The History of the Devil, As Well Ancient as Modern: In Two Parts
Chapter 5
OF THE MODERN HISTORY OF THE DEVIL.
CHAP. I.
I have examined the Antiquities of Satan's History in the former Part of this Work, and brought his Affairs down from the Creation, as far as to our blessed Christian Times; especially to the Coming of the _Messiah_, when one would think the _Devil_ could have nothing to do among us. I have indeed but touch'd at some Things which might have admitted of a farther Description of Satan's Affairs, and the Particulars of which we may all come to a farther Knowledge of hereafter; yet I think I have spoken to the material Part of his Conduct, as it relates to his Empire in this World: What has happen'd to his more sublimated Government, and his Angelic Capacities, I shall have an Occasion to touch at in several solid Particulars as we go along.
The _Messiah_ was now born, _the Fulness of Time was come_, that the old Serpent was to have his _Head broken_, that is to say, his Empire or Dominion over Man, which he gain'd by the Fall of our first Father and Mother in _Paradise_, receiv'd a Downfal or Overthrow.
It is worth observing, in order to confirm what I have already mention'd of the Limitation of Satan's Power, that not only his Angelic Strength seems to have received a farther Blow upon the Coming of the Son of God into the World, but he seems to have had a Blow upon his Intellects; his Serpentine Craft and _Devil-like_ Subtilty seems to have been circumscrib'd and cut short; and instead of his being so cunning a Fellow as before, when, _as I said_, 'tis evident he outwitted all Mankind, not only _Eve_, _Cain_, _Noah_, _Lot_, and all the Patriarchs, but even Nations of Men, and that in their publick Capacity; and thereby led them into absurd and ridiculous Things, such as the Building of _Babel_, and deifying and worshiping their Kings, when dead and rotten; idolizing _Beasts_, _Stocks_, _Stones_, _any Thing_, and even _Nothing_; and in a Word, when he manag'd Mankind just as he pleased.
Now and from this Time forward he appeared a weak, foolish, ignorant _Devil_, compar'd to what he was before; He was upon almost every Occasion resisted, disappointed, baulk'd and defeated, especially in all his Attempts to thwart or cross the Mission and Ministry of the _Messiah_, while he was upon Earth, and sometimes upon other and very mean Occasions too.
And first, how foolish a Project was it, and how below Satan's celebrated Artifice in like Cases, to put _Herod_ upon sending to kill the poor innocent Children in _Bethlehem_, in hopes to destroy the Infant? for I take it for granted, it was the _Devil_ put into _Herod_'s Thoughts that Execution, how simple and foolish soever; now we must allow him to be very ignorant of the Nativity himself, or else he might easily have guided his Friend _Herod_ to the Place where the Infant was.
This shews that _either_ the _Devil_ is in general ignorant as we are, of what is to come in the World, before it is really come to pass; and consequently can foretel nothing, no not so much as our famous old _Merlin_ or _Mother Shipton_ did, _or else_ that great Event was hid from him by an immediate Power superior to his, which I cannot think neither, considering how much he was concern'd in it, and how certainly he knew that it was once to come to pass.
But be that as it will, 'tis certain the _Devil_ knew nothing where Christ was born, or when; nor was he able to direct _Herod_ to find him out, and therefore put him upon that foolish, as well as cruel Order, to kill all the Children, that he might be sure to destroy the _Messiah_ among the rest.
The next simple Step that the _Devil_ took, and indeed the most foolish one that he could ever be charg'd with, unworthy the very Dignity of a _Devil_, and below the Understanding that he always was allow'd to act with, was that of coming to tempt the _Messiah_ in the Wilderness; it is certain, and he own'd it himself afterwards, upon many Occasions, that the _Devil_ knew our Saviour to be the Son of God; and 'tis as certain that he knew, that _as such_ he could have no Power or Advantage over him; how foolish then was it in him to attack him in that Manner, _if thou beest the Son of_ GOD? why he knew him to be the _Son of_ GOD well enough; he said so afterwards, _I know thee who thou art, the holy One of_ GOD; how then could he be so weak a Devil as to say, _if thou art_, then do _so_ and _so_?
The Case is plain, the _Devil_, tho' he knew him to be the Son of GOD, did not fully know the Mystery of the Incarnation; nor did he know how far the _Inanition_ of Christ extended, and whether, _as Man_, he was not subject to fall as _Adam_ was, tho' his reserv'd Godhead might be still immaculate and pure; and upon this Foot, as he would leave no Method untried, he attempts him three Times, one immediately after another; but then, finding himself disappointed he fled.
This evidently proves that the _Devil_ was ignorant of the great Mystery of Godliness, _as the Text calls it_, God manifest in the Flesh, and therefore made that foolish Attempt upon Christ, thinking to have conquer'd his human Nature as capable of Sin, which it was not; and at this Repulse _Hell_ groan'd, the whole Army of regimented _Devils_ receiv'd a Wound, and felt the Shock of it; 'twas a second Overthrow to them, they had had a long Chain of Success, carried a _devilish_ Conquest over the greatest Part of the Creation of GOD; but now they were cut short, _the Seed of the Woman_ was now come _to break the Serpent's Head_, that is, to cut short his Power, to contract the Limits of his Kingdom, and in a Word, to dethrone him in the World: No doubt the _Devil_ receiv'd a Shock, for you find him always afterward, crying out in a horrible Manner, whenever Christ met with him, or else very humble and submissive, as when he begg'd leave to go into the Herd of Swine, a Thing he has often done since.
Defeated here, the first Stratagem I find him concern'd in after it, was his entring into _Judas_, and putting him upon betraying Christ to the Chief Priest; but here again he was entirely mistaken, for he did not see, _as much a Devil as he was_, what the Event would be; but when he came to know, that if Christ was put to Death, he would become a Propitiatory and be the great Sacrifice of Mankind, so to rescue the fallen Race from that Death they had incurr'd the Penalty of, by the Fall, that this was the fulfilling of all Scripture Prophesy, and that thus it was that Christ was to be _the End of the Law_, I say, as soon as he perceiv'd this, he strove all he could to prevent it, and disturb'd _Pilate_'s Wife in her Sleep, in order to set her upon her Husband to hinder his delivering him up to the _Jews_; for then, and not till then, he knew how Christ was to vanquish Hell by the Power of his Cross.
Thus the _Devil_ was disappointed and exposed in every Step he took, and as he now plainly saw his Kingdom declining, and even the temporal Kingdom of Christ, rising up upon the Ruins of his (_Satan_'s) Power; he seem'd to retreat into his own Region the Air, and to consult there with his fellow _Devils_, what Measures he should take next to preserve his Dominion among Men; Here it was that he resolv'd upon that truly hellish Thing call'd Persecution, by which, _tho' he prov'd a foolish Devil in that too_, he flatter'd himself he should be able to destroy God's Church, and root out its Professors from the Earth, even almost as soon as it was establish'd; whereas on the contrary, Heaven counter-acted him there too, and tho' he arm'd the whole _Roman_ Empire against the Christians, _that is say_, the whole World, and they were fallen upon every where, with all the Fury and Rage of some of the most flaming Tyrants that the World ever saw, of whom _Nero_ was the first; yet in spight of Hell, GOD made all the Blood, which the Devil caus'd to be spilt, to be _semen Ecclesiæ_, and the DEVIL had the Mortification to see, that the Number of Christians encreased even under the very Means he made use of to root them out and destroy them: This was the Case thro' the Reign of all the _Roman_ Emperors, for the first three hundred Years after Christ.
Having thus tried all the Methods that best suited his Inclination, I mean those of Blood and Death, complicated with Tortures and all Kinds of Cruelty, and that for so long a Stage of Time as above; the _Devil_ all on a suddain, as if glutted with Blood, and satiated with Destruction, sits still and becomes a peaceable Spectator for a good while; as if he either found himself unable, or had no Disposition to hinder the Progress of Christianity in the first Ages of its Settlement in the World: In this interval the Christian Church was establish'd under _Constantine_, Religion flourished in Peace, and under the most perfect Tranquillity: The _Devil_ seem'd to be at a Loss what he should do next, and Things began to look as if Satan's Kingdom was at an End; but he soon let them see that he was the same indefatigable _Devil_ that ever he was, and the Prosperity of the Church gave him a large Field of Action; for knowing the Disposition of Mankind to Quarrel and Dispute, the universal Passion rooted in Nature, especially among the Church-Men for Precedency and Dominion, he fell to work with them immediately; so that turning the Tables, and reassuming the Subtilty and Craft, which, I say, he seem'd to have lost in the former four hundred Years, he gain'd more Ground in the next Ages of the Church, and went farther towards restoring his Power and Empire in the World, and towards overthrowing that very Church which was so lately establish'd, than all he had done by Fire and Blood before.
His Policy now seem'd to be edg'd with Resentment for the Mistakes he had made; as if the Devil looking back with Anger at himself, to see what a Fool he had been to expect to crush Religion by Persecution, rejoyc'd for having discover'd that Liberty and Dominion was the only way to ruin the Church, not Fire and Faggot; and that he had nothing to do but to give the zealous People their utmost Liberty in Religion, only sowing Error and Variety of Opinion among them, and they would bring Fire and Faggot in fast enough among themselves.
It must be confess'd these were devilish Politicks; and so sure was the Aim, and so certain was the _Devil_ to hit his Mark by them, that we find he not only did not fail then, but the same hellish Methods have prevail'd still, and will do so to the End of the World. Nor had the Devil ever a better Game to play than this, for the Ruin of Religion, as we shall have room to show in many Examples, besides that of the Dissenters in _England_, who are evidently weaken'd by the late Toleration: Whether the _Devil_ had any hand in baiting his Hook with an A--- of Parliament or no, History is silent, but 'tis too evident he has catch'd the Fish by it; and if the honest Church of _England_ does not in Pity and Christian Charity to the Dissenters, straighten her Hand a little, I cannot but fear the _Devil_ will gain his Point, and the Dissenter will be undone by it.
Upon this new foot of Politicks the _Devil_ began with the Emperors themselves: _Arius_, the Father of the Hereticks of that Age, having broach'd his Opinions, and _Athanasius_ the orthodox Bishop of the East opposing him, the _Devil_ no sooner saw the Door open to Strife and Imposition, but he thrust himself in, and raising the Quarrel up to a suited Degree of Rage and Spleen, he involv'd the good Emperor himself in it first and _Athanasius_ was banish'd and recall'd, and banish'd and recall'd again, several times, as Error ran high, and as the _Devil_ either got or lost Ground: After _Constantine_, the next Emperor was a Child of his own, (_Arian_) and then the Court came all into the Quarrel, as Courts often do, and then the _Arians_ and the _Orthodox_ persecuted one another as furiously as the Pagans persecuted them all before. To such a Height the _Devil_ brought his Conquest in the very Infancy of the Question, and so much did he prevail over the true Christianity of the Primitive Church, even before they had enjoy'd the Liberty of the pure Worship twenty Years.
Flush'd with this Success, the _Devil_ made one Push for the restoring _Paganism_, and bringing on the old Worship of the Heathen Idols and Temples; but like our King _James_ II. he drove too hard, and _Julian_ had so provok'd the whole _Roman_ Empire, which was generally at that time become Christian, that had the Apostate liv'd, he would not have been able to have held the Throne; and as he was cut off in his Beginning, Paganism expir'd with him, and the _Devil_ himself might have cry'd out, as _Julian_ did, and with much more Propriety, _Vicisti Galileane_.
_Jovian_, the next Emperor, being a glorious Christian, and a very good and great Man, the _Devil_ abdicated for a while, and left the Christian Armies to re-establish the Orthodox Faith; nor could he bring the Christians to a Breach again among themselves a great while after.
However, Time and a diligent _Devil_ did the Work at last, and when the Emperors concerning themselves one way or other, did not appear sufficient to answer his End, he chang'd Hands again, and went to work with the Clergy: To set the Doctors effectually together by the Ears, he threw in the new Notion of _Primacy_ among them, for a Bone of Contention; the Bait took, the Priests swallow'd it eagerly down, and the _Devil_, a cunninger Fisherman than ever St. _Peter_ was, _struck them_ (as the Anglers call it) with a quick Hand, and hung them fast upon the Hook.
Having them thus in his Clutches, and they being now, as we may say, his own, they took their Measures afterwards from him, and most obediently follow'd his Directions; nay, I will not say but he may have had pretty much the Management of the whole Society ever since, of what Profession or Party soever they may have been, with Exception only to the Reverend and Right Reverend among our selves.
The Sacred, as above, being thus hook'd in, and the DEVIL being at the Head of their Affairs, Matters went on most gloriously his own way; first, the Bishops fell to bandying and Party-making for the Superiority, as heartily as ever Temporal Tyrants did for Dominion, and took as black and devilish Methods to carry it on, as the worst of those Tyrants ever had done before them.
At last Satan declar'd for the _Roman_ Pontiff, and that upon excellent Conditions, in the Reign of the Emperor _Mauritius_; for _Boniface_, who had long contended for the Title of Supreme, fell into a Treaty with _Phocas_, Captain of the Emperor's Guards; whether the Bargain was from Hell or not, let any one judge, the Conditions absolutely entitle the _Devil_ to the Honour of making the Contract, _viz._ That _Phocas_ first murthering his Master (the Emperor) and his Sons, _Boniface_ should countenance the Treason, and declare him Emperor; and in Return, _Phocas_ should acknowledge the Primacy of the Church of _Rome_, and declare _Boniface_ universal Bishop. A blessed Compact! which at once set the _Devil_ at the Head of Affairs in the Christian World, as well Spiritual as Temporal, Ecclesiastick and Civil. Since the Conquest over _Eve_ in Paradise, by which Death and the DEVIL, Hand in Hand, establish'd their first Empire upon Earth, the _Devil_ never gain'd a more important Point than he gain'd at this time.
He had indeed prospered in his Affairs tolerably well for some time before this, and his Interest among the Clergy had got Ground for some Ages; but that was indeed a secret Management, was carried on privately, and with Difficulty; as in sowing Discord and Faction among the People, perplexing the Councils of their Princes, and secretly wheedling in with the dignified Clergy.
Also he had raised abundance of little Church-Rebellions, by setting up Hereticks of several Kinds, and raising them Favourers among the Clergy, such as _Ebion_, _Cerinthius_, _Pelagius_, and others.
He had drawn in the Bishops of _Rome_ to set up the ridiculous Pageantry of the KEY; and while he, the DEVIL, set open the Gates of Hell to them all, set them upon locking up the Gates of Heaven, and giving the Bishop the Key; a Cheat which, as gross as it was, the DEVIL so gilded over, or so blinded the Age to receive it, that like _Gideon's Ephod_, all the Catholick World went a whoring after the Idol; and the Bishop of _Rome sent_ more Fools to the _Devil_ by it than ever he pretended to let into Heaven, though he open'd the Door as wide as his Key was able to do.
The Story of this Key being given to the Bishop of _Rome_ by St. _Peter_, (who, by the way, never had it himself,) and of its being lost by Somebody or other, (the _Devil_ it seems did not tell them who) and its being found again by a _Lombard_ Soldier in the Army of King _Antharis_, who attempting to cut it with his Knife, was miraculously forced to direct the Wound to himself, and cut his own Throat; that King _Antharis_ and his Nobles happened to see the Fellow do it, and were converted to Christianity by it, and that the King sent the Key, with another made like it, to Pope _Pelagius_, then Bishop of _Rome_, who thereupon assum'd the Power of opening and shutting Heaven's Gates; and he afterwards setting a Price or Toll upon the Entrance, as we do here at passing a Turn-pike; these fine things, I say, were successfully managed for some Years before this I am now speaking of, and the Devil got a great deal of Ground by it too; but now he triumph'd openly, and having set up a Murtherer upon the temporal Throne, and a Church Emperor upon the Ecclesiastic Throne, and both of his own choosing, the _Devil_ may be said to begin his new Kingdom from this Epocha, and call it the _Restoration_.
Since this time indeed the Devil's Affairs went very merrily on, and the Clergy brought so many Gewgaws into their Worship, and such devilish Principles were mixt with that which we call'd the Christian Faith, that in a Word, from this Time the Bishop of _Rome_ commenc'd _Whore of Babylon_, in all the most express Terms that could be imagin'd: Tyranny of the worst sort crept into the Pontificate, Errors of all sorts into the Profession, and they proceeded from one thing to another, till the very Popes, for so the Bishop of _Rome_ was now called, by way of Distinction; I say, the Popes themselves, their spiritual Guides, profess'd openly to confederate with the _Devil_, and to carry on a personal and private Correspondence with him at the same time, taking upon them the Title of Christ's Vicar, and the infallible Guide of the Consciences of Christians.
This we have sundry Instances of in some merry Popes, who, _if Fame lies not_, were Sorcerers, Magicians, had familiar Spirits, and immediate Conversation with the Devil, as well visibly as invisibly, and by this means became what we call _Devils incarnate_: Upon this account it is that I have left the Conversation that passes between _Devils and Men_ to this Place, as well because I believe it differs much now in his modern State, from what it was in his ancient State, and therefore that which most concerns us belongs rather to this part of his History; as also because, as I am now writing to the present Age, I choose to bring the most significant Parts of his History, especially as they relate to our selves, into that Part of Time that we are most concern'd in.
The _Devil_ had once, as I observ'd before, the universal Monarchy or Government of Mankind in himself, and I doubt not but in that flourishing State of his Affairs, he governed them like what he is (_viz._) an absolute Tyrant; during this _Theocracy_ of his, _for_ Satan _is call'd the God of this World_, he did not familiarize himself to Mankind so much, as he finds Occasion to do now, there was not then so much need of it; he governed then with an absolute Sway; he had his Oracles, where he gave Audience to his Votaries like a Deity, and he had his Sub-Gods, who under his several Dispositions receiv'd the Homage of Mankind in their Names; such were all the Rabble of the Heathen Deities, from _Jupiter_ the Supreme, to the _Lares_ or Houshold Gods of every Family; these, I say, like Residents, received the Prostrations, but the Homage was all Satan's; the Devil had the Substance of it all, which was the Idolatry.
During this Administration of _Hell_, there was less Witchcraft, less true literal Magick than there has been since; there was indeed no need of it, the DEVIL did not stoop to the Mechanism of his more modern Operations, but rul'd as a Deity, and receiv'd the Vows and the Bows of his Subjects in more State, and with more Solemnity; whereas since that, he is content to employ more Agents and take more Pains himself too; now he runs up and down Hackney in the World, more like a Drudge than a Prince, and much more than he did then.
Hence all those Things we call Apparitions and Visions of Ghosts, Familiar-Spirits and Dealings with the Devil, of which there is so great a Variety in the World at this Time, were not so much known among the People, in those first Ages of the Devil's Kingdom; _in a Word_, the Devil seems to be put to his Shifts, and to fly to Art and Stratagem for the carrying on his Affairs, much more now than he did then.
One Reason for this may be, that he has been more discover'd and expos'd in these Ages, than he was before; then he could appear in the World in his own proper Shapes, and yet not be known; when the Sons of GOD appear'd at the divine Summons, Satan came along with them; but now he has plaid so many scurvy Tricks upon Men, and they know him so well, that he is oblig'd to play quite out of sight and act in disguise; Mankind will allow nothing of his doing, and hear nothing of his saying, in his own Name; and if you propose any Thing to be done, and it be but said the _Devil_ is to help in the doing it, or if you say of any Man he deals with the _Devil_, or the _Devil_ has a Hand in it, every Body flies him and shuns him, as the most frightful Thing in the World.
Nay, if any Thing strange and improbable be done or related to be done, we presently say the _Devil_ was at the doing it: Thus the great Ditch at _Newmarket Heath_, is call'd the _Devil_'s _Ditch_; so the _Devil_ built _Crowland_ Abby, and the Whispering-Place in _Gloucester_ Cathedral; nay, the Cave at _Castleton_, only because there's no getting to the farther End of it, is call'd the _Devil_'s A---- and the like: The poor People of _Wiltshire_, when you ask them how the great Stones at _Stonehenge_ were brought thither? they'll all tell you the _Devil_ brought them: If any Mischief extraordinary befalls us, we presently say the _Devil_ was in it, and the _Devil_ would have it so; in a Word, the _Devil_ has got an ill Name among us, and so he is fain to act more _in Tenebris_, more _incog._ than he used to do, play out of sight himself, and work by the Sap, as the Engineers call it, and not openly and avowedly in his own Name and Person, as formerly, tho' perhaps not with less Success than he did before; and this leads me to enquire more narrowly into the manner of the _Devil_'s Management of his Affairs since the Christian Religion began to spread in the World, which manifestly differs from his Conduct in more antient Times; in which if we discover some of the most consummate Fool's Policy, the most profound simple Craft, and the most subtle shallow Management of Things that can by our weak Understandings be conceiv'd, we must only resolve it into this, that in short it is the DEVIL.
CHAP. II.
_Of Hell as it is represented to us, and how the_ Devil _is to be understood, as being personally in Hell, when at the same Time we find him at Liberty ranging over the World._
It is true, as that learn'd and pleasant Author, the inimitable Dr. _Brown_ says, the _Devil_ is his own Hell; one of the most constituting Parts of his Infelicity is, that he cannot act upon Mankind _brevi Manu_, by his own inherent Power, as well as Rage; that he cannot unhinge this Creation, which, _as I have observ'd in its Place_, he had the utmost Aversion to from its Beginning, as it was a stated Design in the Creator to supply his Place in Heaven with a new Species of _Beings_ call'd _Man_, and fill the Vacancies occasion'd by his Degeneracy and Rebellion.
This fill'd him with Rage inexpressible, and horrible Resolutions of Revenge, and the Impossibility of executing those Resolutions torments him with Despair; this added to what he was before, makes him a compleat _Devil_, with a Hell in his own Breast, and a Fire unquenchable burning about his Heart.
I might enlarge here, and very much to the Purpose, in describing spherically and mathematically that exquisite Quality call'd _a devilish Spirit_, in which it would naturally occur to give you a whole Chapter upon the glorious Articles of _Malice_ and _Envy_, and especially upon that luscious, delightful, triumphant Passion call'd REVENGE; how natural to Man, nay even to both Sexes; how pleasant in the very Contemplation, tho' there be not just at that Time a Power of Execution; how palatable it is in it self, and how well it relishes when dish'd up with its proper Sauces, such as Plot, Contrivance, Scheme, and Confederacy, all leading on to Execution: How it possesses a human Soul in all the most sensible Parts; how it empowers Mankind to sin in Imagination, as effectually to all future Intents and Purposes (Damnation) as if he had sinned actually: How safe a Practice it is too, as to Punishment in this Life, namely, that it empowers us to cut Throats clear of the Gallows, to slander Virtue, reproach Innocence, wound Honour and stab Reputation; and in a Word, to do all the wicked Things in the World, out of the Reach of the Law.
It would also require some few Words to describe the secret Operations of those nice Qualities when they reach the human Soul; how effectually they form a Hell within us, and how imperceptibly they assimilate and transform us into _Devils_, meer human Devils, as really _Devils_ as Satan himself, or any of his Angels; and that therefore 'tis not so much out of the Way, as some imagine, to say, such a Man is an _incarnate_ Devil; for as Crime made Satan a _Devil_, who was before a bright immortal Seraph, or Angel of Light; how much more easily may the same Crime make _the same_ DEVIL, tho' every Way meaner and more contemptible, _of a Man or_ a Woman either? But this is too grave a Subject for me at this Time.
The _Devil_ being thus, I say, fir'd with Rage and Envy, in consequence of his Jealousy upon the Creation of Man, his Torment is encreased to the highest by the Limitation of his Power, and his being forbid to act against Mankind by Force of Arms; this is, I say, part of his _Hell_, which, as above, is within him, and which he carries with him wherever he goes; nor is it so difficult to conceive of _Hell_, or of the _Devil_, either under this just Description, as it is by all the usual Notions that we are taught to entertain of them, by (the old Women) our Instructors; for every Man may, by taking but a common View of himself, and making a just Scrutiny into his own Passions, on some of their particular Excursions, see a _Hell_ within himself, and himself a meer _Devil_ as long as the Inflammation lasts; and that as really, and to all Intents and Purposes, as if he had the Angel (_Satan_) before his Face, in his Locality and Personality; that is to say, all Devil and Monster in his Person, and an immaterial but intense Fire flaming about and from within him, at all the Pores of his Body.
The Notions we receive of the Devil, _as a Person_ being in Hell _as a Place_, are infinitely absurd and ridiculous; the first we are certain is not true in Fact, because he has a certain Liberty, (_however limited_ that is not to the Purpose) is daily visible, and to be trac'd in his several Attacks upon Mankind, and has been so ever since his first Appearance in _Paradise_; as to his corporal Visibility that is not the present Question neither; 'tis enough that we can hunt him by the Foot, that we can follow him as Hounds do a Fox upon a hot Scent: We can see him as plainly by the Effect, by the Mischief he does, and more by the Mischief he puts us upon doing, _I say_, as plainly, as if we saw him by the Eye.
It is not to be doubted but the _Devil_ can see us when and where we cannot see him: and as he has a Personality, tho' it be spirituous, he and his Angels too may be reasonably supposed to inhabit the World of Spirits, and to have free Access from thence to the Regions of Life, and to pass and repass in the Air, as really, tho' not perceptible to us, as the Spirits of Men do after their release from the Body, pass to the Place (wherever that is) which is appointed for them.
If the _Devil_ was confin'd to a Place (_Hell_) as a Prison, he could then have no Business here; and if we pretend to describe _Hell_, as not a Prison, but that the Devil has Liberty to be there, or not be there as he pleased, then he would certainly never be there, or _Hell_ is not such a Place as we are taught to understand it to be.
Indeed according to some, _Hell_ should be a Place of Fire and Torment to the Souls that are cast into it, but not to the _Devils_ themselves; who we make little more or less than keepers and Turnkeys to Hell, as a Goal; that they are sent about to bring Souls thither, lock them in when they come, and then away upon the Scent to fetch more: That one Sort of _Devils_ are made to live in the World among Men, and to be busy continually debauching and deluding Mankind bringing them as it were to the Gates of _Hell_; and then another Sort are Porters and Carriers to fetch them in.
This is, _in short_, little more or less than the old Story of _Pluto_, of _Cerberus_, and of _Charon_; only that our Tale is not half so well told, nor the Parts of the Fable so well laid together.
In all these Notions of _Hell_ and _Devil_, the Torments of the first, and the Agency of the last Tormenting, we meet with not one Word of the main and perhaps only Accent of Horror, which belongs to us to judge of about Hell, I mean the Absence of Heaven; Expulsion, and Exclusion from the Presence and Face of the chief Ultimate, the only eternal and sufficient Good; and this loss sustain'd by a sordid Neglect of our Concern in that excellent Part, in exchange for the most contemptible and justly condemn'd Trifles, and all this eternal and irrecoverable: These People tell us nothing of the eternal Reproaches of Conscience, the Horror of Desperation, and the Anguish of a Mind hopeless of ever seeing the Glory, which alone constitutes Heaven, and which makes all other Places dreadful, and even Darkness it self.
And this brings me directly to the Point in Hand, (_viz._) the State of that Hell which we ought to have in view when we speak of the _Devil_ as _in Hell_: This is the very Hell, which is the Torment of the _Devil_; in short, the _Devil_ is in HELL, and HELL is in the _Devil_; he is fill'd with this unquenchable Fire, he is expel'd the Place of Glory, banish'd from the Regions of Light, Absence from the Life of all Beatitude is his Curse, Despair is the reigning Passion in his Mind, and all the little Constituent Parts of his Torment, such as Rage, Envy, Malice, and Jealousy are consolidated in this, to make his Misery compleat, (_viz._) the Duration of it all, the Eternity of his Condition; that he is without Hope, without Redemption, without Recovery.
If any thing can inflame this _Hell_ and make it hotter, 'tis this only, and this does add an inexpressible Horror to the Devil himself; _namely_, the seeing Man (the only Creature he hates) placed in a State of Recovery, a glorious Establishment of Redemption form'd for him in Heaven, and the Scheme of it perfected on Earth; by which _this Man_, tho' even the _Devil_ by his Art may have deluded him, and drawn him into Crime, is yet in a State of Recovery, which the Devil is not; and that it is not in his (_Satan_'s) Power to prevent it: Now take the Devil as he is in his own Nature Angelic, a bright immortal Seraph, Heaven-born, and having tasted the eternal Beatitude, which these are appointed to enjoy; the Loss of that State to himself, the Possession of it granted to his Rival tho' wicked like and as himself; I say, take the Devil as he is, having a quick Sense of his own Perdition, and a stinging Sight of his Rival's Felicity, 'tis _Hell enough_, and more than enough, even for an Angel to support; nothing we can conceive can be worse.
As to any other Fire than this, such and so immaterially intense as to Torment a Spirit, which is it self Fire also; I will not say it cannot be, because to Infinite every Thing is possible, but I must say, I cannot conceive rightly of it.
I will not enter here into the Wisdom or Reasonableness of representing the Torments of Hell to be Fire, and that Fire to be a Commixture of _Flame_ and _Sulphur_; it has pleased God to let the Horror of those eternal Agonies about _a lost Heaven_, be laid before us by those Similitudes or Allegories, which are most moving to our Senses and to our Understandings; nor will I dispute the Possibility; much less will I doubt but that there is to be a Consummation of Misery to all the Objects of Misery when the _Devil_'s Kingdom in this World ending with the World it self, that Liberty he has now may be farther abridg'd; when he may be return'd to the same State he was in between the Time of his Fall and the Creation of the World; with perhaps some additional Vengeance on him, such as at present we cannot describe, for all that Treason and those high Crimes and Misdemeanours which he has been guilty of here, in his Conversation with Mankind.
As his Infelicity will be then consummated and compleated, so the Infelicity of that Part of Mankind, who are condemn'd with him, may receive a considerable Addition from those Words in their Sentence, to be tormented _with the Devil and his Angels_; for as the Absence of the Supreme Good is a compleat Hell, so the hated Company of the Deceiver, who was the great Cause of his Ruine, must be a Subject of additional Horror, and he will be always saying, as a _Scots_ Gentleman, who died of his Excesses, said to the famous Dr. _P----_, who came to see him on his Death-bed, but had been too much his Companion in his Life,
_O tu fundamenta jecisti------_
I would not treat the very Subject it self with any Indecency, nor do I think my Opinion of that _Hell_, which I say consists in the Absence of him, in whom is Heaven, one Jot less Solemn than theirs who believe it all _Fire_ and _Brimstone_; but I must own, that to me nothing can be more ridiculous than the Notions that we entertain and fill our Heads with about _Hell_, and about the _Devil_'s being there tormenting of Souls, broiling them upon Gridirons, hanging them up upon Hooks, carrying them upon their Backs, and the like, with the several Pictures of _Hell_, represented by a great Mouth with horrible Teeth, gaping like a Cave on the Sides of a Mountain; suppose that appropriated to _Satan_ in the _Peak_, which indeed is not much unlike it, with a Stream of Fire coming out of it, as there is of Water, and smaller Devils going and coming continually in and out, to fetch and carry Souls the Lord knows whither, and for the Lord knows what.
These Things, however intended for Terror, are indeed so ridiculous, that the _Devil_ himself, to be sure, mocks at them, and a Man of Sense can hardly refrain doing the like, only I avoid it, because I would not give offence to weaker Heads.
However, I must not Compliment the Brains of other Men, at the Expence of my own, or talk Nonsense because they can understand no other; I think all these Notions and Representations of _Hell_ and of the _Devil_, to be as prophane as they are ridiculous, and I ought no more to talk prophanely than merrily of them.
Let us learn to talk of these Things then, as we should do; and as we really cannot describe them to our Reason and Understanding, why should we describe them to our Senses; we had, I think, much better not describe them at all, that is to say, not attempt it: The blessed Apostle St. _Paul_ was, as he said himself, carried up, or caught up into the _third Heaven_, yet when he came down again, he could neither tell what he heard or describe what he saw; all he could say of it was, that what he heard was _inutterable_, and what he saw was _inconceivable_.
It is the same thing as to the State of the _Devil_ in those Regions which he now possesses, and where he now more particularly inhabits; my present Business then is not to enter into those grave Things so as to make them ridiculous, as I think most People do that talk of them; but as the _Devil_, let his Residence be where it will, has evidently free Leave to come and go, not into this World only; (_I mean, the Region of our Atmosphere_,) but for ought we know, to all the other inhabited Worlds which God has made, where-ever they are, and by whatsoever Names they are or may be known or distinguished; for if he is not confined in one Place, we have no Reason to believe he is excluded from any Place, Heaven only excepted, from whence he was expell'd for his Treason and Rebellion.
His Liberty then being thus ascertain'd, three Things seem to be material for us to give an Account of, in order to form this Part of his History.
1. What his Business is on this Globe of Earth which we vulgarly call the World, how he acts among us, what Affairs Mankind and he have together, and how far his Conduct here relates to Us, and Ours is, or may be influenc'd by him.
2. Where his Principal Residence is, and whether he has not a particular Empire of his own, to which he retreats upon proper Occasions; where he entertains his Friends when they come under his particular Administration; and where, when he gets any Victory over his Enemies, he carries his Prisoners of War.
3. What may probably be the great Business this black Emperor has at present upon his Hands, either in this World or out of it, and by what Agents he works.
As these Things may perhaps run promiscuously thro' the Course of this whole Work, and frequently be touch'd at under other Branches of the _Devil_'s History, so I do not propose them as Heads of Chapters or Particular Sections, for the Order of Discourse to be handled apart; for (by the way) as Satan's Actings have not been the most regular Things in the World, so in our Discourse about him, it must not be expected that we can always tie our selves down to Order and Regularity, either as to Time, or Place, or Persons; for Satan being _hic & ubique_, a loose ungovern'd Fellow, we must be content to trace him where we can find him.
It is true, in the foregoing Chapter, I shew'd you the DEVIL entred into the Herd Ecclesiastick, and gave you some Account of the first successful Step he took with Mankind since the Christian Epocha; how having secretly managed both Temporal and Spiritual Power apart, and by themselves, he now united them in Point of Management, and brought the Church Usurpation and the Army's Usurpation together; the Pope to bless the General in deposing and murthering his Master the Emperor; and the General to recognise the Pope in dethroning his Master Christ Jesus.
From this time forward you are to allow the _Devil_ a mystical Empire in this World; not an Action of Moment done without him, not a Treason but he has a Hand in it, not a Tyrant but he prompts him, not a Government but he has a ---- in it; not a Fool but he tickles him, not a Knave but he guides him; he has a Finger in every Fraud, a Key to every Cabinet, from the _Divan_ at _Constantinople_, to the _Mississipi_ in _France_, and to the _South-Sea_ Cheats at ------; from the first Attack upon the Christian World, in the Person of the _Romish_ Antichrist, down to the Bull _Unigenitus_; and from the Mixture of St. _Peter_ and _Confucius_ in _China_, to the Holy Office in _Spain_; and down to the _Emlins_ and _Dodwells_ of the current Age.
How he has managed, and does manage, and how in all Probability he will manage till his Kingdom shall come to a Period, and how at last he will probably be managed himself, _Enquire within, and you shall know farther_.
CHAP. III.
_Of the Manner of_ Satan_'s acting and carrying on his Affairs in this World, and particularly of his ordinary Workings in the dark, by_ Possession _and_ Agitation.
The Devil being thus reduc'd to act upon Mankind by Stratagem only, it remains to enquire how he performs, and which way he directs his Attacks; the Faculties of Man are a kind of a Garrison in a strong Castle, which as they defend it on the one hand under the Command of the reasoning Power of Man's Soul, so they are prescribed on the other hand, and can't sally out without Leave; for the Governor of a Fort does not permit his Soldiers to hold any Correspondence with the Enemy, without special Order and Direction. Now the great Enquiry before us is, How comes the DEVIL to a Parley with us? how does he converse with our Senses, and with the Understanding? How does he reach us, which way does he come at the Affections, and which way does he move the Passions? 'Tis a little difficult to discover this treasonable Correspondence, and that Difficulty is indeed the _Devil_'s Advantage, and, for ought I see, the chief Advantage he has over Mankind.
It is also a great Enquiry here, whether the _Devil_ knows our Thoughts or no? If I may give my Opinion, I am with the negative; I deny that he knows any thing of our Thoughts, except of those Thoughts which he puts us upon thinking, for I will not doubt but he has the Art to inject Thoughts, and to revive dormant Thoughts in us: It is not so wild a Scheme as some take it to be, that Mr. _Milton_ lays down, to represent the _Devil_ injecting corrupt Desires and wandring Thoughts into the Head of _Eve_, by Dreams, and that he brought her to Dream whatever he put into her Thoughts, by whispering to her vocally when she was asleep; and to this End, he imagines the DEVIL laying himself close to her Ear, in the Shape of a Toad, when she was fall asleep; I say, this is not so wild a Scheme, seeing even now, if you can whisper any thing close to the Ear of a Person in a deep Sleep, so as to speak distinctly to the Person, and yet not awaken him, as has been frequently tried, the Person sleeping shall dream distinctly of what you say to him; nay, shall dream the very Words you say.
We have then no more to ask, but how the DEVIL can convey himself to the Ear of a sleeping Person, and it is granted then that he may have Power to make us dream what he pleases: But this is not all, for if he can so forcibly, by his invisible Application, cause us to dream, what he pleases, why can he not with the same Facility prompt our Thoughts, whether sleeping or waking? To dream, is nothing else but to think sleeping; and we have abundance of deep-headed Gentlemen among us, who give us ample Testimony that they dream waking.
But if the DEVIL can prompt us to dream, that is to say, to think, yet if he does not know our Thoughts, how then can he tell whether the Whisper had its Effect? The answer is plain, the DEVIL, like the Angler, baits the Hook, if the Fish bite he lies ready to take the Advantage, he whispers to the Imagination, and then waits to see how it works; as _Naomi_ said to _Ruth_, Chap. iii. 5, 18. _Sit still, my Daughter, until thou know how the Matter will fall, for the Man will not be at rest until he have finished the thing._ Thus when the DEVIL had whisper'd to _Eve_ in her Sleep, _according to Milton_, and suggested Mischief to her Imagination, he only sat still to see how the Matter would work, for he knew if it took with her, he should hear more of it; and then by finding her alone the next Day, without her ordinary Guard her Husband, he presently concluded she had swallowed the Bait, and so attack'd her afresh.
A small deal of Craft, and less by far than we have reason to believe the _Devil_ is Master of, will serve to discover whether such and such Thoughts as he knows he has suggested, have taken Place or no; the Action of the Person presently discovers it, at least to him that lies always upon the Watch, and has every Word, every Gesture, every Step we take subsequent to his Operation, open to him; it may therefore, for ought we know, be a great Mistake, and what most of us are guilty of, to tell our Dreams to one another in the Morning, after we have been disturb'd with them in the Night; for if the _Devil_ converses with us so insensibly as some are of the Opinion he does, _that is to say_, if he can hear as far as we can see, we may be telling our Story to him indeed, when we think we are only talking to one another.
This brings me most naturally to the important Enquiry, whether the _Devil_ can walk about the World invisibly or no? The Truth is, this is no question to me; for as I have taken away his Visibility already, and have denied him all Prescience of Futurity too, and have prov'd he cannot know our Thoughts, nor put any Force upon Persons or Actions, if we should take away his Invisibility too, we should _undevil_ him quite, to all Intents and Purposes, as to any Mischief he could do; nay, it would banish him the World, and he might e'en go and seek his Fortune some where else; for if he could neither be visible or invisible, neither act in publick or in private, he could neither have Business or Being in this Sphere, nor could we be any way concern'd with him.
The _Devil_ therefore most certainly has a Power and Liberty of moving about in this World, after _some manner or another_; this is verify'd as well by way of Allegory, as by way of History, in the Scripture it self; and as the first strongly suggests and supposes it to be so, the last positively asserts it; and, not to croud this Work with Quotations from a Book which we have not much to do with in the _Devil_'s Story, at least not much to his Satisfaction, I only hint his personal Appearance to our Saviour in the Wilderness, where it is said, _the Devil taketh him up to an exceeding high Mountain_; and in another Place, _the Devil departed from him_. What Shape or Figure he appear'd in, we do not find mentioned, but I cannot doubt his appearing to him there, any more than I can his talking to our Saviour in the Mouths, and with the Voices of the several Persons who were under the terrible Affliction of an actual Possession.
