The True Story vs. Myth of Witchcraft. William Godwin

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The True Story vs. Myth of Witchcraft - William Godwin

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devil's power, makes a compromise, and has 'recourse to a fraud of Satan,' explaining that he is in reality but a clever juggler, a transcendent physician who knows how to accomplish what is in relation to us a prodigy, in knowing how to use natural forces which our knowledge has not yet discovered. Such an unworthy compromise was certainly not fitted to arouse men from their 'cauchemar démonologique.'—See Révue des Deux Mondes, Aug. 1, 1858.

      'Straws, laid across, my pace retard.

       The horse-shoe's nailed, each threshold's guard.

       The stunted broom the wenches hide

       For fear that I should up and ride.

       They stick with pins my bleeding seat,

       And bid me show my secret teat.'

      θελκτήρια πάντα τέτυκτο‧

       Ἔνθ᾽ ἔνι μὲν φιλότης, ἐν δ᾽ ἵμερος, ἐν δ᾽ ὀαριστὺς,

       Πάρφασις, ἥ τ᾽ ἔκλεψε νόον πύκα περ φρονεόντων.

      'has not he, within a year,

       Hang'd threescore of 'em in one shire,

       * * * * *

       Who after prov'd himself a witch,

       And made a rod for his own breech?'

      The Knight's Squire on the same occasion reminds his master of the more notorious of the devil's tricks of that and the last age:—

      'Did not the devil appear to Martin

       Luther in Germany for certain,

       And would have gull'd him with a trick

       But Mart was too, too politic?

       Did he not help the Dutch to purge

       At Antwerp their cathedral church?

       Sing catches to the saints at Mascon,

       And tell them all they came to ask him?

       Appear in divers shapes to Kelly,

       And speak i' th' nun of Loudun's belly?

       Meet with the Parliament's committee

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