THE FIRST SECTION, MEMBER, SUBSECTION.
Unlawful Cures rejected.
Inveterate Melancholy, howsoever it may seem to be a continuate, inexorable
disease, hard to be cured, accompanying them to their graves, most part, as
[2789]Montanus observes, yet many times it may be helped, even that which
is most violent, or at least, according to the same [2790]author, it may
be mitigated and much eased.
Nil desperandum. It may be hard to cure,
but not impossible for him that is most grievously affected, if he but
willing to be helped.
Upon this good hope I will proceed, using the same method in the cure,
which I have formerly used in the rehearsing of the causes; first general,
then particular; and those according to their several species. Of these
cures some be lawful, some again unlawful, which though frequent, familiar,
and often used, yet justly censured, and to be controverted. As first,
whether by these diabolical means, which are commonly practised by the
devil and his ministers, sorcerers, witches, magicians, &c., by spells,
cabilistical words, charms, characters, images, amulets, ligatures,
philters, incantations, &c., this disease and the like may be cured? and if
they may, whether it be lawful to make use of them, those magnetical cures,
or for our good to seek after such means in any case? The first, whether
they can do any such cures, is questioned amongst many writers, some
affirming, some denying. Valesius, cont. med. lib. 5. cap. 6. Malleus
Maleficar, Heurnius, lib. 3. pract. med. cap. 28. Caelius lib. 16. c. 16.
Delrio Tom. 3. Wierus lib. 2. de praestig. daem. Libanius Lavater de
spect. part. 2. cap. 7. Holbrenner the Lutheran in Pistorium, Polydore
Virg. l. 1. de prodig. Tandlerus, Lemnius, (Hippocrates and Avicenna
amongst the rest) deny that spirits or devils have any power over us, and
refer all with Pomponatius of Padua to natural causes and humours. Of the
other opinion are Bodinus Daemonamantiae, lib. 3, cap. 2. Arnoldus,
Marcellus Empyricus, I. Pistorius, Paracelsus Apodix. Magic. Agrippa
lib. 2. de occult. Philos. cap. 36. 69. 71. 72. et l. 3, c. 23, et 10.
Marcilius Ficinus de vit. coelit. compar. cap. 13. 15. 18. 21. &c.
Galeottus de promiscua doct. cap. 24. Jovianus Pontanus Tom. 2. Plin.
lib. 28, c. 2. Strabo, lib. 15. Geog. Leo Suavius: Goclenius de ung.
armar. Oswoldus Crollius, Ernestus Burgravius, Dr. Flud, &c. Cardan de
subt. brings many proofs out of Ars Notoria, and Solomon's decayed works,
old Hermes, Artefius, Costaben Luca, Picatrix, &c. that such cures may be
done. They can make fire it shall not burn, fetch back thieves or stolen
goods, show their absent faces in a glass, make serpents lie still, stanch
blood, salve gouts, epilepsies, biting of mad dogs, toothache, melancholy,
et omnia mundi mala, make men immortal, young again as the [2791]Spanish
marquis is said to have done by one of his slaves, and some, which
jugglers in [2792]China maintain still (as Tragaltius writes) that they
can do by their extraordinary skill in physic, and some of our modern
chemists by their strange limbecks, by their spells, philosopher's stones
and charms. [2793]Many doubt,
saith Nicholas Taurellus, whether the
devil can cure such diseases he hath not made, and some flatly deny it,
howsoever common experience confirms to our astonishment, that magicians
can work such feats, and that the devil without impediment can penetrate
through all the parts of our bodies, and cure such maladies by means to us
unknown.
Daneus in his tract de Sortiariis subscribes to this of
Taurellus; Erastus de lamiis, maintaineth as much, and so do most
divines, out of their excellent knowledge and long experience they can
commit [2794]agentes cum patientibus, colligere semina rerum, eaque
materiae applicare, as Austin infers de Civ. Dei et de Trinit. lib. 3.
cap. 7. et 8. they can work stupendous and admirable conclusions; we see
the effects only, but not the causes of them. Nothing so familiar as to
hear of such cures. Sorcerers are too common; cunning men, wizards, and
white-witches, as they call them, in every village, which if they be sought
unto, will help almost all infirmities of body and mind, Servatores in
Latin, and they have commonly St. Catherine's wheel printed in the roof of
their mouth, or in some other part about them, resistunt incantatorum
praestigiis ([2795]Boissardus writes) morbos a sagis motos propulsant
&c., that to doubt of it any longer, [2796]or not to believe, were to
run into that other sceptical extreme of incredulity,
saith Taurellus. Leo
Suavius in his comment upon Paracelsus seems to make it an art, which ought
to be approved; Pistorius and others stiffly maintain the use of charms,
words, characters, &c. Ars vera est, sed pauci artifices reperiuntur; the
art is true, but there be but a few that have skill in it. Marcellius
Donatus lib. 2. de hist, mir. cap. 1. proves out of Josephus' eight
books of antiquities, that [2797]Solomon so cured all the diseases of the
mind by spells, charms, and drove away devils, and that Eleazer did as much
before Vespasian.