These Things leave us no room to doubt of what is advanced above, namely, that he, (the _Devil_) has a certain Residence, or Liberty of residing in, and moving about upon the Surface of this Earth, as well as in the Compass of the Atmosphere, vulgarly call'd the Air, in some manner or other: That is the general.
It remains to enquire into the manner, which I resolve into two Kinds;
1. _Ordinary_, which I suppose to be his invisible Motions as a Spirit; under which Consideration I suppose him to have an unconfin'd, unlimited, unrestrain'd Liberty, as to the manner of acting; and this either in Persons, by Possession; or in Things, by Agitation.
2. _Extraordinary_; which I understand to be his Appearances in borrowed Shapes and Bodies, or Shadows rather of Bodies; assuming Speech, Figure, Posture, and Several Powers, of which we can give little or no Account; in which extraordinary manner of Appearances, he is either limited by a Superior Power, or limits himself politically, as being not the Way most for his Interest or Purpose, to act in his Business, which is more effectually done in his State of Obscurity.
Hence we must suppose the _Devil_ has it very much in his own Choice, whether to act in one Capacity, or in the other, or in both; that is to say, of appearing, and not appearing, as he finds for his Purpose: In this State of Invisibility, and under the Operation of these Powers and Liberties, he performs all his Functions and Offices, as _Devil_, as Prince of Darkness, as God of this World, as Tempter, Accuser, Deceiver, and all whatsoever other Names of Office, or Titles of Honour he is known by.
Now taking him in this large unlimited, or little limited State of Action, he is well call'd, _the God of this World_, for he has very much of the Attribute of Omnipresence, and may be said, _either by himself or his Agents_, to be every where, and see every thing; that is to say, every thing that is visible; for I cannot allow him any Share of _Omniscience_ at all.
That he ranges about every where, is _with us_, and sometimes _in us_, sees when he is not seen, hears when he is not heard, comes in without Leave, and goes out without Noise, is neither to be shut in or shut out, that when he runs _from us_ we can't catch him, and when he runs _after us_ we can't escape him, is seen when he is not known, and is known when he is not seen; all these things, and more, we have Knowledge enough about to convince us of the Truth of them; so that, as I have said above, he is certainly walking to and fro thro' the Earth, _&c._ after _some manner or other_, and in some Figure or other, visible or invisible, as he finds Occasion. Now in order to make our History of him complete, the next Question before us is, how, and in what manner he acts with Mankind? how his Kingdom is carried on, and by what Methods he does his Business, for he certainly has a great deal of Business to do; he is not an idle Spectator, nor is he walking about _incognito_, and cloth'd in Mist and Darkness, purely in Kindness to us, that we should not be frighted at him; but 'tis in Policy, that he may act undiscover'd, that he may see and not be seen, may play his Game in the dark, and not be detected in his Roguery; that he may prompt Mischief, raise Tempests, blow up Coals, kindle Strife, embroil Nations, use Instruments, and not be known to have his Hand in any thing, when at the same time he really has a Hand in every thing.
Some are of Opinion, _and I among the rest_, that if the _Devil_ was personally and visibly present among us, and we conversed with him Face to Face, we should be so familiar with him in a little time, that his ugly Figure would not affect us at all, that his Terrors would not fright us, or that we should any more trouble our selves about him, than we did with the last great Comet in 1678, which appear'd so long and so constantly without any particular known Event, that at last we took no more Notice of it than of the other ordinary Stars which had appear'd before we or our Ancestors were born.
Nor indeed should we have much Reason to be frighted at him, or at least none of those silly Things could be said of him which we now amuse our selves about, and by which we set him up like a Scare-Crow to fright Children and old Women, to fill up old Stories, make Songs and Ballads, and in a Word, carry on the low priz'd Buffoonery of the common People; we should either see him in his Angelic Form, as he was from the Original, or if he has any Deformities entail'd upon him by the supreme Sentence, and in Justice to the Deformity of his Crime, they would be of a superior Nature, and fitted more for our Contempt as well as Horror, than those weak fancied Trifles contrived by our antient Devil-raisers and Devil-makers, to feed the wayward Fancies of old Witches and Sorcerers, who cheated the ignorant World with a _Devil_ of their own making, set forth, _in terrorem_, with Bat's Wings, Horns, cloven Foot, long Tail, fork'd Tongue, and the like.
In the next Place, be his frightful Figure what it would, and his Legions as numerous as the Host of Heaven, we should see him still, as the Prince of _Devils_, tho' monstrous as a Dragon, flaming as a Comet, tall as a Mountain, yet dragging his Chain after him equal to the utmost of his supposed Strength; always in Custody of his _Jailors_ the Angels, his Power over-power'd, his Rage cow'd and abated, or at least aw'd and under Correction, limited and restrain'd; in a Word, we should see him a vanquish'd Slave, his Spirit broken, his Malice, tho' not abated, yet Hand-cuff'd and overpower'd, and he not able to work any Thing against us by Force; so that he would be to us but like the Lions in the Tower, encag'd and lock'd up, unable to do the Hurt he wishes to do, and that we fear, or indeed any hurt at all.
From hence 'tis evident, that 'tis not his Business to be public, or to walk up and down in the World visibly, and in his own Shape; his Affairs require a quite different Management, as might be made apparent from the Nature of Things, and the Manner of our Actings, as Men, either with our selves or to one another.
Nor could he be serviceable in his Generation, as a public Person as now he is, or answer the End of his Party who employ him, and who, if he was to do their Business in public, as he does in private, would not be able to employ him at all.
As in our modern Meetings for the Propagation of Impudence and other Virtues, there would be no Entertainment and no Improvement for the Good of the Age, if the People did not all appear in Masque, and conceal'd from the common Observation; so neither could _Satan_ (from whose Management those more happy Assemblies are taken as Copies of a glorious Original) perform the usual and necessary Business of his Profession, if he did not appear wholly in Covert and under needful Disguises; how, but for the Convenience of his Habit, could he call himself into so many Shapes, act on so many different Scenes, and turn so many Wheels of State in the World, as he has done? as a meer profess'd _Devil_ he could do nothing.
Had he been oblig'd always to act the meer Devil in his own Clothes, and with his own Shape, appearing uppermost in all Cafes and Places, he could never have preach'd in so many Pulpits, presided in so many Councils, voted in so many Committees, sat in so many Courts, and influenc'd so many Parties and Factions in Church and State, as we have Reason to believe he has done in our Nation, and in our Memories too, as well as in other Nations and in more antient Times. The Share Satan has had in all the weighty Confusions of the Times, ever since the first Ages of Christianity in the World, has been carried on with so much Secresy, and so much with an Air of Cabal and Intrigue, that nothing can have been manag'd more subtilly and closely, and in the same Manner has he acted in our Times, in order to conceal his Interest, and conceal the Influence he has had in the Councils of the World.
Had it been possible for him to have raised the Flames of Rebellion and War so often in this Nation, as he certainly has done? Could he have agitated the Parties on both Sides, and inflam'd the Spirits of three Nations, if he had appears in his own Dress, a meer naked DEVIL? It is not the Devil as a _Devil_ that does the Mischief, but the _Devil_ in Masquerade, _Satan_ in full Disguise, and acting at the Head of civil Confusion and Distraction.
If History may be credited, the _French_ Court at the Time of our old Confusions was made the Scene of Satan's Politicks, and prompted both Parties in _England_ and in _Scotland_ also to quarrel, and how was it done? Will any Man offer to scandalize the _Devil_ so much as to say, or so much as to suggest that _Satan_ had no Hand in it all? Did not the _Devil_, by the Agency of Cardinal _Richlieu_, send 400000 Crowns at one Time, and 600000 at another, to the _Scots_, to raise an Army and march boldly into _England?_ and did not the same _Devil_ at the same time, by other Agents, remit 800000 Crowns to the other Party, in order to raise an Army to fall upon the _Scots_? nay, did not the _Devil_ with the same Subtilty send down the Archbishop's Order to impose the Service-Book upon the People in _Scotland_, and at the same Time raise a Mob against it, in the great Church (at St. _Giles_'s)? Nay, did not he actually, in the Person of an old Woman (his favourite Instrument) throw the three-leg'd Stool at the Service-Book, and animate the zealous People to take up Arms for Religion, and turn Rebels for God Sake?
All these happy and successful Undertakings, tho' 'tis no more to be doubted they were done by the Agency of _Satan_, and in a very surprizing Manner too, yet were all done in secret, by what I call Possession and Injection, and by the Agency and Contrivance of such Instruments, or by the _Devil_ in the Disguise of such Servants as he found out fitted to be employ'd in his Work, and who he took a more effectual Care in concealing of.
But we shall have Occasion to touch all this Part over again, when we come to discourse of the particular Habits and Disguises which the _Devil_ has made use of, all along in the World, the better to cover his Actions, and to conceal his being concern'd in them.
In the mean Time the Cunning or Artifice the _Devil_ makes use of in all these Things is in it self very considerable; 'tis an old Practice of his using, and he has gone on in diverse Measures, for the better concealing himself in it; which Measures, tho' he varies sometimes, as his extraordinary Affairs require, yet they are in all Ages much the same, and have the same Tendency; namely, that he may get all his Business carried on by the Instrumentality of Fools; that he may make Mankind Agents in their own Destruction, and that he may have all his Work done in such a Manner as that he may seem to have no Hand in it; nay he contrives so well, that the very Name _Devil_ is put upon his opposite Party, and the Scandal of the black Agent lies all upon them.
In order then to look a little into his Conduct, let us enquire into the common Mistakes about him, see what Use is made of them to his Advantage, and how far Mankind is imposed upon in those Particulars, and to what Purpose.
CHAP. IV.
_Of Satan's Agents or Missionaries, and their Actings upon and in the Minds of Men in his Name._
Infinite Advantages attend the _Devil_ in his retired Government, as they respect the Management of his Interests, and the carrying on his absolute Monarchy in the World; particularly as it gives him room to act by the Agency of his inferior Ministers and Messengers, call'd on many Occasions _his Angels_, of whom he has an innumerable _Multitude_, at his Command, enough, for ought we know, to spare one to attend every Man and Woman now alive in the World; and of whom, if we may believe our second sight Christians, the Air is always as full, as a Beam of the Evening Sun is of Insects, where they are ever ready for Business, and to go and come as their great Governor issues out Orders for their Directions.
These, as they are all of the same spirituous Quality with himself, and consequently invisible like him, _except as above_, are ready upon all Occasions to be sent to _and into_ any such Person, and for such Purposes, _superior Limitations only excepted_, as the grand Director of _Devils_, (The _Devil_ properly so call'd guides them;) and be the Subject or the Object what it will, _that is to say_, be the Person they are sent to, _or into, as above_, who it will, and the Business the Messenger is to do what it will, they are sufficiently qualified; for this is a Particular to Satan's Messengers or Agents, that they are not like us humane _Devils_ here in the World, some bred up one Way, some another, some of one Trade, some of another, and consequently some fit for some Business, some for another, some good for something, and some good for nothing, but his People are every one fit for every Thing, can find their Way every where, and are a Match for every Body they are sent to; in a Word, there are no _foolish Devils_, they are all fully qualified for their Employment, fit for any thing he sets them about, and very seldom mistake their Errand or fail in the Business they are sent to do.
Nor is it strange at all, that the _Devil_ should have such a numberless Train of Deputy _Devils_ to act under him; for it must be acknowledged he has a great deal of Business upon his Hands, a vast deal of Work to do, abundance of public Affairs under his Direction, and an infinite Variety of particular Cases always before him; _for Example_.
How many Governments in the World are wholly in his Administration? how many Divans and great Councils under his Direction? nay, I believe, 'twould be hard to prove that there is or has been one Council of State in the World for many hundred Years past, down to the Year 1713, (we don't pretend to come nearer home) where the _Devil_ by himself, or his Agents in one Shape or another, has not sat as a Member, if not taken the Chair.
And tho' some learn'd Authors may dispute this Point with me, by giving some Examples where the Councils of Princes have been acted by a better Hand, and where Things have been carried against _Satan_'s Interest, and even to his great Mortification, it amounts to no more than this; namely, that in such Cases the _Devil_ has been out-voted; but it does not argue but he might have been present there, and have push'd his Interest as far as he could, only that he had not the Success he expected; for I don't pretend to say that he has never been disappointed; but those Examples are so rare, and of so small Signification, that when I come to the Particulars, as I shall do in the Sequel of this History, you will find them hardly worth naming; and that, take it one Time with another, the _Devil_ has met with such a Series of Success in all his Affairs, and has so seldom been baulk'd; and where he has met with a little Check in his Politicks, has notwithstanding, so soon and so easily recover'd himself, regain'd his lost Ground, or replac'd himself in another Country when he has been supplanted in one, that his Empire is far from being lessen'd in the World, for the last thousand Years of the Christian Establishment.
Suppose we take an Observation from the Beginning of _Luther_, or from the Year 1420, and call the Reformation a Blow to the _Devil_'s Kingdom, which before that was come to such a Height in Christendom, that 'tis a Question not yet thorowly decided, whether that Medley of Superstition and horrible Heresies, that Mass of Enthusiam and Idols call'd the Catholick Hierarchy, was a Church of God or a Church of the _Devil_; whether it was an Assembly of Saints or a Synagogue of Satan: I say, take that Time to be the _Epocha_ of Satan's Declension and of Lucifer's falling from Heaven, that is, from the Top of his terrestrial Glory, yet whether he did not gain in the Defection of the _Greek_ Church about that Time and since, as much as he lost in the Reformation of the _Roman_, is what Authors are not yet agreed about, not reckoning what he has regain'd since of the Ground which he had lost even by the Reformation, (_viz._) the Countries of the Duke of _Savoy_'s Dominion, where the Reformation is almost eaten out by Persecution; the whole _Valtoline_ and some adjacent Countries; the whole Kingdom of _Poland_ and almost all _Hungary_; for since the last War the Reformation, as it were, lies gasping for Breath, and expiring in that Country, also several large Provinces in _Germany_, as _Austria_, _Carinthia_, and the whole Kingdom of _Bohemia_, where the Reformation once powerfully planted, receiv'd its Death's Wound at the Battle of _Prague_, _Ann._ 1627, and languish'd but a very little while, died and was buried, and good King POPERY reign'd in its stead.
To these Countries thus regain'd to Satan's infernal Empire, let us add his modern Conquests and the Encroachments he has made upon the Reformation in the present Age, which are, _however light we make of them_, very considerable (_viz._) the Electorate of the _Rhine_ and the _Palatinate_, the one fallen to the House of _Bavaria_, and the other to that of _Neuburgh_, both Popish; the Dutchy of _Deux Ponts_ fallen just now to a popish Branch, the whole Electorate of _Saxony_ fallen under the Power of popish Government by the Apostacy of their Princes, and more likely to follow the Fate of _Bohemia_, whenever the diligent _Devil_ can bring his new Project in _Poland_ to bear, as 'tis more than probable he will do so some time or other, by the growing Zeal as well as Power of (that House of Bigots) the House of _A----_.
But to sum up the dull Story; we must add in the Roll of the _Devil_'s Conquests, the whole Kingdom of _France_, where we have in one Year seen, to the immortal Glory of the _Devil_'s Politicks, that his Measures have prevailed to the total Extirpation of the Protestant Churches without a War; and that Interest which for 200 Years had supported it self in spight of Persecutions, Massacres, five civil Wars and innumerable Battles and Slaughters, at last receiv'd its mortal Wound from its own Champion _Henry_ IV. and sunk into utter Oblivion, by _Satan_'s most exquisite Management under the Agency of his two prime Ministers Cardinal _Richlieu_ and _Lewis_ the XIV, whom he entirely possess'd.
Thus far we have a melancholy View of the _Devil_'s new Conquests, and the Ground he has regain'd upon the Reformation, in which his secret Management has been so exquisite, and his Politicks so good, that could he bring but one Thing to pass, which by his own former Mistake, (for the _Devil_ is not infallible) he has rendred impossible, he would bring the Protestant Interest so near its Ruin, that Heaven would be, _as it were_, put to the Necessity of working by Miracle to prevent it; _the Case is thus_.
Antient Historians tell us, and from good Authority, that the DEVIL finding it for his Interest to bring his favourite _Mahomet_ upon the Stage, and spread the victorious Half-Moon upon the Ruin of the Cross, having with great Success, rais'd first the _Saracen_ Empire, and then the _Turkish_ to such a Height, as that the Name of Christian seemed to be extirpated in those two Quarters of the World, which were then not the greatest only, but by far the most powerful, I mean _Asia_ and _Africa_; having totally laid wast all those antient and flourishing Churches of _Africa_, the Labours of St. _Cyprian_, _Tertullian_, St. _Augustine_, and 670 Christian Bishops and Fathers, who govern'd there at once, also all the Churches of _Smyrna_, _Philadelphia_, _Ephesus_, _Sardis_, _Antioch_, _Laodicea_, and innumerable others in _Pontus_, _Bithynia_, and the Provinces of the lesser _Asia_.
The _Devil_ having, I say, finish'd these Conquests so much to his Satisfaction, began to turn his Eyes Northward, and tho' he had a considerable Interest in the _Whore of Babylon_, and had brought his Power by the Subjection of the _Roman_ Hierarchy to a great Height, yet finding the Interest of _Mahomet_ most suitable to his _devilish_ Purposes, as most adapted to the Destruction of Mankind, and laying waste the World, he resolv'd to espouse the growing Power of the _Turk_, and bring him in upon _Europe_ like a Deluge.
In order to this, and to make Way for an easy Conquest, like a true _Devil_ he work'd under Ground, and sap'd the Foundation of the Christian Power, by sowing Discord among the reigning Princes of _Europe_; that so envying one another they might be content to stand still and look on while the _Turk_ devoured them one by one, and at last might swallow them up all.
This _devilish_ Policy took to his Heart's Content; the Christian Princes stood still, stupid, dozing, and unconcern'd, till the Turk conquered _Thrace_, over-run _Servia_, _Macedonia_, _Bulgaria_, and all the Remains of the _Grecian_ Empire, and at last the Imperial City of _Constantinople_ it self.
Finding this politic Method so well answer his Ends, the _Devil_, who always improves upon the Success of his own Experiments, resolv'd from that time to lay a Foundation for the making those Divisions and Jealousies of the Christian Princes immortal; whereas they were at first only personal, and founded in private Quarrels between the Princes respectively; such as _Emulation_ of one another's Glory, _Envy_ at the extraordinary Valour, or other Merit of this or that Leader, or _Revenge_ of some little Affront; for which notwithstanding, so great was the Piety of Christian Princes in those Days, that they made no Scruple to sacrifice whole Armies, yea, Nations, to their Piques and private Quarrels, _a certain Sign whose Management they were under_.
These being the Causes by which the DEVIL first sow'd the Seeds of Mischief among them, and the Success so well answering his Design, he could not but wish to have the same Advantage always ready at his Hand; and therefore he resolv'd to order it so, that these Divisions, which, however useful to him, were only personal, and consequently temporary, like an Annual in the Garden, which must be rais'd anew every Season, might for the future be national, and consequently durable and immortal.
To this end it was necessary to lay the Foundation of eternal Feud, not in the Humours and Passions of Men only, but in the Interests of Nations: The Way to do this was to form and state the Dominion of those Princes, by such a Plan drawn in Hell, and laid out from a Scheme truly political, of which the _Devil_ was chief Engineer; that the Divisions should always remain, being made a natural Consequence of the Situation of the Country, the Temper of their People, the Nature of their Commerce, the Climate, the Manner of living, or something which should for ever render it impossible for them to unite.
This, I say, was a Scheme truly infernal, in which the _Devil_ was as certainly the principal Operator, to illustrate great Things by small, as ever _John_ of _Leyden_ was of the High _Dutch_ Rebellion, or Sir _John B------t_ of the late Project, called the _South-Sea_ Stock. Nor did this Contrivance of the _Devil_ at all dishonour his Author, or the Success appear unworthy of the Undertaker; for we see it not only answer the End, and made the _Turk_ victorious at the same Time, and formidable to _Europe_ ever after, but it works to this Day, the Foundation of the Divisions remains in all the several Nations, and that to such a Degree that it is impossible they should unite.
This is what I hinted before, in which the _Devil_ was mistaken, and is another instance that he knows nothing of what is to come; for this very Foundation of immortal Jealousy and Discord between the several Nations of _Spain_, _France_, _Germany_, and others, which the _Devil_ himself with so much Policy contriv'd, and which serv'd his Interests so long, is now the only Obstruction to his Designs, and prevents the entire Ruin of the Reformation; for tho' the reform'd Countries are very Powerful, and some of them, as _Great Britain_ and _Prussia_ is particularly, more powerful than ever; yet it cannot be said that the Protestant Interests in general are stronger than formerly, or so strong as they were in 1623 under the victorious Arms of the _Swede_; On the other Hand, were it possible that the Popish Powers, to wit, of _France_, _Spain_, _Germany_, _Italy_ and _Poland_, which are intirely Popish, could heartily unite their Interests, and should join their Powers to attack the Protestants, the latter would find it very difficult, if not impossible, to defend themselves.
But as fatal as such a Union of the Popish Powers would be, and as useful as it would be to the _Devil_'s Cause at this time, not the _Devil_ with all his Angels are able to bring it to pass; no, not with all his Craft and Cunning; he divided them, but he can't unite them; so that even just as 'tis with Men, so 'tis with _Devils_, they may do in an Hour what they can't undo in an Age.
This may comfort those faint-hearted Christians among us, who cry out of the Danger of a religious War in _Europe_, and what terrible Things will happen when _France_, and _Spain_, and _Germany_, and _Italy_, and _Poland_ shall all unite; let this Answer satisfy them, The _Devil_ himself can never make _France_ and _Spain_, or _France_ and the Emperor unite; jarring Humours may be reconcil'd, but jarring Interests never can: They may unite so as to make Peace, _tho' that can hardly be long_, but never so as to make Conquests together; they are too much afraid of one another, for one to bear, that any Addition of Strength should come to the other. But this is a Digression. We shall find the _Devil_ mistaken and disappointed too on several other Occasions, as we go along.
I return to Satan's Interest in the several Governments and Nations, by vertue of his Invisibility, and which he carries on by Possession; 'tis by this Invisibility that he presides in all the Councils of _foreign Powers_, (for we never mean our own, that we always premise;) and what tho' it is alledged by the Criticks, that he does not preside, because there is always a President; I say, if he is not in the President's Chair, yet if he be in the President himself, the Difference is not much; and if he does not vote as a Counsellor, if he votes in the Counsellor, 'tis much the same; and here, as it was in the Story of _Ahab_ the King of _Israel_, as he was a _lying Spirit_ in the Mouths of _all his Prophets_, so we find him a Spirit of some particular evil Quality or other, in all the Transactions and Transactors on that Stage of Life we call the State.
Thus he was a dissembling Spirit in _Char._ IX. a turbulent Spirit in _Char._ V. Emperors; a bigotted Spirit of Fire and Faggot in our Queen _Mary_; an apostate Spirit in _Hen._ IV.; a cruel Spirit in _Peter_ of _Castile_; a revengeful Spirit in _Ferdinand_ II.; a _Phaeton_ in _Lewis_ XIV.; a _Sardanapalus_ in _C------_ II.
In the Great Men of the World, take them a degree lower than the Class of Crown'd Heads, he has the same secret Influence; and hence it comes to pass, that the greatest Heroes, and Men of the highest Character for Atchievements of Glory, either by their Virtue or Valour, however they have been crowned with Victories, and elevated by human Tongues, whatever the most consummate Virtues or good Qualities they have been known by, yet they have always had some Devil or other in them to preserve _Satan_'s Claim to them uninterrupted, and prevent their Escape out of his Hands; thus we have seen a bloody Devil in a _D'Alva_; a profligate Devil in a _Buckingham_; a lying, artful, or politick Devil in a _Richlieu_; a treacherous Devil in a _Mazarin_; a cruel, merciless Devil in a _Cortez_; a debauch'd Devil in an _Eugene_; a conjuring Devil in a _Luxemburg_; and a covetous Devil in a _M---------h_: In a word, tell me the Man, I tell you the Spirit that reign'd in him.
Nor does he thus carry on his secret Management by Possession in Men of the first Magnitude only, but have you not had Evidences of it among our selves? how has he been a _lying_ Spirit in the Mouths of our Prophets, a factious Spirit in the Heads of our Politicians, a profuse _Devil_ in a _B-----s_, a corrupt Devil in _M-----_, a proud Spirit in my Lord _Plausible_, a bullying Spirit in my Lord _Bugbear_, a talkative Spirit in his Grace the D---- of _Rattle-hall_, a scribling Spirit in my Lord _H------_, a run-away Spirit in my Lord _Frightful_; and so thro' a long Roll of Heroes, whose exceeding, and particular Qualifications proclaim loudly what Handle the _Devil_ took them by, and how fast he held them; for these were all Men of ancient Fame, I hope you know that.
From Men of Figure, we descend to the Mob, and 'tis there the same thing; Possession, like the Plague, is _Morbus Plebæi_; not a Family but he is a Spirit of Strife and Contention among them; not a Man but he has a Part in him; he is a drunken _Devil_ in one, a whoring _Devil_ in another, a thieving _Devil_ in a third, a lying _Devil_ in the fourth, and so on, to a thousand, and a hundred thousand, _ad infinitum_.
Nay, even the Ladies have their Share in the Possession; and if they have not the _Devil_ in their Heads, or in their Tails, in their Faces or their Tongues, it must be some poor despicable She-devil that Satan did not think it worth his while to meddle with; and the Number of those that are below his Operation, I doubt is very small. But that Part I have much more to say to in its Place.
From Degrees of Persons, to Professions and Employments, 'tis the same; we find the _Devil_ is a true Posture-master, he assumes any Dress, appears in any Shape, counterfeits every Voice, acts upon every Stage; here he wears a Gown, there a long Robe; here he wears the Jack-Boots, there the Small-Sword; is here an _Enthusiast_, there a _Buffoon_; on this Side he acts the _Mountebank_, on that Side the _Merry-Andrew_; nothing comes amiss to him, from the Great _Mogul_, to the _Scaramouch_; the _Devil_ is in them, more or less, and plays his Game so well that he makes sure Work with 'em all: He knows where the _Common Foible_ lies, which is UNIVERSAL PASSION, what Handle to take hold of every Man by, and how to cultivate his Interest so, as not to fail of his End, or mistake the Means.
How then can it be deny'd but that his acting thus _in tenebris_, and keeping out of the sight of the World, is abundantly his Interest, and that he could do nothing, comparatively speaking, by any other Method?
What would this publick Appearance have signified? Who would have entertain'd him in his own proper Shape and Person? Even B---- _B----_ himself, tho' all the World knows him to have a foolish _Devil_ in him, would not have been Fool enough to have taken him into his Service, if he had known him: And my Lord _Simpleton_ also, who _Satan_ has set up for a cunning Fool, seems to have it sit much better upon him now he passes for a Fool of Art, than it should have done if the naked DEVIL had come and challenged him for a Fool in Nature.
Infinite Variety illustrate the _Devil_'s Reign among the Sons of Men; all which he manages with admirable Dexterity, and a Slight particular to himself, by the mere Advantage of his present conceal'd Situation, and which, had he been obliged to have appear'd in Publick, had been all lost, and he capable of just nothing at all, or at least of nothing more than the other ordinary Politicians of Wickedness could have done without him.
Now, Authors are much divided as to the manner how the _Devil_ manages his proper Instruments for Mischief; for Satan has a great many Agents in the Dark, who neither have the DEVIL in them, nor are they much acquainted with him, and yet he serves himself of them, whether of their Folly, or of that other Frailty call'd Wit, 'tis all one, he makes them do his Work, when they think they are doing their own; nay, so cunning is he in his guiding the weak Part of the World, that even when they think they are serving God, they are doing nothing less or more than serving the _Devil_; nay, 'tis some of the nicest Part of his Operation, to make them believe they are serving God, when they do his Work. Thus those who the Scripture foretold should persecute Christ's Church in the latter Days, were to think they do God _good Service_: Thus the Inquisition, (for Example,) it may be, at this time, in all the acts of Christian Cruelty which they are so famous for (if any of them are ignorant enough not to know that they are _Devils_ incarnate) they may, for ought we know, go on for God's sake; torture, murther, starve to Death, mangle and macerate, and all for God, and God's Catholic Church; and 'tis certainly the _Devil_'s Master-piece to bring Mankind to such a Perfection of Devilism as that of the _Inquisition_ is; for _if the_ Devil _had not been in them_, could they christen such a _Hell-fire_ Judicature as the _Inquisition_ is, by the Name of _the Holy Office_? And so in Paganism, how could so many Nations among the poor _Indians_ offer human Sacrifices to their Idols, and murther thousands of Men, Women and Children, to appease this God of the Air, when he is angry, if the _Devil_ did not act in them under the Vizor of Devotion?
But we need not go to _America_, or to the Inquisition, not to Paganism or to Popery either, to look for People that are sacrificing to the _Devil_, or that give their Peace-offerings to him, while they are offer'd upon God's Altar; are not our Churches (ay, and Meeting-houses too, as much as they pretend to be more sanctified than their Neighbours) full of _Devil_ Worshipers? Where do his Devotees gratulate one another, and congratulate him, more than at Church? where, while they hold up their Hands, and turn up their Eyes towards Heaven, they make all their Vows to Satan, or at least to the fair _Devils_ his Representatives, which I shall speak of in their Place.
Do not the Sons of God make Assignations with the Daughters of Men in the very House of Worship? Do they not talk to them in the Language of the Eyes? And what is at the Bottom of it, while one Eye is upon the Prayer-book, and the other adjusting their Dress? Are they not sacrificing to _Venus_ and _Mercury_, nay, and the very _Devil_ they dress at?
Let any Man impartially survey the Church-Gestures, the Air, the Postures and the Behaviour; let him keep an exact Roll, and if I do not shew him two _Devil_ Worshipers for one true Saint, then the Word _Saint_ must have another Signification than I ever yet understood it by.
The Church (as a Place) is the Receptacle of the Dead, as well as the Assembly of the Living; what relates to those below, I doubt Satan, if he would be so kind, could give a better Account of than I can; but as to the Superficies, I pretend to so much Penetration as to tell you, that there are more Spectres, more Apparitions always there, than you that know nothing of the matter may be aware of.
I happen'd to be at an eminent Place of God's most devout Worship the other Day, with a Gentleman of my Acquaintance, who, I observed, minded very little the Business he ought to come about; first I saw him always busy staring about him and bowing this Way and that Way, nay, he made two or three bows and Scrapes when he was repeating the Responses to the Ten Commandments, and assure you he made it correspond strangely, so that the Harmony was not so broken in upon as you would expect it should; thus; _Lord_, and a Bow to a fine Lady just come up to her Seat, _have Mercy upon us_; ---- three Bows to a Throng of Ladies that came into the next Pew altogether, _and incline_ ---- then stop'd to make a great Scrape to my Lord ----, _our Hearts_, just then the Hearts of all the Church were gone off from the Subject, for the Response was over, so he huddled up the rest in Whispers, for _God a Mighty_ could hear him well enough, _he said_, nay, as well as if he had spoken as loud as his Neighbours did.
After we were come home, I ask'd him what he meant by all this, and what he thought of it?
How could I help it, _said he_, I must not be rude.
What, _says I_, rude to who?
Why, _says he_, there came in so many she _Devils_ I could not help it.
What, _said I_, could not you help bowing when you were saying your Prayers?
O Sir! _says he_, the Ladies would have thought I had slighted them, I could not avoid it.
Ladies! _said I_, I thought you call'd them _Devils_ just now.
Ay, ay, _Devils_, _said he_, little charming Devils, but I must not be rude to them however.
Very well, _said I_, then you would be rude to _God a Mighty_, because you could not be rude to the Devil?
Why that's true, _said he_, but what can we do? there's no going to Church as the Case stands now, if we must not worship the _Devil_ a little between whiles.
This is the Case indeed, and Satan carries his Point on every Hand; for if the fair speaking World, and the fair looking World are generally _Devils_, that is to say, are in his Management, we are sure the foul speaking and the foul doing World are all on his Side, and you have then only the fair-doing Part of the World that are out of his Class, and when we speak of them, _O how few!_
But I return to the _Devil_'s managing our wicked Part, for this he does with most exquisite Subtilty; and this is one Part of it, (_viz._) he thrusts our Vices into our Virtues, by which he mixes the Clean and the Unclean, and thus by the Corruption of the one, poisons and debauches the other, so that the Slave he governs cannot account for his own common Actions, and is fain to be oblig'd to his Maker to accept of the Heart without the Hands and Feet; to take, as we vulgarly express it, _the Will_ for the _Deed_, and if Heaven was not so good to come into that half in half Service, I don't see but the _Devil_ would carry away all his Servants: Here indeed I should enter into a long Detail of involuntary Wickedness, which in short, is neither more or less than the _Devil_ in every Body, ay, in every one of you, (our Governors excepted) take it as you please.
What is our Language when we look back with Reflection and Reproach on past Follies? _I think I was bewitch'd_, I was _posses'd_, _certainly the Devil was in me, or else I had never been such a Sot_: _Devil_ in you, Sir! Ay, who doubts it; you may be sure the _Devil_ was in you, and there he is still, and next Time he can catch you in the same Snare, you'll be just the same SOT that you say you were before.
In short, the _Devil_ is too cunning for us, and manages us his own Way; he governs the Vices of Men by his own Methods; tho' every Crime will not make a Man a _Devil_, yet it must be owned that every Crime puts the Criminal in some Measure into the Devil's Power, gives him a Title to the Man, and he treats him magisterially ever after.
Some tell us every single Man, every individual has a _Devil_ attending him, to execute the Orders of the (Grand Signior) Devil of the whole Clan; that this attending _evil Angel_, for so he is call'd, sees every Step you take, is with you in every Action, prompts you to every Mischief, and leaves you to do every Thing that is pernicious to your self; they also alledge that there is a good Spirit which attends him too, which latter is always accessary to every Thing that we do that is good, and reluctant to evil; If this is true, how comes it to pass that those two opposite Spirits do not quarrel about it when they are pressing us to contrary Actions, one good and the other evil? and why does the evil tempting Spirit so often prevail? Instead of answering this difficult Question, I shall only tell you, as to this Story of good and evil Angels attending every particular Person, 'tis a good Allegory indeed to represent the Struggle in the Mind of Man between good and evil Inclinations; but as to the rest, the best Thing I can say of it is, _that_ I think _'tis a Fib_.
But to take Things as they are, and only talk by way of natural Consequence, for to argue from Nature is certainly the best Way to find out the _Devil_'s Story; if there are good and evil Spirits attending us, that is to say, a good Angel and a _Devil_, then 'tis no unjust Reproach upon any Body to say, when they follow the Dictates of the latter, the _Devil_ is in them; or they are _Devils_; nay, I must carry it farther still, namely, that as the Generality and greatest Number of People do follow and obey the evil Spirit and not the good, and that the predominate Power is allowed to be the nominating Power; you must then allow, that in short, the greater Part of Mankind has the Devil in them, and so I come to my Text.
To this Purpose give me leave to borrow a few Lines of a Friend on this very Part of the Devil's Management.
To Places and Persons he suits his Disguises, And dresses up all his Banditti, Who as Pickpockets flock to a Country Assizes, Croud 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 in some he's the Whole, And of some (like the Vicar of _Baddow_) It can neither be said they have Body or Soul, But only are _Devils_ in Shadow.
The Pretty and Witty, are Devils in Masque, The Beauties are meer Apparitions; The homely alone by their Faces are known, And the Good by their ugly Conditions.
The Beaus walk about like the Shadows of Men. And wherever he leads 'em 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 our Ears, 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 enflames and the Appetite fires, And takes ev'ry Thing by the Handle.
Thus he walks up and down in compleat Masquerade, And with every Company mixes, Sells in every Shop, works at every Trade, And ev'ry Thing doubtful perplexes.
How Satan comes by this governing Influence in the Minds and upon the Actions of Men, is a Question I am not yet come to, nor indeed does it so particularly belong to the Devil's History, it seems rather a Polemick, so it may pass at School among the Metaphysicks, and puzzle the Heads of our Masters; wherefore I think to write to the learned Dr. _B----_ about it, imploring his most sublime Haughtiness, that when his other more momentous Avocations of Pedantry and Pedagogism will give him an Interval from Wrath and Contention, he will set apart a Moment to consider human Nature Deviliz'd, and give us a Mathematical Anatomical Description of it; with a Map of Satan's Kingdom in the Microcosm of Mankind, and such other Illuminations as to him and his Contemporaries ---- and, ---- _&c._ in their great Wisdom shall seem meet.
CHAP. V.
_Of the_ Devil_'s Management in the Pagan Hierarchy by Omens, Entrails, Augurs, Oracles, and such like Pageantry of Hell; and how they went off the Stage at last by the Introduction of true Religion._
I have adjourn'd, not finished, my Account of the _Devil_'s secret Management by _Possession_, and shall reassume it, in its Place; but I must take leave to mention some other Parts of his retir'd Scheme, by which he has hitherto manag'd Mankind, and the first of these is by that Fraud of all Frauds call'd Oracle.
Here his Trumpet yielded an uncertain Sound for some Ages, and like what he was, and according to what he practised from the Beginning, he deliver'd out Falshood and Delusion by Retale: The Priests of _Apollo_ acted this Farce for him to a great Nicety at _Delphos_; there were divers others at the same Time, and some, which to give the Devil his due, he had very little Hand in, as we shall see presently.
There were also some smaller, some greater, some more, some less famous Places where those Oracles were seated, and Audience given to the Enquirers, in all which the _Devil_, or some Body for him, _Permissu Superiorum_, for either vindictive or other hidden Ends and Purposes, was allow'd to make at least a Pretension to the Knowledge of Things to come; but, as publick Cheats generally do, they acted in Masquerade, and gave such uncertain and inconsistent Responses, that they were oblig'd to use the utmost Art to reconcile Events to the Prediction, even after things were come to pass.
Here the Devil was a _lying Spirit_, in a particular and extraordinary manner, in the Mouths of all the Prophets; and yet he had the Cunning to express himself so, that whatever happen'd, the Oracle was suppos'd to have meant as it fell out; and so all their Augurs, Omens and Voices, by which the Devil amus'd the World, not at that Time only, but since, have been likewise interpreted.
_Julian_ the Apostate dealt mightily in these Amusements, but the Devil, who neither wish'd his Fall, or presag'd it to him, evidenc'd that he knew nothing of _Julian_'s Fate; for that, as he sent almost to all the Oracles of the East, and summon'd all the Priests together to inform him of the Success of his _Persian_ Expedition, they all, like _Ahab_'s _Prophets_, having a lying Spirit in them, encourag'd him and promis'd him Success.
Nay, all the ill Omens which disturb'd him, they presag'd good from; _for Example_, he was at a prodigious Expence when he was at _Antioch_ to buy up white Beasts, and white Fowls, for Sacrifices, and for predicting from the Entrails; from whence the _Antiochians_, in contempt, call'd him _Victimarius_; but whenever the Entrails foreboded Evil, the cunning Devil made the Priests put a different Construction upon them, and promise him Good: When he entred into the Temple of the _Genij_ to offer Sacrifice, one of the Priests dropt down dead; this, had it had any Signification more than a Man falling dead of an Apoplectic, would have signified something fatal to _Julian_, who made himself a Brother Sacrist or Priest; whereas the Priests turn'd it presently to signify the Death of his Colleague, the Consul _Sallust_ which happen'd just at the same Time, tho' eight hundred Miles off; so in another Case, _Julian_ thought it ominous that he, who was _Augustus_ should be nam'd with two other Names of Persons, both already dead; the Case was thus, the Stile of the Emperor was _Julianus Foelix Augustus_, and two of his principal Officers were _Julianus_ and _Foelix_; now both _Julianus_ and _Foelix_ died within a few Days of one another, which disturb'd Him much, who was the third of the three Names; but his flattering _Devil_ told him it all imported Good to him (_viz._) that tho' _Julianus_ and _Foelix_ should die, _Augustus_ should be immortal.
