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'Seeing therefore,' infers Milton, the greatest of England's patriots as well as poets, 'that no man, no synod, no session of men, though called the Church, can judge definitively the sense of Scripture to another man's conscience, which is well known to be a maxim of the Protestant religion; it follows plainly, that he who holds in religion that belief or those opinions which to his conscience and utmost understanding appear with most evidence or probability in the Scripture, though to others he seem erroneous, can no more be justly censured for a heretic than his censurers, who do but the same thing themselves, while they censure him for so doing.... To Protestants therefore, whose common rule and touchstone is the Scripture, nothing can with more conscience, more equity, nothing more Protestantly can be permitted than a free and lawful debate at all times by writing, conference, or disputation of what opinion soever disputable by Scripture.... How many persecutions, then, imprisonments, banishments, penalties, and stripes; how much bloodshed, have the forcers of conscience to answer for—and Protestants rather than Papists!' (A Treatise of Civil Power in Ecclesiastical Causes.) The reasons which induced Milton to exclude the Catholics of his day from the general toleration are more intelligible and more plausible, than those of fifty or sixty years since, when the Rev. Sidney Smith published the Letters of Peter Plymley.

      '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

       At Woodstock on a pers'nal treaty?

       ... &c. &c.'

      Hudibras, ii. 3.

      Chapter IX.

       Table of Contents

      Glanvil's Sadducismus Triumphatus—His Sentiments on Witchcraft and Demonology—Baxter's 'Certainty of the World of Spirits,' &c.—Witch Trial at Bury St. Edmund's by Sir Matthew Hale, 1664—The Evidence adduced in Court—Two Witches hanged—Three hanged at Exeter in 1682—The last Witches judicially executed in England—Uniformity of the Evidence adduced at the Trials—Webster's Attack upon the Witch-Creed in 1677—Witch Trials in England at the end of the Seventeenth Century—French Parliaments vindicate the Diabolic Reality of the Crime—Witchcraft in Sweden.

      The bold licentiousness and ill-concealed scepticism of Charles II. and his Court, whose despotic prejudices, however, supported by the zeal of the Church, prosecuted dissenters from a form of religion which maintained 'the right divine of kings to govern wrong,' might be indifferent to the prejudice of witchcraft. But the princes and despots of former times have seldom been more careful of the lives than they have been of the liberties, of their subjects. The formal apology for the reality of that crime published by Charles II.'s chaplain-in-ordinary, the Rev. Dr. Joseph Glanvil, against the modern Sadducees (a very inconsiderable sect) who denied both ghosts and witches, their well-attested apparitions and acts, has been already noticed. His philosophic inquiry (so he terms it) into the nature

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