Langius in his med. epist. holds Jupiter Menecrates,
that did so many stupendous cures in his time, to have used this art, and
that he was no other than a magician. Many famous cures are daily done in
this kind, the devil is an expert physician, as Godelman calls him, lib.
1. cap. 18. and God permits oftentimes these witches and magicians to
produce such effects, as Lavater cap. 3. lib. 8. part. 3. cap. 1.
Polid. Virg. lib. 1. de prodigiis, Delrio and others admit. Such cures
may be done, and as Paracels. Tom. 4. de morb. ament. stiffly
maintains, [2798]they cannot otherwise be cured but by spells, seals, and
spiritual physic.
[2799]Arnoldus, lib. de sigillis, sets down the
making of them, so doth Rulandus and many others.
Hoc posito, they can effect such cures, the main question is, whether it
be lawful in a desperate case to crave their help, or ask a wizard's
advice. 'Tis a common practice of some men to go first to a witch, and then
to a physician, if one cannot the other shall, Flectere si nequeant
superos Acheronta movebunt. [2800]It matters not,
saith Paracelsus,
whether it be God or the devil, angels, or unclean spirits cure him, so
that he be eased.
If a man fall into a ditch, as he prosecutes it, what
matter is it whether a friend or an enemy help him out? and if I be
troubled with such a malady, what care I whether the devil himself, or any
of his ministers by God's permission, redeem me? He calls a [2801]
magician, God's minister and his vicar, applying that of vos estis dii
profanely to them, for which he is lashed by T. Erastus part. 1. fol.
45. And elsewhere he encourageth his patients to have a good faith, [2802]
a strong imagination, and they shall find the effects: let divines say to
the contrary what they will.
He proves and contends that many diseases
cannot otherwise be cured. Incantatione orti incantatione curari debent;
if they be caused by incantation, [2803]they must be cured by incantation.
Constantinus lib. 4. approves of such remedies: Bartolus the lawyer,
Peter Aerodius rerum Judic. lib. 3. tit. 7. Salicetus Godefridus, with
others of that sect, allow of them; modo sint ad sanitatem quae a magis
fiunt, secus non, so they be for the parties good, or not at all. But
these men are confuted by Remigius, Bodinus, daem. lib. 3. cap 2.
Godelmanus lib. 1. cap. 8, Wierus, Delrio lib. 6. quaest. 2. tom. 3.
mag. inquis. Erastus de Lamiis; all our [2804]divines, schoolmen, and
such as write cases of conscience are against it, the scripture itself
absolutely forbids it as a mortal sin, Levit. cap. xviii. xix. xx. Deut.
xviii. &c. Rom. viii. 19. Evil is not to be done, that good may come of
it.
Much better it were for such patients that are so troubled, to endure
a little misery in this life, than to hazard their souls' health for ever,
and as Delrio counselleth, [2805]much better die, than be so cured.
Some
take upon them to expel devils by natural remedies, and magical exorcisms,
which they seem to approve out of the practice of the primitive church, as
that above cited of Josephus, Eleazer, Irenaeus, Tertullian, Austin.
Eusebius makes mention of such, and magic itself hath been publicly
professed in some universities, as of old in Salamanca in Spain, and Krakow
in Poland: but condemned anno 1318, by the chancellor and university of
[2806]Paris. Our pontifical writers retain many of these adjurations and
forms of exorcisms still in the church; besides those in baptism used, they
exorcise meats, and such as are possessed, as they hold, in Christ's name.
Read Hieron. Mengus cap. 3. Pet. Tyreus, part. 3. cap. 8. What
exorcisms they prescribe, besides those ordinary means of [2807]fire
suffumigations, lights, cutting the air with swords,
cap. 57. herbs,
odours: of which Tostatus treats, 2. Reg. cap. 16. quaest. 43, you shall
find many vain and frivolous superstitious forms of exorcisms among them,
not to be tolerated, or endured.