Thus whatever happen'd, and whatever was foretold, and how much soever they differ'd from one another, the lying Spirit was sure to reconcile the _Prediction_ and the _Event_, and make them at least seem to correspond in Favour of the Person enquiring.
Now we are told Oracles are ceased, and the _Devil_ is farther limited for the Good of Mankind, not being allow'd to vent his Delusions by the Mouths of the Priests and Augurs, as formerly: I will not take upon me to say how far they are really ceas'd, more than they were before; I think 'tis much more reasonable to believe there was never any Reality in them at all, or that any Oracle ever gave out any Answers but what were the Invention of the Priests and the Delusions of the DEVIL; I have a great many antient Authors on my Side in this Opinion, as _Eusebius_, _Tertullian_, _Aristotle_, and others, who as they liv'd so near the Pagan Times, and when even some of those Rites were yet in Use, they had much more Reason to know, and could probably pass a better Judgment upon them; nay _Cicero_ himself ridicules them in the openest manner; again, other Authors descend to Particular and shew how the Cheat was manag'd by the Heathen Sacrists and Priests, and in what enthusiastic manner they spoke; namely, by going into the hollow Images, such as the brazen Bull and the Image of _Apollo_, and how subtilly they gave out _dubious_ and _ambiguous_ Answers; that when the People did not find their Expectations answer'd by the Event, they might be imposed upon by the Priests, and confidently told they did not rightly understand the Oracle's Meaning: However, I cannot say but that indeed there are some Authors of good Credit too, who will have it that there was a real prophetic Spirit in the Voice or Answers given by the Oracles, and that oftentimes they were miraculously exact in those Answers; and they give that of the _Delphic_ Oracle answering the Question which was given about _Croesus_ for an Example, _viz._ what _Croesus_ was doing at that time? _to wit_, that he was boiling a Lamb and the Flesh of a Tortoise together, in a brass Vessel, or Boiler, with a Cover of the same Metal; that is to say, in a Kettle with a brass Cover.
To affirm therefore, that they were all Cheats, a Man must encounter with Antiquity, and set his private Judgment up against an establish'd Opinion; but 'tis no matter for that; if I do not see any thing in that receiv'd Opinion capable of Evidence, much less of Demonstration, I must be allow'd still to think as I do; others may believe as they list; I see nothing hard or difficult in the Thing; the Priests, who were always historically inform'd of the Circumstances of the Enquirer, or at least something about them, might easily find some ambiguous Speech to make, and put some double _Entendre_ upon them, which upon the Event solv'd the Credit of the Oracle, were it one way or other; and this they certainly did, or we have room to think the DEVIL knows less of Things now than he did in former Days.
It is true that by these Delusions the Priests got infinite Sums of Money, and this makes it still probable that they would labour hard, and use the utmost of their Skill to uphold the Credit of their Oracles; and 'tis a full Discovery, as well of the Subtlety of the Sacrists, as of the Ignorance and Stupidity of the People, in those early Days of _Satan_'s Witchcraft; to see what merry Work the _Devil_ made with the World, and what gross Things he put upon Mankind: Such was the Story of the _Dordonian_ Oracle in _Epirus_, _viz_. That two _Pigeons_ flew out of _Thebes_ (_N. B._ it was the _Egyptian Thebes_) from the Temple of _Belus_, erected there by the antient Sacrists, and that one of these fled Eastward into _Lybia_, and the Desarts of _Africk_, and the other into _Greece_, namely, to _Dordona_, and these communicated the divine Mysteries to one another, and afterwards gave mystical Solutions to the devout Enquirers; first the _Dordonian_ Pigeon perching upon an Oak spoke audibly to the People there, that the Gods commanded them to build an Oracle, or Temple, to _Jupiter_, in that Place; which was accordingly done: The other Pigeon did the like on the Hill in _Africa_, where it commanded them to build another to _Jupiter Ammon_, or _Hammon_.
Wise _Cicero_ contemned all this, and, as Authors tell us, ridiculed the Answer, which, as I have hinted above, the Oracle gave to _Croesus_ proving that the Oracle it self was a _Liar_, that it could not come from _Apollo_, for that _Apollo_ never spoke _Latin_: In a Word, _Cicero_ rejected them all, and _Demosthenes_ also mentions the Cheats of the _Oracles_; when speaking of the Oracle of _Apollo_, he said, _Pithia Philippiz'd_; that is, that when the Priests were brib'd with Money, they always gave their Answers in favour of _Philip_ of _Macedon_.
But that which is most strange to me is, that in this Dispute about the Reality of Oracles, the Heathen who made use of them are the People who expose them, and who insist most positively upon their being Cheats and Impostors, as in particular those mentioned above; while the Christians who reject them, yet believe they did really foretel Things, answer Questions, _&c._ only with this Difference, that the Heathen Authors who oppose them, insist that 'tis all Delusion and Cheat, and charge it upon the Priests; and the Christian Opposers insist that it was real, but that the _Devil_, not the Gods, gave the Answers; and that he was permitted to do it by a superior Power, to magnify that Power in the total silencing them at last.
But, as I said before, I am with the Heathen here, against the Christian Writers, for I take it all to be a Cheat and Delusion: I must give my Reason for it, or I do nothing; my Reason is this, I insist Satan is as blind in Matters of Futurity, as we are, and can tell nothing of what is to come; these Oracles often pretending to predict, could be nothing else therefore but a Cheat form'd by the Money-getting Priests to amuse the World, and bring Grist to their Mill: If I meet with any thing in my Way to open my Eyes to a better Opinion of them, I shall tell it you as I go on.
On the other hand, whether the _Devil_ really spake in those Oracles, or set the cunning Priests to speak for him; whether they predicted, or only made the People believe they predicted; whether they gave Answers which came to pass, or prevail'd upon the People to believe that what was said did come to pass, it was much at one, and fully answer'd the _Devil_'s End; namely, to amuse and delude the World; and as to do, or to cause to be done, is the same Part of Speech, so whoever did it, the _Devil_'s Interest was carried on by it, his Government preserv'd, and all the Mischief he could desire was effectually brought to pass, so that every way they were the _Devil_'s Oracles, that's out of the Question.
Indeed I have wonder'd sometimes why, since by this Sorcery the _Devil_ perform'd such Wonders, that is, play'd so many Tricks in the World, and had such universal Success, he should set up no more of them; but there might be a great many Reasons given for that, too long to tire you with at present: 'Tis true, there were not many of them, and yet considering what a great deal of Business they dispatch'd, it was enough, for six or eight Oracles were more than sufficient to amuse all the World: The chief Oracles we meet with in History are among the _Greeks_ and the _Romans_, _viz._
That of _Jupiter Ammon_, in _Lybia_, as above.
The _Dordonian_, in _Epirus_.
_Apollo Delphicus_, in the Country of _Phocis_ in _Greece_.
_Apollo Clavius_, in _Asia Minor_.
_Serapis_, in _Alexandria_ in _Egypt_.
_Trophomis_, in _Bæotia_.
_Sybilla Cumæa_, in _Italy_.
_Diana_, at _Ephesus_.
_Apollo Daphneus_, at _Antioch_.
Besides many of lesser Note, in several other Places, as I have hinted before.
I have nothing to do here with the Story mentioned by _Plutarch_, of a Voice being heard at Sea, from some of the Islands call'd the _Echinades_, and calling upon one _Thamuz_, an _Egyptian_, who was on board a Ship, bidding him, when he came to the _Palodes_, other Islands in the _Ionian_ Seas, tell them there that the great God PAN was dead; and when _Thamuz_ perform'd it, great Groanings, and Howlings, and Lamentation were heard from the Shore.
This Tale tells but indifferently, tho' indeed it looks more like _a Christian Fable_, than a Pagan; because it seems as if made to honour the Christian Worship, and blast all the Pagan Idolatry; and for that Reason I reject it, the Christian Profession needing no such fabulous Stuff to confirm it.
Nor is it true in fact, that the Oracles did cease immediately upon the Death of Christ; but, as I noted before, the Sum of the Matter is this; the Christian Religion spreading it self universally, as well as miraculously, and that too _by the Foolishness of Preaching_, into all Parts of the World, the Oracles ceas'd; that is to say, their Trade ceas'd, their Rogueries were daily detected, the deluded People being better taught, came no more after them, and being asham'd, as well as discourag'd, they sneak'd out of the World as well as they could; in short the Customers fell off, and the Priests, who were the Shopkeepers, having no Business to do, shut up their Shops, broke, and went away; the Trade and the Tradesmen were hiss'd off the Stage together; so that the _Devil_, who, it must be confess'd, got infinitely by the Cheat, became bankrupt, and was oblig'd to set other Engines at work, as other Cheats and Deceivers do, who when one Trick grows stale, and will serve no longer, are forc'd to try another.
Nor was the _Devil_ to seek in new Measures; for tho' he could not give out his delusive Trash as he did before, in Pomp and State, with the Solemnity of a Temple and a Set of Enthusiasts call'd Priests, who plaid a thousand Tricks to amuse the World, he then had Recourse to his old _Egyptian_ Method, which indeed was more antient than that of Oracles; and that was by Magic, Sorcery, Familiars, Witchcraft, and the like.
Of this we find the people of the _South_, that is, of _Arabia_ and _Chaldea_ were the first, from whence we are told of the Wise Men, that is to say, Magicians, were call'd _Chaldeans_ and _Southsayers_. Hence also we find _Ahaziah_ the King of _Israel_ sent to _Baalzebub_ the God of _Ekron_, to enquire whether he should live or die? This some think was a kind of an Oracle, tho' others think it was only some over-grown Magician, who counterfeited himself to be a _Devil_, and obtain'd upon that Idol-hunting Age to make a Cunning Man of him; and for that Purpose he got himself made a Priest of _Baalzebub_, the God of _Ekron_, and gave out Answers in his Name. Thus those merry Fellows in _Egypt_, _Jannes_ and _Jambres_, are said to mimick _Moses_ and _Aaron_, when they work'd the miraculous Plagues upon the _Egyptians_; and we have some Instances in Scripture that support this, such as the Witch of _Endor_, the King _Manasses_, who dealt with the _Devil_ openly, and had a Familiar; the Woman mentioned _Acts_ xvi. who had a Spirit of _Divination_, and who got Money by playing the Oracle; that is, answering doubtful Questions, _&c._ which Spirit, or _Devil_, the Apostles cast out.
Now tho' it is true that the old Women in the World have fill'd us with Tales, some improbable, others impossible; some weak, some ridiculous, and that this puts a general Discredit upon all the graver Matrons, who entertain us with Stories better put together, yet 'tis certain, and I must be allow'd to affirm, that the _Devil_ does not disdain to take into his Service many Troops of good _Old Women_, and Old Women-Men too, who he finds 'tis for his Service to keep in constant Pay; to these he is found frequently to communicate his Mind, and oftentimes we find them such Proficients, that they know much more than the _Devil_ can teach them.
How far our antient Friend _Merlin_, or the grave Matron his (Satan's) most trusty and well-beloved Cousin and Counsellor, Mother _Shipton_, were commissioned by him to give out their prophetic Oracles, and what degree of Possession he may have arrived to in them upon their Midnight Excursions, I will not undertake to prove; but that he might be acquainted with them both, as well as with several of our modern Gentlemen, I will not deny neither.
I confess it is not very incongruous with the _Devil_'s Temper, or with the Nature of his Business, to shift hands; possibly he found that he had tried the World with Oracular Cheats; that Men began to be forfeited with them, and grew sick of the Frauds which were so frequently detected; that it was time to take new Measures, and contrive some new Trick to Bite the World, that he might not be expos'd to Contempt; or perhaps he saw the Approach of new Light, which the Christian Doctrine bringing with it began to spread in the Minds of Men; that it would out-shine the dim burning _ignis fatuus_, with which he had so long cheated Mankind, and was afraid to stand it, lest he should be mobb'd off the Stage by his own People, when their Eyes should begin to open: That upon this foot he might in Policy withdraw from those old Retreats the Oracles, and restrain those Responses before they lost all their Credit; for we find the People seem'd to be at a mighty Loss for some time, for want of them, so that it made them run up and down to Conjurers, and _Man-Gossips_, to brazen Heads, speaking Calves, and innumerable simple Things, so gross that they are scarce fit to be named, to satisfy the Itch of having their Fortunes told them, as we call it.
Now as the DEVIL is very seldom blind to his own Interest, and therefore thought fit to quit his old way of imposing upon the World by his Oracles, only because he found the World began to be too wise to be imposed upon that way; so on the other hand, finding there was still a Possibility to delude the World, tho' by other Instruments, he no sooner laid down his Oracles, and the solemn Pageantry, magnificent Appearances, and other Frauds of his Priests and Votaries, in their Temples and Shrines; but he set up a new Trade, and having, as I have said, Agents and Instruments sufficient for any Business that he could have to employ them in, he begins in Corners, as the learned and merry Dr. _Brown_ says, and exercises his minor Trumperies by way of his own contriving, lifting a great Number of new-found Operators, such as Witches, Magicians, Diviners, Figure-casters, Astrologers, and such inferior Seducers.
Now it is true, as that Doctor says, this was running into Corners, as if he had been expell'd his more triumphant way of giving Audience in Form, which for so many Ages had been allow'd him; yet I must add, that as it seem'd to be the DEVIL's own doing, from a right Judgment of his Affairs, which had taken a new Turn in the World, upon the shining of new Lights from the Christian Doctrine, so it must be acknowledged the _Devil_ made himself amends upon Mankind, by the various Methods he took, and the Multitude of Instruments he employ'd, and perhaps deluded Mankind in a more fatal and sensible manner than he did before, tho' not so universally.
He had indeed before more Pomp and Figure put upon it, and he cheated Mankind then in a Way of Magnificence and Splendor; but this was not in above eight or ten principal Places, and not fifty Places in all, public or private; whereas now fifty thousand of his Angels and Instruments, visible and invisible, hardly may be said to suffice for one Town or City; but in short, as his invisible Agents fill the Air, and are at hand for Mischief on every Emergence, so his visible Fools swarm in every Village, and you have scarce a Hamlet or a Town but his Emissaries are at Hand for Business; and which is still worse, in all Places he finds Business; nay even where Religion is planted and seems to flourish; yet he keeps his Ground and pushes his Interest according to what has been said elsewhere upon the same Subject, that wherever Religion plants, the Devil plants close by it.
Nor, as I say, does he fail of Success, Delusion spreads like a Plague, and the Devil is sure of Votaries; like a true Mountebank, he can always bring a Croud about his Stage, and that some Times faster than other People.
What I observe upon this Subject is this, that the World is at a strange Loss for want of the Devil; if it was not so, what's the Reason, that upon the silencing the Oracles, and Religion telling them that Miracles are ceas'd, and that God has done speaking by Prophets, they never enquire whether Heaven has established any other or new Way of Revelation, but away they ran with their Doubts and Difficulties to these Dreamers of Dreams, Tellers of Fortunes, and personal Oracles to be resolv'd; as if when they acknowledge the Devil is dumb, these could speak; and as if the wicked Spirit could do more than the Good, the _Diabolical_ more than the _Divine_, or that Heaven having taken away the DEVIL's Voice, had furnish'd him with an Equivalent, by allowing Scolds, Termagants, and old weak and superannuated Wretches to speak for him; for these are the People we go to now in our Doubts and Emergencies.
While this Blindness continues among us, 'tis Nonsense to say that Oracles are silenced, or the _Devil_ is dumb, for the _Devil_ gives Audience still by his Deputies; only as _Jeroboam_ made Priests of the meanest of the People, so he is grown a little humble, and makes use of meaner Instruments than he did before; for whereas the Priests of _Apollo_, and of _Jupiter_, were splendid in their Appearance, of grave and venerable Aspect, and sometimes of no mean Quality; now he makes use of Scoundrels and Rabble, Beggars and Vagabonds, old Hags, superannuated miserable Hermits, Gypsies and Strollers, the Pictures of Envy and ill Luck.
Either the _Devil_ is grown an ill Master, and gives but mean Wages, that he can get no better Servants; or else Common Sense is grown very low priz'd and contemptible; that such as these are fit Tools to continue the Succession of Fraud, and carry on the _Devil_'s Interest in the World; for were not the Passions and Temper of Mankind deeply pre-engaged in favour of this dark Prince, we could never suffer our selves to accept of his Favours by the Hands of such contemptible Agents as these! How do we receive his Oracles from an old Witch of particular Eminence, and who we believe to be more than ordinarily inspir'd from Hell; I say, we receive the Oracle with Reverence; that is to say, with a kind of Horror, with regard to the Black Prince it comes from, and at the same time turn our Faces away from the Wretch that mumbles out the Answers, lest she should cast an _Evil Eye_, as we call it, upon us, and put a Devil into us when she plays the _Devil_ before us? How do we listen to the Cant of those worst of Vagabonds the _Gypsies_, when at the same time we watch our Hedges and Hen-roosts for fear of their thieving?
Either the DEVIL uses us more like Fools than he did our Ancestors, or we really are worse Fools than those Ages produced, for they were never deluded by such low-priz'd _Devils_ as we are; by such despicable _Bridewell_ DEVILS, that are fitter for a Whipping-post than an Altar, and instead of being receiv'd as the Voice of an Oracle, should be sent to the House of Correction for Pick-pockets.
Nor is this accidental, and here and there one of these Wretches to be seen, but in short, if it has been in other Nations as it is with us, I do not see that the DEVIL was able to get any better People into his Pay, or at least very rarely: Where have we seen any thing above a Tinker turn Wizard? and where have we had a Witch of Quality among us, Mother _Je------gs_ excepted? and if she had not been more of something else than a Witch, 'twas thought she had never got so much Money by her Profession.
Magicians, Southsayers, Devil-raisers, and such People, we have heard much of, but seldom above the Degree of the meanest of the mean People, the lowest of the lowest Rank: Indeed the Word _Wise Men_, which the _Devil_ wou'd fain have had his Agents honour'd with, was used a while in _Egypt_, and in _Persia_, among the _Chaldeans_, but it continued but a little while, and never reach'd so far Northward as our Country; nor, however the _Devil_ has managed it, have many of our great Men, who have been most acquainted with him, ever been able to acquire the Title of Wise Men.
I have heard that in older Times, I suppose in good Queen _Bess_'s Days, or beyond, (for little is to be said here for any thing on this Side of her time) there were some Counsellors and Statesmen who merited the Character of _wise_, in the best Sense; that is to say, _good_, and _wise_, as they stand in Conjunction; but as to what has happen'd since that, or, as we may call it, from that Queen's Funeral to the late Revolution, I have little to say; but I'll tell you what honest _Andrew Marvel_ said of those Times, and by that you may, if you please, make your Calculation or let it alone, 'tis all one.
"To see a white Staff-maker, a Beggar, a Lord, "And scarce _a wise Man_ at a long Council-Board.
But I may be told this relates to wise Men in another Constitution, or wise Men as they are opposed to Fools; whereas we are talking of them now under another Class, namely, as _Wisemen_ or Magicians, South-sayers, _&c._ such as were in former Times call'd by that Name.
But to this I answer, that take them in which Sense you please, it may be the same; for if I were to ask the _Devil_ the Character of the best States-man he had employ'd among us for many Years past, I am apt to think that tho' Oracles are ceased, he would honestly, according to the old ambiguous Way, when I ask'd if they were Christians, answer they were (his) _Privy-Counsellors_.
It is but a little while ago, that I happen'd (in Conversation) to meet with a long List of the Magistrates of that Age, in a neighbouring Country, that is to say, the Men of Fame among them; and it was a very diverting Thing to see the Judgment which was pass'd upon them among a great deal of good Company; it is not for me to tell you how many white Staves, Golden Keys, Mareshals Batoons, Cordons Blue, Gordon Rouge and Gordon Blanc, there were among them, or by what Titles, as Dukes, Counts, Marquis, Abbot, Bishop, or Justice they were to be distinguish'd; but the marginal Notes I found upon most of them were (being mark'd with an Asterism) as follows.
Such a Duke, such eminent Offices added to his Titles (* in the Margin) ------ _No Saint_.
Such an Arch---- with the Title of Noble added, ------ _No Archangel_.
Such an eminent Statesman and prime Minister, ------ _No Witch_.
Such a Ribbon with a Set of great Letters added, ------ _No Conjurer_.
It presently occurr'd to me that tho' Oracles were ceased, and we had now no more double _Entendre_ in such a Degree as before, yet that ambiguous Answers were not at an End; and that whether those Negatives were meant so by the Writers, or not, 'twas certain Custom led the Readers to conclude them to be Satyrs, that they were to be rung backwards like the Bells when the Town's on fire; tho' in short, I durst not read them backward any where, but as speaking of foreign People, for fear of raising the _Devil_ I am talking of.
But to return to the Subject; to such mean Things is the DEVIL now reduc'd in his ordinary Way of carrying on his Business in the World, that his Oracles are deliver'd now by the Bellmen and the Chimney-Sweepers, by the meanest of those that speak in the Dark, and if he operates by them, you may expect it accordingly; his Agents seem to me as if the DEVIL had singl'd them out by their Deformity, or that there was something particular requir'd in their Aspect to qualify them for their Employment; whence it is become proverbial, when our Looks are very dismal and frightful, to say, I look like a Witch, or in other Cases to say, as ugly as a Witch; in another Case to look as envious as a Witch; now whether there is any Thing particularly requir'd in the Looks of the DEVIL's modern Agents, which is assisting in the Discharge of their Offices, and which make their Answers appear more solemn, this the _Devil_ has not yet reveal'd, at least not to me; and therefore why it is that he singles out such Creatures as are fit only to fright the People that come to them with their Enquiries, I do not take upon me to determine.
Perhaps it is necessary they should be thus extraordinary in their Aspect, that they might strike an Awe into the Minds of their Votaries, as if they were Satan's true and real Representatives; and that the said Votaries may think when they speak to the Witches they are really talking to the _Devil_; or perhaps 'tis necessary to the Witches themselves, that they should be so exquisitely ugly, that they might not be surpriz'd at whatever Figure the Devil makes when he first appears to them, being certain they can see nothing uglier than themselves.
Some are of the Opinion that the Communication with the _Devil_, or between the Devil and those Creatures his Agents, has something assimulating in it, and that if they were tolerable before, they are, _ipso facto_, turn'd into DEVILS by talking with him; I will not say but that a Tremor in the Limbs, a Horror in the Aspect, and a surprizing Stare in the Eyes may seize upon some of them when they really see the DEVIL, and that the frequent Repetition may make those Distortions, which we so constantly see in their Faces becomes natural to them; by which if it does not continue always upon the Countenance, they can at least, _like the Posture-Masters_, cast themselves into such Figures and frightful Dislocations of the Lines and Features in their Faces, and so assume a Devil's Face suitable to the Occasion, or as may serve the turn for which they take it up, and as often as they have any use for it.
But be it which of these the Enquirer pleases, 'tis all one to the Case in Hand; this is certain, that such deform'd _Devil-like_ Creatures, most of those we call _Hags_ and _Witches_, are in their Shapes and Aspects, and that they give out their Sentences and frightful Messages with an Air of Revenge for some Injury receiv'd; for Witches are fam'd chiefly for doing Mischief.
It seems the _Devil_ has always pick'd out the most ugly and frightful old Women to do his Business; _Mother Shipton_, our famous _English_ Witch or Prophetess, is very much wrong'd in her Picture, if she was not of the most terrible Aspect imaginable; and if it be true that _Merlin_, the famous _Welch_ Fortune-Teller, was a frightful Figure, it will seem the more rational to believe, if we credit another Story, (_viz._) that he was begotten by the Devil himself, of which I shall speak by it self: But to go back to the Devil's Instruments being so ugly; it may be observed, I say, that the Devil has always dealt in such sort of Cattle; the _Sybils_, of whom so many strange prophetic Things are recorded, whether true or no is not to the Question, are (if the _Italian_ Painters may have any Credit given them) all represented as very old Women; and as if Ugliness were a Beauty to old Age, they seem to paint them out as ugly and frightful as (not they, the Painters) but even as the Devil himself could make them; not that I believe there are any original Pictures of them really extant; but it is not unlikely that the _Italians_ might have some traditional Knowledge of them, or some remaining Notions of them, or particularly that antient _Sybil_ named _Anus_, who sold the fatal Book to _Tarquin_; 'tis said of her that _Tarquin_ supposed she doated with Age.
I had Thoughts indeed here to have entred into a learned Disquisition of the Excellency of old Women in all diabolical Operations, and particularly of the Necessity of having recourse to them for _Satan_'s more exquisite Administration, which also may serve to solve the great Difficulty in the natural Philosophy of Hell; namely, why it comes to pass that the Devil is oblig'd for want of old Women, properly so call'd, to turn so many antient Fathers, grave Counsellors both of Law and State, and especially Civilians or Doctors of the Law into old Women, and how the extraordinary Operation is perform'd; but this, as a Thing of great Consequence in Satan's Management of humane Affairs, and particularly as it may lead us into the necessary History, as well as Characters of some of the most eminent of these Sects among us, I have purposely reserv'd for a Work by it self, to be published, if _Satan hinders not_, in fifteen Volumes in Folio, wherein I shall in the first Place define in the most exact Manner possible, what is to be understood by a _Male old Woman_, of what heterogeneous Kind they are produced, give you the monstrous Anatomy of the Parts, and especially those of the Head, which being fill'd with innumerable Globules of a sublime Nature, and which being of a fine Contexture without, but particularly hollow in the Cavity, defines most philosophically that antient paradoxical Saying, (_viz._) _being full of Emptiness_, and makes it very consistent with Nature and common Sense.
I shall likewise spend some Time, _and it must be Labour too, I assure you, when 'tis done_, in determining whether this new Species of Wonderfuls are not deriv'd from that famous _old Woman Merlin_, which I prove to be very reasonable for us to suppose, because of the many several judicious Authors, who affirm the said _Merlin_, as I hinted before, to have been begotten by the _Devil_.
As to the deriving his Gift of Prophesy from the Devil, by that pretended Generation, I shall omit that Part, because, as I have all along insisted upon it, that Satan himself has no prophetic or predicting Powers of his own, it is not very clear to me that he could convey it to his Posterity, _nil dat quod not habet_.
However, in deriving this so much magnified Prophet in a right Line from the _Devil_, much may be said in favour of his ugly Face, in which it was said he was very remarkable, for it is no new Thing for a Child to be like the Father; but all these weighty Things I adjourn for the present, and proceed to the Affair in Hand, namely, the several Branches of the _Devil_'s Management since his quitting his Temples and Oracles.
CHAP. VI.
_Of the extraordinary Appearance of the_ Devil, _and particularly of the Cloven-Foot._
Some People would fain have us treat this Tale of the _Devil_'s appearing with a Cloven-Foot with more Solemnity than I believe the _Devil_ himself does; for Satan, who knows how much of a Cheat it is, must certainly ridicule it, in his own Thoughts, to the last Degree; but as he is glad of any Way to hoodwink the Understandings, and bubble the weak Part of the World; so if he sees Men willing to take every Scarecrow for a Devil, it is not his Business to undeceive them; on the other Hand, he finds it his Interest to foster the Cheat, and serve himself of the Consequence: Nor could I doubt but the Devil, if any Mirth be allow'd him, often laughs at the many frightful Shapes and Figures we dress him up in, and especially to see how willing we are first to paint him as black, and make him appear as ugly as we can, and then stare and start at the Spectrum of our own making.
The Truth is, that among all the Horribles that we dress up Satan in, I cannot but think we shew the least of Invention in this of a Goat, or a Thing with a Goat's Foot, of all the rest; for tho' a Goat is a Creature made use of by our Saviour in the Allegory of the Day of Judgment, and is said there to represent the wicked rejected Party, yet it seems to be only on Account of their Similitude to the Sheep, and so to represent the just Fate of Hypocrisy and Hypocrites, and in particular to form the necessary Antithesis in the Story; for else, _our whimsical Fancies excepted_, a Sheep or a Lamb has a Cloven-Foot as well as a Goat; nay, if the Scripture be of any Value in the Case, 'tis to the _Devil_'s Advantage, for the dividing the Hoof was the distinguishing Character or Mark of a clean Beast, and how the Devil can be brought into that Number is pretty hard to say.
One would have thought if we had intended to have given a just Figure of the _Devil_, it would have been more apposite to have rank'd him among the Cat-kind, and given him a Foot (if he is to be known by his Foot) like a Lion, or like a _red Dragon_, being the same Creatures which he is represented by in the Text, and so his Claws would have had some Terror in them as well as his Teeth.
But neither is the _Goat_ a true Representative of the Devil at all, for we do not rank the Goats among the Subtle or cunning Part of the Brutes; he is counted a fierce Creature indeed of his Kind, tho' nothing like those other abovemention'd; and he is emblematically used to represent a lustful Temper, but even that Part does not fully serve to describe the Devil, whose Operation lies principally another Way.
Besides it is not the _Goat_ himself that is made use of, 'tis the Cloven-Hoof only, and that so particularly, that the _Cloven Foot_ of a Ram or a Swine, or any other Creature, may serve as well as that of a _Goat_, only that History gives us some Cause to call it the _Goat_'s _Foot_.
In the next Place 'tis understood by us not as a bare Token to know _Satan_ by, but as if it were a Brand upon him, and that like the Mark God put upon _Cain_, it was given him for a Punishment, so that he cannot get leave to appear without it, nay cannot conceal it whatever other Dress or Disguise he may put on; and as if it was to make him as ridiculous as possible, they will have it be, that whenever _Satan_ has Occasion to dress himself in any humane Shape, be it of what Degree soever, from the King to the Beggar, be it of a fine Lady or of an _old Woman_, (the Latter it seems he oftenest assumes) yet still he not only must have this _Cloven-Foot_ about him, but he is oblig'd to shew it too; nay, they will not allow him any Dress, whether it be a Prince's Robes, a Lord Cha---r's Gown, or a Lady's Hoop and long Petticoats, but the Cloven-Foot must be shew'd from under them; they will not so much as allow him an artificial _Shoe_ or a _Jack-Boot_, as we often see contriv'd to conceal a _Club-Foot_ or a _Wooden-Leg_; but that the _Devil_ may be known wherever he goes, he is bound to shew his Foot; they might as well oblige him to set a Bill upon his Cap, as Folks do upon a House to be let, and have it written in capital Letters, _I am the_ DEVIL.
It must be confess'd this is very particular, and would be very hard upon the _Devil_, if it had not another Article in it, which is some Advantage to him, and that is, that _the Fact is not true_; but the Belief of this is so universal, that all the World runs away with it; by which Mistake the good People miss the _Devil_ many times where they look for him, and meet him as often where they did not expect him, and when for want of this Cloven-Foot they do not know him.
Upon this very Account I have sometimes thought, not that this has been put upon him by meer Fancy, and the Cheat of a heavy Imagination, propagated by Fable and Chymny-Corner Divinity, but that it has been a Contrivance of his own; and that, in short, the Devil rais'd this Scandal upon himself, that he might keep his Disguise the better, and might go a Visiting among his Friends without being known; for were it really so, that he could go no where without this particular Brand of Infamy, he could not come into Company, could not dine with my Lord Mayor, nor drink Tea with the Ladies, could not go to the Drawing-R---- at ------, could not have gone to _Fountainbleau_ to the King of _France_'s Wedding, or to the Diet of _Poland_, to prevent the Grandees there coming to an Agreement; nay, _which would be still worse than all_, he could not go to the Masquerade, nor to any of our Balls; the Reason is plain, he would be always discover'd, expos'd and forc'd to leave the good Company, or which would be as bad, the Company would all cry out the _Devil_ and run out of the Room as if they were frighted; nor could all the Help of Invention do him any Service, no Dress he could put on would cover him; not all our Friends at _Tavistock Corner_ could furnish him with a Habit that would disguise or conceal him, this unhappy Foot would spoil it all: Now this would be a great a Loss to him, that I question whether he could carry on any of his most important Affairs in the World without it; for tho' he has access to Mankind in his compleat Disguise, I mean that of his Invisibility, yet the Learned very much agree in this, that his corporal Presence in the World is absolutely necessary upon many Occasions, to support his Interest and keep up his Correspondences, and particularly to encourage his Friends when Numbers are requisite to carry on his Affairs; but this Part I shall have Occasion to speak of again, when I come to consider him as a Gentleman of Business in his Locality, and under the Head of visible Apparition; but I return to the _Foot_.
As I have thus suggested that the Devil himself has politically spread about this Notion concerning his appearing with _a Cloven-Foot_, so I doubt not that he has thought it for his Purpose to paint this _Cloven-Foot_ so lively in the Imaginations of many of our People, and especially of those clear sighted Folks who see the _Devil_ when he is not to be seen, that they would make no Scruple to say, nay and to make Affidavit too, even before _Satan_ himself, whenever he sat upon the Bench, that they had seen his Worship's Foot at such and such a Time; this I advance the rather because 'tis very much for his Interest to do this, for if we had not many Witnesses, _viva voce_, to testify it, we should have had some obstinate Fellows always among us, who would have denied the Fact, or at least have spoken doubtfully of it, and so have rais'd Disputes and Objections against it, as impossible, or at least as improbable; buzzing one ridiculous Notion or other into our Ears, as if the Devil was not so black as he was painted, that he had no more a _Cloven-Foot_ than a Pope, whose Apostolical Toes have so often been reverentially kiss'd by Kings and Emperors: but now alas this Part is out of the Question, not the Man in the Moon, not the Groaning-Board, not the speaking of Fryar _Bacon_'s Brazen-Head, not the Inspiration of _Mother Shipton_, or the Miracles of Dr. _Faustus_, Things as certain as Death and Taxes, can be more firmly believ'd: The Devil not have a Cloven-Foot! I doubt not but I could, in a short Time, bring you a thousand old Women together, that would as soon believe there was no Devil at all; nay, they will tell you, he could not be a Devil without it, any more than he could come into the Room, and the Candles not burn blue, or go out and not leave a smell of Brimstone behind him.
Since then the Certainty of the Thing is so well establish'd, and there are so many good and substantial Witnesses ready to testify that he has a Cloven-Foot, and that they have seen it too; nay, and that we have Antiquity on our Side, for we have this Truth confirm'd by the Testimony of many Ages; why should we doubt it any longer? we can prove that many of our Ancestors have been of this Opinion, and divers learn'd Authors have left it upon Record, as particularly that learned Familiarist Mother _Hazel_, whose Writings are to be found in MS. in the famous Library at _Pye-Corner_; also the admir'd _Joan_ of _Amesbury_, the History of the _Lancashire_ Witches, and the Reverend Exorcist of the _Devil_'s of _London_, whose History is extant among us to this Day; all these and many more may be quoted, and their Writings referr'd to for the Confirmation of the Antiquity of this Truth; but there seems to be no Occasion for farther Evidence, 'tis enough, _Satan_ himself, if he did not raise the Report, yet tacitly owns the Fact, at least he appears willing to have it believ'd, and be receiv'd as a general Truth for the Reasons above.
But besides all this, and as much a Jest as some unbelieving People would have this Story pass for, who knows but that if _Satan_ is empower'd to assume any Shape or Body, and to appear to us visibly, as if really so shap'd; I say, who knows but he may, by the same Authority, be allow'd to assume the Addition of the Cloven-Foot, or two or four Cloven-Feet, if he pleased? and why not a _Cloven-Foot_ as well as any other Foot, if he thinks fit? For if the _Devil_ can assume a Shape, and can appear to Mankind in a visible Form, it may, I doubt not, with as good Authority be advanc'd that he is left at Liberty to assume what Shape he pleases, and to choose _what Case of Flesh and Blood he'll please to wear_, whether real or imaginary; and if this Liberty be allow'd him, it is an admirable Disguise for him to come generally with his _Cloven-Foot_, that when he finds it for his Purpose, on special Occasions to come without it, as I said above, he may not be suspected; _but take this with you as you go_, that all this is upon a Supposition that the _Devil_ can assume a visible Shape, and make a real Appearance, which however I do not yet think fit to grant or deny.
Certain it is, the first People who bestow'd a _Cloven-Foot_ upon the Devil, were not so despicable as you may imagine, but were real Favourites of Heaven; for did not _Aaron_ set up the _Devil_ of a Calf in the Congregation, and set the People a dancing about it for a God? Upon which Occasion, Expositors tell us, that particular Command was given, _Levit._ xvii. 7. _They shall no more offer their Sacrifices unto_ Devils, _after whom they have gone a Whoring_; likewise King _Jeroboam_ set up the two Calves, one at _Dan_ and the other at _Bethel_, and we find them charg'd afterwards with setting up the Worship of _Devils_ instead of the Worship of _God_.
After this we find some Nations actually sacrificed to the _Devil_ in the Form of a Ram, and others of a Goat; from which, and that above of the Calves at _Horeb_, I doubt not the Story of the _Cloven-Foot_ first derived; and it is plain that the Worship of that Calf at _Horeb_ is meant in the Scripture quoted above, _Levit._ xvii. 7. _Thou shalt no more offer Sacrifices unto Devils_: The Original is _Seghnirim_; that is, rough and hairy _Goats_ or _Calves_; and some think also in this Shape the _Devil_ most ordinarily appeared to the _Egyptians_ and _Arabians_, from whence it was derived.
Also in the old Writings of the _Egyptians_, I mean their hieroglyphick Writing, before the Use of Letters was known, we are told this was the Mark that he was known by; and the Figure of a _Goat_ was the _Hieroglyphick_ of the _Devil_; some will affirm that the _Devil_ was particularly pleased to be so represented; how they came by their Information, and whether they had it from his own Mouth or not, Authors have not yet determined.
But be this as it will, I do not see that _Satan_ could have been at a Loss for some extraordinary Figure to have banter'd Mankind with, tho' this had not been thought of; but thinking of the _Cloven-Foot_ first, and the Matter being indifferent, this took place, and easily rooted it self in the bewildred Fancy of the People, and now 'tis riveted too fast for the _Devil_ himself to remove it if he was disposed to try; but as I said above, 'tis none of his Business to solve Doubts or remove Difficulties out of our Heads, but to perplex us with more, as much as he can.
Some People carry this Matter a great deal higher still, and will have the _Cloven-Foot_ be like the great Stone which the _Brasilian Conjurers_ used to solve all difficult Questions upon, after having used a great many monstrous and barbarous Gestures and Distortions of their Bodies, and cut certain Marks or magical Figures upon the Stone; so, _I say_, they will have this Cloven-Foot be a kind of a Conjuring-Stone, and tell us, that in former Times, when _Satan_ drove a greater Trade with Mankind in publick, than he has done of late, he gave this _Cloven-Foot_ as a Token to his particular Favourites to work Wonders with, and to conjure by, and that Witches, Fairies, Hobgoblins, and such Things, of which the Antients had several Kinds, at least in their Imagination, had all a _Goat's Leg_ with a _Cloven-Foot_ to put on upon extraordinary Occasions; it seems this Method is of late grown out of Practice, and so like the melting of Marble and the painting of Glass, 'tis laid aside among the various useful Arts which History tells us are lost to the World; what may be practised in the Fairy World, if such a Place there be, we can give no particular Account at present.
But neither is this all, for other wou'd-be-wise People take upon them to make farther and more considerable Improvements upon this Doctrine of the _Cloven-Foot_, and treat it as a most significant Instrument of Satan's private Operation, and that as _Joseph_ is said to _Divine_, that is to say, to _conjure_ by his Golden Cup which was put into _Benjamin_'s Sack, so the _Devil_ has managed several of his secret Operations, and Possessions, and other hellish Mechanisms upon the Spirits as well as Bodies of Men, by the Medium or Instrumentality of the _Cloven-Foot_; accordingly it had a Kind of an hellish Inspiration in it, and a separate and magical Power by which he wrought his infernal Miracles; that the Cloven-Foot had a superior Signification, and was not only emblematic and significative of the Conduct of Men, but really guided their Conduct in the most important Affairs of Life; and that the Agents the Devil employ'd to influence Mankind, and to delude them and draw them into all the Snares and Traps that he lays continually for their Destruction, were equipp'd with this Foot in Aid of their other Powers for Mischief.
