrection in
England,
for example; the Devil and the witch between them shared the blame in
the eyes
of respectable Europe. The greater pestilences were attributed to the
Devil's
personal intervention, while minor diseases, and especially poisonings,
fell to
the witch's share — this latter accusation being, perhaps, not
altogether without
cause. The public — or that portion
whose lives were cast in places sufficiently pleasant to prevent them
desiring
such consolation as magic might afford them — were now fully aroused to
their
iniquity. Against the agents of so grisly a horror as the mediaeval
devil no
measures could be too severe, no torture too dreadful. Scholasticism
vied with
the Church in deploring the increasing evil; John XXII.'s publication
of the
first Bull against witchcraft was capped by the University of Paris,
which, in 1398,
laid down rules for the judicial prosecution of witches, expressing at
the same
time regret that the crime of sorcery should be growing more common
than in any
former age. In England, from the Conquest onwards, commissions were
issued from
time to time empowering the Bishops to seek out sorcerers. In 1406 such
a
mission was delegated to the Bishop of Lincoln. It was not, however,
until 1542
that penalties more severe than fine and imprisonment were inflicted by
the
Ecclesiastical Courts. The
ever-increasing prestige of witchcraft in time raised it to a point
where it
could be made an apt weapon for political intrigues. The burning of
Jeanne
d'Arc as a witch is a case in point, her tormentors by their choice of
indictment dimming for long centuries the halo which surrounded her
efforts
towards the freeing of her country, while at the same time it provided
ample
opportunity for those who, having been among the first to hail the
rising
popular star, are also first to enjoy her fall from
greatness. Another case, even more definitely political, was that of
Eleanor
Duchess of Gloucester, in which the charge of witchcraft proved a
serviceable
weapon in the hands of Cardinal Beaufort. The Duchess, although accused
of no
less a crime than procuring a wax image of Henry VI., manufactured by
the Witch
of Eye, with nefarious intent, escaped the death penalty indeed, but
was
condemned to public penance, followed by life-long banishment. As the Reformation grew nearer, public opinion veered round to some slight extent in the direction of leniency. The Inquisition was itself becoming so unpopular that its victims were bound to excite some secret sympathy. The Renaissance, throwing wide the door to all the intellect of classical days, already shook the dominion of the Church to its foundations. The time had come for desperate measures if Orthodoxy was to hold her own. In 1484 the Witch-Bull of Innocent VIII. definitely handed the witch over to the care of the Inquisitors — and thus gave the signal for a series of persecutions of unexampled horror, enduring through more than two centuries, and the last echoes of which have scarcely died away even to-day. |