paradoxes, madness; fasting naturally prepares men
to these things.” Monks, anchorites, and
the like, after much emptiness, become melancholy,
vertiginous, they think they hear strange noises,
confer with hobgoblins, devils, rivel up their bodies,
et dum hostem insequimur, saith Gregory, civem
quem diligimus, trucidamus, they become bare skeletons,
skin and bones; Carnibus abstinentes proprias carnes
devorant, ut nil praeter cutem et ossa sit reliquum.
Hilarion, as [6458]Hierome reports in his life, and
Athanasius of Antonius, was so bare with fasting,
“that the skin did scarce stick to the bones;
for want of vapours he could not sleep, and for want
of sleep became idleheaded, heard every night infants
cry, oxen low, wolves howl, lions roar” (as
he thought), “clattering of chains, strange voices,
and the like illusions of devils.” Such
symptoms are common to those that fast long, are solitary,
given to contemplation, overmuch solitariness and
meditation. Not that these things (as I said of
fasting) are to be discommended of themselves, but
very behoveful in some cases and good: sobriety
and contemplation join our souls to God, as that heathen
[6459]Porphyry can tell us. [6460]"Ecstasy is a taste
of future happiness, by which we are united unto God,
a divine melancholy, a spiritual wing,” Bonaventure
terms it, to lift us up to heaven; but as it is abused,
a mere dotage, madness, a cause and symptom of religious
melancholy. [6461]"If you shall at any time see”
(saith Guianerius) “a religious person over-superstitious,
too solitary, or much given to fasting, that man will
certainly be melancholy, thou mayst boldly say it,
he will be so.” P. Forestus hath almost
the same words, and [6462]Cardan subtil, lib. 18.
et cap. 40. lib. 8. de rerum varietate, “solitariness,
fasting, and that melancholy humour, are the causes
of all hermits’ illusions.” Lavater,
de spect. cap. 19. part. 1. and part. 1.
cap. 10. puts solitariness a main cause of such
spectrums and apparitions; none, saith he, so melancholy
as monks and hermits, the devil’s hath melancholy;
[6463]"none so subject to visions and dotage in this
kind, as such as live solitary lives, they hear and
act strange things in their dotage.” [6464]Polydore
Virgil, lib. 2. prodigiis, “holds that
those prophecies and monks’ revelations? nuns,
dreams, which they suppose come from God, to proceed
wholly ab instinctu daemonum, by the devil’s
means;” and so those enthusiasts, Anabaptists,
pseudoprophets from the same cause. [6465]Fracastorius,
lib. 2. de intellect, will have all your pythonesses,
sibyls, and pseudoprophets to be mere melancholy,
so doth Wierus prove, lib. 1. cap. 8. et l. 3. cap.
7. and Arculanus in 9 Rhasis, that melancholy is
a sole cause, and the devil together, with fasting
and solitariness, of such sibylline prophecies, if
there were ever such, which with [6466]Casaubon and
others I justly except at; for it is not likely that