Here they read us learn'd Lectures upon the sovereign Operations which the Devil is at present Master of, in the Government of human Affairs; and how the Cloven-Foot is an Emblem of the true _double Entendre_ or divided Aspect, which the great Men of the World generally act with, and by which all their Affairs are directed; from whence it comes to pass that there is no such Thing as a single hearted Integrity, or an upright Meaning to be found in the World; that Mankind, worse than the ravenous Brutes, preys upon his own Kind, and devours them by all the laudable Methods of Flattery, Whyne, Cheat and Treachery; _Crocodile like_, weeping over those it will devour, destroying those it smiles upon, and, in a Word, devours its own Kind, which the very Beasts refuse, and that by all the Ways of Fraud and Allurement that _Hell_ can invent; holding out a cloven divided Hoof, or Hand, pretending to save, when the very Pretence is made use of to ensnare and destroy.
Thus the divided Hoof is the Representative of a divided double Tongue, and Heart, an Emblem of the most exquisite Hypocrisy, the most fawning and fatally deceiving Flattery; and here they give us very diverting Histories, tho' tragical in themselves, of the manner which some of the _Devil_'s inspired Agents have manag'd themselves under the especial Influence of the _Cloven-Foot_; how they have made War under the Pretence of Peace, murther'd Garrisons under the most sacred Capitulations, massacred innocent Multitudes after Surrenders to Mercy.
Again, they tell us the _Cloven-Foot_ has been made use of in all Treasons, Plots, Assassinations, and secret as well as open Murthers and Rebellions. Thus _Joab_ under the Treason of an Embrace, shew'd how dexterously he could manage the _Cloven-Foot_, and struck _Abner_ under the fifth Rib: Thus _David_ play'd the Cloven-Foot upon poor _Uriah_, when he had a Mind to lie with his Wife: Thus _Brutus_ play'd it upon _Cæsar_; and to come nearer home, we have had a great many retrograde Motions in this Country by this magical Implement the _Foot_; Such as that of the Earl of _Essex_'s Fate, beheading the Queen of _Scots_, and diverse others in Queen _Elizabeth_'s Time: That of the Earl of _Shrewsbury_ and Sir _Thomas Overbury_, _Gondamor_ and Sir _Walter Raleigh_, and many others in King _James_ the I.'s Time; in all which, if the Cloven-Foot had not been dexterously manag'd, those Murthers had not been so dexterously manag'd, or the Murtherers have so well been skreen'd from Justice; for which and the imprecated Justice of Heaven unappeased, some have thought the innocent Branches of the Royal House of _Stuart_ did not fare the better in the Ages which follow'd.
It must be confess'd, the Cloven-Foot was in its full Exercise in the next Reign, and the Generation that rose up immediately after them, arrived to the most exquisite Skill for Management of it; here they fasted and pray'd, there they plunder'd and murther'd; here they rais'd War for the King, and there they fought against him, cutting Throats for _God's Sake_, and deposing both King and kingly Government according to Law.
Nor was the _Cloven-Foot_ unemployed on all Sides, for 'tis the main Excellency of this Instrument of Hell, that it acts on every Side, it is its denominating Quality, and is for that Reason call'd a cloven or divided Hoof.
This mutilated Apparition has been so publick in other Countries too, that it seems to convince us the Devil is not confin'd to _England_ only, but that as his Empire extended to all the sublunary World, so he gives them all Room to see he is qualified to manage them his own Way.
What abundant Use did that Prince of Dissemblers, _Charles_ V. make of this Foot? 'twas by the Help of this Apparition of the Foot that he baited his Hook with the City of _Milan_, and tickled _Francis_ I. of _France_ so well with it, that when he pass'd thro' _France_, and was in that King's Power, he let him go, and never get the Bait off of the Hook neither; it Seems the _Foot_ was not on King _Francis_'s Side at that Time.
How cruelly did _Philip_ II. of _Spain_ manage this Foot in the Murther of the Nobility of the _Spanish Netherlands_, the Assassination of the Prince of _Orange_, and at last: in that of his own Son _Don Carlos_ Infant of _Spain_? and yet such was the _Devil_'s Craft, and so nicely did he bestir his _Cloven-Hoof_, that this Monarch died consolated (tho' impenitent) in the Arms of the Church, and with the Benediction of the Clergy too, _those second best Managers of the said Hoof in the World_.
I must acknowledge, I agree with this Opinion thus far; namely, that the Devil acting by this Cloven-Foot, as a Machine, has done great Things in the World for the propagating his dark Empire among us; and History is full of Examples, besides the little low priz'd Things done among us; for we are come to such a Kind of Degeneracy in Folly, that we have even dishonour'd the _Devil_, and put this glorious Engine the Cloven-Foot to such mean Uses, that the _Devil_ himself seems to be asham'd of us.
But to return a little to foreign History, besides what has been mention'd above, we find flaming Examples of most glorious Mischief done by this Weapon, when put into the Hands of Kings and Men of Fame in the World: How many Games have the Kings of _France_ play'd with this _Cloven-Foot_, and that within a few Years of one another? First, _Charles_ IX. play'd the _Cloven-Foot_ upon _Gaspar Coligni_ Admiral of _France_, when he caress'd him, complimented him, invited him to _Paris_, to the Wedding of the King of _Navarre_, call'd him Father, kiss'd him, and when he was wounded sent his own Surgeons to take Care of him, and yet three Days after order'd him to be assassinated and murther'd, used with a thousand Indignities, and at last thrown out of the Window into the Street to be insulted by the Rabble?
Did not _Henry_ III. in the same Country, play the Cloven-Foot upon the Duke of _Guise_, when he call'd him to his Council, and caus'd him to be murther'd as he went in at the Door? The _Guises_ again plaid the same Game back upon the King, when they sent out a _Jacobin_ Friar to assassinate him in his Tent as he lay at the Siege of _Paris_.
In a Word, this Opera of the _Cloven-Foot_ has been acted all over the Christian World, ever since _Judas_ betray'd the Son of God with a Kiss; nay, our Saviour says expresly of him, _One of you is a Devil_; and the sacred Text says in another Place, _The Devil enter'd into Judas_.
It would take up a great deal of Time and Paper too, to give you a full Account of the Travels of this _Cloven-Foot_; its Progress into all the Courts of _Europe_, and with what most accurate Hypocrisy _Satan_ has made use of it upon many Occasions, and with what Success; but as in the elaborate Work of which I just now gave you a Specimen I design one whole Volume upon this Subject, and which I shall call, _The compleat History_ of the _Cloven-Foot_; I say, for that Reason, and diverse others, I shall say but very little more to it in this Place.
It remains to tell you, that this merry Story of the _Cloven-Foot_ is very essential to the History which I am now writing, as it has been all along the great Emblem of the _Devil_'s Government in the World, and by which all his most considerable Engagements have been answer'd and executed; for as he is said not to be able to conceal this Foot, but that he carries it always with him, it imports most plainly, that the _Devil_ would be no _Devil_ if he was not a Dissembler, a Deceiver, and carried a _double Entendre_ in all he does or says; that he cannot but say one Thing and mean another, promise one Thing and do another, engage and not perform, declare and not intend, and act like a true _Devil_ as he is, with a Countenance that is no Index of his Heart.
I might indeed go back to Originals, and derive this _Cloven-Foot_ from Satan's primitive State as a Cherubim or a celestial Being, which Cherubims, as _Moses_ is said to have seen them about the Throne of God in Mount _Sinai_, and as the same _Moses_, from the Original represented them afterwards covering the Ark, had the Head and Face of a Man, Wings of an Eagle, Body of a Lion, and Legs and Feet of a Calf; but this is not so much to our present Purpose, for as we are to allow that whatever _Satan_ had of heavenly Beauty before the Fall, he lost it all when he commenc'd _Devil_, so to fetch his Original so far up would be only to say, that he retain'd nothing but the _Cloven-Foot_, and that all the rest of him was alter'd and deform'd, become frightful and horrible as the DEVIL; but his Cloven-Foot, as we now understand it, is rather mystical and emblematick, and describes him only as the Fountain of Mischief and Treason, and the Prince of Hypocrites, and as such we are now to speak of him.
'Tis from this Original all the hypocritic World copy, he wears the Foot on their Account, and from this Model they act: This made our blessed Lord tell them, _the Works of your Father ye will do_, meaning the _Devil_, as he had express'd it just before.
Nor does he deny the Use of the _Foot_ to the meaner Class of his Disciples in the World, but decently equips them all upon every Occasion with a needful Proportion of Hypocrisy and Deceit; that they may hand on the Power of promiscuous Fraud thro' all his temporal Dominions, and wear _the Foot_ always about them as a Badge of their profess'd Share in whatever is done by that Means.
Thus every Dissembler, every false Friend, every secret Cheat, every Bearskin-Jobber has a _Cloven-Foot_, and so far hands on the Devil's Interest by the same powerful Agency of Art, as the _Devil_ himself uses to act when he appears in Person, or would act if he was just now upon the Spot; for this _Foot_ is a Machine which is to be wound up and wound down, as the Cause it appears for requires; and there are Agents and Engineers to act in it by Directions of _Satan_ (the grand Engineer) who lies still in his Retirement, only issuing out his Orders as he sees convenient.
Again, every Class, every Trade, every Shopkeeper, every Pedlar, nay, that meanest of Tradesmen, that Church Pedlar the Pope, has a Cloven-Foot, with which he _Paw wa's_ upon the World, wishes them all well, and at the same time cheats them; wishes them all fed, and at the same time starves them; wishes them all in Heaven, and at the same time marches before them directly to the Devil, _alamode de Cloven-Foot_.
Nay, the very Bench, the everliving Foundation of Justice in the World; how often has it been made the Tool of Violence, the Refuge of Oppression, the Seat of Bribery and Corruption, by this Monster in Masquerade, and that every where (our own Country always excepted)? They had much better wipe out the Picture of justice blinded, and having the Sword and Scales in her Hand, which in foreign Countries is generally painted over the Seat of those who sit to do Justice, and place instead thereof a naked unarm'd Cloven-Hoof, a proper Emblem of that Spirit that Influences the World, and of the Justice we often see administred among them; human Imagination cannot form an Idea more suitable, nor the _Devil_ propose an Engine more or better qualified for an Operation of Justice, by the Influence of Bribery and Corruption; it is this magnipotent Instrument in the Hands of the Devil, which under the closest Disguise agitates every Passion, bribes every Affection, blackens every Virtue, gives a double Face to Words and Actions, and to all Persons who have any Concern in them, and in a Word, makes us all Devils to one another.
Indeed the Devil has taken but a dark Emblem to be distinguish'd by, for this of a Goat was said to be a Creature hated by Mankind from the beginning, and that there is a natural Antipathy in Mankind against them: Hence the Scape Goat was to bear the Sins of the People, and to go into the Wilderness with all that Burthen upon him.
But we have a Saying among us, in Defence of which we must enquire into the proper Sphere of Action which may be assigned to this Cloven-Foot, as hitherto described: The Proverb is this; _Every_ Devil _has not a Cloven-Foot_. This Proverb, instead of giving us some more favourable Thoughts of the _Devil_, confirms what I have said already, that the _Devil_ rais'd this Scandal upon himself; I mean, the Report that he cannot conceal or disguise his Devil's Foot, or Hoof, but that it must appear, under whatever Habit he shews himself; and the Reason I gave holds good still, _namely_, that he may be more effectually conceal'd when he goes abroad without it: For if the People were fully persuaded that the _Devil_ could not appear without this Badge of his Honour, or Mark of his Infamy, _take it as you will_; and that he was bound also to shew it upon all Occasions, it would be natural to conclude, that whatever frightful Appearances might be seen in the World, if the Cloven-Foot did not also appear, we had no Occasion to look for the _Devil_, or so much as to think of him, much less to apprehend he was near us; and as this might be a Mistake, and that the _Devil_ might be there while we thought our selves so secure, it might on many Occasions be a Mistake of very ill Consequence, and in particular, as it would give the _Devil_ room to act in the Dark, and not be discover'd, where it might be most needful to know him.
From this short Hint, thus repeated, I draw a new Thesis, namely, That _Devil_ is most dangerous that has no Cloven-Foot; or, if you will have it in Words more to the common Understanding, the _Devil_ seems to be most dangerous when he goes without his Cloven-Foot.
And here a learned Speculation offers it self to our Debate, and which indeed I ought to call a Council of Casuists, and Men learned in the _Devil_'s Politicks, to determine:
Whether is most hurtful to the World, the _Devil_ walking about without his Cloven-Foot, or the Cloven-Foot walking about without the _Devil_?
It is indeed a nice and difficult Question, and merits to be well enquir'd into; for which Reason, and diverse others, I have referr'd it to be treated with some Decency, and as a Dispute of Dignity sufficient to take up a Chapter by itself.
CHAP. VII.
_Whether is most hurtful to the World, the_ Devil _walking about without his Cloven-Foot, or the Cloven-Foot walking about without the_ Devil?
In discussing this most critical Distinction of Satan's private Motions, I must, as the Pulpit Gentlemen direct us, explain the Text, and let you know what I mean by several dark Expressions in it, that I may not be understood to talk (as the _Devil_ walks) in the dark.
1. As to the Devil's walking about.
2. His walking without his Cloven-Foot.
3. The Cloven-Foot walking about without the _Devil_.
Now as I study Brevity, and yet would be understood too, you may please to understand me as I understand my self, thus.
1. That I must be allow'd to suppose the _Devil_ really has a full Intercourse in, and through, and about this Globe, with Egress and Regress, for the carrying on his special Affairs, when, how, and where, to his Majesty, in his great Wisdom, it shall seem meet; that sometimes he appears and becomes visible, and that, like a Mastiff without his Clog, he does not always carry his Cloven-Foot with him. This will necessarily bring me to some Debate upon the most important Question of Apparitions, Hauntings, Walkings, _&c._ whether of _Satan_ in human Shape, or of human Creatures in the _Devil_'s Shape, or in any other manner whatsoever.
2. I must also be allow'd to tell you that Satan has a great deal of Wrong done him by the general embracing vulgar Errors, and that there is a Cloven-Foot oftentimes without a _Devil_; or, in short, that Satan is not guilty of all the simple Things, no, or of all the wicked Things we charge him with.
These two Heads well settled will fully explain the Title of this Chapter, answer the Query mentioned in it, and at the same time correspond very well with, and give us a farther Prospect into the main and original Design of this Work, _namely, The History of the Devil_. We are so fond of, and pleased with the general Notion of seeing the _Devil_, that I am loth to disoblige my Readers so much as calling in question his Visibility would do. Nor is it my Business, any more than it is his, to undeceive them, where the Belief is so agreeable to them; especially since upon the whole 'tis not one Farthing matter, either on one Side or on the other, whether it be so or no, or whether the Truth of Fact be ever discovered or not.
Certain it is, whether we see him or no, here he is, and I make no doubt but he is looking on while I am writing this Part of his Story, whether behind me, or at my Elbow, or over my Shoulder, is not material to me, nor have I once turned my Head about to see whether he is there or no; for if he be not in the Inside, I have so mean an Opinion of all his extravasated Powers, that it seems of very little Consequence to me what Shape he takes up, or in what Posture he appears; nor indeed can I find in all my Enquiry that ever the _Devil_ appear'd (_Qua Devil_) in any of the most dangerous or important of his Designs in the World; the most of his Projects, especially of the significant Part of them, having been carried on another way.
However, as I am satisfied no Body will be pleas'd if I should dispute the Reality of his Appearance, and the World runs away with it as a receiv'd Point, and that admits no Dispute, I shall most readily grant the General, and give you some Account of the Particulars.
History is fruitful of Particulars, whether Invention has supply'd them or not, I will not say, where the _Devil_ is brought upon the Stage in plain and undeniable Apparition: The Story of _Samuel_ being rais'd by the Witch of _Endor_, I shall leave quite out of my List, because there are so many Scruples and Objections against that Story; and as I shall not dispute with the Scripture, so on the other hand, I have so much Deference for the Dignity of the _Devil_, as not to determine rashly how far it may be in the Power of every old (_Witch_) Woman, to call him up whenever she pleases, and that he must come, whatever the Pretence is, or whatever Business of Consequence he may be engaged in, as often as 'tis needful for her to _Pa wa_ for half a Crown, or perhaps less than half the Money.
Nor will I undertake to tell you, till I have talk'd farther with him about it, how far the _Devil_ is concern'd to discover Frauds, detect Murthers, reveal Secrets, and especially to tell where any Money is hid, and shew Folks where to find it; 'tis an odd thing that Satan should think it of Consequence to come and tell us where such a Miser hid a Strong Box, or where such an old Woman buried her _Chamber Pot_ full of Money, the Value of all which is perhaps but a Trifle, when at the same time he lets so many Veins of Gold, so many unexhausted Mines, nay, Mountains of Silver, as, we may depend upon it, are hid in the Bowels of the Earth, and which it would be so much to the Good of whole Nations to discover, lie still there, and never say one Word of them to any Body. Besides, how does the _Devil_'s doing Things so foreign to himself, and so out of his way, agree with the rest of his Character; namely, shewing a kind of a friendly Disposition to Mankind, or doing beneficent Things? This is so beneath _Satan_'s Quality, and looks so little, that I scarce know what to say to it; but that which is still more pungent in the Case is, these Things are so out of his Road, and so foreign to his Calling, that it shocks our Faith in them, and seems to clash with all the just Notions we have of him, and of his Business in the World. The like is to be said of those little merry Turns we bring him in acting with us, and upon us, upon trifling and simple Occasions, such as tumbling Chairs and Stools about House, setting Pots and Vessels Bottom upward, tossing the Glass and Crokery Ware about without breaking; and such like mean foolish Things, beneath the Dignity of the _Devil_, who, in my Opinion, is rather employ'd in setting the World with the Bottom upward, tumbling Kings and Crowns about, and dashing the Nations one against another; raising Tempests and Storms, whether at Sea, or on Shore; and, in a word, doing capital Mischiefs suitable to his Nature, and agreeable to his Name, _Devil_; and suited to that Circumstance of his Condition, which I have fully represented in the primitive Part of his exil'd State.
But to bring in the _Devil_ playing at Push-pin with the World, or like _Domitian_ catching Flies, that is to say, doing nothing to the purpose; this is not only deluding our selves, but putting a Slur upon the _Devil_ himself; and, I say, I shall not dishonour Satan so much as to suppose any thing in it: However, as I must have a care too how I take away the proper Materials of Winter Evening Frippery, and leave the good Wives nothing of the Devil to fright the Children with, I shall carry the weighty Point no farther. No doubt the _Devil_ and Dr. _Faustus_ were very intimate; I should rob you of a very significant [6] Proverb, if I should so much as doubt it; no doubt the _Devil_ shew'd himself in the Glass to that fair Lady who look'd in it to see where to place her Patches; but then it should follow too that the _Devil_ is an Enemy to the Ladies wearing Patches, and that has some Difficulties in it which we cannot so easily reconcile; but we must tell the Story, and leave out the Consequences.
But to come to more remarkable Things, and in which the _Devil_ has thought fit to act in a Figure more suitable to his Dignity, and on Occasions consistent with himself; take the Story of the Appearance of _Julius Cæsar_, or the _Devil_ assuming that murthered _Emperor_, to the great _Marcus Brutus_, who notwithstanding all the good Things said to justify it, was no less than a King-killer and an Assassinator, which we in our Language call by a very good Name, and peculiar to the _English_ Tongue, a _Ruffian_.
The Spectre had certainly the Appearance of _Cæsar_, with his Wounds bleeding fresh, as if he had just receiv'd the fatal Blow; he had reproach'd him with his Ingratitude, with a _Tu Brute! tu quoque, mi fili_: "What Thou _Brutus_! Thou, my adopted Son!" Now History seems to agree universally, not only in the Story itself, but in the Circumstances of it; we have only to observe that the _Devil_ had certainly Power to assume, not a human Shape only, but the Shape of _Julius Cæsar_ in particular.
Had _Brutus_ been a timorous _Conscience-harry'd_, weak-headed Wretch, had he been under the Horror of the Guilt, and terrify'd with the Dangers that were before him at that time, we might suggest that he was over-run with the Vapours, that the Terrors which were upon his Mind disorder'd him, that his Head was delirious and prepossess'd, and that his Fancy only plac'd _Cæsar_ so continually in his Eye, that it realiz'd him to his Imagination, and he believ'd he saw him; with many other suggested Difficulties to invalidate the Story, and render the Reality of it doubtful.
But the contrary, to an Extreme, was the Case of _Brutus_; his known Character plac'd him above the Power of all Hypocondriacks, or fanciful Delusions; _Brutus_ was of a true _Roman_ Spirit, a bold Hero, of an intrepid Courage; one that scorn'd to fear even the _Devil_, as the Story allows: Besides, he glory'd in the Action; there cou'd be no Terror of Mind upon him; he valued himself upon it, as done in the Service of Liberty, and the Cause of his Country; and was so far from being frighted at the _Devil_ in the worst Shape, that he spoke first to him, and ask'd him, _What art thou?_ and when he was cited to see him again at _Philippi_, answer'd, with a Gallantry that knew no Fear, _well I will see thee there_. Whatever the _Devil_'s Business was with _Brutus_, this is certain, according to all the Historians who give us the Account of it, that _Brutus_ discover'd no Fear; he did not, _like Saul at Endor_, fall to the Ground in a Swoon, 1 _Sam._ xxviii. 20. _Then Saul fell all along upon the Earth, and there was no Strength in him, and was sore afraid._ In a word, I see no room to charge _Brutus_ with being over-run with the _Hyppo_, or with Vapours, or with Fright and Terror of Mind; but he saw the _Devil_, that's certain, and with Eyes open, his Courage not at all daunted, his Mind resolute, and with the utmost Composure spoke to him, reply'd to his Answer, and defy'd his Summons to Death, which indeed he fear'd not, as appear'd afterward.
I come next to an Instance as eminent in History as the other; this was in _Char._ VI. of _France_, sirnamed, _The Beloved_; who riding over the Forest near _Mans_, a ghastly frightful Fellow (that is to say, the _Devil_ so clothed in human Vizor) came up to his Horse, and taking hold of his Bridle, stop'd him, with the Addition of these Words, _Stop King, whither go you? You are betray'd!_ and immediately disappear'd. It is true, the King had been distemper'd in his Head before, and so he might have been deceived, and we might have charg'd it to the Account of a whimsical Brain, or the Power of his Imagination; but this was in the Face of his Attendants, several of his great Officers, Courtiers, and Princes of the Blood being with him, who all saw the Man, heard the Words, and immediately, to their Astonishment, lost Sight of the Spectre, who vanish'd from them all.
Two Witnesses will convict a Murtherer, why not a Traitor? This must be the _Old Gentleman_, emblematically so called, or who must it be? nay, who else could it be? His Ugliness is not the Case, tho' _ugly as the Devil_, is a Proverb in his Favour; but vanishing out of sight is an Essential to a Spirit, and to an evil Spirit in our Times especially.
These are some of the _Devil_'s Extraordinaries, and it must be confess'd they are not the most agreeable to Mankind, for sometimes he takes upon him to disorder his Friends very much on these Occasions, as in the above Case of _Cha._ VI. of _France_; the King, they say, was really demented ever after; that is, as we vulgarly, but not always improperly, express it, he was really _frighted out of his Wits_. Whether the malicious _Devil_ intended it so, or not, is not certain, tho' it was not so foreign to his particular Disposition if he did.
But where he is more intimate, we are told he appears in a manner less disagreeable, and there he is more properly _a familiar Spirit_; that is, in short, a _Devil_ of their Acquaintance: It is true, the Antients understand the Word, _a familiar Spirit_, to be one of the kinds of Possession; but if it serves our turn as well under the Denomination of an intimate _Devil_, or a _Devil_ visitant, it must be acknowledg'd to be as near in the literal Sense and Acceptation of the Word, as the other; nay, it must be allow'd 'tis a very great Piece of Familiarity in the _Devil_ to make Visits, and shew none of his Disagreeables, not appear formidable, or in the Shape of what he is, respectfully withholding his dismal Part, in Compassion to the Infirmities of his Friends.
It is true, _Satan_ may be oblig'd to make different Appearances, as the several Circumstances of Things call for it; in some Cases he makes his publick Entry, and then he must shew himself in his Habit of Ceremony; in other Cases he comes upon private Business, and then he appears in Disguise; in some publick Cases he may thing fit to be _incog._ and then he appears dress'd _a la Masque_; so they say he appear'd at the famous St. _Bartholomew_ Wedding at _Paris_, where, he came in dress'd up like a Trumpeter, danc'd in his Habit, sounded a _Levet_, and then went out and rung the Alarm-Bell (which was the Signal to begin the Massacre) half an Hour before the Time appointed, lest the King's Mind should alter, and his Heart fail him.
If the Story be not made upon him, (for we should not slander the _Devil_) it should seem, he was not thoroughly satisfied in King _Charles_ IX.'s Steadiness in his Cause; for the King, it seems, had relax'd a little once before, and Satan might be afraid he would fall off again, and so prevent the Execution: Others say, the King did relent immediately after the ringing the _Alarm-Bell_, but that then it was too late, the Work was begun, and the Rage of Blood having been let loose among the People, there was no recalling the Order. If the _Devil_ was thus brought to the Necessity of a secret Management, it must be owned he did it dexterously; but I have not Authority enough for the Story, to charge him with the Particulars, so I leave it _au croc._
I have much better Vouchers for the Story following, which I had so solemnly confirm'd by one that liv'd in the Family, that I never doubted the Truth of it. There liv'd, in the Parish of St. _Bennet Fynk_, near the _Royal Exchange_, an honest poor Widow Woman, who, _her Husband being lately dead_, took Lodgers into her House; that is, she let out some of her Rooms in order to lessen her own Charge of Rent; among the rest, she let her Garrets to a working Watchwheel-maker, or one some way concern'd in making the Movements of Watches, and who work'd to those Shop-keepers who sell Watches; as is usual.
It happened that a Man and Woman went up, to speak with this Movement-maker upon some Business which related to his Trade, and when they were near the Top of the Stairs, the Garret-Door where he usually worked being wide open, they saw the poor Man (the Watch-maker, or Wheel-maker) had hang'd himself upon a Beam which was left open in the Room a little lower than the Plaister, or Ceiling: Surpriz'd at the Sight, the Woman stop'd, and cried out to the Man who was behind her on the Stairs that he should run up, and cut the poor Creature down.
At that very Moment comes a Man hastily from another Part of the Room which they upon the Stairs could not see, bringing a Joint-Stool in his Hand, as if in great Haste, and sets it down just by the Wretch that was hang'd, and getting up as hastily upon it pulls a Knife out of his Pocket, and taking hold of the Rope with one of his Hands, beckon'd to the Woman and the Man behind her with his Head, as if to stop and not come up, shewing them the Knife in his other Hand, as if he was just going to cut the poor Man down.
Upon this, the Woman stopp'd a while, but the Man who stood on the Joint-Stool continued with his Hand and Knife as if fumbling at the Knot, but did not yet cut the Man down; at which the Woman cried out again, and the Man behind her call'd to her. Go up, _says he_, and help the Man upon the Stool! supposing something hindred. But the Man upon the Stool made Signs to them again to be quiet, and not come on, as if saying, I shall do it immediately; then he made two Strokes with his Knife, as if cutting the Rope, and then stopp'd again; and still the poor Man was hanging, and consequently dying: Upon this, the Woman on the Stairs cried out to him. What ails you? Why don't you cut the poor Man down? And the Man behind her, having no more Patience, thrusts her by, and said to her. Let me come, I'll warrant you I'll do it; and with that runs up and forward into the Room to the Man; but when he came there, behold, the poor Man was there hanging; but no Man with a Knife, or Joint-Stool, or any such thing to be seen, all that was Spectre and Delusion, in order, no doubt, to let the poor Creature that had hang'd himself perish and expire.
The Man was so frighted and surpriz'd, that with all the Courage he had before, he drop'd on the Floor as one dead, and the Woman at last was fain to cut the poor Man down with a Pair of Scissars, and had much to do to effect it.
As I have no room to doubt the Truth of this Story, which I had from Persons on whose Honesty I could depend. So I think it needs very little Trouble to convince us who the Man upon the Stool must be, and that it was the _Devil_ who plac'd himself there in order to finish the Murther of the Man who he had, _Devil_-like, tempted before, and prevail'd with to be his own Executioner. Besides, it corresponds so well with the _Devil_'s Nature, and with his Business, _viz._ that of a _Murtherer_, that I never question'd it; nor can I think we wrong the _Devil_ at all to charge him with it.
_N. B._ I cannot be positive in the remaining Part of this Story, _viz._ whether the Man was cut down soon enough to be recover'd, or whether the _Devil_ carry'd his Point, and kept off the Man and Woman till it was too late; but be it which it will, 'tis plain he did his Devilish Endeavour, and stay'd till he was forc'd to abscond again.
We have many solid Tales well attested, as well in History as in the Reports of honest People, who could not be deceived, intimating the _Devil_'s personal Appearance, some in one Place, some in another; as also sometimes in one Habit or Dress, and sometimes in another; and it is to be observed, that in none of those which are most like to be real, and in which there is least of Fancy and Vapour, you have any Mention of the _Cloven Foot_, which rather seems to be a mere Invention of Men (and perhaps chiefly of those who had a Cloven Understanding) I mean a shallow kind of Craft, the Effect of an empty and simple Head, thinking by such a well-meant, tho' weak Fraud, to represent the _Devil_ to the old Women and Children of the Age, with some Addition suitable to the Weakness of their Intellects, and suited to making them afraid of him.
I have another Account of a Person who travell'd upwards of four Years with the _Devil_ in his Company, and convers'd most intimately with him all the while; nay, if I may believe the Story, he knew most part of the Time that he was the _Devil_, and yet convers'd with him, and that very profitably, for he perform'd many very useful Services for him, and constantly preserv'd him from the Danger of Wolves and wild Beasts, which the Country he travell'd thro' was intolerably full of. Where, by the way, you are to understand, that the Wolves and Bears in those Countries knew the _Devil_, whatever Disguise he went in; or that the _Devil_ has some Way to fright Bears and such Creatures, more than we know of. Nor could this _Devil_ ever be prevail'd upon to hurt him or any of his Company. This Account has an innumerable Number of diverting Incidents attending it; but they are equal to all the rest in Bulk, and therefore too long for this Book.
I find too upon some more ordinary Occasions the _Devil_ has appear'd to several People at their Call: This indeed shews abundance of good Humour in him, considering him as a _Devil_, and that he was mighty complaisant: Nay some, they tell us, have a Power to raise the _Devil_ whenever they think fit; this I cannot bring the _Devil_ to a Level with, unless I should allow him to be _Servus Servorum_, as another _Devil_ in Disguise calls himself; subjected to ever old Wizard's Call; or that he is under a Necessity of appearing on such or such particular Occasions, whoever it is that calls him; which would bring the _Devil_'s Circumstances to a pitch of Slavery which I see no Reason to believe of them.
Here also I must take Notice again, that tho' I say the _Devil_, when I speak of all these Apparitions, whether of a greater or lesser Kind, yet I am not oblig'd to suppose Satan himself in Person is concern'd to shew himself, but that some of his _Agents_, Deputies and Servants, are sent to that Purpose, and directed what Disguise of Flesh and Blood to put on, as may be suitable to the Occasion.
This seems to be the only Way to reconcile all those simple and ridiculous Appearances which not _Satan_, but his Emissaries, (which we old Women call Imps) sometimes make, and the mean and sorry Employment they are put to: Thus Fame tells us of a certain Witch of Quality, who call'd the _Devil_ once to carry her over a Brook where the Water was swell'd with a hasty Rain, and lash'd him soundly with her Whip for letting her Ladyship fall into the Water before she was quite over. Thus also, as Fame tells us, she set the _Devil_ to work, and made him build _Crowland_ Abbey, where there was no Foundation to be found, only for disturbing the Workmen a little who were first set about it. So it seems another laborious _Devil_ was oblig'd to dig the great Ditch cross the Country from the Fenn Country to the Edge of _Suffolk_ and _Essex_; which who ever he has preserv'd the Reputation of, and where it crosses _New-Market_ Heath, 'tis call'd _Devil_'s _Ditch_ to this Day.
Another Piece of Punishment no doubt it was, when the _Devil_ was oblig'd to bring the Stones out of _Wales_ into _Wiltshire_, to build _Stone-heng_: How this was ordered in those Days, when it seems they kept _Satan_ to hard Labour, I know not; I believe it must be registred among the antient Pieces of Art which are lost in the World, such as melting of Stone, painting of Glass, _&c._ Certainly they had the _Devil_ under Correction in those Days; that is to say, those lesser Sorts of _Devils_; but I cannot think that the _muckle Thief Devil_, as they call him in the _North_, the Grand Seignior _Devil_ of all, was ever reduced to Discipline. What _Devil_ it was that _Dunstan_ took by the Nose with his red hot Tongs, I have not yet examin'd Antiquity enough to be certain of, any more than I can what Devil it was that St. _Francis_ play'd so many warm Tricks with, and made him run away from him so often: However, this I take upon me to say, in the _Devil_'s Behalf, that it cou'd not be our _Satan_, the Arch _Devil_ of all _Devils_, of whom I have been talking so long.
Now is it unworthy the Occasion, to take notice that we really wrong the _Devil_, and speak of him very much to his Disadvantage, when we say of such a Great Lord, or of such a Lady of Quality, _I think the_ Devil _is in your Grace_: No, no, Satan has other Business, he very rarely possesses F--ls: Besides, some are so far from having the _Devil_ in them, that they are really transmigrated into the very Essence of the _Devil_ themselves; and others again not transmigrated, or assimilated, but Indeed and in Truth shew us that they are to have mere native _Devils_ in every Part and Parcel of them, and that the rest is only Masque and Disguise. Thus if _Rage_, _Envy_, _Pride_ and _Revenge_ can constitute the Parts of a _Devil_, why should not a Lady of such Quality, in whom all those Extraordinaries abound, have a Right to the Title of being a _Devil_ really and substantially, and to all Intents and Purposes, in the most perfect and absolute Sense, according to the most exquisite Descriptions of Devils already given by me or any Body else; and even just as _Joan_ of _Arc_, or _Joan_ Queen of _Naples_ were, who were both sent home to their native Country, as soon as it was discovered that they were real _Devils_, and that _Satan_ acknowledg'd them in that Quality.
Nor does my Lady D----ss's wearing sometimes a Case of Humanity about her, call'd _Flesh and Blood_, at all alter the Case; for so 'tis Evident, according to our present Hypothesis, _Satan_ has been always allow'd to do, upon urgent Occasions; ay, and to make his Personal Appearance as such, among even the Sons and Daughters of God too, as well as among the Children of Men; and therefore _her Grace_ may have appeared in the Shape of a fine Lady, as long as she has been suppos'd to do, without any Impeachment of her just Claim to the Title of _Devil_; which being her true and natural Original, she ought not, nor indeed shall not, by me, be denied her Shapes of Honour, whenever she pleases to declare for a Re-assumption.
And farther, to give every Truth its due Illustration, this need not be thought so strange; and is far from being unjust; _her Grace_ (as she, it may be, is now stiled) has not acted, at least that I never heard of, so unworthy her great and illustrious Original, that we should think she has lost any thing by walking about the World so many Years in Apparition: But to give her the due Homage of her Quality, she has acted as consonant to the Essence and Nature of _Devil_, which she has such a Claim to, as was consistent with the needful Reserve of her present Disguise.
Nor shall we lead the Reader into any Mistake concerning this part of our Work, as if this was or is meant to be a particular Satyr upon the D-----ss of -----------, and upon her only, as if we had no DEVILS among us in the Phenomena of fair Ladies, but this one: If Satan would be so honest to us as he might be (and 'twou'd be very ingenuous in him, that must be acknowledg'd, to give us a little of his Illumination in this Case) we should soon be able to unmasque a great many notable Figures among us, to our real Surprize.
Indeed 'tis a Point worth our further Enquiry, and would be a Discovery many ways to our Advantage, were we bless'd with it, to see how many real _Devils_ we have walking up and down the World in Masque, and how many Hoop-Petticoats compleat the entire Masque that disguises the Devil in the Shape of that Thing call'd Woman.
As for the Men, Nature has satisfied her self in letting them be their own Disguise, and in suffering them to act the _old Women_, as old Women are vulgarly understood, in Matters of Council and Politicks; but if at any time they have Occasion for the _Devil_ in Person, they are oblig'd to call him to their Aid in such Shape as he pleases to make use of _pro hac vice_; and of all those Shapes, the most agreeable to him seems to be that of a Female of Quality, in which he has infinite Opportunity to act to Perfection, what Part soever he is call'd in for.
How happy are those People who they say have the particular Quality, or acquir'd Habit, call'd the _Second Sight_; one Sort of whom they tell us are able to distinguish the _Devil_, in whatever Case or Outside of Flesh and Blood he is pleas'd to put on, and consequently could know the _Devil_ wherever they met him? Were I blest with this excellent and useful Accomplishment, how pleasant would it be, and how would it particularly gratify my Spleen, and all that which I, in common with my fellow Creatures carry about me, call'd Ill-Nature, to stand in the _Mall_, or at the Entrance to any of our _Assemblies of Beauties_, and point them out as they pass by, with this particular Mark, That's a _Devil_; that fine young Toast is a _Devil_; There's a _Devil_ drest in a new Habit for the Ball; There's a _Devil_ in a Coach and Six, _cum aliis_. In short, it would make a merry World among us if we cou'd but enter upon some proper Method of such Discriminations: but, _Lawr'd_, what a Hurricane would it raise, if, like -------, who they say scourg'd the _Devil_ so often that he durst not come near him in any Shape whatever, we cou'd find some new Method out to make the _Devil_ unmask, like the Angel _Uriel_, who, Mr. _Milton_ says, had an enchanted Spear, with which if he did but touch the _Devil_, in whatever Disguise he had put on, it oblig'd him immediately to start up, and shew himself in his true original Shape, mere _Devil_ as he was.
This would do nicely, and as I who am originally a Projector, have spent some Time upon this Study, and doubt not in a little Time to finish my Engine, which I am contriving, to screw the _Devil_ out of every Body, or any Body; I question not when I have brought it to Perfection, but I shall make most excellent Discoveries by it; and besides the many extraordinary Advantages of it to human Society, I doubt not but it will make good Sport in the World too; wherefore, when I publish my Proposals, and divide it into Shares, as other less useful Projects have been done, I question not, for all the severe Act lately pass'd against Bubbles, but I shall get Subscribers enough, _&c._
In a Word, a secret Power of discovering what Devils we have among us, and where and what Business they are doing, would be a vast Advantage to us all; that we might know among the Crowd of _Devils_ that walk about Streets, who are _Apparitions_, and who are not.
Now I, you must know, at certain Intervals when the Old Gentleman's Illuminations are upon me, and when I have something of an _Eclaricissement_ with him, have some Degrees of this discriminating _Second Sight_, and therefore 'tis no strange thing for me to tell a great many of my Acquaintance that they are really _Devils_, when they themselves know nothing of the Matter: Sometimes indeed I find it pretty hard to convince them of it, or at least they are very unwilling to own it, but it is not the less so for that.
I had a long Discourse upon this Subject one day, with a young beautiful Lady of my Acquaintance, who the World very much admired; and as the World judges no farther than they can see, (and how should they, you would say) they took her to be, as she really was, a most charming Creature.
To me indeed she discover'd her self many Ways, besides the Advantage I had of my extraordinary Penetration by the magic Powers which I am vested with: To me, _I say_, she appear'd a Fury, a Satyr, a fiery little Fiend as could possibly be dress'd up in Flesh; in short, she appear'd to me what really she was, a very DEVIL: It is natural to human Creatures to desire to discover any extraordinary Powers they are possess'd of superior to others, and this Itch prevailing in me, among the rest, I was impatient to let this Lady know that I understood her Composition perfectly well, nay, as well as she did her self.
