Discovery of Witches eBook

Thomas Henry Potts
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 302 pages of information about Discovery of Witches.

Discovery of Witches eBook

Thomas Henry Potts
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 302 pages of information about Discovery of Witches.

[Footnote 18:  In the epistle to his kinsman Sir Thomas Scot, prefixed to his Discoverie, he observes:—­

“I see among other malefactors manie poore old women conuented before you for working of miracles, other wise called witchcraft, and therefore I thought you also a meet person to whom I might commend my booke.”—­And he then proceeds, in the following spirited and gallant strain, to run his course against the Dagon of popular superstition:—­

“I therefore (at this time) doo onelie desire you to consider of my report, concerning the euidence that is commonlie brought before you against them.  See first whether the euidence be not friuolous, & whether the proofs brought against them be not incredible, consisting of ghesses, presumptions, & impossibilities contrarie to reason, scripture, and nature.  See also what persons complaine vpon them, whether they be not of the basest, the vnwisest, & most faithles kind of people.  Also may it please you to waie what accusations and crimes they laie to their charge, namelie:  She was at my house of late, she would haue had a pot of milke, she departed in a chafe bicause she had it not, she railed, she curssed, she mumbled and whispered, and finallie she said she would be euen with me:  and soone after my child, my cow, my sow, or my pullet died, or was strangelie taken.  Naie (if it please your Worship) I haue further proofe:  I was with a wise woman, and she told me I had an ill neighbour, & that she would come to my house yer it were long, and so did she; and that she had a marke aboue hir waste, & so had she:  and God forgiue me, my stomach hath gone against hir a great while.  Hir mother before hir was counted a witch, she hath beene beaten and scratched by the face till bloud was drawne vpon hir, bicause she hath beene suspected, & afterwards some of those persons were said to amend.  These are the certeinties that I heare in their euidences.

Note also how easilie they may be brought to confesse that which they neuer did, nor lieth in the power of man to doo:  and then see whether I haue cause to write as I doo.  Further, if you shall see that infidelitie, poperie, and manie other manifest heresies be backed and shouldered, and their professors animated and hartened, by yeelding to creatures such infinit power as is wrested out of Gods hand, and attributed to witches:  finallie, if you shall perceiue that I haue faithfullie and trulie deliuered and set downe the condition and state of the witch, and also of the witchmonger, and haue confuted by reason and lawe, and by the word of God it selfe, all mine aduersaries obiections and arguments:  then let me haue your countenance against them that maliciouslie oppose themselues against me.

My greatest aduersaries are yoong ignorance and old custome. For what follie soeuer tract of time hath fostered, it is so superstitiouslie pursued of some, as though no error could be acquainted with custome.  But if the lawe of nations would ioine with such custome, to the maintenance of ignorance, and to the suppressing of knowledge; the ciuilest countrie in the world would soone become barbarous, &c.  For as knowledge and time discouereth errors, so dooth superstition and ignorance in time breed them.”

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Discovery of Witches from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.