cause and cure most diseases, deceive our senses;
they have excellent skill in all Arts and Sciences;
and that the most illiterate devil is
Quovis homine
scientior (more knowing than any man), as [1153]Cicogna
maintains out of others. They know the virtues
of herbs, plants, stones, minerals, &c.; of all creatures,
birds, beasts, the four elements, stars, planets,
can aptly apply and make use of them as they see good;
perceiving the causes of all meteors, and the like:
Dant se coloribus (as [1154] Austin hath it)
accommodant se figuris, adhaerent sonis, subjiciunt
se odoribus, infundunt se saporibus, omnes sensus etiam
ipsam intelligentiam daemones fallunt, they deceive
all our senses, even our understanding itself at once.
[1155]They can produce miraculous alterations in the
air, and most wonderful effects, conquer armies, give
victories, help, further, hurt, cross and alter human
attempts and projects (
Dei permissu) as they
see good themselves. [1156]When Charles the Great
intended to make a channel betwixt the Rhine and the
Danube, look what his workmen did in the day, these
spirits flung down in the night,
Ut conatu Rex
desisteret, pervicere. Such feats can they
do. But that which Bodine,
l. 4, Theat. nat.
thinks (following Tyrius belike, and the Platonists,)
they can tell the secrets of a man’s heart,
aut
cogitationes hominum, is most false; his reasons
are weak, and sufficiently confuted by Zanch.
lib.
4, cap. 9. Hierom.
lib. 2, com. in Mat. ad cap.
15, Athanasius
quaest. 27, ad Antiochum Principem,
and others.
Orders.] As for those orders of good and bad
devils, which the Platonists hold, is altogether erroneous,
and those Ethnics boni et mali Genii, are to
be exploded: these heathen writers agree not in
this point among themselves, as Dandinus notes, An
sint [1157]mali non conveniunt, some will have
all spirits good or bad to us by a mistake, as if an
Ox or Horse could discourse, he would say the Butcher
was his enemy because he killed him, the grazier his
friend because he fed him; a hunter preserves and yet
kills his game, and is hated nevertheless of his game;
nec piscatorem piscis amare potest, &c.
But Jamblichus, Psellus, Plutarch, and most Platonists
acknowledge bad, et ab eorum maleficiis cavendum,
and we should beware of their wickedness, for they
are enemies of mankind, and this Plato learned in
Egypt, that they quarrelled with Jupiter, and were
driven by him down to hell. [1158]That which [1159]Apuleius,
Xenophon, and Plato contend of Socrates Daemonium,
is most absurd: That which Plotinus of his, that
he had likewise Deum pro Daemonio; and that
which Porphyry concludes of them all in general, if
they be neglected in their sacrifice they are angry;
nay more, as Cardan in his Hipperchen will,
they feed on men’s souls, Elementa sunt plantis
elementum, animalibus plantae, hominibus animalia,
erunt et homines aliis, non autem diis, nimis enim