In order to this, happening to be in the Family once for some Days, and having the Honour to be very intimate with her and her Husband too, I took an Opportunity on an extraordinary Occasion, when she was in the Height of good Humour, to talk with her; You must note, that as I said, the Lady was in an extraordinary good Humour, and there had been a great deal of Mirth in the Family for some Days; but one Evening, Sir _E----_ her Husband, upon some very sharp Turn she gave to another Gentleman, which made all the Company pleasant, run to her, and with a Passion of good Humour takes her in his Arms, and turning to me, says he, Jack, This Wife of mine is full of Wit and good Humour, but when she has a Mind to be smart, she is the keenest little _Devil_ in the World: This was alluding to the quick Turn she had given the other Gentleman.
Is that the best Language you can give your Wife, says my Lady? O Madam, says I, such _Devils_ as you, are all _Angels_; ay, ay, says my Lady, I know that, he has only let a Truth fly out that he does not understand: Look ye there now, _says Sir_ Edward, could any thing but such a dear _Devil_ as this have said a thing so pointed? Well, well, adds he, _Devil_ to a Lady in a Man's Arms, is a Word of divers Interpretations. Thus they rallied for a good while, he holding her fast all the while in his Arms, and frequently kissing her, and at last it went off, all in Sunshine and Mirth.
But the next Day, for I had the Honour to lodge in the Lady's Father's House, where it all happen'd; I say, the next Day my Lady begins with me upon the Subject, and that very smartly, so that first I did not know whether she was in jest or earnest: Ay, ay, _says she_, you Men make nothing of your Wives after you have them, _alluding to the Discourse with_ Sir Edward _the Night before_.
Why Madam, says I, _we Men_, as you are pleas'd to term it, if we meet with good Wives worship them, and make Idols of them, what would you have more of us?
No, no, says she, before you have them they are Angels, but when you have been in Heaven, _adds she and smil'd_, then they are Devils.
Why Madam, _says I_, Devils are Angels, you know, and were the highest Sort of Angels once.
Yes, _says she_, very smartly, all _Devils_ are Angels, but all Angels are not _Devils_.
But Madam, _says I_, you should never take it ill to be call'd _Devil_, you know.
I know, _says she_, hastily, what d'ye mean by that?
Why Madam, _says I_, and look'd very gravely and serious, I thought you had known that I knew it, or else I would not have said so, for I would not offend you; but you may depend I shall never discover it, unless you order me to do so for your particular Service.
Upon this she look'd hard and wild, and bid me explain my self.
I told her, I was ready to explain my self, if she would give me her Word, she would not resent it, and would take nothing ill.
She gave me her word solemnly she would not, tho' like a true _Devil_ she broke her Promise with me all at once.
Well however, being unconcern'd whether she kept her Word or no, I began, by telling her that I had not long since obtain'd the second sight, and had some years studied Magic, by which I could penetrate into many things, which to ordinary Perception were invisible, and had some Glasses, by the Help of which I could see into all visionary or imaginary Appearances in a different Manner than other People did.
Very well, _says she_, suppose you can, what's that to me?
I told her it was nothing to her any further than that as she knew her self to be originally not the same Creature she seem'd to be, but was of a sublime angelic Original; so by the Help of my recited Art I knew it too, and so far it might relate to her.
Very fine, says she, so you would make a _Devil_ of me indeed.
I took that Occasion to tell her, I would make nothing of her but what she was; that I suppos'd she knew well enough God Almighty never thought fit to make any human Creature so perfect and compleatly beautiful as she was, but that such were also reserved for Figures to be assum'd by Angels of one Kind or other.
She rallied me upon that, and told me that would not bring me off, for I had not determined her for any thing Angelic, but a meer _Devil_; and how could I flatter her with being handsome and a _Devil_ both at the same time?
I told her, as Satan, whom we abusively call'd _Devil_, was an immortal Seraph, and of an original angelic Nature, so abstracted from any thing wicked, he was a most glorious Being; that when he thought fit to encase himself with Flesh, and walk about in Disguise, it was in his Power equally with the other Angels to make the Form he took upon himself be as he thought fit, beautiful or deform'd.
Here she disputed the Possibility of that, and after charging me faintly with flattering her Face, told me the Devil could not be represented by any thing handsome, alledging our constant picturing the _Devil_ in all the frightful Appearances imaginable.
I told her we wrong'd him very much in that, and quoted St. _Francis_, to whom the _Devil_ frequently appeared in the Form of the most incomparably beautiful naked Woman, to allure him, and what Means he used to turn the Appearance into a _Devil_ again, and how he effected it.
She put by the Discourse, and returned to that of Angels, and insisted that Angels did not always assume beautiful Appearances; that sometimes they appear'd in terrible Shapes, but that when they did not, it was at best only amiable Faces, not exquisite; and that therefore it would not hold, that to be handsome, should always render them suspected.
I told her the _Devil_ had more Occasion to form Beauties than other Angels had, his Business being principally to deceive and ensnare Mankind. And then I gave her some Examples upon the whole.
I found by her Discourse she was willing enough to pass for an _Angel_, but 'twas the hardest thing in the World to convince her that she was a DEVIL, and she would not come into that by any means; she argued that I knew her Father, and that her Mother was a very good Woman, and was delivered of her in the ordinary Way, and that there was such and such Ladies who were present in the Room when she was born, and that had often told her so.
I told her that was nothing in such a Case as hers; that when the Old Gentleman had occasion to transform himself into a fine Lady, he could easily dispose of a Child, and place himself in the Cradle instead of it, when the Nurse or Mother were asleep; nay, or when they were broad awake either, it was the same thing to him; and I quoted _Luther_ to her upon that Occasion, who affirms that it had been so. However I said, to convince her that I knew it, (for I would have it that she knew it already) if she pleas'd I would go to my Chamber and fetch her my Magick Looking-glass, where she should see her own Picture, not only as it was an angelick Picture for the World to admire, but a _Devil_ also frightful enough to any Body but herself and me that understood it.
No, no, _said she_, I'll look in none of your conjuring Glasses; I know my self well enough, and I desire to look no otherwise than I am.
No, Madam, _says I_, I know that very well; nor do you need any better Shape than that you appear in, 'tis most exquisitely fine; all the World knows you are a compleat Beauty, and that is a clear Evidence what you would be if your present appearing Form was reduced to its proper Personality.
_Appearing Form!_ says she, why, what would you make an _Apparition_ of me?
An _Apparition!_ Madam, said I, yes, to be sure; why you know, you are nothing else but an _Apparition_; and what else would you be, when it is so infinitely to your Advantage?
With that, she turn'd pale and angry, and then rose up hastily, and look'd into the Glass, (_a large Peer-glass being in the Room_) where she stood, surveying her self from Head to Foot, with Vanity not a little.
I took that Time to slip away, and running up into my Apartment, I fetch'd my _Magic Glass_ as I call'd it, in which I had a hollow Case so framed behind a Looking-glass, that in the first; she would see her own Face only; in the second, she would see the _Devil_'s Face, ugly and frightful enough, but dress'd up with a Lady's Head-Clothes in a Circle, the _Devil_'s Face in the Center, and as it were at a little Distance behind.
I came down again so soon that she did not think the Time long, especially having spent it in surveying her fair self; when I return'd, I said, Come, Madam, do not trouble your self to look there, that is not a Glass capable of shewing you any thing; come, take this Glass.
It will shew me as much of my self, _says she, a little scornfully_, as I desire to see; so she continued looking in the Peer-glass; after some time more (for seeing her a little out of Humour, I waited to see what Observations she would make) I ask'd her if she had view'd her self to her Satisfaction? She said she had, and she had seen nothing of _Devil_ about her. Come, Madam, said I, look here; and with that I open'd the Looking-glass, and she look'd in it, but saw nothing but her own Face; Well, _says she_, the Glasses agree well enough, I see no Difference; what can you make of it? With that I took it a little away; Don't you? _says I_, then I shou'd be mistaken very much; so I look'd in it my self, and giving it a Turn imperceptible to her, I shew'd it her again, where she saw the _Devil_ indeed, dress'd up like a fine Lady, but ugly, and _Devil_ like as could be desired for a _Devil_ to be.
She started, and cry'd out most horribly, and told me, she thought I was more of a _Devil_ than she, for that she knew nothing of all those Tricks, and I did it to fright her, she believ'd I had rais'd the _Devil_.
I told her it was nothing but her own natural Picture, and that she knew well enough, and that I did not shew it her to inform her of it, but to let her know that I knew it too; that so she might make no Pretences of being offended when I talk'd familiarly to her of a Thing of this Nature.
Very well; so, _says she_, I am a real frightful _Devil_, am I?
O, Madam, says I, don't say, _Am I?_ why you know what you are, don't you? A _Devil_! ay, certainly; as sure as the rest of the World believes you a Lady.
I had a great deal of farther Discourse with her upon that Subject, tho' she would fain have beat me off of it, and two or three times she put the Talk off, and brought something else on; but I always found Means to revive it, and to attack her upon the Reality of her being a Devil, till at last I made her downright angry, and then she shew'd it.
First she cried, told me I came to affront her, that I would not talk so if Sir _Ed----_ was by; and that she ought not to be used so. I endeavour'd to pacify her, and told her I had not treated her with any Indecency, nor I would not; because while she thought fit to walk Abroad _incog._ it was none of my Business to discover her; that if she thought fit to tell Sir _Ed----_ any thing of the Discourse, she was very welcome, or to conceal it, (_which I thought the wisest Course_) she should do just as she pleas'd; but I made no question I should convince Sir _E----_ her Husband, that what I said was just, and that I was really so; whether it was for her Service or no for him to know it, was for her to consider.
This calm'd her a little, and she look'd hard at me a Minute without speaking a Word, when on a sudden she broke out thus: And you will undertake, _says she_, to convince Sir _Ed----_ that he has married a _Devil_, will ye? A fine Story indeed! and what follows? why then it must follow that the Child I go with (for she was big with Child) will be a _Devil_ too, will it? A fine Story for Sir _Ed----_ indeed! isn't it?
I don't know that, Madam, said I, that's as you order it; by the Father's Side, _said I_, I know it will not, but what it may by the Mother's Side, that's a Doubt I can't resolve till the _Devil_ and I talk farther about it.
You and the Devil talk together! _says she_, and looks rufully at me; why do you talk with the _Devil_ then?
Ay, Madam, _says I_, as sure as ever you did your self; besides, said I, can you question that? Pray who am I talking to now?
I think you are mad, _says she_; why you will make _Devils_ of all the Family, it may be, and particularly I must be with Child of a _Devil_, that's certain.
No, Madam, _said I_, 'tis not certain, as I said before, I question it.
Why you say I am the DEVIL, the Child, you know, has always most of the Mother in it, then that must be a Devil too I think, what else can it be, _says she_?
I can't tell that, Madam, _said I_; that's as you agree among your selves, this Kind does not go by Generation; that's a Dispute foreign to the present Purpose.
Then I entred into a Discourse with her of the Ends and Purposes for which the Devil takes up such beautiful Forms as hers, and why it always gave me a Suspicion when I saw a Lady handsomer than ordinary, and set me upon the Search to be satisfied whether she was really a Woman or an _Apparition_? a Lady or a Devil? allowing all along that her being a Devil was quite out of the Question.
Upon that very Foot, she took me up again roundly, and so, _says she_, you are very civil to me through all your Discourse, for I see it ends all in that, and you take it as a thing confest, that I am a Devil! A very pretty piece of good Usage indeed! _says she_; _I thank you for it_.
Nay, Madam, _says I_, do not take it ill of me, for I only discover to you that I knew it; I do not tell it you as a Secret, for you are satisfied of that another way.
Satisfied of what? says she, that I am a Devil? I think the Devil's in you: _And so began to be hot_.
A Devil! yes, Madam, says I, without doubt a meer DEVIL; take it as you please, I can't help that: And so I began to take it ill that she should be disgusted at opening such a well-known Truth to her.
With that she discover'd it all at once, for she turn'd _Fury_, in the very Letter of it; flew out in a Passion, rail'd at me, curst me most heartily, and immediately disappeared; which you know is the particular Mark of a Spirit or Apparition.
We had a great deal of Discourse besides this, relating to several other young Ladies of her Acquaintance, some of which, I said, were mere _Apparitions_ like her self; and told her which were so, and which not; and the Reason why they were so, and for what Uses and Purposes, some to delude the World one way, and some another; and she was pretty well pleased to hear that, but she could not bear to hear her own true Character, which however, as cunning as she was, made her act the Devil at last, as you have heard; and then vanished out of my sight.
I have seen her in Miniature several Times since; but she proves her self still to be the Devil of a Lady, for she bears Malice, and will never forgive me, that I would not let her be an Angel; but like a very Devil as she is, she endeavours to kill me at a Distance; and indeed the Poison of her Eyes, (Basilisk-like) is very strong, and she has a strange Influence upon me; but I that know her to be a Devil, strive very hard with my self to drive the Memory of her out of my Thoughts.
I have had two or three Engagements since this, with other _Apparitions_ of the same Sex, and I find they are all alike, they are willing enough to be thought Angels, but the Word Devil does not go down at all with them: But 'tis all one, whenever we see an _Apparition_, it is so natural to say we have seen the Devil, that there's no prevailing with Mankind to talk any other Language. A Gentleman of my Acquaintance, the other Day, that had courted a Lady a long time, had the Misfortune to come a little suddenly upon her, when she did not expect him, and found her in such a Rage at some of her Servants, that it quite disorder'd her, especially a Footman; the Fellow had done something that was indeed provoking, but not sufficient to put her into such a Passion, and so out of her self; nor was she able to restrain her self when she saw her Lover come in, but damn'd the Fellow, and rag'd like a Fury at him.
My Friend did his best to compose her, and begg'd the Fellow's Pardon of her, but it would not do; nay, the poor Fellow made all the Submissions that could be expected, but 'twas the same thing: And so the Gentleman, not caring to engage himself farther than became him, withdrew, and came no more at her for three Days, in all which time she was hardly cool.
The next Day my Friend came to me, and talking of it in Confidence to me, I am afraid, _says he_, I am going to marry a She _Devil_, and so told me the Story; I took no Notice to him, but finding out his Mistress, and taking proper Measures, with some of my particular Skill, I soon found out that it was really so, that she was a mere _Apparition_; and had it not been for that accidental Disorder of her Passions, which discover'd her Inside, she might indeed have cheated any Man, for she was a lovely Devil as ever was seen; she talk'd like an Angel, sung like a Syren, did every thing, and said every thing that was taking and charming: But what then? it was all Apparition, for she was a mere _Devil_. It is true, my Friend marry'd her, and tho' she was a _Devil_ without doubt, yet either she behav'd so well, or he was so good, I never could hear him find Fault with her.
These are particular Instances; but alas! I could run you a Length beyond all those Examples, and give you such a List of Devils among the gay Things of the Town, that would fright you to think of; and you would presently conclude, with me, that all the perfect Beauties are Devils, mere Apparitions; but Time and Paper fails, so we must only leave the Men the Caution, let them venture at their Peril. I return to the Subject.
We have a great many charming _Apparitions_ of like kind go daily about the World in compleat Masquerade, and, tho' we must not say so, they are in themselves mere _Devils_, wicked dangerous murthering Devils, that kill various Ways, some, Basilisk-like, with their Eyes; some Syren-like, with their Tongues; all _Murtherers_, even from the _Beginning_: It is true, 'tis pity these pretty _Apparitions_ should be Devils, and be so mischievous as they are; but since it is so, I can do no less than to advertise you of it, that you may shun the Devil in whatever Shape you meet with him.
Again, there are some half Devils, they say, like the _Sagittarii_, half Man, half Horse, or rather like the _Satyr_, who, _they say_, is half Devil, half Man; or, like my Lord Bishop, who, _they say_, was half-headed; whether they mean half-witted or no, I do not find Authors agreed about it: But if they had voted him such, it had been as kind a thing as any they cou'd say of him, because it would have clear'd him from the Scandal of being a Devil, or half a Devil, for we don't find the Devil makes any Alliance with F----ls.
Then as to merry Devils, there's my Master _G------_, he may indeed have the Devil in him, but it must be said, to the Credit of Possession in general, that Satan would have scorn'd to have entred into a Soul so narrow that there was not room to hold him, or to take up with so discording a Creature, so abject, so scoundrel, as never made a Figure among Mankind greater than that of a Thief, a _Moroder_, moulded up into Quality, and a Raparee dress'd up _a-la-Masque_, with a _Robe_ and a _Coronet_.
Some little Dog-kennel Devil may indeed take up his Quarters in or near him, and so run into and out of him as his Drum beats a Call; but to him that was born a _Devil_, Satan, that never acts to no purpose, cou'd not think him worth being possess'd by any thing better than a Devil of a dirty Quality; that is to say, a Spirit too mean to wear the Name of _Devil_, without some Badge or Addition of Infamy and Meanness to distinguish it by.
Thus what _Devil_ of Quality would be confin'd to a _P--------n_, who inheriting all the Pride and Insolence of his Ancestors, without one of their good Qualities; the Bully, the _Billingsgate_, and all the hereditary ill Language of his Family, without an Ounce of their Courage; that has been rescued five or six times from the Scandal of a Coward, by the Bravery, and at the Hazard of Friends, and never fail'd to be ungrateful; that if ever he committed a Murther, did it in cold Blood, because no body could prove he ever had any hot; who possess'd with a Poltroon _Devil_, was always wickeder in the Dark, than he durst be by Day-light; and who, after innumerable passive Sufferings, has been turned out of human Society, because he could not be kick'd or cuff'd either into good Manners or good Humour.
To say this was a _Devil_, an Apparition, or even a half _Devil_, would be unkind to _Satan_ himself, since tho' he (the _Devil_) has so many Millions of inferior _Devils_ under his Command, not one cou'd be found base enough to match him, nor one _Devil_ found but what would think himself dishonour'd to be employ'd about him.
Some merry good-for-nothing _Devils_ we have indeed, which we might, if we had room, speak of at large, and divert you too with the Relation, such as my Lady _Hatt's Devil_ in _Essex_, who upon laying a Joiner's Mallet in the Window of a certain Chamber, would come very orderly and knock with it all Night upon the Window, or against the Wainscot, and disturb the Neighbourhood, and then go away in the Morning, as well satisfied as may be; whereas if the Mallet was not left, he would think himself affronted, and be as unsufferable and terrifying as possible, breaking the Windows, splitting the Wainscot, committing all the Disorders, and doing all the Damage that he was able to the House, and to the Goods in it. And again, such as the Druming _Devil_ in the Well at _Oundle_ in _Northamptonshire_, and such like.
A great many antick _Devils_ have been seen also, who seem'd to have little or nothing to do, but only to assure us that they can appear if they please, and that there is a Reality in the thing call'd Apparition.
As to Shadows of _Devils_, and imaginary Appearances, such as appear, and yet are invisible at the same time, I had thought to have bestow'd a Chapter upon them by themselves, but it may be as much to the Purpose to let them alone, as to meddle with them; 'tis said our old Friend _Luther_ used to be exceedingly troubled with such invisible Apparitions, and he tells us much of them, in what they call his Table-talk; but with Master _Luther_'s leave, tho' the _Devil_ passes for a very great Lyar, I could swallow many things of his own proper making, as soon as some of those I find in a Book that goes by his Name, particularly the Story of the Devil in a Basket, the Child flying out of the Cradle, and the like.
In a word, the walking _Devils_ that we have generally among us, are of the female Sex; whether it be that the _Devil_ finds less Difficulty to manage them, or that he lives quieter with them, or that they are fitter for his Business than the Men, I shall not now enter into a Dispute about that; perhaps he goes better disguis'd in the fair Sex than otherwise; Antiquity gives us many Histories of She-Devils, such as we can very seldom match for Wickedness among the Men; such now as in the Text, _Lot_'s Daughters, _Joseph_'s Mistress, _Sampson_'s _Dalilah_, _Herod_'s _Herodias_, these were certainly _Devils_, or play'd the _Devil_ sufficiently in their Turn; one Male Apparition indeed the Scripture furnishes you with, and that is _Judas_; for his Master says expresly of him, _One of you is a Devil_; not has the _Devil_, or is possess'd of the DEVIL; but really is a DEVIL, or is a real DEVIL.
How happy is it, that this great Secret comes thus to be discover'd to mankind? Certainly the World has gone on in Ignorance a long time, and at a strange rate, that we should have so many _Devils_ continually walking about among us in humane Shape, and we know it not.
Philosophers tell us that there is a World of Spirits, and many learned Pieces of Guess-work they make at it, representing the World to be so near us, that the Air, as they describe it, must be full of Dragons and _Devils_, enough to fright our Imaginations with the very Thoughts of them; and if they say true, 'tis our great Felicity that we cannot see any farther into it than we do, which if we could, would appear as frightful as Hell itself; but none of those Sages ever told us, till now, that half the People who converse with us are _Apparitions_, especially of the Women; and among them especially this valuable Part, the Woman of Figure, the fair, the beautiful, or patch'd and painted.
This unusual Phænomenon has been seen but a little while, and but a little way, and the general Part of Mankind cannot come into the same Notions about it; nay, perhaps they will all think it strange; but be it as strange as it will, the Nature of the Thing confirms it, this lower Sphere is full of _Devils_; and some of both Sexes have given strange Testimonies of the Reality of their pre-existent _Devilism_ for many Ages past, tho' I think it never came to that Height as it has now.
It is true, in former times Satan dealt much in old Women, and those, as I have observ'd already, very ugly, _Ugly as a Witch_, _Black as a Witch_, _I look like a Witch_, all proverbial Speeches, and which testify'd what Tools it was Satan generally work'd with; and these old Spectres, they tell us, us'd to ride thro' the Air in the Night, and upon Broomsticks too, all mighty homely Doings; some say they us'd to go to visit their Grand Seignior the _Devil_, in those Nocturnal Perambulations: But be that as it will, 'tis certain the _Devil_ has chang'd hands, and that now he walks about the World cloth'd in Beauty, cover'd with the Charms of the Lovely, and he fails not to disguise himself effectually by it, for who would think a beautiful Lady could be a Masque to the Devil? and that a fine Face, a divine Shape, a heavenly Aspect, should bring the _Devil_ in her Company, nay, should be herself an _Apparition_, a mere DEVIL.
The Enquiry is indeed worth our while, and therefore I hope all the enamour'd Beaus and Boys, all the Beauty-hunters and Fortune-hunters, will take heed, for I suppose if they get the _Devil_, they will not complain for want of a Fortune; and there's Danger enough, I assure you, for the World is full of Apparitions, _non rosa sine spinis_; not a Beauty without a _Devil_, the old Women Spectres, and the young Women Apparitions; the ugly ones Witches, and the handsome ones _Devils_; Lord ha' Mercy, and a [Illustration: Cross] may be Set on the Man's Door that goes a courting.
CHAP. VIII.
_Of the Cloven-Foot walking about the World without the_ Devil, (viz.) _of Witches making Bargains for the_ Devil, _and particularly of selling the Soul to the_ Devil.
I have dwelt long upon the _Devil_ in Masque as he goes about the World incog. and especially without his Cloven-Foot, and have touched upon some of his Disguises in the Management of his Interest in the World; I must say some of his Disguises only, for who can give a full account of all his Tricks and Arts in so narrow a Compass as I am prescrib'd to?
But as I said, that every _Devil_ has not a Cloven-Foot, so I must add now for the present Purpose, that every Cloven-Foot is not the Devil.
Not but that wherever I should meet the Cloven-Hoof, I should expect that the _Devil_ was not far off, and should be apt to raise the Posse against him, to apprehend him; yet it may happen otherwise, that's certain; every Coin has its Counterfeit, every Art its Pretender, every Whore her Admirer, every Error its Patron, and every Day has its DEVIL.
I have had some thought of making a full and compleat Discovery here of that great Doubt which has so long puzzl'd the World, namely, whether there is any such Thing, as secret making Bargains with the Devil, and the first positive Assurance I can give you in the Case, is, that if there is not, 'tis not his Fault, 'tis not for want of his Endeavour, 'tis plain, if you will pardon me for taking so mean a Step, as that of quoting Scripture; I say, 'tis evident he would fain have made a Contract with our Saviour, and he bid boldly (_give him his due_) namely, _all the Kingdoms of the World for one bend of his Knee_: Impudent Seraph! To think thy Lord should pay thee Homage! How many would agree with him here for a less Price! They say, _Oliver Cromwell_ struck a Bargain with him, and that he gave _Oliver_ the Protectorship, but would not let him call himself King, which stuck so close to that _Furioso_, that the Mortification Spread into his Soul, and 'tis said, he dy'd of a Gangreen in the Spleen. But take Notice and do _Oliver_ Justice; I do not vouch the Story, neither does the Bishop say one Word of it.
Fame us'd to say, that the old famous Duke of _Luxemburg_ made a Magic compact of this Kind; nay, I have heard many an (old Woman) Officer of the Troops, who never car'd to see his Face, declare that he carry'd the Devil at his Back. I remember a certain Author of a News Paper in _London_ was once taken up, and they say, it cost him 50_l._ for printing in his News, that _Luxemburg_ was _Humpback'd_. Now if I have resolv'd the Difficulty, namely, that he was not hump'd, only carry'd the _Devil_ at his Back; I think the poor Man should have his 50_l._ again, or I should have it for the Discovery.
I confess, I do not well understand this compacting with such a Fellow as can neither write nor read; nor do I know who is the Scrivener between them, or how the Indenture can be executed; but that which is worse than all the rest is, that in _the first Place_, the _Devil_ never keeps Articles; he will contract perhaps, and they say he is mighty forward to make Conditions; but who shall bind him to the Performance, and where is the Penalty if he fails? if we agree with him, he will be apt enough to claim his Bargain and demand Payment; nay, perhaps before it is due; but who shall make him stand to his.
Besides, he is a Knave in his Dealing, for he really promises what he cannot perform; witness his impudent Proposal to our Lord mentioned above. _All these Kingdoms will I give_ thee! _Lying Spirit!_ Why they were none of thine to give, no not one of them; for the Earth is the Lords and the kingdoms thereof, nor were they in his Power any more than in his Right: So (I have heard that) some poor dismal Creatures have sold themselves to the Devil for a Sum of Money, for so much Cash, and yet even in that Case, when the Day of Payment came, I never heard that he brought the Money or paid the Purchase, so that he is a Scoundrel in his Treaties, for you shall trust for your Bargain, but not be able to get your Money; and yet for your Part, he comes for you to an Hour: _Of which by it self_.
In a Word, let me caution you all, when you trade with the Devil, either get the Price or quit the Bargain; the _Devil_ is a cunning Shaver, he will wriggle himself out of the Performance on his Side if possible, and yet expect you should be punctual on your Side. They tell you of a poor Fellow in _Herefordshire_, that offer'd to sell his Soul to him for a Cow, and though the _Devil_ promised, and as they say, sign'd the Writings, yet the poor Countryman could never get the Cow of him, but still as he brought a Cow to him, some body or other came and challeng'd it, proving that it was lost or stolen from them; so that the Man got nothing but the Name of a Cow-stealer, and was at last carried to _Hereford_ Goal, and condemn'd to be hang'd for stealing two Cows, one after the other: The wicked Fellow was then in the greatest Distress imaginable, he summon'd his _Devil_ to help him out, but he failed him, as the _Devil_ always will; he really had not stolen the Cows, but they were found in his Possession, and he could give no Account how he came by them; at last he was driven to confess the Truth, told the horrid Bargain he had made, and how the _Devil_ often promis'd him a Cow, but never gave him one, except that several Times in the Morning early he found a Cow put into his Yard, but it always prov'd to belong to some of his Neighbours: Whether the Man was hang'd or no, the Story does not relate; but this Part is to my Purpose, that they that make Bargains with the _Devil_, ought to make him give Security for the Performance of Covenants, and who the Devil would get to be bound for him, I can't tell, they must look to that who make the Bargain: Besides, if he had not had a Mind to cheat or baffle the poor Man, what need he have taken a Cow so near home? if he had such and such Powers as we talk of, and as Fancy and Fable furnish for him, could not he have carried a Cow in the Air upon a Broom-stick, as well as an old Woman? Could he not have stole a Cow for him in _Lincolnshire_, and set it down in _Herefordshire_, and so have performed his Bargain, saved his Credit, and kept the poor Man out of Trouble? so that if the Story is True, as I really believe it is, either it is not the Devil that makes those Bargains, or the Devil has not such Power as we bestow on him, except on Special Occasions he gets a Permit, and is bid go, as in the Case of _Job_, the _Gadaren Hogs_, and the like.
We have another Example of a Man's selling himself to the _Devil_, that is very remarkable, and that is in the Bible too, and even in that, I do not find, what the _Devil_ did for him, in Payment of the Purchase Price. The Person selling was _Ahab_, of whom the Text says expresly, _there was none like_ him, _who did sell himself to work Wickedness in the Sight of the_ LORD, 1 _Kings_ xxi. 20, and the 25. I think it might have been rendred, if not translated _in Spight of the Lord_, or _in Defiance of God_; for certainly that's the Meaning of it; and now allowing me to preach a little upon this Text, my Sermon shall be very short. _Ahab_ sold himself, who did he sell himself to? I answer that Question by a Question; who would buy him? who, _as we say_, would give any thing for him? and the Answer to that is plain also, you may judge of the Purchaser by the Work he was to do; he that buys a Slave in the Market, buys him to work for him, and to do such Business as he has for him to do: _Ahab_ was bought to work wickedness, and who would buy him for that but the _Devil_?
I think there's no room to doubt but _Ahab_ sold himself to the Devil; the Text is plain that he sold himself, and the Work he was sold to do points out the Master that bought him; what Price he agreed with the _Devil_ for, that indeed the Text is silent in, so we may let it alone, nor is it much to our Purpose, unless it be to enquire whether the _Devil_ stood to his Bargain or not, and whether he paid the Money according to Agreement, or cheated him as he did the Farmer at _Hereford_.
This buying and selling between the _Devil_ and us, is, I must confess, an odd kind of Stock-jobbing, and indeed the _Devil_ may be said to sell the _Bear-skin_, whatever he buys; but the strangest Part is when he comes to demand the transfer; for as I hinted before, whether he Performs or no, he expects his Bargain to a Tittle; there is indeed some Difficulty in resolving how and in what Manner Payment is made; the Stories we meet with in our Chimney-Corner Histories, and which are so many Ways made Use of to make the _Devil_ frightful to us and our Heirs for ever, are generally so foolish and ridiculous, as, if true or not true, they have nothing Material in them, are of no Signification, or else so impossible in their Nature, that they make no Impression upon any body above twelve Years old and under seventy; or else are so tragical that Antiquity has fabled them down to our Taste, that we might be able to hear them and repeat them with less Horror than is due to them.
This Variety has taken off our Relish of the Thing in general, and made the Trade of Soul-selling, like our late more eminent Bubbles, be taken to be a Cheat and to have little in it.
However, to speak a little more gravely to it, I cannot say but that since, by the two eminent Instances of it above in _Ahab_, and in Christ himself, the Fact is evidently ascertain'd; and that the Devil has attempted to make such a Bargain on one, and actually did make it with the other. The Possibility of it is not to be disputed; but then I must explain the Manner of it a little, and bring it down, nearer to our Understanding, that it may be more intelligible than it is; for as for this selling the Soul, and making a Bargain to give the _Devil_ Possession by Livery and Seisin on the Day appointed, that I cannot come into by any Means; no nor into the other Part, namely, of the Devil coming to claim his Bargain, and to demand the Soul according to Agreement, and upon Default of a fair Delivery, taking it away by Violence _Case and all_, of which we have many historical Relations pretty current among us; some of which, _for ought I know_, we might have hop'd had been true, if we had not been sure they were false, and others we had Reason to fear were false, because it was impossible they should be true.
The Bargains of this Kind, according to the best Accounts we have of them, used to consist of two main Articles, according to the ordinary Stipulations in all Covenants; namely,
1. Something to be perform'd on the Devil's Part, buying.
2. Something to be performed on the Man's Part, selling.
1. The _Devil_'s Part: This was generally some poor Trifle, for the Devil generally bought good Penny-worths, and oftentimes like a compleat Sharper, agreed to give what he was not able to procure; that is to say, would bargain for a Price he could not pay, as in the Case of the _Hereford_ Man and the Cow; for Example, 1. _Long Life_: This tho' the deluded Chapman has often had folly enough to contract for, the Devil never had Power to make good; and we have a famous Story, how true I know not, of a Wretch that sold himself to the DEVIL on Condition he, _Satan_, should assure him (1.) That he should never want Victuals; (2.) That he should never be a cold; (3.) That he should always come to him when he call'd him; and (4.) That he should let him live one and twenty Years, and then Satan was at Liberty to have him; that is, I suppose, to take him wherever he could find him.
It seems, the Fellow's desire to be assur'd of 21 Years Life, was chiefly, that during that Time, he might be as wicked as he would, and should yet be sure not to be hang'd, nay, to be free from all Punishment; upon this Foot 'tis said he commenc'd Rogue, and committed a great many Robberies and other villanous Things; now it seems the _Devil_ was pretty true to his Bargain in several of those things; particularly, that two or three times when the Fellow was taken up for petty Crimes, and call'd for his old Friend, he came and frighted the Constables so, that they let the Offender get away from them: But at Length having done some capital Crime, a Set of Constables, or such like Officers, seiz'd upon him, who were not to be frighted with the _Devil_, in what Shape soever he appear'd; so that they carry'd him off, and he was committed to _Newgate_ or some other Prison as effectual.
Nor could Satan with all his Skill unlock his Fetters, much less the Prison Doors; But he was try'd, convicted, and executed. The Fellow in his Extremity, _they say_, expostulated with the _Devil_ for his Bargain, the Term of 21 Years it seems not being expir'd. But the _Devil_, it is said, shuffl'd with him, told him a good while, he would get him out, bid him have Patience and stay a little, and thus led him on, till he came as it were within Sight of the Gallows, that is to say, within a Day or two of his Execution; when the _Devil_ cavill'd upon his Bargain, told him, he agreed to let him live 21 Years, and he had not hindred him, but that he did not Covenant to cause him to live that Time; that there was a great deal of Difference between doing and suffering; that he was to suffer him to live, and that he did; but he could not make him live when he had brought himself to the Gallows.
Whether this Story were true or not, for you must not expect we Historians should answer for the Discourse between the _Devil_ and his Chaps, because we were not privy to the Bargain: I say, whether it was true or not, the Inference is to our Purpose several Ways.
1. It confirms what I have said of the Knavery of the _Devil_ in his Dealings, and that when he has Stock-jobb'd with us on the best Conditions he can get, he very seldom performs his Bargain.
2. It confirms what I have likewise said, that the _Devil_'s Power is limited; with this Addition, that he not only cannot destroy the Life of Man, but that he cannot preserve it; _in short_, he can neither prevent or bring on our Destruction.
I may be allow'd, I hope, for the Sake of the present Discourse, to suppose that the _Devil_ would have been so just to this wicked, tho' foolish Creature, as to have sav'd him from the Gallows if he could; but it seems, he at last acknowledg'd that it was not in his Power; nay, he could not keep him from being taken and carry'd to Prison, after he was gotten into the Hands of a bold Fellow or two, that were not to be fear'd with his Bluster, as some foolish Creatures had been before.
And how simple, how weak, how unlike any Thing of an Angelick Nature, was it to attempt to save the poor Wretch, only by little Noises and sham Appearances, putting out the Candles, rushing and josteling in the Dark, _and the like_! If the _Devil_ was that mighty Seraph, which we have heard of, if he is a God of this World, a Prince of the Air, a Spirit able to destroy Cities and make Havock in the World; if he can raise Tempests and Storms, throw Fire about the World, and do wonderful Things, as an unchain'd _Devil_ no Doubt could do; what need all this Frippery? and what need he try so many ridiculous Ways, by the Emptiness, nay, the silly nonsensical Manner, of which, he shews, that he is able to do no better, and that his Power is extinguish'd? _In a Word_, he would certainly act otherwise, if he could. _Sed caret pedibus_, he wants Power.
How weak a thing is it then, for any Man to expect Performance from the _Devil_? If he has not Power to do Mischief, which is his Element, his very Nature, and on many Accounts, is the very sum of his Desires; How should he have Power to do Good? how Power to deliver from Danger or from Death? which Deliverance would be in itself a Good, and we know it is not in his Nature to do Good to or for any Man?
In a Word, the _Devil_ is strangely impudent, to think that any Man should depend upon him for the Performance of an Agreement of any Kind whatever, when he knows himself, that he is not able, if he was honest enough, to be as good as his Word.
Come we next to his expecting our Performance to him; tho' he is not so just to us, yet, it seems, he never fails to come and demand Payment of us at the very Day appointed: He was but a weak Trader in Things of this Nature, who having sold his Soul to the _Devil_, so our old Women's Tales call the Thing, and when the _Devil_ came to demand his Bargain, put it off as a Thing of no Force, for that it was done so long ago, he thought he (_the Devil_) had forgot it. It was a better Answer, which they tell us, a _Lutheran_ Divine gave the _Devil_ in the Name of a poor Wretch, who had sold himself to the _Devil_, and who was in a terrible Fright about his coming for his Bargain, as he might well be indeed, if the _Devil_ has such a Power, as really to come and take it by Force. _The Story (if you can bear a serious one) is this._
The Man was in great Horror of Mind, and the Family fear'd he would destroy himself; at length they sent for a _Lutheran_ Minister to talk with him, and who after some Labour with him, got out the Truth (_viz._) that he had sold himself to the _Devil_, and that the Time was almost expir'd, when he expected the _Devil_ would come and fetch him away, and he was sure he would not fail coming to the Time to a Minute; the Minister first endeavour'd to convince him of the horrid Crime, and to bring him to a true Penitence for that Part; and having as he thought made him a sincere Penitent, he then began to encourage him, and particularly, desir'd of him, that when the Time was come, that the _Devil_ should fetch him away, he, the Minister, should be in the House with him; accordingly, to make the Story short, the Time came, the _Devil_ came, and the Minister was present, when the _Devil_ came; what Shape he was in, the Story does not say; the Man said he saw him, and cry'd out; the Minister could not see him, but the Man affirming he was in the Room, the Minister said aloud, _in the Name of the_ living God, _Satan, what comest thou here for?_ The _Devil_ answer'd, _I come for my own_; the Minister answer'd, _He is not thy own, for Jesus Christ has redeem'd him, and in his Name I charge thee to avoid and touch him not_; at which, says the Story, the _Devil_ gave a furious Stamp (with his Cloven-Foot I suppose) and went away, and was never known to molest him afterward.
Another Story, tho' it be in it self a long one, I shall abridge (for your reading with the less Uneasiness) as follows.
A young Gentleman of _----berg_, in the Elector of _Brandenburgh_'s (now the King of _Prussia_'s) Dominions, being deeply in Love with a beautiful Lady, but something above his Fortune, and whom he could by no Means bring to love him again, apply'd himself to an _old thing_ call'd _a Witch_, for her Assistance, and promised her great Things, if she could bring the Lady to love him, or any how compass her, so as he might have his Will of her; nay, at last he told her he would give up his Soul to her, if she would answer his Desire.
The old Hag, it seems, having had some of his Money, had very honestly tried what she could do, but all to no Purpose, the Lady would not comply; but when he offer'd such a great Price, she told him, she would consider farther against such a Time, and so appointed him the next Evening.
At the Time appointed he comes, and the Witch made a long Speech to him upon the Nicety of the Affair; I suppose to prepare him not to be surpriz'd at what was to come; for she suppos'd he was not so very desperately bent as he appear'd to be; she told him it was a Thing of very great Difficulty; but as he had made such a great Offer, of _selling his Soul for it_, she had an Acquaintance in the House, who was better skill'd (than she was) in such particular Things, and would treat with him farther, and she doubted not but that both together they might answer his End. The Fellow it seems was still of the same Mind, and told her, he car'd not what he pawn'd or sold, if he could but obtain the Lady; well, says the old Hag, sit still a while, and with that she withdraws.
By and by she comes in again with a Question in her Mouth; pray, says she, do you seek this Lady for a Wife, or for a Mistress, would you marry her, or would you only lie with her? The young Man told her _no, no_, he did not expect she would lie with him, therefore he would be satisfied to marry her, but asks her the Reason of the Question; why truly, says the old Hag, my Reason is very Weighty; for if you would have her for your Wife, I doubt, we can do you no Service; but if you have a Mind to lie with her, the Person, I speak of, will undertake it.
The Man was surpriz'd at that, only he objected that this was a transient or short Felicity, and that he should perhaps have her no more; the old Hag bid him not fear, but that if she once yielded to be his Whore, he might have her as often as he pleased; upon this he consents, for he was stark mad for the Lady; He having consented, she told him then, he should follow her, but told him, whoever he saw, he must speak to no body but her, till she gave him leave, and that he should not be surpriz'd, whatever happen'd, for no hurt should befall him; all which he agreed to, and the old Woman going out he follow'd her.
Being upon this led into another Room, where there was but very little Light, yet enough to let him see that there was no body in it but himself and the Woman, he was desired to sit down in a Chair next to a Table, and the old Woman clapping the Door too after her, he asked her why she shut the Door, and where was the Person she told him of? At which she answer'd _there he is_, pointing to a Chair at a little Distance: The young Gentleman turning his Head, saw a grave Kind of a Man sitting in an Elbow-Chair, tho' he said, he could have sworn there was no body in the Chair when the old Woman shut the Door; however, having promis'd not to speak to any body but the old Woman, he said not a Word.
By and by the Woman making abundance of strange Gestures and Motions, and mumbling over several Things which he could not understand, on a suddain a large Wicker-Chair, which stood by the Chimney, removes to the other End of the Table which he sat by, but there was no body in the Chair; in about two Minutes after that the Chair remov'd, there appear'd a Person sitting in that too, who, the Room being, as is said, almost dark, could not be so distinguish'd by the Eye, as to see his Countenance.
After some while, the first Man, and the Chair he sat in, mov'd, as if they had been one Body, to the Table also; and the old Woman and the two Men seem'd to talk together, but the young Man could not understand any Thing they said; after some Time the old Witch turn'd to the young Gentleman, told him his Request was granted, but not for Marriage, but the Lady should love and receive him.
The Witch then gave him a Stick dipt in Tar at both Ends, and bid him hold it to a Candle, which he did, and instead of burning like a Stick it burnt out like a Torch; then she bid him break it off in the Middle, and light the other End; he did that too, and all the Room seem'd to be in a light Flame; then she said, deliver one Piece here, pointing to one only of the Persons, so he gave the first Fire-stick to the first Man or _Apparition_; now says she, deliver the other here, so he gave the other Piece to the other Apparition, at which they both rose up and spoke to him Words, which he said he understood not, and could not repeat, and immediately vanish'd with the Fire-sticks and all, leaving the Room full of Smoke: I do not remember that the Story says any Thing of Brimstone, or the Smell of it, but it says the Door continu'd fast lock'd, and no Body was left in the Room but the young Gentleman and the Witch.
Now the Ceremony being over, he ask'd the Witch if the Business was done? She said _yes_. Well, but says he, have I sold my Soul to the Devil? Yes, says she, you have, and you gave him Possession, when you deliver'd the two Fire-sticks to him. _To him!_ says he, why, was that the _Devil_? Yes, says the old Hag. At which the young Man was in a terrible Fright for a while, but it went off again.
And what's next, says he, when shall I see the Lady for whose sake I have done all this? You shall know that presently, said she, and opening the Door, in the next Room she presents him with a most beautiful Lady, but had charg'd him not to speak a Word to her: She was exactly dress'd like, and he presently knew her to be the Lady he desir'd; upon which he flew to her and clasped her in his Arms, but that Moment he had her fast, as he thought, in his Arms, she vanish'd out of his sight.
Finding himself thus disappointed, he upbraids the old Woman with betraying him, and flew out with ill Language at her, in a great Rage; the _Devil_ often deluded him thus, after this, with Shews and Appearances, but still no Performance; after a while he gets an Opportunity to speak with the Lady her self in Reality, but she was as positive in her Denial as ever, and even took away all Hopes of his ever obtaining her, which put him into Despair; for now he thought he had given himself up to the _Devil_ for nothing, and this brought him to himself; so that he made a penitent Confession of his Crime to some Friends, who took great Care of him, and encourag'd him, and at last furnish'd him with such an Answer as put the _Devil_ into a Fright, when he came for the Bargain.
For Satan, it seems, _as the Story says_, had the Impudence to demand his Agreement, notwithstanding he had fail'd in the Performance on his Part; what the Answer was I do not pretend to have seen, but it seems it was something like what is mention'd above, (_viz._) that he was in better Hands, and that he durst not touch him.
I have heard of another Person that had actually sign'd a Contract with the _Devil_; and upon a Fast kept by some Protestant or Christian Divines, while they were praying for the poor Man, the Devil was oblig'd to come and throw the Contract in at the Window.
But I vouch none of these Stories, there may be much in them and much Use made of them, even whether exactly such in Fact, as they are related, or no; the best Use I can make of them, is this, if any wicked desperate Wretches have made Bargain and Sale with _Satan_, their only Way is to repent, if they know how, and that before he comes to claim them; then batter him with his own Guns; play Religion against Devilism, and perhaps they may drive the _Devil_ out of their Reach; at least he will not come at them, which is as well.
On the other Hand, how many Stories have we handed about of the Devil's really coming with a terrible Appearance at the Time appointed, and powerfully or by violence carrying away those, that have given themselves thus up to him; nay, and sometimes a Piece of the House along with them, as in the famous Instance of _Sudbury_, _Anno_ 1662. It seems he comes with Rage and Fury upon such Occasions, pretending he only comes to take his own, or as if he had leave given him to come and take his Goods, _as we say_, where he could find them, and would strike a Terror into all that should oppose him.
The greatest Part of the Terror we are usually in upon this Occasion, is from a Supposition, that when this _Hell-Fire Contract_ is once made, God allows the _Devil_ to come and take the wicked Creature, how and in what manner he thinks fit, as being given up to him by his own Act and Deed; but in my Opinion there's no Divinity at all in that; for as in our Law we punish a _Felo de se_, or Self-murtherer, because, _as the Law suggests_, he had no Right to dismiss his own Life; that he being a Subject of the Common-wealth, the Government claims the _Ward_ or Custody of him, and so 'twas not Murther only, but Robbery, and is a Felony against the State, robbing the King of his Liege-Man, as _'tis justly call'd_; so neither has any Man a Right to dispose of his Soul, which belongs to his Maker in Property and in Right of Creation: The Man then having no Right to sell, Satan has no Right to buy, or at best he has made a Purchase without a Title, and consequently has no just Claim to the Possession.
It is therefore a Mistake to say, that when any of us have been so mad to make such a pretended Contract with the Devil, that God gives him leave to take it as his Due; _'tis no such thing_; the _Devil_ has bought, what you had no Right to sell, and therefore, as an unlawful Oath is to be repented of, and then broken; so your Business is to repent of the Crime, and then tell the _Devil_, you have better consider'd of it, and that you won't stand to your Bargain, for you had no Power to sell; and if he pretends to Violence after that, I am mistaken; I believe the _Devil_ knows better.
It is true, our old Mothers and Nurses have told us other Things, but they only told us what their Mothers and Nurses told them, and so the Tale has been handed down from one Generation of old Women to another; but we have no Vouchers for the Fact other than Oral Tradition, the Credit of which, I confess, goes but a very little Way with me; nor do I believe it one Jot the more for all the frightful Addenda which they generally join to the Tale, for it never wants a great Variety of that Kind.
Thus they tell us the Devil carried away Dr. _Faustus_ and took a Piece of the Wall of his Garden along with them: Thus at _Salisbury_ the _Devil_ as it is said, and publickly printed, carried away two Fellows that had given themselves up to him, and carried away the Roof of the House with them, _and the like_; all which I believe my Share of; besides, if these Stories were really true, they are all against the Devil's true Interest, _Satan_ must be a Fool, which is indeed what I never took him to be in the Main; this would be the Way not to encrease the Number of Desperadoes, who should thus put themselves into his Hand, but to make himself a Terror to them; and this is one of the most powerful Objections I have against the Thing, for the Devil, I say, is no Fool, that must be acknowledg'd; he knows his own Game, and generally plays it sure.
I might, before I quit this Point, seriously reflect here upon our _Beau mond_ (_viz._) the gay Part of Mankind, especially those of the Times we live in, who walk about in a Composure and Tranquillity inexpressible, and yet as we all know, must certainly have all sold themselves to the Devil, for the Power of acting the foolishest Things with the greater Applause; it is true, to be a Fool is the most pleasant Life in the World, if the Fool has but the particular Felicity, which few Fools want, (_viz._) to think themselves wise: The learned say, it is the Dignity and Perfection of Fools, that they never fail trusting themselves; they believe themselves sufficient and able for every Thing; and hence their want or waste of Brains is no Grievance to them, but they hug themselves in the Satiety of their own Wit; but to bring other People to have the same Notion of them, which they have of themselves, and to have their apish and ridiculous Conduct make the same Impression on the Minds of others, as it does on their own; this requires a general Infatuation, and must either be a Judgment from Heaven, or a Mist of Hell; nothing but the Devil can make all the Men of Brains applaud a Fool, and can any Man believe, that the Devil will do this for nothing? no, no, he will be well paid for it, and I know no other Way they have to compound with him, but this of Bargain and Sale.
'Tis the same thing with Rakes and Bullies, as 'tis with Fools and Beaus; and this brings me to the Subject of _buying_ and _selling_ it self, and to examine what is understood by it in the World, what People mean by such and such a Man selling himself to the Devil: I know the common Acceptation of it is, that they make some Capitulation for some Indulgence in Wickedness, on Conditions of Safety and Impunity, which the Devil promises them; tho' as I said above, he is a _Bite_ in that too, for he can't perform the Conditions; however, I say, he promises boldly, and they believe him, and for this Privilege in Wickedness, they consent, that he shall come and fetch them for his own, at such or such a Time.
This is the State of the Case in the general Acceptation of it; I do not say 'tis really so, nay 'tis even an Inconsistency in it self; for one would think, they need not capitulate with the Devil to be so, and so, superlatively wicked, and give him such a Price for it, seeing, unless we have a wrong Notion of him, he is naturally enclin'd, as well as avow'dly willing to have all Men be as superlatively wicked as possibly they can, and must necessarily be always ready to issue out his Licenses gratis, as far as his Authority will go in the Case; and therefore I do not see why the Wretches that deal with him, should article with him for a Price; but suppose, for Argument sake, that it is so, then the next Thing is, some capital Crime follows the Contract, and then the Wretch is forsaken, for the Devil cannot protect him, as he promised; so he is _Trust up_, and like _Coleman_ at the Gallows, he exclaims that _there is no Truth in_ Devils.
It may be true, however, that under the powerful Guard and Protection of the Devil, Men do sometimes go a great Way in Crime, and that perhaps farther in these our Days of boasted Morals than was known among our Fathers; the only Difference that I meet with between the Sons of _Belial_ in former Days, and those of our Ages, seems to be in the Devil's Management, not in theirs; the Sum of which amounts to this, that Satan seems to act with more Cunning, and they with less; for in the former Ages of Satan's Dominion, he had much Business upon his Hands, all his Art and Engines, and Engineers also, were kept fully employ'd, to wheedle, allure, betray and circumvent People, and draw them into Crimes, and they found him, as we may say, a full Employment; I doubt not, he was call'd the Tempter on that very Account; but the Case seems quite alter'd now, the Tables are turned; then the Devil tempted Men to sin, _But now, in short_, they tempt the Devil; Men push into Crimes before he pushes them; they out shoot him in his own Bow, out run him on his own Ground, and, as we say of some hot Spurs who ride Post, they whip the Post-Boy; in a Word, the Devil seems to have no Business now but to sit still and look on.
This, I must confess, seems to intimate some secret Compact between the Devil and them; but then it looks, not as is they had contracted with the Devil for leave to sin, but that the Devil had contracted with them, that they should sin so and so, up to such a Degree, and that without giving him the Trouble of daily Solicitation, private Management, and artful screwing up their Passions, their Affections and their most retir'd Faculties, as he was before oblig'd to do.
This also appears more agreeable to the Nature of the Thing; and as it is a most exquisite part of Satan's Cunning, so 'tis an undoubted Testimony of his Success; if it was not so, he could never bring his Kingdom to such a height of absolute Power as he has done; this also solves several Difficulties in the Affair of the World's present Way of sinning, which otherwise it would be very hard to understand; as particularly how some eminent Men of Quality among us, whose upper Rooms are not extraordinary well furnished in other Cases, yet are so very witty in their Wickedness, that they gather Admirers by hundreds and thousands; who, however heavy, lumpish, slow and backward, even by Nature, and in force of Constitution in better things, yet in their Race Devil-wards they are of a sudden grown nimble, light of Foot, and outrun all their Neighbours; Fellows that are as empty of Sense as Beggars are of Honesty, and as far from Brains as a Whore is of Modesty; on a sudden you shall find them dip into _Polemicks_, study _Michael Servetus_, _Socinus_, and the most learned of their Disciples; they shall reason against all Religion, as strongly as a Philosopher; blaspheme with such a Keenness of Wit, and satyrise God and Eternity, with such a Brightness of Fancy, as if the soul of a _Rochester_ or a _Hobbs_ was transmigrated into them; in a little length of Time more they banter Heaven, burlesque the Trinity, and jest with every sacred thing, and all so sharp, so ready, and so terribly witty, as if they were born Buffoons, and were singl'd out by Nature to be Champions for the Devil.
Whence can all this come? how is the Change wrought? who but the Devil can inject Wit in Spight of natural Dullness, create Brains, fill empty Heads, and supply the Vacuities in the Understanding? and will Satan do all this for nothing? _No, no_, he is too wise for that; I can never doubt a secret Compact, if there is such a thing in Nature; when I see a Head where there was no Head, Sense in _Posse_ where there is no Sense in _Esse_, Wit without Brains, and Sight without Eyes, 'tis all _Devil-Work_: Could _G----_ write Satyrs, that could neither read _Latin_ or spell _English_, like old Sir _William Read_, who wrote a Book of Opticks, which when it was printed, he did not know which was the right Side uppermost, and which the wrong? Could this eminent uninform'd Beau turn Atheist, and make wise Speeches against that Being, which made him a Fool, if the Devil had not sold him some Wit in exchange for that Trifle of his, call'd Soul? Had he not barter'd his Inside with that Son of the Morning, to have his Tongue tip'd with Blasphemy, he that knew nothing of a God, but only to swear by him, could never have set up for a Wit, to burlesque his Providence and ridicule his Government of the World.
But the Devil, as he is God of the World, has one particular Advantage, and that is, that when he has Work to do he very seldom wants Instruments; with this Circumstance also, that the Degeneracy of human Nature supplies him; as the late King of _France_ said of himself, when they told him what a Calamity was like to befal his Kingdom by the Famine: _Well_, says the King, then I shall not want Soldiers; _and it was so_, want of Bread supplied his Army with Recruits; so want of Grace supplied the _Devil_ with Reprobates for his Work.
Another Reason why, I think, the _Devil_ has made more Bargains of that Kind we speak of, in this Age, is, because he seems to have laid by his Cloven-Foot; all his old Emissaries, the Tools of his Trade, the Engineers which he employ'd in his Mines, such as Witches, Warlocks, Magicians, Conjurers, Astrologers, and all the hellish Train or Rabble of human _Devils_, who did his Drudgery in former Days, seem to be out of Work: I shall give you a fuller Enumeration of them in the next Chapter.
These, I say, seem to be laid aside; not that his Work is abated, or that his Business with Mankind, for their Delusion and Destruction is not the same, or perhaps more than ever; but the _Devil_ seems to have chang'd Hands; the Temper and Genius of Mankind is alter'd, and they are not to be taken by Fright and Horror, as they were then: The Figures of those Creatures was always dismal and horrible, and that is it which I mean by the _Cloven-Foot_; but now Wit, Beauty and gay Things, are the Sum of his Craft, he manages by the Soft and the Smooth, the Fair and the Artful, the Kind and the Cunning, not by the Frightful and Terrible, the Ugly and the Odious.
When the _Devil_ for weighty Dispatches, Wanted Messengers cunning and bold, He pass'd by the beautiful Faces, And pick'd 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 encreases in Growth; He now takes his Measures much wiser, And Trafficks 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.
CHAP. IX.
_Of the Tools the_ Devil _works with,_ (viz.) _Witches, Wizards or Warlocks, Conjurers, Magicians, Divines, Astrologers, Interpreters of Dreams, Tellers of Fortunes; and above all the rest, his particular modern Privy-Counsellors call'd Wits and Fools._
Tho', as I have advanc'd in the foregoing Chapter, the _Devil_ has very much chang'd Hands in his modern Management of the World, and that instead of the Rabble and long Train of Implements reckoned up above, he now walks about in Beaus, Beauties, Wits and Fools; yet I must not omit to tell you that he has not dismiss'd his former Regiments, but like Officers in Time of Peace, he keeps them all in half Pay, or like Extraordinary Men at the Custom-House, they are kept at a Call, to be ready to fill up Vacancies, or to employ when he is more than ordinarily full of Business; and therefore it may not be amiss to give some brief Account of them, from Satan's own Memoirs, their Performance being no inconsiderable Part of his History.
Nor will it be an unprofitable Digression to go back a little to the primitive Institution of all these _Orders_, for they are very antient, and I assure you, it requires great Knowledge of Antiquity, to give a Particular of their Original; I shall be very brief in it.
In order then to this Enquiry, you must know that it was not for want of Servants, that Satan took this Sort of People into his Pay; he had, as I have observ'd in its Place, Millions of diligent _Devils_ at his Call, whatever Business, and however difficult, he had for them to do; but as I have said above, that our modern People are forwarder than even the _Devil_ himself can desire them to be; and that they come before they are call'd, run before they are sent, and crowd themselves into his Service; so it seems it was in those early Days, when the World was one universal Monarchy under his Dominion, as I have at large describ'd in its Place.
In those Days the Wickedness of the World keeping a just Pace with their Ignorance, this inferior Sort of low priz'd Instruments did the _Devil_'s work mighty well; they drudg'd on in his Black-Art so laboriously, and with such good Success, that he found it was better to employ them as Tools to delude and draw in Mankind, than to send his invisible Implements about, and oblige them to take such Shapes and Dresses as were necessary upon every trifling Occasion; which, perhaps, was more Cost than Worship, more Pains than Pay.
Having then a Set of these Voluntiers in his Service, the true _Devil_ had nothing to do but to keep an exact Correspondence with them, and communicate some needful Powers to them, to make them be and do something extraordinary, and give them a Reputation in their Business; and these, in a Word, did a great Part of, nay almost all the _Devil_'s Business in the World.
To this Purpose gave he them Power, if we may believe old _Glanville_, _Baxter_, _Hicks_, and other learn'd Consultors of Oracles, to walk invisible, to fly in the Air, ride upon Broom-sticks, and other Wooden Gear, to interpret Dreams, answer Questions, betray Secrets, to talk (Gibberish) the universal Language, to raise Storms, sell Winds, bring up Spirits, disturb the Dead, and torment the Living, with a thousand other needful Tricks to amuse the World, keep themselves in Veneration, and carry on the _Devil_'s Empire in the World.
The first Nations among whom these infernal Practices were found, were the _Chaldeans_; and that I may do Justice in earnest, as well as in jest, it must be allow'd that the _Chaldeans_, or those of them so call'd, were not Conjurers or Magicians, only Philosophers and Studiers of Nature, wise, sober and studious Men at first, and we have an extraordinary Account of them; and if we may believe some of our best Writers of Fame, _Abraham_ was himself famous among them for such Magick, as Sir _Walter Raleigh_ expresses it, _Qui Contemplatione Creaturarum Cognovit Creatorem_.
Now granting this, it is all to my Purpose, namely, that the Devil drew these wise Men in, to search after more Knowledge than Nature could instruct them in; and the Knowledge of the true God being at that Time sunk very low, he debauch'd them all with Dreams, Apparitions, Conjurers, _&c._ till he ruin'd the just Notions they had, and made _Devils_ of them all, like himself.
The learned _Senensis_, speaking of this _Chaldean_ Kind of Learning, gives us an Account of five Sorts of them; you will pardon me for being so grave as to go this Length back.
1. _Chascedin_ or _Chaldeans_, properly so call'd, being Astronomers.
2. _Asaphim_ or _Magicians_, such was _Zoroastres_ and _Balaam_ the Son of _Beor_.
3. _Chatumim_ or Interpreters of Dreams and hard Speeches, Inchanters, _&c._
4. _Mecasphim_ or Witches, call'd at first Prophets, afterwards _Malefici_ or _Venefici_, Poisoners.
5. _Gazarim_ or _Auruspices_, and Diviners, such as divin'd by the Entrails of Beasts, the Liver in particular; mention'd in _Ezek._ or as others, call'd Augurs.
Now, as to all these, I suppose, I may do them no wrong, if I say, however justifiable they were in the Beginning, the _Devil_ got them all into his Service at last, and that brings me to my Text again, from which the rest was a Digression.
1. The _Chascedin_ or _Chaldean_ Astronomers turned Astrologers, Fortune-Tellers, Calculators of Nativities, and vile Deluders of the People, as if the Wisdom of the holy God was in them, as _Nebuchadnezzar_ said of _Daniel_ on that very Account.
2. The _Asaphim_ or Magi, or Magicians; _Sixtus Senensis_ says, they were such as wrought by Covenants with Devils, but turn'd to it from their Wisdom, which was to study the practical Part of Natural Philosophy, working admirable Effects by the mutual Application of Natural Causes.
3. The _Chartumim_ from being Reasoners or Disputers upon difficult Points in Philosophy, became Enchanters and Conjurers. So,
4. The _Mecasphim_ or Prophets, they turn'd to be Sorcerers, Raisers of Spirits, such as wounded by an evil Eye, and by bitter Curses, and were afterwards fam'd for having familiar Converse with the _Devil_, and were called Witches.
5. The _Gazarim_, from the bare observing of the good and bad Omens, by the Entrails of Beasts, flying of Birds, _&c._ were turn'd to Sacrists or Priests of the Heathen Idols and Sacrificers.
Thus, I say, first or last the _Devil_ engross'd all the Wise-Men of the East, for so they are call'd; made them all his own, and by them he work'd Wonders, that is, he fill'd the World with lying Wonders, as if wrought by these Men, when indeed it was all his own, from Beginning to the End, and set on Foot meerly to propagate Delusion, impose upon blinded and ignorant Men; the God of this World blinded their Minds, and they were led away by the Subtilty of the _Devil_, to say no worse of it, till they became _Devils_ themselves, as to Mankind; for they carried on the Devil's Work upon all Occasions, and the Race of them still continue in other Nations, and some of them among our selves, as we shall see presently.
The _Arabians_ follow'd the _Chaldeans_ in this Study, while it was kept within its due Bounds, and after them the _Egyptians_; and among the Latter we find that _Jannes_ and _Jambres_ were famous for their leading _Pharaoh_ by their pretended magic Performances, to reject the real Miracles of _Moses_; and History tells us of strange Pranks the Wise-Men, the Magicians and the Southsayers plaid to delude the People in the most early Ages of the World.
But, as I say, now, the _Devil_ has improv'd himself, so he did then; for the _Grecian_ and _Roman_ Heathen Rites coming on, they outdid all the Magicians and Southsayers, by establishing the _Devil_'s lying Oracles, which, as a Master-Piece of Hell, did the _Devil_ more Honour, and brought more Homage to him, than ever he had before, or could arrive to since.
Again, as by the setting up the Oracles, all the Magicians and Southsayers grew out of Credit; so at the ceasing of those Oracles, the _Devil_ was fain to go back to the old Game again, and take up with the Agency of Witches, Divinations, Inchantments and Conjurings, as I hinted before, answerable to the four Sorts mention'd in the Story of _Nebuchadnezzar_, (viz.) _Magicians_, _Astrologers_, the _Chaldeans_ and the _Southsayers_: How these began to be out of Request, I have mention'd already; but as the _Devil_ has not quite given them over, only laid them aside a little for the present, we may venture to ask what they were, and what Use he made of them when he did employ them.
The Truth is, I think, as it was a very mean Employment for any thing that wears a human Countenance to take up, so I must acknowledge, I think, 'twas a mean low priz'd Business for _Satan_ to take up with; below the very _Devil_; below his Dignity as an Angelic, tho' condemn'd Creature; below him even as a _Devil_; to go to talk to a parcel of ugly, deform'd, spiteful, malicious old Women; to give them Power to do Mischief, who never had a Will, after they enter'd into the State of _old Woman-Hood_, to do any thing else: Why the _Devil_ always chose the ugliest old Women he could find; whether _Wizardism_ made them ugly, that were not so before, and whether the Ugliness, as it was a Beauty in Witchcraft, did not encrease according to the meritorious Performance in the Black-Trade? These are all Questions of Moment to be decided, (if human Learning can arrive to so much Perfection) in Ages to come.
Some say the evil Eye and the wicked Look were Parts of the Enchantment, and that the Witches, when they were in the height of their Business, had a powerful Influence with both; that by looking upon any Person they could bewitch them, and make the _Devil_, _as the Scots express it_, ride through them booted and spurr'd; and that hence came that very significant Saying, _to look like a Witch_.
The strange Work which the _Devil_ has made in the World, by this Sort of his Agents call'd Witches, is such, and so extravagantly wild, that except our Hope that most of those Tales happen not to be true, I know not how any one could be easy to live near a Widow after she was five and fifty.
All the other Sorts of Emissaries which Satan employs, come short of these Ghosts; and Apparitions sometimes come and shew themselves, on particular Accounts, and some of those Particulars respect doing Justice, repairing Wrongs, preventing Mischief; sometimes in Matters very considerable, and on Things so necessary to publick Benefit, that we are tempted to believe they proceed from some vigilant Spirit who wishes us well; but on the other Hand, these Witches are never concern'd in any thing but Mischief; nay, if what they do portends good to one, it issues in hurt to many; the whole Tenour of their Life, their Design in general, is to do Mischief, and they are only employ'd in Mischief, and nothing else: How far they are furnish'd with Ability suitable to the horrid Will they are vested with, remains to be describ'd.
These Witches, 'tis said, are furnish'd with Power suitable to the Occasion that is before them, and particularly that which deserves to be consider'd, as Prediction, and foretelling Events, which I insist the Author of Witchcraft is not accomplish'd with himself, nor can he communicate it to any other: How then _Witches_ come to be able to foretel Things to come, which, 'tis said, the _Devil_ himself cannot know, and which, as I have shewn, 'tis evident he does not know himself, is yet to be determin'd; that Witches do foretel, is certain, from the Witch of _Endor_, who foretold Things to _Saul_, which he knew not before, namely, that he should be slain in Battle the next Day, which accordingly came to pass.
There are, however, and notwithstanding this particular Case, many Instances wherein the _Devil_ has not been able to foretel approaching Events, and that in Things of the utmost Consequence, and he has given certain foolish or false Answers in such Cases; the DEVIL's Priests, which were summon'd in by the Prophet _Elija_, to decide the Dispute between God and _Baal_, had the _Devil_ been able to have inform'd them of it, would certainly have receiv'd Notice from him, of what was intended against them by _Elija_; that is to say, that they would be all cut in pieces; for Satan was not such a Fool as not to know that _Baal_ was a Non-Entity, a Nothing, at best a dead Man, perish'd and rotting in his Grave; for _Baal_ was _Bell_ or _Belus_, an ancient King of the _Assyrian_ Monarchy, and he could no more answer by Fire to consume the Sacrifice, than he could raise himself from the dead.
But the Priests of _Baal_ were left of their Master to their just Fate, namely, to be a Sacrifice to the Fury of a deluded People; hence I infer his Inability, for it would have been very unkind and ungrateful in him not to have answer'd them, if he had been able. There is another Argument raised here most justly against the _Devil_, with Relation to his being under Restraint, and that of greater Eminence than we imagine, and it is drawn from this very Passage, thus; 'tis not to be doubted but that _Satan_, who has much of the Element put into his Hands, as Prince of the Air, had a Power, or was able potentially speaking, to have answer'd _Baal_'s Priests by Fire; Fire being in Vertue of his airy Principality a Part of his Dominion; but he was certainly _withheld_ by the Superior Hand, which gave him that Dominion, I mean _withheld_ for the Occasion only: So in another Case, it was plain that _Balaam_, who was one of those Sorts of _Chaldeans_ mention'd above, who dealt in _Divinations_ and _Inchantments_, was withheld from cursing Israel.
Some are of Opinion that _Balaam_ was not a Witch or a Dealer with the _Devil_ because 'tis said of him, or rather he says it of himself, that he saw the Visions of God, _Numb._ xxiv. 16. _He hath said_, who _heard the Words of_ GOD, _and knew the Knowledge of the most High, which saw the Visions of the Almighty, falling into a_ TRANCE, _but having his Eyes open_: Hence they alledge he was one of those Magi, which St. _Augustin_ speaks of, _de Divinatione_, who by the Study of Nature, and by the Contemplation of created Beings came to the Knowledge of the Creature; and that _Balaam_'s Fault was, that being tempted by the Rewards and Honours that the King promised him, he intended to have curs'd _Israel_; but when his Eyes were open'd, and that he saw they were God's own People, he durst not do it; they will have it therefore, that except, _as above_, _Balaam_ was a good Man, or at least that he had the Knowledge of the true God, and the Fear of that God upon him, and that he honestly declares this, _Numb._ xxii. 18. _If_ Balak _would give me his House full of Silver and Gold, I cannot go beyond the Word of the Lord_ MY GOD: Where tho' he is call'd a false Prophet by some, he evidently owns God, and assumes a Property in him, as other Prophets did; MY GOD, and I cannot go beyond his Orders; but that which gives me a better Opinion of _Balaam_ than all this is, his plain Prophesy of Christ, Chap. xxiv. 17. where he calls him the Star of _Jacob_, and declares, _I shall see him, but not now, I shall behold him, but not nigh; there shall come a Star out of_ Jacob, _and a Scepter shall rise out of_ Israel, _and shall smite the Corners of_ Moab, _and destroy all the Children of_ Seth, all which express not a Knowledge only, but a Faith in Christ; but I have done preaching, this is all by the by, I return to my Business, which is the History.
There is another Piece of dark Practice here, which lies between Satan and his particular Agents, and which they must give us an Answer to, when they can, which I think will not be in haste; and that is about the obsequious _Devil_ submitting to be call'd up into Visibility, whenever an old Woman has her Hand cross'd with a white Six-pence, _as they Call it_: One would think that instead of these vile Things call'd Witches, being sold to the _Devil_, the _Devil_ was really sold for a Slave to them; for how far soever Satan's Residence is off of this State of Life, they have Power, it seems, to fetch him from home, and oblige him to come at their Call.
I can give little Account of this, only that indeed so it is; nor is the Thing so strange in its self, as the Methods to do it are mean, foolish, and ridiculous; as making a Circle and dancing in it, pronouncing such and such Words, saying the Lord's Prayer backward, and the like; now is this agreeable to the Dignity of the Prince of the Air or Atmosphere, that he should be commanded forth with no more Pomp or Ceremony than that of muttering a few Words, such as the old Witches and he agree about? or is there something else in it, which none of us or themselves understand?
Perhaps, indeed, he is always with those People call'd Witches and Conjurers, or at least some of his _Camp Volant_ are always present, and so upon the least call of the Wizard, it is but putting off the misty Cloak and showing themselves.
Then we have a Piece of mock Pageantry in bringing those Things call'd witches or Conjurers to Justice, that is, first to know if a Woman be a Witch, throw her into a Pond, and if she be a Witch, she will swim, and it is not in her own Power to prevent it; if she does all she can to sink her self, it will not do, she will swim like a Cork. Then that a Rope will not hang a Witch, but you must get a With, a green Osyer; that if you nail a Horse-Shoe on the Sill of the Door, she cannot come into the House, or go out, if she be in; these and a thousand more, too simple to be believ'd, are yet so vouch'd, so taken for granted, and so universally receiv'd for Truth, that there is no resisting them without being thought atheistical.
What Methods to take to know, who are _Witches_, I really know not; but on the other Side, I think there are variety of Methods to be used to know who are not; _W--- G---_, Esq; is a Man of Fame, his Parts are great, because his Estate is so; he has threescore and eight Lines of _Virgil_ by rote, and they take up many of the Intervals of his merry Discourses; he has just as many witty Stories to please Society; when they are well told, _once over_, he begins again, and so he lives in a round of Wit and Learning; he is a Man of great Simplicity and Sincerity; you must be careful not to mistake my Meaning, as to the Word Simplicity; some take it to mean Honesty, and so do I, only that it has a Negative attending it, in his particular Case; in a Word, _W---- G----_ is an honest Man, and no _Conjurer_; a good Character, I think, and without Impeachment to his Understanding, he may be a Man of Worth for all that; take the other Sex, there is the Lady _H----_ is another Discovery; bless us! what Charms in that Face! How bright those Eyes! How flowing white her Breasts! How sweet her Voice? add to all, how heavenly, divinely good her Temper! How inimitable her Behaviour! How spotless her Virtue! How perfect her Innocence! and to sum up her Character, we may add, the Lady _H----_ is no _Witch_; sure none of our Beau Critics will be so unkind now as to censure me in those honest Descriptions, as if I meant that my good Friend _W---- G----_ Esq; or my ador'd Angel, the bright, the charming Lady _H----_ were Fools; but what will not those Savages, call'd Critics, do, whose barbarous Nature enclines them to trample on the brightest Characters, and to cavil on the clearest Expressions?
It might be expected of me, however, in justice to my Friends, and to the bright Characters of abundance of Gentlemen of this Age, who, by the Depth of their Politics, and the Height of their Elevations might be suspected, and might give us Room to charge them with Subterranean Intelligence; I say, it might be expected that I should clear up their Fame, and assure the World concerning them, even by Name, that they are no _Conjurers_, that they do not deal with the _Devil_, at least, not by the Way Witchcraft and Divination, such as Sir _T---k_, _E--- B---_, Esq; my Lord _Homily_, Coll. _Swagger_, _Jeoffry Well with_, Esq; Capt. _Harry Go Deeper_, Mr. _Wellcome Woollen_, Citizen and Merchant Taylor of _London_, _Henry Cadaver_, Esq; the D---- of _Caerfilly_, the Marquess of _Sillyhoo_, Sir _Edward Thro' and Thro'_ Bart. and a World of fine Gentlemen more, whose great Heads and Weighty Understandings have given the World such Occasion to challenge them with being at least descended from the _Magi_, and perhaps engaged with old Satan in his Politics and Experiments; but I, that have such good Intelligence among _Satan_'s Ministers of State, as is necessary to the present Undertaking, am thereby well able to clear up their Characters: and I doubt not, but they will value themselves upon it, and acknowledge their Obligation to me, for letting the World know the _Devil_ does not pretend to have had any Business with them, or to have enroll'd them in the List of his Operators; _in a Word_, that none of them are _Conjurers_: Upon which Testimony of mine, I expect they be no longer charg'd with, or so much as suspected of having an unlawful Quantity of Wit, or having any Sorts of it about them, that are contraband or prohibited, but that for the future they pass unmolested, and be taken for nothing but what they are, (_viz._) very honest worthy Gentlemen.
CHAP. X.
_Of the various Methods the Devil takes to converse with Mankind._
Having spoken something of Persons, and particularly of such as the _Devil_ thinks fit to employ in his Affairs in the World, it comes next of course to say something of the Manner how he communicates his Mind to them, and by them to the rest of his Acquaintance in the World.
I take the _Devil_ to be under great Difficulties in his Affairs on his Part, especially occasion'd by the Bounds which are set him, or which Policys oblige him to set to himself, in his Access to the conversing with Mankind; 'tis evident he is not permitted to fall upon them with Force and Arms, that is to say, to muster up his infernal Troops, and attack them with Fire and Sword; if he was not loose to act in this Manner as he was able, by his own seraphic Power to have destroy'd the whole Race, and even the Earth they dwelt upon, so he would certainly, and long ago have effectually done it; his particular Interests and Inclinations are well enough known.
But in the next Place, as he is thus restrain'd from Violence, so Prudentials restrain him in all his other Actings with Mankind; and being confin'd to Stratagem, and soft still Methods, such as Persuasion, Allurement, feeding the Appetite, prompting, and then gratifying corrupt Desires, and the like; he finds it for his Purpose not to appear in Person, except very rarely, and then in Disguise; but to act all the rest in the Dark, under the Vizor of Art and Craft, making Use of Persons and Methods conceal'd, or at least not fully understood or discover'd.
As to the Persons whom he employs, I have taken some Pains you see to discover some of them; but the Methods he uses with them, either to inform and instruct, and give Orders to them, or to converse with other People by them, these are very particular, and deserve some Place in our Memoirs, particularly as they may serve to remove some of our Mistakes, and to take off some of the frightful Ideas we are apt to entertain in Prejudice of this great Manager; as if he was no more to be match'd in his Politics, than he would be to be match'd in his Power, if it was let loose; which is so much a Mistake, that on the contrary, we read of several People that have abused and cheated the _Devil_, a Thing, which I cannot say, is very honest nor just, notwithstanding the old Latin Proverb, _Fallere fallentem non est fraus_, (which Men construe, or rather render, by way of Banter Upon Satan) 'tis no Sin to cheat the _Devil_, which for all that, upon the whole I deny, and alledge, that let the _Devil_ act how he will by us, we ought to deal fairly by him.
But to come to the Business, without Circumlocutions; I am to enquire how Satan issues out his Orders, gives his Instructions and fully delivers his Mind to his Emissaries, of whom I have mention'd some in the Title to Chap. IX. In order to this, you must form an Idea of the _Devil_ sitting in great State, in open Campaign, with all his Legions about him, in the height of the Atmosphere; or if you will, at a certain Distance from the Atmosphere, and above it, that the Plan of his Encampment might not be hurried round its own Axis, with the Earth's diurnal Motion, which might be some Disturbance to him.
By this fix'd Situation, the Earth performing its Rotation, he has every Part and Parcel of it brought to a direct Opposition to him, and consequently to his View once in twenty four Hours: The last time I was there, if I remember right, he had this Quarter of the World, which we call Christendom, just under his Eye; and as the Motion is not so swift, but that his piercing Opticks can take a strict View of it _en passant_; for the Circumference of it being but twenty one thousand Miles, and its circular Motion being full twenty four Hours performing, he has something more than an Hour to view every thousand Miles, which, to his supernatural Penetration, is not worth naming.
As he takes thus a daily View of all the Circle, and an hourly View of the Parts, he is fully Master of all Transactions, at least such as are done above Board by all Mankind; and then he dispatches his Emissaries or _Aid du Camps_ to every Part with his Orders and Instructions: Now these Emissaries, you are to understand, are not the _Witches_ and _Diviners_, who I spoke of above, for I call them also Emissaries; but they are all _Devils_ or (as you know they are call'd) _Devil_'s Angels; and these may, perhaps, come and converse personally with the Sub-emissaries I mention'd, to be ready for their Support and Assistance on all Occasions of Business: These are those _Devils_ which the Witches are said to raise; for we can hardly suppose the Master _Devil_ comes himself, at the Summons of every ugly old Woman.
These run about into every Nook and Corner, wherever Satan's Business calls them, and are never wanting to him; but are the most diligent _Devils_ imaginable; like the _Turkish Chaiux_, they no sooner receive their Errand, but they execute it with the utmost Alacrity; and as to their Speed, it may be truly written as a Motto, upon the Head of every individual _Devil_,
_Non indiget calcaribus._
These are those, who they tell us our Witches, Sorcerers, Wizards, and such Sorts of Folks converse freely with, and are therefore call'd their _Familiars_; and as they tell us, come to them in human Shapes, talk to them with articulate plain Voices, as if Men, and that yet the said Witches, _&c._ know them to be _Devils_.
History has not yet enlighten'd us in this Part of useful Knowledge, or at least not sufficiently for a Description of the Persons or Habits of these Sorts of Appearances; as what Shapes they take up, what Language they speak, and what particular Works they perform, so we must refer it to farther Enquiry; but if we may credit History, we are told many famous Stories of these Appearances; for Example, the famous Mother _Lakland_, who was burnt for a Witch at _Ipswich_, _Anno_ 1646, confessed at the Time of her Execution, or a little before it, that she had frequent Conversation with the _Devil_ himself; that she being very poor, and withal of a devilish passionate, cruel and revengeful Disposition before, used to wish she had it in her Power to do such and such mischievous Things to some that she hated; and that the _Devil_ himself, who, it seems, knew her Temper, came to her one Night as she lay in her Bed, and was between sleeping and waking, and speaking in a deep hollow Voice, told her; if she would serve him in some Things he would employ her to do, she should have her Will of all her Enemies, and should want for nothing: That she was much afraid at first, but that he solliciting her very often, bad her not be afraid of him, and still urg'd her to yield, and as she says, struck his Claw into her Hand, and tho' it did not hurt her, made it bleed, and with the Blood wrote the Covenants, that is to say, the Bargain between them: being ask'd what was in them, and whether he requir'd her to curse or deny God or Christ? She said no.
N. B. I do not find she told them whether the _Devil_ wrote it with a Pen, or whether on Paper or Parchment, nor whether she sign'd it or no, but it seems he carry'd it away with him. I suppose, if Satan's Register were examin'd, it might be found among the Archives of Hell, the Rolls of his _acta Publica_; and when his Historiographer Royal publishes them, we may look for it among them.
Then he furnish'd her with three _Devils_, to wait upon her (I suppose) for she confess'd they were to be employ'd in her Service; they attended in the Shapes of two little Dogs and a Mole: The first she bewitch'd was her own Husband, by which he lay a while in great Misery and died; then she sent to one Captain _Beal_ and burnt a new Ship of his just built, which had never been at Sea; these and many other horrid Things she did and confess'd, and having been twenty Years a Witch, at last the _Devil_ left her, and she was burnt as she deserv'd.
That some extraordinary Occasions may bring these Agents of the _Devil_, nay, sometimes the _Devil_ himself, to assume human Shapes, and appear to other People we cannot doubt; he did thus in the Case of our Saviour _as a Tempter_, and some think he did so to _Manasses_ as a Familiar, who the Scripture charges with Sorcery, and having a Familiar or Devil; Fame tells us that St. _Dunstan_ frequently converst with him, and finally, took him by the Nose; and so of others.
But in these modern Ages of the World, he finds it much more to his Purpose to work under Ground as I have observ'd, and to keep upon the Reserve; so that we have no authentick Accounts of his personal Appearance, but what are very antient or very remote from our Faith, as well as our Enquiry.
It seems to be a Question that would bear some debating, whether all Apparitions are not _Devils_ or from the _Devil_; but there being so many of those Apparitions which we call Spirits, which really assume Shapes and make Appearances in the World, upon such Accounts as we know _Satan_ himself scorns to be employ'd in, that I must dismiss the Question in favour of the _Devil_; assuring them, that as he never willingly did any good in his Life, so he would be far from giving himself the Trouble of setting one Foot into the World, on such an Errand; and for that Reason we maybe assur'd those certain Apparitions, which we are told came to detect a Murther in _Gloucestershire_, and others who appear'd to prevent the ruining an Orphan for want of finding a Deed, that was not lost, was certainly some other Power equally concern'd, and not the _Devil_.
On the other Hand, neither will it follow that _Satan_ never appears in human Shape; for tho' every Apparition may not be the _Devil_, yet it does not follow that the _Devil_ never makes an Apparition: All I shall say to it is, as I have mention'd before, that generally speaking, the _Devil_ finds it more for his Purpose, to have his Interest in the World propagated another Way; namely, in private, and his personal Appearances are reserv'd for Things only of extraordinary Consequence, and, as I may say, of evident Necessity, where his Honour is concern'd, and where his Interest could be carried on no other Way; not forgetting to take Notice that this is very seldom.
It remains to enquire, what then those Things are which we make so much stir about, and which are call'd _Apparitions_, or Spirits assuming human Shapes, and shewing themselves to People on particular Occasions? whether they are evil Spirits or good? and tho', indeed, this is out of my Way at this Time, and does not relate at all to the _Devil_'s History, yet I thought it not amiss to mention it; (1.) Because, as I have said, I do not wholly exclude Satan from all Concern in such Things; and (2.) Because I shall dismiss the Question with so very short an Answer, namely, that we may determine which are and which are not the _Devil_'s, by the Errand they come upon; every one to his own Business; if it comes of a good Errand, you may certainly acquit the _Devil_ of it, conclude him innocent, and that he has no hand in it; if it comes of a wicked and devilish Errand, you may e'en take him up upon Suspicion, 'tis ten to one but you find him at the Bottom of it.
Next to Apparitions, we find Mankind disturb'd by abundance of little odd reserv'd Ways which the _Devil_ is shrewdly suspected of having a Hand in, such as _Dreams_, _Noises_, _Voices_, &c. smells of Brimstone, Candles burning blue, and the like.
As to Dreams, I have nothing to say in Satan's Prejudice at all there; I make no Question but he deals very much in that Kind of Intelligence, and why should he not? we know _Heaven_ it self formerly converst very often with the greatest of Men, by the same Method, and the _Devil_ is known to mimick the Methods, as well as the Actions of his Maker; whether Heaven has not quite left off that Way of working, we are not certain; but we pretty well know the _Devil_ has not left it, and I believe some Instances may be given where his Worship has been really seen and talk'd to in sleep, as much as if the Person had been awake with his Eyes open.
These are to be distinguish'd too, pretty much by the Goodness or Badness of the Subject; how often have Men committed Murther, Robbery and Adultery in a Dream, and at the same time except an extraordinary Agitation of the Soul, and express'd by extraordinary Noises in the Sleep, by violent Sweating and other such Ways, the Head has never been remov'd from the Pillow, or the Body so much as turn'd in the Bed?
Whether in such Cases, the Soul with all the Passions and Affections being agitated, and giving their full assent to the Facts, of whatever Kind soever, the Man is not as guilty as if the Sins so dream'd of his committing, had been actually committed? tho' it be no Doubt to me, but that it is so, yet as it is foreign to the present Affair, and not at all relating to the _Devil_'s History, I leave it to the Reverend Doctors of the Church, as properly belonging to them to decide.
I knew a Person who the _Devil_ so haunted with naked Women, fine beautiful Ladies in Bed with him, and Ladies of his Acquaintance too, offering their Favours to him, and all in his Sleep; so that he seldom slept without some such Entertainment; the Particulars are too gross for my Story, but he gave me several long Accounts of his Night's _Amours_, and being a Man of a virtuous Life and good Morals, it was the greatest Surprize to him imaginable; for you cannot doubt but that the cunning _Devil_ made every thing be acted to the Life with him, and in a manner the most wicked; he own'd with Grief to me, that the very first Attack the _Devil_ made upon him, was with a very beautiful Lady of his Acquaintance, who he had been really something freer than ordinary with in their common Conversation; This Lady he brought to him in a Posture for Wickedness, and wrought up his Inclination so high in his Sleep, that he, as he thought, actually went about to debauch her, she not at all resisting; but that he wak'd in the very Moment, to his particular Satisfaction.
He was greatly concern'd at this Part, namely, that he really gave the Consent of his Will to the Fact, and wanted to know if he was not as guilty of Adultery, as if he had lain with her; indeed he decided the Question against himself, so forcibly, that I, who was of the same Opinion before, had nothing to say against it; however, I confirm'd him in it, by asking him these Questions.
1. Whether he did not think the _Devil_ had the chief Hand in such a Dream? he answer'd, it could certainly be no body else, it must be the _Devil_.
2. I then ask'd him what Reason the _Devil_ could have for it, if his Consent to the Fact in Sleep had not been criminal? _That's true indeed_, says he, _I am answer'd_: But then he ask'd another Question, which, I confess, is not so easy to answer, namely, How he should prevent being serv'd so again.
Nor could all my Divinity or his own keep the _Devil_ from attacking him again; on the other Hand, as I have said, he worried him to that Degree, that he injur'd his Health, bringing naked Women to him, sometimes one, sometimes another, sometimes in one Posture of Lewdness, sometimes in another, sometimes into his very Arms, sometimes with such Additions as I am not merry enough, and sometimes such as I am not wicked enough to put into your Heads; the Man, indeed, could not help it, and so the _Devil_ was more Faulty than he; but as I hinted to him, he might bring his Mind to such a stated Habit of Virtue, as to prevent its assenting to any wicked Motion, even in Sleep, and that would be the Way to put an End to the Attempt; and this Advice he relish'd very well, and practised, I believe, with Success.
By this same Method, the same _Devil_ injects powerful Incentives to other Crimes, provokes Avarice, by laying a great Quantity of Gold in your View, and no body present, giving you an Opportunity to steal it, or some of it, at the same time, perhaps, knowing your Circumstances to be such as that you are at that Time in a great want of the Money.
I knew another, who being a Tradesman, and in great Distress for Money in his Business, dream'd that he was walking all alone in a great Wood, and that he met a little Child with a Bag of Gold in its Hand, and a fine Necklace of Diamonds on its Neck, upon the Sight, his Wants presently dictated to him to rob the Child; the little innocent Creature, (just so he dream'd) not being able to resist; or to tell who it was, accordingly he consented to take the Money from the Child, and then to take the Diamond Necklace from it too, and did so.
But the _Devil_, (a full Testimony, as I told him, that it was the _Devil_, not contented with that, hinted to him, that perhaps the Child might some time or other know him, and single him out, by crying or pointing, or some such Thing, especially if he was suspected and shew'd to it, and therefore it would be better for him to kill the Child, prompting him to kill it for his own Safety, and that he need do no more but twist the Neck of it a little, or crush it with his Knee; He told me he stood debating with himself, whether he should do so or not; but that in that Instant his Heart struck him with the Word Murther, and he entertain'd a Horror of it, refus'd to do it, and immediately waked.
He told me, that when he wak'd, he found himself in so violent a Sweat as he never had known the like; that his Pulse beat with that Heat and Rage, that it was like a Palpitation of the Heart to him, and that the Agitation of his Spirits was such, that he was not fully composed in some Hours; tho' the Satisfaction and Joy that attended him, when he found it was but a Dream, assisted much to return his Spirits to their due Temperament.
It is neither my Business or Inclination to turn Divine here, nor is the Age I write to sufficiently Grave to relish a Sermon, if I was disposed to preach, though they must allow the Subject would very well bear it; but I shall only ask them, if they think this is not the _Devil_, what they think it is? If they believe it is the _Devil_, they will act accordingly I hope, or let it alone, as Satan and they can agree about it.
I should not oblige the _Devil_ over much, whatever I might do to those that read it; if I should enter here upon a Debate of Interests, (_viz._) to enquire whether the _Devil_ has not a vast Advantage upon Mankind this Way, and whether it is not much his Interest to preserve it; and if I prove the Affirmative, I leave it to you to enquire whose Interest it is to disappoint and supplant him.
In short, I take Dreams to be the second Best of the Advantages the _Devil_ has over Mankind; the first, I suppose, you all know (_viz._) the Treachery of the Garrison within; by Dreams he may be said to get into the Inside of us without Opposition; here he opens and locks without a Key, and like an Enemy laying siege to a fortified City, Reason and Nature, the Governor of the City, keep him out by Day, and keep the Garrison true to their Duty; but in the Dark he gets in and parlees with the Garrison (the Affections and Passions) Debauches their Loyalty, stirring up them to Disloyalty and Rebellion, so they betray their Trust, Revolt, Mutiny, and go over to the Besieger.
Thus he manages his Interest, I say, and insinuates himself into the Inside of us, without our Consent, nay, without our Knowledge; for whatever Speculation may do, 'tis evident Demonstration does not assist us to discover which Way he gets Access to the Soul, while the Organ tied up, and dozed with Sleep has lock'd it up from Action; that it is so is clear, but how he does it is a Secret which I do not find the Antients or Moderns have yet made a Discovery of.
That Devil of a Creature, Mother _Lakland_, whose Story I mention'd above, acknowledg'd that the first Time the _Devil_ attempted to draw her in to be a Witch was in a Dream, and even when she consented, she said, she was between sleeping and waking; that is, she did not know whether she was awake or asleep, and the cunning Devil it seems was satisfied with her Assent given so, when she was asleep, or neither asleep or awake, so taking the Advantage of her Incapacity to act rationally.
The Stories of her bewitching several People, and the manner in which they died, are so formidable and extravagant, that I care not to put any one's Faith to the stretch about them, tho' publish'd by Authority, and testified by Abundance of Witnesses; but this is recorded in particular, and to my Purpose, whether from her own Mouth or not, I do not say, namely, the Description of a Witch, and the Difference between Witches, and those other of Satan's Acquaintance who act in his Name.
1. They have consulted and covenanted with a Spirit or _Devil_.
2. They have a Deputy _Devil_, sometimes several to serve and assist them.
3. These they employ as they please, call them by Name, and command their Appearance in whatever Shape they think fit.
4. They send them abroad to or into the Persons who they design to bewitch, who they always torment, and often murther them, as Mother _Lakland_ did several.
As to the Difference between the several Devils that appear, it relates to the Office of the Persons who employ them; as Conjurers, who seem to command the particular _Devil_ that waits upon them with more Authority, and raise them and lay them at Pleasure, drawing Circles, casting Figures, and the like; but the Witch, in a more familiar manner, whispers with the Devil, keeps the _Devil_ in a Bag or a Sack, sometimes in her Pocket, and the like, and like Mr. _Faux_ shews Tricks with him.
But all these Kinds deal much in Dreams, talk with the Devil in their Sleep, and make other People talk with him in their Sleep too; and 'tis on this Occasion I mention it here; in short, the Devil may well take this Opportunity with Mankind, for not half the World that came into his Measures would comply, if they were awake; but of that hereafter.
And yet his thus insinuating himself by Dream, does not seem sufficient, in my Opinion, to answer the _Devil_'s End, and to carry on his Business; and therefore we must be forc'd to allow him a Kind of actual Possession, in particular Cases, and that in the Souls of some People, by different Methods from others; _Luther_ is of the Opinion that the _Devil_ gets a Familiarity with some Souls just at, or rather before their being embodied; as to the Manner and Method how he gets in, that is another Question, and may be spoken of by it self; besides, why may not he, that at Satan's Request to enter into the Herd of Swine, said _go_, give the same Commission to possess a sort of Creatures so many Degrees below the Dignity of the _Gaderenian_ Swine, and open the Door too? but as for that, when our Lord said _go_, the _Devil_ never enquir'd which Way he should get in.
When then I see Nations, or indeed Herds of Nations set on Fire of Hell, and as I may say, enflam'd by the _Devil_; when I see Towns, Parties, Factions and Rabbles of People visibly possess'd; 'tis enough to me that the great Master of the Devils has said to him, GO; there's no need to enquire which Way he finds open, or at what postern Gate he gets in; as to his appearing, 'tis plain he often gets in without appearing, and therefore the Question about his appearing still remains a Doubt, and is not very easy to be resolv'd.
In the Scripture we have some Light into it, and that is all the Help I find from Antiquity, and it goes a great Way to solve the Phænomena of Satan's appearing; what I mean by the Scripture giving some Light to it, is this; 'tis said in several Places, and of several Persons, God came to them in a Dream, _Gen._ xx. 3. _God came to_ Abimelech _in a Dream by Night_, Gen. xxxi. 24. _And God came to_ Laban _the_ Syrian _in a Dream_, Matt. ii. 13. _The Angel of the Lord appear'd to_ Joseph _in a Dream_; short Comments are sufficient to plain Texts, applying this to my Friend when he wanted to be satisfied about the How, relating to his Dream (_viz._) how he should come to Dream such wicked Things? I told him, in short, the Case was plain, _the Devil came to him in a Dream by Night_: How and in what manner he form'd the wicked Representations, and spread debauch'd Appearances before his Fancy, by real Whispers and Voice, according to _Milton_, or by what other Methods, the Learned are not arriv'd to any Certainty about it.
This leads me necessarily to enquire whether the _Devil_ or some of his Agents are not always in our Company, whether they make any visible Appearances or no? For my Part I make no Question of it, how else could he come at the Knowledge of what we do; for as I can allow him no Prescience at all, as for many Reasons I have observ'd already, he must be able to see and know us, and what we are about when we know nothing of him, or else he could know nothing of us and our Affairs, which yet we find otherwise; and this gives him infinite Advantage to Influence our Actions, to judge of our Inclinations, and to bring our Passions to clash with our Reason, as they often do, and get the better of it too.
All this he obtains by his being able to walk about invisible, and see when he is not seen, of which I have spoken already; hence that most wise and solid Suggestion, that when the Candles burn blue the _Devil_ is in the Room, which great Secret in Nature, that you may more fully be convinc'd of its imaginary Reality, I must tell you the following Story which I saw in a Letter directed to a particular Friend, take it Word for Word as in the Letter; because I do not make my self accountable for the Facts, but take them _ad referendum_.
SIR,
We had one Day, very early in the Morning, and for the most Part of the Day a great deal of Rain with a high Wind, and the Clouds very thick and dark all Day.
In the Evening the cloudy thick Weather continued, tho' not the Rain, when being at a Friend's House in ---- Lane _London_, and several Ladies and some Gentlemen in the Room, besides two or three Servants (for we had been eating) the following Interlude happen'd for our Entertainment: When the Cloth was taken away, two large Candles were brought upon the Table and plac'd there with some Bottles and Glasses for the Gentlemen, who, it seems, were intending to drink and be very merry; two large Wax-Candles were also set on another Table, the Ladies being going to Cards, also there were two large Candles in Sconces over or near the Chimney, and one more in a Looking-Glass Sconce, on a Peer by the Window.
With all this _Apparatus_, the Company separating sat down, the Gentlemen at their Table, and the Ladies at theirs, to play _as above_; when after some time the Gentleman of the House said hastily to a Servant, _what a P---- ails the Candles_? and turning to the Servant raps out an Oath or two, and bids him snuff the Candles, for they burnt as if the Devil was in the Room.
The Fellow going to snuff one of the Candles, snuffs it out, at which his Master being in a Passion the Fellow lights it again immediately at the other Candle, and then being in a little hurry, going to snuff the other Candle snuffed that out too.
The first Candle that was relighted (as is usual in such Cases) burn'd dim and dull for a good while, and the other being out, the Room was much darker than before, and a Wench that stood by the Ladies Table, bawls out to her Mistress, _Law Madam!_ the Candles _burn blue_; an old Lady that sat by says, _ay Betty!_ so they do; upon this one of the Ladies starts up, _Mercy upon us_, says she, _what is the Matter!_ In this unlucky Moment another Servant, without Orders, went to the great Peer Sconce, and because, _as he thought_, he would be sure to snuff the Candle well, he offers to take it down, but very unhappily, I say, the Hook came out and down falls the Sconce Candle and all, and the Looking-Glass broke all to pieces, with a horrible Noise; however, the Candle falling out of the Sconce did not go out, but lay on the Floor burning dully, and as it is usual on such Cases, all on one Side, _Betty_ cries out again, _Law Madam_, that Candle burns blue too; the very Moment she said this, the Footman that had thrown down the Sconce, says to his fellow Servant, that came to his Assistance, I _think_ the Devil _is in the Candles to Night_, and away he run out of the Room, for fear of his Master.
The old Lady, who, upon the Maid _Betty_'s Notion of the Candles burning blue, had her Head just full of that old _Chimney-Corner Story_, the Candles _burn blue when the Spirits are in the Room_, heard the Footman Say the Word _Devil_, but heard nothing else of what he said; upon this she rises up in a terrible Fright, and cries out that the Footman said the _Devil was in the Room_; as she was, indeed, frighted out of her Wits, she frighted the Ladies most terribly, and they all starting up together, down goes the Card Table, and put the Wax-Candles out.
Mrs. _Betty_, that had frighted them all, runs to the Sconce next the Chimney, but that having a long Snuff, she cried out it burnt blue too, and she durst not touch it; in short, tho' there were three Candles left still burning in the Room, yet the Ladies we're all so frighted, that they and the Maids too run out of the Parlour screaming like mad Folks. The Master in a Rage kick'd his first Man out of the Room, and the second Man was run out to avoid, as I said before, the like, so that no Servant was to be had, but all was in Confusion.
The two other Gentlemen, who were sitting at the first Table, kept their Seats composed and easy enough, only concern'd to see all the House in such a fright; it was true, they said, the Candles burnt dim and very oddly, but they could not perceive they _burnt blue_, except one of those over the Chimney, and that on the Table, which was relighted after the Fellow had snufft it out.
However, the Maid, the old Lady and the Footman that pull'd down the Sconce, all insist that the Candles _burnt blue_, and all pretend that the Devil was certainly in the Room, and was the Occasion of it; and they now came to me with the Story, to desire my Opinion of it.
This put me upon Enquiry into the Notion of Candles _burning blue_ when Spirits are in a Room, which upon all the Search into Things, that I am able to make, amounts to no more than this; that upon any extraordinary Emission of sulphureous or of nitrous Particles, either in a close Room, or in any not very open Place, if the Quantity be great, a Candle or Lamp, or any such little Blaze of Fire will seem to be, or to _burn blue_; and if then they can prove that any such Effluvia attends or is emitted from a Spirit, then when SATAN is at Hand it may be so.
But then 'tis begging the Question grossly, because no Man can assure us that the Devil has any sulphureous Particles about him.
It is true, the Candles burn thus in Mines and Vaults, and damp Places; and 'tis as true that they will do so upon Occasion of very damp, stormy and moist Air, when an extraordinary Quantity of Vapours are supposed to be dispers'd abroad, as was the Case when this happen'd; and if there was any Thing of that in it on that _Monday_ Night, the Candles might, perhaps, burn blue upon that Occasion; but that the _Devil_ was abroad upon any extraordinary Business that Night, that I cannot grant, unless I have some better Testimony than the _old Lady_ that heard the Footman's out-cry but by halves, or than Mrs. _Betty_, who first fancied the Candles _burnt blue_; so I must suspend my Judgment till I hear farther.
This Story however may solve a great many of those Things which pass for Apparitions in the World, and which are laid to the Devil's Charge, tho' he really may know nothing of the Matter; and this would bring me to defend _Satan_ in many Things, wherein he may truly be said to suffer wrongfully; and if I thought it would oblige him, I might say something to his Advantage this Way; however, I'll venture a Word or two for an injur'd _Devil_, take it as you will.
First, it is certain, that as this Invisibility of the _Devil_ is very much to our Prejudice, so the Doctrine of his Visibility is a great Prejudice to him, as we make Use of it.
By his Invisibility he is certainly vested with infinite Advantages against us; while he can be present with us, and we know nothing of the Matter, he informs himself of all our Measures, and arms himself in the best and most suitable manner to injure and assault us, as he can counteract all our secret concerted Designs, disappoint all our Schemes, and except when Heaven apparently concerns it self to over-rule him, can defeat all our Enterprizes, break all our Measures, and do us Mischief in almost every Part of our Life, and all this, because we are not privy to all his Motions, as he is to ours.
But now for his Visibility and his real Appearance in the World, and particularly among his Disciples and Emissaries, such as Witches and Wizards, Demonaists, and the like: Here, I think Satan has a great deal of Loss, suffers manifest Injury, and has great Injustice done him; and, that therefore I ought to clear this Matter up a little, if it be possible, to do Justice to Satan, and set Matters right in the World about him, according to that useful old Maxim of setting the Saddle upon the right Horse, or _giving the_ Devil _his due_.
First, _as I have said_, we are not to believe every idle Head, who pretends even to converse Face to Face with the _Devil_, and who tells us, they have thus seen him, and been acquainted with him every Day: Many of these Pretenders are manifest Cheats; and, however, they would have the Honour of a private Interest in him, and boast how they have him at their Beck, can call him this Way, and send him that, as they please, raise him and lay him when and how, and as often as they find for their Purpose; I say, whatever Boasts they make of this Kind, they really have nothing of Truth in them.
Now the Injuries and Injustice done to the _Devil_, in these Cases, are manifest; namely, that they entitle the _Devil_ to all the Mischief they are pleased to do in the World; and if they commit a Murther or a Robbery, fire a House, or do any Act of Violence in the World, they presently are said to do it by the Agency of the _Devil_, and the _Devil_ helps them; so Satan bears the Reproach, and they have all the Guilt; this is, (1.) a grand Cheat upon the World, and (2.) a notorious Slander upon the _Devil_; and it would be a public Benefit to Mankind, to have such would-be-Devils as these turn'd inside out, that we might know when the _Devil_ was really at work among us, and when not; what Mischiefs were of his doing, and which were not; and that these Fellows might not slip their Necks out of the Halter, by continually laying the Blame of their Wickedness upon the _Devil_.
Not that the _Devil_ is not very willing to have his Hand in any Mischief, or in all the Mischief that is done in the World; but there are some low priz'd Rogueries that are too little for him, beneath the Dignity of his Operation, and which 'tis really a Scandal to the _Devil_ to charge upon him. I remember the _Devil_ had such a Cheat put upon him in _East-Smithfield_ once, where a Person pretended to converse with the _Devil_ Face to Face, and that in open Day too, and to cause him to tell Fortunes, foretel Good and Evil, _&c._ discover stollen Goods, tell where they were who stole them, and how to find them again, nay, and even to find out the Thieves; but _Satan_ was really sandered in the Case, the Fellow had no more to do with the _Devil_ than other People, and perhaps not so much neither: This was one of those they call'd CUNNING-MEN, or at least he endeavour'd to pass for such a one, but 'twas all a Cheat.
Besides, what had the _Devil_ to do to detect Thieves, and restore stollen Goods? Thieving and Robbing, Trick and Cheat, are part of the Craft of his Agency, and of the Employments which it is his Business to encourage; they greatly mistake him, who think he will assist any Body in suppressing and detecting such laudable Arts and such diligent Servants.
I won't say, but the _Devil_, to draw these People we call _Cunning-Men_, into a Snare, and to push on his farther Designs, may encourage them privately, and in a manner that they themselves know nothing of, to make use of his Name, and abuse the World about him, till at last they may really believe they do deal with the _Devil_, when indeed 'tis only he deals with them, and they know nothing of the Matter.
In other Cases he may encourage them in these little Frauds and Cheats, and give them leave, as above, to make use of his Name to bring them afterwards, and by Degrees to have a real Acquaintance with him; so bringing the Jest of their Trade into Earnest, till at length prompting them to commit some great Villany, he secures them to be his own, by their very Fear of his leaving them to be exposed to the World; thus he puts a _Jonathan Wild_ upon them, and makes them be the very Wretches they only pretended to be before: So old _Parsons_ of _Clithroe_, as Fame tells, was twenty five Years a _Cunning-man_, and twenty two Years a Witch; that is to say, for five and twenty Years, he was only pretending to deal with the _Devil_, when Satan and he had no manner of Acquaintance, and he only put his _Leger-de-main_ upon the People in the _Devil_'s Name, without his leave; but at length the _Devil_'s Patience being tir'd quite out, he told the old Counterfeit, that in short, he had been his stalking Horse long enough, and that now, if he thought fit to enter himself, and take a Commission, well and good; and he should have a Lease to carry on his Trade for so many Years more, to his Heart's content; but if not, he would expose his Knavery to the World, for that he should take away his Peoples Trade no longer; but that he (Satan) would set up another in his Room, that should make a meer Fool of him, and carry away all his Customers.
Upon this, the old Man consider'd of it, took the _Devil_'s Counsel, and listed in his Pay; so he, that had plaid his Pranks twenty five Years as a Conjurer, when he was no Conjurer, was then forc'd really to deal with the DEVIL, for fear the People should know he did not: Till now he had _ambo dexter_, cheated the Devil on one Hand, and the People on the other; but the _Devil_ gain'd his Point at last, and so he was a real Wizard ever after.
But this is not the only way the Devil is injur'd neither, for we have often found People pretend upon him in other Cases, and of nearer Concern to him a great deal, and in Articles more Weighty, as in particular, in the great Business of Possession; it is true this Point is not thoro'ly understood among Men, neither has the Devil thought fit to give us those Illuminations about it, as I believe he might do; particularly that great and important Article, is not, for ought I can see, rightly explain'd, namely; whether there are not two several Kinds of Possession, (_viz._) some wherein the Devil possesses us, and some in which we really possess the Devil; the Nicety of which I doubt this Age, with all its Penetration, is not qualified to explain, and a Dissertation upon it being too long for this Work, especially so near its Conclusion, I am oblig'd to omit, as I am also all the practical Discourses upon the Usefulness and Advantages of real Possession, whether consider'd one Way or other to Mankind, all which I must leave to hereafter.
But to come back to the Point in Hand, and to consider the Injustice done to the Devil, in the various Turns and Tricks which Men put upon him very often in this one Article (_viz._) pretending to Possession, and to have the Devil in them, when really it is not so; certainly the Devil must take it very ill, to have all their demented, lunatick Tricks charg'd upon him; some of which, nay, most of which are so gross, so simple, so empty, and so little to the Purpose, that the _Devil_ must be asham'd to see such Things pass in his Name, or that the World should think he was concern'd in them.
It is true, that Possession being one of the principal Pieces of the Devil's Artifice in his managing Mankind, and in which, with the most exquisite skill he plays the Devil among us, he has the more Reason to be affronted when he finds himself invaded in this Part, and angry that any Body should pretend to possess, or be possess'd without his leave, and this may be the Reason for ought we know, why so many Blunders have been made, when People have pretended to it without him, and he has thought fit not to own them in it; of which we have many Examples in History, as in _Simon Magus_, _the Devil of_ London, _the fair Maid of_ Kent, and several others, whose History it is not worth while to enlarge upon.
In short, Possessions, as I have said, are nice Things, as it is not so easy to mimick the _Devil_ in that Part, as it may be in some other; designing Men have attempted it often, but their manner has been easily distinguish'd, even without the Devil's Assistance.
Thus the People of _Salem_ in _New-England_ pretended to be bewitch'd, and that a black Man tormented them by the Instigation of such and such, whom they resolv'd to bring to the Gallows: This black Man they would have be the _Devil_, employ'd by the Person who they accus'd for a Witch: Thus making the _Devil_ a Page or a Footman to the Wizard, to go and torment whoever the said Wizard commanded, till the _Devil_ himself was so weary of the foolish Part, that he left them to go on their own Way, and at last they over-acted the murthering Part so far, that when they confess'd themselves to be Witches, and possess'd, and that they had Correspondence with the Devil, _Satan_ not appearing to vouch for them, no Jury would condemn them upon their own Evidence, and they could not get themselves hang'd, whatever Pains they took to bring it to pass.
Thus you see the _Devil_ may be wrong'd, and falsely accus'd in many Particulars, and often has been so; there are likewise some other sorts of counterfeit _Devils_ in the World, such as _Gypsies_, _Fortune-Tellers_, Foretellers of good and bad Luck, Sellers of Winds, Raisers of Storms, and many more, some practis'd among us, some in foreign Parts, too many almost to reckon up; nay I almost doubt whether the Devil himself knows all the Sorts of them; for 'tis evident he has little or nothing to do with them, I mean not in the Way of their Craft.
These I take to be Interlopers, or with the _Guinea_ Merchants leave, separate Traders, and who act under the Skreen and Protection of Satan's Power, but without his License or Authority; no doubt these carry away a great deal of his Trade, that is to say, the Trade which otherwise the _Devil_ might have carried on by Agents or his own; I cannot but say, that while these People would fain be thought _Devils_, tho' they really are not, it is but just they should be really made as much _Devils_ as they pretended to be, or that _Satan_ should do himself Justice upon them, as he threaten'd to do upon old _Parsons_ of _Clithroe_ abovemention'd, and let the World know them.
CHAP. XI.
_Of Divination, Sorcery, the Black-Art, Pawawing, and such like Pretenders to Devilism, and how far the_ Devil _is or is not concern'd in them._
Tho' I am writing the History of the _Devil_, I have not undertaken to do the like of all the Kinds of People, Male or Female, who set up for _Devils_ in the World: This would be a Task for the _Devil_ indeed, and fit only for him to undertake, for their Number is and has been prodigious great, and may, with his other Legions be rank'd among the Innumerable.
What a World do we inhabit! where there is not only with us a great _Roaring-Lyon-Devil_ daily seeking whom of us he may devour, and innumerable Millions of lesser Devils hovering in the whole Atmosphere over us, nay, and for ought we know, other Millions always invisibly moving about us, and perhaps in us, or at least in many of us; but that have, besides all these, a vast many counterfeit _Hocus Pocus Devils_; human _Devils_, who are visible among us, of our own Species and Fraternity, conversing with us upon all Occasions; who like Mountebanks set up their Stages in every Town, chat with us at every Tea-Table, converse with us in every Coffee-House, and impudently tell us to our Faces that they are Devils, boast of it, and use a thousand Tricks and Arts to make us believe it too, and that too often with Success.
It must be confess'd there is a strong Propensity in Man's Nature, especially the more ignorant part of Mankind, to resolve every strange Thing, or whether really strange or no, if it be but strange to us, into Devilism, and to say every Thing is the Devil, that they can give no Account of.
Thus the famous Doctors of the Faculty at _Paris_, when _John Faustus_ brought the first printed Books that had then been seen in the World, or at least seen there, into the City, and sold them for Manuscripts: They were surpriz'd at the Performance, and question'd _Faustus_ about it; but he affirming they were Manuscripts, and that he kept a great many Clarks employ'd to write them, they were satisfied for a while.
But looking farther into the Work, they observ'd the exact Agreement of every Book, one with another, that every Line stood in the same Place, every Page a like Number of Lines, every Line a like Number of Words; if a Word was mis-spelt in one, it was mis-spelt also in all, nay, that if there was a Blot in one, it was alike in all; they began again to muse, how this should be? in a Word, the learned Divines not being able to comprehend the Thing (and that was always sufficient) concluded it must be the _Devil_, that it was done by Magick and Witchcraft, and that in short, poor _Faustus_ (who was indeed nothing but a meer Printer) dealt with the _Devil_.
N. B. _John Faustus_ was Servant, or Journeyman, or Compositor, or what you please to call it, to _Koster_ of _Harlem_, the first inventor of Printing; and having printed the Psalter, sold them at _Paris_ as Manuscripts; because as such they yielded a better Price.
But the learned Doctors not being able to understand how the Work was perform'd, concluded as above, it was all _the Devil_, and that the Man was a _Witch_; accordingly they took him up for a _Magician_ and a _Conjurer_, and one that work'd by the _Black Art_, that is to say, by the help of the _Devil_; and in a Word, they threaten'd to hang him for a Witch, and in order to it, commenc'd a Process against him in their criminal Courts, which made such a Noise in the World as rais'd the Fame of poor _John Faustus_ to a frightful Height, till at last he was oblig'd, for fear of the Gallows, to discover the whole Secret to them.
N. B. This is the true original of the famous Dr. _Faustus_ or _Foster_, of whom we have believ'd such strange Things, as that it is become a Proverb, _as great as the_ Devil _and Dr._ Foster: Whereas poor _Faustus_ was no Doctor, and knew no more of the _Devil_ than another Body.
Thus the Magistrates of _Bern_ and _Switzerland_, finding a Gang of _French_ Actors of Puppet-shew open'd their Stage in the Town, upon hearing the surprizing Accounts which the People gave of their wonderful Puppets, how they made them speak, answer Questions, and discourse, appear and disappear in a Moment, pop up here, as if they rise out of the Earth, and down there, as if they vanish'd, and Abundance more Feats of Art, censur'd them as Demons; and if they had not pack'd up their Trinkets, and disappeared almost as dextrously as their Puppets, they had certainly condemn'd the poor Puppets to the Flames for _Devils_, and censur'd, if not otherwise punished their Masters. See _the Count de Rochfort's Memoirs_, p. 179.
Wonderful Operations astonish the Mind, especially where the Head is not over-burthen'd with Brains; and Custom has made it so natural to give the _Devil_ either the Honour or Scandal of every Thing, that we cannot otherwise Account for, that it is not possible to put the People out of the Road of it.
The _Magicians_ were, in the _Chaldean_ Monarchy, call'd the Wisemen; and tho' they are joined with the Sorcerers and Astrologers in the same Place, _Dan._ ii. 4. yet they were generally so understood among those People; but in our Language we understand them to be People that have an Art to reveal Secrets, interpret Dreams, foretel Events, _&c._ and that use Enchantments and Sorceries, by all which we understand the same Thing; which now in a more vulgar Way we express by one general coarse Expression, _Dealing with the_ DEVIL.
The Scripture speaks of a Spirit of _Divination_, _Acts_ xvi. 16. and a Wench that was possess'd by this Spirit _brought her Master much Gain by Southsaying_, that is to say, according to the Learned, by _Oracling_ or answering Questions; whence you will see in the Margin, that this southsaying _Devil_ is there call'd _Python_, that is, _Apollo_, who is often call'd _Python_, and who at the Oracle of _Delphos_ gave out such Answers and _double Entendres_, as this Wench possibly did; and hence all those Spirits which were call'd Spirits of Divination, were in another Sense call'd _Pythons_.
Now when the Apostle St. _Paul_ came to see this Creature, this Spirit takes upon it to declare that _those Men_, meaning St. _Paul_ and _Timotheus_, _were the Servants of the most high God, which shew'd unto them the Way of Salvation_; this was a good turn of the _Devil_, to preserve his Authority in the possess'd Girl; she brought them Gain by Southsaying, that is to say, resolving difficult Questions, answering Doubts, interpreting Dreams, _&c._ Among these Doubts, he makes her give Testimony to _Paul_ and _Timotheus_, to wheedle in with the new Christians, and perhaps (tho' very ignorantly) even with _Paul_ and _Timotheus_ themselves, so to give a Kind of Credit and Respect to her for speaking.
But the _Devil_, who never speaks Truth, but with some sinister End, was discover'd here and detected; his flattering Recognition not accepted, and he himself unkennel'd as he deserv'd; there the _Devil_ was over-shot in his own Bow again.
Here now was a real Possession, and the evil Spirits who possess'd her, did stoop to sundry little Acts of Servitude, that we could give little or no Reason for, only that the Girl's Master might get Money by her; but perhaps this was a particular Case, and, prepar'd to honour the Authority and Power the Apostles had over evil Spirits.
But we find these Things carried a great Way farther in many Cases, that is to say, where the Parties are thus really possess'd; namely, the _Devil_ makes Agents of the possess'd Parties to do many Things for the propagating his Interest and Kingdom, and particularly for the carrying on his Dominion in the World: But I am for the present not so much upon the real Possession as the pretended, and particularly we have had many that have believed themselves possess'd, when the _Devil_ never believed it of them, and perhaps knew them better; some of these are really poor _Devils_ to be pitied, and are what I call _Diables Imaginaire_; these have notwithstanding done the _Devil_ good Service, and brought their Masters good Gain by Southsaying.
We find Possessions acknowledg'd in Scripture to be really and personally the _Devil_, or according to the Text, Legions of _Devils_ in the Plural. The _Devil_ or _Devils_ rather, which possessed the Man among the Tombs, is positively affirm'd to be the _Devil_ in the Scripture; all the Evangelists agree in calling him so, and his very Works shew it; namely, the Mischief he did, as well to the poor Creature among the Tombs, who was made so fierce, that he was the Terror of all the Country, as to the Herd of Swine and to the Country in the Loss of them.
I might preach you a Lecture here of the _Devil_'s Terror upon the Approach of our Saviour, the Dread of his Government, and how he acknowledg'd that there was a Time for his Torment, which was not yet come: _Art thou come to torment us before our Time?_ It is evident the Devil apprehended that Christ would chain them up before the Day of Judgment; and therefore some think the Devil here, being, as it were, caught out of his due Bounds, possessing the poor Man in such a furious manner, was afraid, and petition'd Christ not to chain him up for it, and as the Text says, _They besought him to suffer them to go away_, &c. that is to say, when they say, art thou come to torment us before the Time? the Meaning is, they begg'd he would not cast them into Torment before the Time, which was already fix'd; but that if he would cast them out of the Man, he would let them go away, _&c._
The Evangelist St. _Luke_ says, the _Devil besought him that he would not command them to go out into the Deep_: Our learned Annotators think that part is not rightly render'd; adding, that they do not believe the _Devil_ fears drowning; but with Submission, I believe the meaning is, that they would not be confin'd to the vast Ocean, where no Inhabitants being to be seen, they would be effectually imprison'd and tied down from doing Mischief, which would be a Hell to them; as to their going into the Swine, that might afford us some Allegory; but I am not disposed to jest with the Scripture, no nor with the _Devil_ neither, farther than needs must.
It is evident the _Devil_ makes Use of very mean Instruments sometimes, such as the Damsel possess'd with a Spirit of Divination, and several others.
I remember a Story, how true I know not, of a weak Creature next Door to an Ideot, who was establish'd in the Country for an Oracle, and would tell People strange Things that should be, long before they came to pass; when People were sick, would tell them whether they should live or die; if People were married, tell how many Children they should have; and a hundred such Things as fill'd the People with Admiration, and they were the easier brought to believe that the Girl was possess'd; but then they were divided about her too, and that was the finest spun Thread the Devil could work, for he carried a great Point in it; some said she had a good Spirit, and some a bad, some said she was a Prophetess, and some that she was the _Devil_.
Now had I been there to decide the Question, I should certainly have given it for the latter; if it were only upon this Account, namely, that the Devil has often found Fools very necessary Agents for the propagating his Interest and Kingdom, but we never knew the good Spirits do so; on the other Hand, it does not seem likely that Heaven should deprive a poor Creature of its Senses, and as it were take her Soul from her, and then make her an Instrument of Instruction to others, and an Oracle to declare his Decrees by; this does not seem to be rational.
But as far as this kind of Divination is in Use in our Days, yet I do not find room to charge the Devil with making any great Use of Fools, unless it be such as he has particularly qualified for his Work, for as to _Ideots_ and _Naturals_, they are perfectly useless to him; but a sort of Fools call'd the Magi, indeed, we have some Reason to think he often works with.
We are not arriv'd to a certainty yet, in the settling this great Point, namely, what Magick is? whether a diabolical Art or a Branch of the Mathematicks? Our most learned _Lexicon Technicum_ is of the latter Opinion, and gives the _Magic Square_ and the _Magic Lantern_, two Terms of Art.
The _Magic Square_ is when Numbers in _Arithmetical Proportion_ are dispos'd into such Parallels or equal Ranks, as that the Sums of each Row as well _Diagonally_ as _Laterally_ shall be all equal; for Example, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. Place these Nine in a Square of three, they will _directly_ and _diagonally_ make 18. Thus,
+------------+ | 5 | 10 | 3 | -------------| | 4 | 6 | 8 | -------------| | 9 | 2 | 7 | +------------+
This he calls the _Magic Square_, but gives no Reason for the Term, nor any Account of what infernal Operations are wrought by this Concurrence of the Numbers; neither do I see that there can be any such Use made of it.
The _Magic Lantern_ is an optic Machine, by the Means of which are represented, on a Wall in the Dark, many Phantasms and terrible Appearances, _but no_ Devil _in all this_, only that they are taken for the Effects of Magic, by those that are not acquainted with the Secret.
All this is done by the help of several little painted Pieces of Glass, only so and so situated, plac'd in certain Oppositions to one another, and painted with different Figures, the most formidable being plac'd foremost, and such as are most capable of terrifying the Spectators; and by this all the Figures may be represented upon the opposite Wall, in the largest Size.
I cannot but take Notice, that this very Piece of optic Delusion seems too much akin to the mock Possessions and infernal Accomplishments, which most of the Possessionists of this Age pretend to, so that they are most of them meer Phantasms and Appearances, and no more; Nor is the Spirit of Divination, the Magic, the Necromancing, and other Arts which were call'd Diabolical, found to be of any Use in modern Practice, at least, in these Parts of the World; but the Devil seems to do most of his Work himself, and by shorter Methods; for he has so compleat an Influence among those that he now Lists in his Service, that he brings all the common Affairs of Mankind into a narrower Compass in his Management, with a Dexterity particular to himself, and by which he carries on his Interest silently and surely, much more to the Detriment of Virtue and good Government, and consequently much more to his Satisfaction, than ever he did before.
There is a Kind of _Magic_ or _Sorcery_, or what else you may please to call it, which, tho' unknown to us, is yet, it seems, still very much encourag'd by the _Devil_; but this is a great Way off, and in Countries where the politer Instruments, which he finds here, are not to be had; namely, among the _Indians_ of _North-America_; This is call'd _Pawawing_, and they have their Divines, which they call _Pawaws_ or Witches, who use strange Gestures, Distortions, horrid Smokes, Burnings, and Scents, and several such Things which the Sorcerers and Witches in ancient Times are said to use in casting Nativities, in Philtres, and in determining, or as they pretended, directing the Fate of Persons; by burning such and such Herbs and Roots, such as _Helebore_, _Wormwood_, _Storax_, _Devilwort_, _Mandrake_, _Nightshade_, and Abundance more such, which are call'd noxious Plants, or the Product of noxious Plants; also melting such and such Minerals, Gums, and poisonous Things, and by several hellish Mutterings and Markings over them, the like do these _Pawaws_; and the _Devil_ is pleased, it seems, (or is permitted) to fall in with these Things, and as some People think, appears often to them for their Assistance upon those Occasions.
But be that as it will, he is eas'd of all that Trouble here; he can _Pawaw_ here himself, without their aid, and having laid them all aside, he negotiates much of his Business without Ambassadors; he is his own Plenipotentiary, for he finds Man so easy to come at, and so easy when he is come at, that he stands in no need of secret Emissaries, or at least not so much as he used to do.
Upon the whole, as the World, within the Compass of a few pass'd Years is advanc'd in all Kinds of Knowledge and Arts, and every useful Branch of what they knew before improv'd, and innumerable useful Parts of Knowledge, which were conceal'd before are discover'd; why should we think the _Devil_ alone should stand at a stay, has taken no Steps to his farther Accomplishment, and made no useful Discoveries in his Way? That he alone should stand at a Stay, and be just the same unimprov'd Devil that he was before? No, no, as the World is improv'd every Day, and every Age is grown wiser and wiser than their Fathers; so, no doubt, he has bestirr'd himself too, in order to an encrease of Knowledge and Discovery, and that he finds every Day a nearer Way to go to work with Mankind than he had before.
Besides, as Men in general seem to have alter'd their manner, and that they move in a higher and more exalted Sphere, especially as to Vice and Virtue; so the _Devil_ may have been obliged to change his Measures, and alter his Way of working; particularly, those Things which would take in former Times, and which a stupid Age would come easily into, won't go down with us now: As the taste of Vice and Virtue alters, the _Devil_ is forc'd to bait his Hook with new Compositions; the very Thing call'd Temptation is alter'd in its Nature, and that which serv'd to delude our Ancestors, whose gross Conceptions of Things caused them to be manageable with less Art, will not do now; the Case is quite alter'd; in some Things, perhaps, as I hinted above, we come into Crime with ease, and may be led by a Finger; but when we come to a more refin'd Way of sinning, which our Ancestors never understood, other and more refin'd Politics must be made Use of, and the _Devil_ has been put upon many useful Projects and Inventions, to make many new Discoveries and Experiments to carry on his Affairs; and to speak impartially, he is strangely improv'd either in Knowledge or Experiment, within these few Years; he has found out a great many new Inventions to shorten his own Labour, and carry on his Business in the World currently, which he never was master of before, or at least we never knew he was.
No wonder then that he has chang'd Hands too, and that he has left of pawawing in these Parts of the World; that we don't find our Houses disturb'd as they used to be, and the Stools and Chairs walking about out of one Room into another, as formerly; that Children don't vomit crooked Pins and rusty stub Nails, as of old, the Air is not full of Noises, nor the Church-Yard full of Hobgoblins; Ghosts don't walk about in Winding-Sheets, and the good old scolding Wives visit and plague their Husbands after they are dead, as they did when they were alive.
The Age is grown too wise to be agitated by these dull scare-crow Things which their Fore-Fathers were tickled with; _Satan_ has been obliged to lay by his Puppet-shews and his Tumblers, those things are grown stale; his morrice-dancing Devils, his mountebanking and quacking won't do now; those Things, as they may be supposed to be very troublesome to him, (and but that he has Servants enough would be chargeable too) are now of no great Use in the new Management of his Affairs.
_In a Word_, Men are too much Devils themselves, in the Sense that I have call'd them so, to be frighted with such little low priz'd Appearances as these; they are better acquainted with the old Arch-Angel than so, and they seem to tell him they must be treated after another manner, and that then, as they are good-natur'd and tractable, he may deal with them upon better Terms.
Hence the _Devil_ goes to work with Mankind a much shorter Way; for instead of the Art of Wheedling and Whining, together with the laborious Part of Tricking and Sharping, Hurrying and Driving, Frighting and Terrifying, all which the _Devil_ was put to the Trouble of before; in short, he acts the GRAND MANNER as the Architects call it (I don't know whether our Free-Masons may understand the Word) and therefore I may hereafter explain it, as it is to be Diabolically as well as mathematically understood.
At present my meaning is, he acts with them immediately and personally by a magnificent Transformation, making them meer _Devils_ to themselves, upon all needful Occasions, and _Devils_ to one another too, whenever he (Satan), has Need of their Service.
This Way of embarking Mankind in the _Devil_'s particular Engagement, is really very modern; and tho' the Devil himself may have been long acquainted with the Method, and as I have heard, began to practise it towards the Close of the _Roman_ Empire, when Men began to act upon very polite Principles, and were capable of the most refin'd Wickedness, and afterwards with some Popes, who likewise were a kind of Church Devils, such as Satan himself could hardly expect to find in the World; yet I do not find that he was ever able to bring it into Practice, at least, not so universally as he does now: But now the Case is alter'd, and Men being generally more expert in Wickedness than they were formerly; they suffer the smaller Alteration of the Species, in being transmigrated; in a Word, they turn into _Devils_, with no trouble at all hardly, either to the _Devil_ or to themselves.
This Particular would want much the less Explanation, could I obtain a License from Sir _Hellebore Wormwood_, Bart. or from my Lord _Thwartover_, Baron of _Scoundrel Hall_ in the Kingdom of _Ireland_, to write the true History of their own Conduct; and how early, and above all, how easily they commenc'd _Devils_, without the least Impeachment of their Characters, as wise Men, and without any Diminution of that Part of their Denomination which establish'd them for Fools.
How many mad Fellows appear among us every Day in the critical Juncture of their Transmigration, just when they have so much of the Man left as to be known by their Names, and enough of the _Devil_ taken up to settle their Characters? This Easiness of the _Devil_'s access to these People, and the great Convenience it is to him in his general Business, is a Proof to me that he has no more Occasion of Diviners, Magicians, Sorcerers, and whatever else we please to call those People who were formerly so great with him; for what Occasion has he to employ _Devils_ and Wizards to confound Mankind, when he is arriv'd to such a Perfection of Art as to bring Men, at least in these Parts of the World, to do it all themselves; upon this Account we do not find any of the old Sorcerers and Diviners, Magicians or Witches appear among us; not that the _Devil_ might not be as well able to employ such People as formerly, and qualify them for the Employment too, but that really there is no need of them hereabout, the _Devil_ having a shorter Way, and Mankind being much more easily possess'd; not the old _Herd of Swine_ were sooner agitated, tho' there was full 2000 of them together; Nature has open'd the Door, and the _Devil_ has egress and regress at Pleasure, so that Witches and Diviners are quite out of the Question.
Nor let any Man be alarm'd at this Alteration, in the Case as it stands between Mankind and the _Devil_, and think the _Devil_ having gain'd so much Ground, may in time, by Encroachment, come to a general Possession of the whole Race, and so we should all come to be _Devils_ incarnate; I say, let us not be alarm'd, for Satan does not get these Advantages by Encroachment, and by his infernal Power or Art, no not at all; but 'tis the Man himself does it by his Indolence and Negligence on one Hand, and his Complaisance to the _Devil_ on the other; and both Ways he, as it were, opens the Door to him, beckons him with his very Hand to come in, and the Devil has nothing to do but enter and take Possession: Now if it be so, and Man is so frank to him; you know the _Devil_ is no Fool not to take the Advantage when 'tis offer'd him, and therefore 'tis no wonder if the Consequences which I have been just now naming follow.
But let no Man be discourag'd by this, from reaffirming his natural and religious Powers, and venturing to shut the _Devil_ out; for the Case is plain he may be shut out; the Soul is a strong Castle, and has a good Garrison plac'd within to defend it; if the Garrison behave well, and do their Duty, it is impregnable, and the cowardly _Devil_ must raise his Siege and be gone; nay, he must fly, or, as we call it, make his Escape, lest he be laid by the Heels, that is, lest his Weakness be exposed, and all his Lurking, lying in Wait, ambuscade-Tricks; this Part would bear a great Enlargement, but I have not room to be witty upon him, so you must take it in the Gross, the DEVIL lies at _Blye Bush_, as our Country People call it, to watch your coming out of your Hold; and if you happen to go abroad unarm'd he seizes upon and masters you with ease.
Unarm'd, you'll say, what Arms should I take? what Fence against a Flail? What Weapons can a Man take to fight the _Devil_? I could tell you what to fight him with, and what you might fright him with, for the _Devil_ is to be frighted with several Things besides _Holy Water_; but 'tis too serious for you, and you'll tell me I am a preaching and a canting, and the like; so I must let the _Devil_ manage you rather than displease you with talking Scripture and Religion.
Well, but may not the _Devil_ be fought with some of his own Weapons? Is there no dealing with him in a Way of human Nature? This would require a long answer, and some Philosophy might be acted, or at least imitated, and some Magic, perhaps; for they tells us there are Spells to draw away even the Devil himself; as in some Places they nail Horse-Shoes upon the Threshold of the Door, to keep him out; in other Places old pieces of Flint, with so many Holes and so many Corners, and the like: But I must answer in the Negative, I don't know what _Satan_ might be scar'd at in those Days, but he is either grown cunninger since or bolder, for he values none of those Things now; I question much whether he would value St. _Dunstan_ and his red hot Tongs, if he was to meet him now, or St. _Francis_ or any of the Saints, no not the Host itself in full Procession; and therefore, tho' you don't care I should preach, yet in short, if you are afraid he should charge upon you and attack you, if you won't make Use of those Scripture Weapons I should have mention'd, and which you may hear of, if you enquire at _Eph._ vi. 16. you must look for better where you think you can find them.
But to go on with my Work, the Devil, I say, is not to be fear'd with Maukins, nor does he employ his old Instruments, but does much of his Work himself without Instruments.
And yet I must enter a Caveat here too, against being misunderstood in my saying the Devil stands in no need of Agents; for when I speak so, I am to be taken in a limited Sense; I don't say he needs them no where, but only that he does not need them in those polite Parts of the World which I have been speaking of, and perhaps not much here; but in many remote Countries 'tis otherwise still; the _Indians_ of _America_ are particularly said to have Witches among them, as well in those Countries where the _Spaniards_ and the _English_ and other Nations have planted themselves, as amongst those where the _European_ Nations seldom come: _for Example_, the People of _Canada_, that is, of the Countries under the _French_ Government of _Quebeck_, the Equimeaux, and other Northern Climates, have Magicians, Wizards and Witches, who they call _Pilloatas_ or _Pillotoas_; these pretend they speak intimately and familiarly with the Devil, and receive from him the Knowledge of Things to come; all which, by the Way, I take to be little more than this; that these Fellows being a little more cunning than the rest, think, that by pretending to something more than human, they shall make the stronger Impressions on the ignorant People; as _Mahomet_ amus'd the World with his Pigeon, using it to pick Peas out of his Ear, and persuaded the People it brought him superior Revelations and Inspirations from Paradise.
Thus these _Pillotoas_ gaining an Opinion among the People, behave like so many Mountebanks of Hell, pretending to understand dark Things, cure Diseases, practise Surgery, Physick and Necromancy altogether; I will not say, but _Satan_ may pick out such Tools to work with, and I believe does in those Parts, but I think he has found a nearer Way to the Wood with us, and that is sufficient to my present Purpose.
Some would persuade me the _Devil_ had a great Hand in the late religious Breaches in _France_, among the Clergy, (_viz._) about the Pope's Constitution _Unigenitus_, and that he made a fair Attempt to set the Pope and the _Gallican_ Church together by the Ears, for they were all just upon the Point or breaking out into a Church War, that for ought we knew might have gone farther than the _Devil_ himself car'd it should; now I am of the quite contrary Opinion, I believe the _Devil_ really did not make the Breach, but rather heal'd it, for fear it should have gone so far among them as to have set them all in a Flame, and have open'd the Door to the Return of the _Hugonots_ again, which it was in a fair Way to have done.
But be it one Way or t'other, the historical Part seems to be a little against me; for 'tis certain, the _Devil_ both wanted and made Use of Legions of Agents, as well human as infernal, visible and invisible in that great and important Affair, and we cannot doubt but he has innumerable Instruments still at work about it.
Like as in _Poland_, I make no Question but the _Devil_ has thousands of his Banditti at work at this Time, and in another Country not far from it, perhaps, preparing Matters for the next General Diet, taking care to prevent giving any Relaxation to the Protestants, and to justify the moderate Executions at _Thorn_, to excite a Nation to quarrel with every Body who are able to fight with no body; to erect the Apostate Race of _S----y_ upon a Throne which they have no Title to, and turn an elective Throne into an hereditary, in favour of Popery.
I might anticipate all your Objections, by granting the busy _Devil_ at this Time employing all his Agents and Instruments (for I never told you they were idle and useless) in striving to enflame the Christian World, and bring a new War to overspread _Europe_; I might, perhaps, point out to you some of the Measures he takes, the Provocatives which his State Physicians administer to the Courts and Counsellors of Princes, to foment and ferment the Spirits, and Members of Nations, Kingdoms, Empires and States in the World, in order to bring these glorious Ends of Blood and War to pass; for you cannot think but he that knows so much of the _Devil_'s Affairs, as to write his History, must know something of all these Matters more than those that do not know so much as he.
But all this is remote to the present Case, for this is no Impeachment of Satan's new Methods with Mankind, in this Part of the World, and in his private and separate Capacity; all this only signifies that in his more general and national Affairs, the _Devil_ acts still by his old Methods; and when he is to seduce or embroil Nations, he, like other Conquerors, subdues them by Armies, employs mighty Squadrons of _Devils_, and sends out strong Detachments, with Generals and Generalissimos to lead them, some to one Part of the World, some to another; some to influence one Nation, some to manage and direct another, according as Business presents, and his Occasions require, that his Affairs may be carried on currently, and to his Satisfaction.
If it were not thus, but that the _Devil_ by his new and exquisite Management, of which I have said so much, had brought Mankind in general to be the Agents of their own Mischiefs, and that the World were so at his Beck, that he need but command them to go and fight, declare War, raise Armies, destroy Cities, Kingdoms, Countries and People; the World would be a Field of Blood indeed, and all Things would run into Confusion presently.
But this is not the Case at all, Heaven has not let go the Government of the Creation to his subdu'd Enemy, the Devil; that would overturn the whole System of God, and give Satan more Power, than ever he was or will be vested with; when, therefore, I speak of a few forward Wretches in our Day, who are so warm in their Wickedness, that they anticipate the Devil, save him the Trouble to tempt, turn Devils to themselves, and gallop Hellward faster than he drives; I speak of them as single Persons, and acting in their own personal and private Capacity, but when I speak of Nations and Kingdoms, there the Devil is oblig'd to go on in the old Road, and act by Stratagem, by his proper Machinery, and to make use of all his Arts, and all his Agents, just as he has done in all Ages, from the beginning of his politic Government to this Day.
And if it was not thus too, what would become of all his numberless Legions, of which all Ages have heard so much, and all Parts of the World have had so much fatal Experience? They would seem to be quite out of Employment, and be render'd useless in the World of Spirits, where it is to be supposed they reside; not the Devil himself could find any Business for them, which by the Way, to busy and mischievous Spirits, as they are, would be a Hell to them, even before their Time; they would be, as it were, doom'd to a State of Inactivity, which we may suppose was one Part of their Expulsion from Blessedness and the Creation of Man; or as they were for the surprising Interval between the Destruction of Mankind by the Deluge and _Noah_'s coming out of the Ark, when indeed they might be said to have nothing at all to do.
But this is not Satan's Case, and therefore let me tell you too, that you may not think I treat the Case with more Levity than I really do, and than I am sure I intend to do; tho' it is too true that our modern and modish Sinners have arrived to more exquisite Ways of being wicked, than their Fathers, and really seem, as I have said, to need no Devil to tempt them; nay, that they do Satan's Work for him as to others also, and make themselves Devils to their Neighbours, tempting others to crime even faster than the Devil desires them, running before they are sent, and going of the _Devil_'s Errands _gratis_; by which Means Satan's Work is, as to them, done to his Hand, and they may be said to save him a great deal of Trouble; yet after all, the Devil has still a great deal of Business upon his Hands, and as well himself as all his Legions, find themselves a full Employment in disturbing the World, and opposing the Glory and Kingdom of their great Superior, whose Kingdom it is their whole Business, however vain in its End, to overthrow and destroy, if they were able, or at least to endeavour it.
This being the Case, it follows of course that the general Mischiefs of Mankind, as well national and public, as family Mischiefs, and even personal, (except as before excepted) lie all still at the _Devil_'s Door, as much as ever, let his Advocates bring him off of it if they can; and this brings us back again to the manner of the Devil's Management, and the Way of his working by human Agents, or if you will, the Way of human Devils, working in Affairs of low Life, such as we call Divination, Sorcery, Black-Art, Necromancy, and the like; all which I take to consist of two material Parts, and both very necessary for us to be rightly inform'd of.
1. The Part which Satan by himself or his inferior _Devils_ empowers such People to do, as he is in Confederacy with here on Earth; to whom he may be said, like the Master of an Opera or Comedy, to give their Parts to act, and to qualify them to act it; whether he obliges them to a Rehearsal in his Presence, to try their Talents, and see that they are capable of performing, that indeed I have not enquir'd into.
2. That Part which these empower'd People do voluntier or beyond their Commission, to shew their Diligence in the Service of their new Master, and either (1.) to bring Grist to their own Mill, and make their Market of their Employment in the best manner they can; or (2.) to gain Applause, be admir'd, wonder'd at, and applauded, as if they were ten Times more _Devils_ than really they are.
In a Word, the Matter consists of what the _Devil_ does by the Help of these People, and what they do in his Name without him; the Devil is sometimes cheated in his own Business; there are Pretenders to Witchcraft and Black-Art, who Satan never made any Bargain with, but who he connives at, because at least they do his Cause no harm, tho' their Business is rather to get Money, than to render him any Service, of which I gave you a remarkable Instance before.
But to go back to his real Agents, of which I reckon two.
1. Those who act by Direction and Confederacy, as I have said already many do.
2. Those whom he acts in and by, and they (perhaps) know it not, of which Sort History gives us plenty of Examples, from _Machiavel_'s first Disciple ---- to the famous Cardinal _Alberoni_, and even to some more modern than his Eminence, of whom I can say no more till farther Occasion offers.
1. Those who act by immediate Direction of the Devil, and in Confederacy with him; these are such as I mention'd in the beginning of this Chapter, whose Arts are truly black, because really infernal; it will be very hard to decide the Dispute between those who really act thus in Confederacy with the _Devil_, and those who only pretend to it; so I shall leave that Dispute where I find it; but that there are, or at least have been, a Set of People in the World, who really are of his Acquaintance, and very intimate with him; and tho', as I have said, he has much alter'd his Schemes and chang'd Hands of late; yet that there are such People, perhaps of all Sorts; and that the Devil keeps up his Correspondence with them; I must not venture to deny that Part, lest I bring upon me the whole Posse of the conjuring and bewitching Crew, Male and Female, and they should mob me for pretending to deny them the Honour of dealing with the _Devil_, which they are so exceeding willing to have the Fame of.
Not that I am hereby oblig'd to believe all the strange Things the Witches and Wizards, who have been allow'd to be such, nay, who have been hang'd for it, have said of themselves; nay, that they have confess'd of themselves, even at the Gallows; and if I come to have an Occasion to speak freely of the Matter, I may perhaps convince you that the Devil's possessing Power is much lessen'd of late, and that he either is limited, and his Fetter shortened more than it has been, or that he does not find the old Way (as I said before) so fit for his Purpose as he did formerly, and therefore takes other Measures, but I must adjourn that to a Time and Place by itself: But we are told that there are another Sort of People, and, perhaps, a great many of them too, in whom and by whom the Devil really acts, and they know it not.
It would take up a great deal of Time and Room, too much for this Place, so near the Close of this Work, to describe and mark out the involuntary _Devils_ which there are in the World; of whom it may be truly said, that really the _Devil_ is in them, and they know it not: Now, tho' the _Devil_ is cunning and managing, and can be very silent where he finds it for his Interest not to be known; yet it is very hard for him to conceal himself, and to give so little Disturbance in the House, as that the Family should not know who lodged in it; yet, I say, the Devil is so subtle and so mischievous an Agent, that he uses all manner of Methods and Craft to reside in such People as he finds for his Purpose, whether they will or no, and which is more, whether they know it or no.
And let none of my Readers be angry or think themselves ill used, when I tell them the Devil may be in them, and may act them, and by them, and they not know it; for I must add, it may, perhaps, be one of the greatest Pieces of human Wisdom in the World, for a Man to know when the Devil is in him, and when not; when he is a Tool and Agent of Hell, and when he is not; in a Word, when he is doing the Devil's Work, and under his Direction, and when not.
It is true, this is a very weighty Point, and might deserve to be handled in a more serious Way than I seem to be talking in all this Book; but give me leave to talk of Things my own way, and withall, to tell you, that there is no Part of this Work so seemingly ludicrous, but a grave and well weigh'd Mind may make a serious and solid Application of it, if they please; nor is there any Part of this Work, in which a clear Sight and a good Sense may not see that the Author's Design is, that they should do so; and as I am now so near the End of my Book, I thought it was meet to tell you so, and lead you to it as far as I can.
I say, 'tis a great Part of human Wisdom to know when the _Devil_ is acting in us and by us, and when not; the next and still greatest Part would be to prevent him, put a Stop to his Progress, bid him go about his Business, and let him know he should carry on his Designs no farther in that manner; that we will be his Tools no longer; in short, to turn him out of Doors, and bring a stronger Power to take Possession; but this, indeed, is too solid a Subject, and too great to begin with here.
But now, as to the bare knowing when he is at work with us, I say this, tho' it is considerable, may be done, nor is it so very difficult; _for Example_, you have no more to do but look a little into the Microcosm of the Soul, and see there how the Passions which are the Blood, and the Affections which are the Spirit, move in their particular Vessels; how they circulate, and in what Temper the Pulse beats there, and you may easily see who turns the Wheel; if a perfect Calm possesses the Soul; if Peace and Temper prevail, and the Mind feels no Tempests rising; if the Affections are regular and exalted to vertuous and sublime Objects, the Spirits cool, and the Mind sedate, the Man is in a general Rectitude of Mind, he may be truly said to be _his own Man_; Heaven shines upon his Soul with its benign Influences, and he is out of the Reach of the evil Spirit; for the divine Spirit is an Influence of Peace, all calm and bright, happy and sweet like it self, and tending to every Thing that is good both present and future.
But on the other Hand, if at any Time the Mind is ruffled, if Vapours rise, Clouds gather, if Passions swell the Breast, if Anger, Envy, Revenge, Hatred, Wrath, Strife; if these, or any of these hover over you, much more if you feel them within you; if the Affections are possess'd, and the Soul hurried down the Stream to embrace low and base Objects; if those Spirits, which are the Life and enlivening Powers of the Soul, are drawn off to Parties, and to be engag'd in a vicious and corrupt manner, shooting out wild and wicked Desires, and running the Man headlong into Crime, the Case is easily resolv'd, the Man is possess'd, the _Devil_ is in him; and having taken the Fort, or at least the Counterscarp and Out-Works, is making his Lodgment to cover and secure himself in his Hold, that he may not be dispossess'd.
Nor can he be easily dispossess'd when he has got such hold as this; and 'tis no wonder, that being lodg'd thus upon the Out-Works of the Soul he continues to sap the Foundation of the rest, and by his incessant and furious Assaults, reduces the Man at last to a Surrender.
If the Allegory be not as just and apposite as you would have it be, you may, however, see by it in a full View, the State of the Man, and how the _Devil_ carries on his Designs; nothing is more common, and I believe there are few thinking Minds but may reflect upon it in their own Compass, than for our Passions and Affections to flow out of the ordinary Channel; the Spirits and Blood of the Soul to be extravasated, the Passions grow violent and outragious, the Affections impetuous, corrupt and violently vicious: Whence does all this proceed? from Heaven we can't pretend it comes; if we must not say 'tis the _Devil_, whose Door must it lie at? Pride swells the Passions; Avarice moves the Affections; and what is Pride, and what is Avarice, but the _Devil_ in the Inside of the Man? ay, as personally and really as ever he was in the Herd of Swine.
Let not any Man then, who is a Slave to his Passions, or who is chain'd down to his Covetousness, pretend to take it ill, when I say he has the _Devil_ in him, or that he is a _Devil_: What else can it be, and how comes it to pass that Passion and Revenge so often dispossess the Man of himself, as to lead him to commit Murther, to lay Plots and Snares for the Life of his Enemies, and so to thirst for Blood? How comes this but by the Devil's putting those Spirits of the Soul into so violent a Ferment, into a Fever? that the Circulation is precipitated to that Degree, and that the Man too is precipitated into Mischief, and at last into Ruin; 'tis all the _Devil_, tho' the Man does not know it.
In like manner Avarice leads him to rob, plunder and destroy for Money, and to commit sometimes the worst of Violences to obtain the wicked Reward. How many have had their Throats cut for their Money, have been murther'd on the Highway, or in their Beds, for the Desire of what they had? It is the same Thing in other Articles, every Vice is the Devil in a Man; Lust of Rule is the _Devil_ of great Men, and that Ambition is their _Devil_ as much as whoring is Father ------'s _Devil_, one has a _Devil_ of one Class acting him, one another, and every Man's reigning Vice is a _Devil_ to him.
Thus the _Devil_ has his involuntary Instruments, as well as those who act in Confederacy with him; he has a very great Share in many of us, and acts us, and in us, unknown to our selves tho' we know nothing of it, and indeed tho' we may not suspect it of our selves; like _Hazael_ the _Assyrian_, who when the Prophet told him how he would act the _Devil_ upon the poor _Israelites_, answer'd with Detestation, _is thy Servant a Dog that he should do this Thing_, and yet he was that Dog, and did all those cruel Things for all that; the _Devil_ acting him, or acting in him, to make him wickeder than ever he thought it was possible for him to be.
The CONCLUSION.
_Of the_ Devil_'s last Scene of Liberty, and what may be supposed to be his End, with what we are to understand of his being tormented for ever and ever._
As the _Devil_ is a Prince of the Power of the Air, his Kingdom is mortal, and must have an End; and as he is call'd the God of this World, that is, the great Usurper of the Homage and Reverence which Mankind ought of right to pay to their Maker, so his Usurpation also, like the World it self, must have an End: Satan is call'd the God of the World, as Men too much prostrate and prostitute themselves to him, yet he is not the Governor of this World; and therefore the Homage and Worship he has from the World is an Usurpation; and this will have an End, because the World it self will have an End; and all Mankind, as they had a beginning in Time, so must expire and be remov'd before the End of Time.
Since then the _Devil_'s Empire is to expire and come to an End, and that the _Devil_ himself and all his Host of _Devils_ are immortal Seraphs, Spirits that are not embodied and cannot die, but are to remain in being; the Question before us next will be, what is to become of him? what is his State to be? whether is he to wander, and in what Condition is he to remain to that Eternity to which he is still to exist?
I hope no Man will mistake me so much in what I have said as to Spirits, which are all Flame, not being affected with Fire, as if I supposed there was no Place of Punishment for the _Devil_, nor any Kind of Punishment that could affect them; and so of our Spirits also when transform'd into Flame.
I must be allow'd to speak there of that material Fire, by which, as by an Allegory, all the Terrors of an eternal State are represented to us in Scripture, and in the Writings of the learned Commentators, and by which the Pain of Sense is describ'd; this, perhaps, I do not understand as they seem to do, and therefore have said,
When we're all Flame (that is all Spirit) we shall all Fire (that is, all such Fire as this) despise. And thus I claim to be understood.
It does not follow from hence, neither do I suggest, or so much as think that infinite Power cannot form a something (tho' inconceivable to us here) which shall be as tormenting, and as insupportable to a Devil, an apostate Seraph, and to a Spirit, tho' exalted, unembodied and rarified into _Flame_, as Fire would be to other Bodies; in which I think I am orthodox, and do not give the least Occasion to an Enemy to charge me with profane Speaking, in those Words, or to plead for thinking prophanely himself.
It must be Atheistical to the last Degree to suggest, that whereas the _Devil_ has been heaping up and amassing Guilt ever since the Creation of Man, encreasing in hatred of God and Rebellion against him, and in all possible endeavour to dethrone and depose the Majesty of Heaven; that yet Heaven had not prepar'd, or could not prepare a just Penalty for him; and that it should not all end in God's entire Victory over Hell, and in Satan's open Condemnation: Heaven could not be just to its own Glory, if he should not avenge himself upon this Rebel, for all his superlative Wickedness in his modern as well as ancient Station; for the Blood of so many millions of his faithful Subjects and Saints whom he has destroy'd; and if nothing else offer'd it self to prove this Part, it would appear undoubted to me; but this, I confess, does not belong to Satan's History, and therefore I have reserv'd it to this Place, and shall also be the shorter in it.
That his Condition is to be a State of Punishment, and that by Torment, the _Devil_ himself has own'd, and his calling out to our blessed Lord when he cast him out of the furious Man among the Tombs, is a Proof of it, _What have we to do with thee_, and _art thou come to torment us before the Time?_ Luke viii. 28. where the _Devil_ acknowledges four Things, and three of them are directly to my present Purpose, and if you won't believe the Word of God, I hope you will believe the _Devil_, especially when 'tis an open Confession against himself.
1. He confess Christ to be the _Son of God_ (that by the Way) and _no Thanks to him_, for that does not want the _Devil_'s Evidence.
2. He acknowledges he may be tormented.
3. He acknowledges Christ was able to torment him.
4. He acknowledges that there is a Time appointed when he shall be tormented.
As to _how_, in _what Manner_, and by _what Means_, this tormenting the Devil is to be performed or executed, that I take to be as needless to us as 'tis impossible to know, and being not at present inclined to fill your Heads and Thoughts with weak and imperfect Guesses, I leave it where I find it.
It is enough to us that this Torment of the _Devil_ is represented to us by Fire, it being impossible for our confin'd Thoughts to conceive of Torment by any Thing in the World more exquisite; whence I conclude, that _Devils_ shall at last receive a Punishment suitable to their Spirituous Nature, and as exquisitely Tormenting as a burning Fire would be to our Bodies.
Having thus settl'd my own Belief of this Matter, and stated it so, as I think will let you see 'tis rightly sounded, the Matter stands thus.
Satan having been let loose to play his Game in this World, has improv'd his Time to the utmost; he has not fail'd on all Occasions to exert his Hatred, Rage, and Malice at his Conqueror and Enemy, _namely, his Maker_; he has nor fail'd, from Principles of meer Envy and Pride, to pursue Mankind with all possible Rancour, in order to deprive him of the Honour and Felicity which he was created for, namely, to succeed the _Devil_ and his Angels in the State of Glory from which they fell.
This Hatred of God and Envy at Man, having broken out in so many several Ways in the whole Series of Time from the Creation, must necessarily have greatly encreased his Guilt; and as Heaven is righteous to judge him, must terminate in an encrease of Punishment, adequate to his Crime, and sufficient to his Nature.
Some have suggested, that there is yet a Time to come, when the _Devil_ shall exert more Rage, and do more Mischief than ever yet he has been permitted to do; whether he shall break his Chain, or be unchain'd for a Time, they cannot tell, nor I neither; and 'tis happy for my Work, that even this Part too does not belong to his History; if ever it shall be given an Account of by Mankind, it must be after it is come to pass, for my Part is not Prophesy of foretelling what the Devil shall do, but History of what he has done.
Thus, good People, I have brought the History of the Devil down to _your own Times_; I have, as it were, _rais'd him_ for you, and set him in your View, that you may know him and have a Care of him.
If any cunninger Men among you think they are able now to _lay him_ again, and so dispose of him out of your Sight, that you shall be troubled no more with him, either here or hereafter, let them go to work with him their own Way; you know Things future do not belong to an Historian, so I leave him among you, wishing you may be able to give no worse an Account of him for the Time to come, than I have done for the Time past.
FINIS.
Footnotes:
[1] N. B. He never refus'd setting his hand to any opinion, which he thought it for his interest to acknowledge.
[2] Mean't of nothing.
[3] _Mr._ Pool's _words are these_: Some refer the words, _This day have I begotten thee_, to the incarnation of the Son of GOD, others to the Resurrection: our Translators lay the stress on the preposition of which the verb is compounded, and by adding _again_, (viz.) _rais'd up Jesus again_, Acts xiii. 33. intend it to be understood of the Resurrection; and there is ground for it, in the context, for the Resurrection of Christ, is that which St. _Paul_ had propounded in v. 30. of the same Chapter, as his theme or argument to preach upon.
Not that Christ at his Resurrection began to be the Son of God, but that he was manifested then to be so.
[4] Satan.
[5] The meaning of the word Devil is Destroyer. See _Pool_ upon _Acts_ xiii. 10.
[6] _As great as the Devil and Doctor_ Faustus. Vulg. Dr. _Foster_.
Transcriber's Notes:
Passages in italics are indicated by _underscore_.
Additional spacing after some of the quotes is intentional to indicate both the end of a quotation and the beginning of a new paragraph as presented in the original text.
Long "s" has been modernized.
The original text includes Greek characters. For this text version these letters have been replaced with transliterations.
The text includes two instances of unmatched round brackets; as these require interpretation to close, they have been left unmatched.
The following misprints have been corrected: "Origiual" corrected to "Original" (Table of Contents) "34" corrected to "31" (Table of Contents) "259" corrected to "159" (Table of Contents) extraneous "a" removed (page 1) "blinding" corrected to "binding" (page 9) "decrib'd" corrected to "describ'd" (page 57) "Battels" corrected to "Battles" (page 76) "inconcievable" corrected to "inconceivable" (page 91) "Devils" corrected to "Devil's" (page 101) "hut" corrected to "but" (page 120) "that that" corrected to "that" (page 127) "opposs'd" corrected to "oppos'd" (page 152) "notwitstanding" corrected to "notwithstanding" (page 162) "a as Body" corrected to "as a Body" (page 172) "Peoples" corrected to "People's" (page 184) "Asia" corrected to "Asa" (page 187) "was" corrected to "saw" (page 213) "faling" corrected to "falling" (page 229) "Christain" corrected to "Christian" (page 230) "what's is" corrected to "what is" (page 233) "disapointed" corrected to "disappointed" (page 234) "been" corrected to "seen" (page 235) "momentons" corrected to "momentous" (page 244) "Chritians" corrected to "Christians" (page 250) "Egyytian" corrected to "Egyptian" (page 252) "Magnifience" corrected to "Magnificence" (page 256) "whereever" corrected to "wherever" (page 267) "compliasant" corrected to "complaisant" (page 294) "coul'd" corrected to "cou'd" (page 298) "Acquiantance" corrected to "Acquaintance" (page 299) "Oportunity" corrected to "Opportunity" (page 300) "har'd" corrected to "hard" (page 301) "distingush" corrected to "distinguish" (page 312) "whereever" corrected to "wherever" (page 322) "the the" corrected to "the" (page 330) "CHAP. VII" corrected to "CHAP. IX" (page 339) "Businses" corrected to "Business" (page 370)
Other than the corrections listed above, printer's inconsistencies in spelling, punctuation, and hyphenation usage have been retained.
End of Project Gutenberg's The History of the Devil, by Daniel Defoe