The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 12, No. 325, August 2, 1828 by Various
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page 20 of 50 (40%)
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extraordinary manner, afflict them with such distempers as their bodies
were most subject to, as particularly appeared in the children of Dorothy Dunent, (one of the indictments against the prisoners being for their bewitchment;) for he conceived that these swooning fits were natural, and nothing else but that they call the mother, but _only heightened to a great excess by the subtilty of the devil co-operating with the malice of these, which we term witches, at whose instance he doth the villanies_." The ceremony of initiation to the dreadful vocation and great powers of witchcraft was attended with considerable form and mystery:-- ----They call me hag and witch. What is the name? When, and by what art learned? With what spell, what charm or invocation, May the thing call'd _familiar_ be purchas'd? The older and more ugly the performer in these appalling ceremonies, the better. Some witches seem to have had the devil quite at their beck; but his visits to most of them appear to have been "few and far between." The convention (remarks John Gaule, an old writer) for such a solemn initiation being proclaimed (by some herald imp) to some others of the confederation, on some great holy or Lord's day, they meet in some church, either before the consecrated bell hath tolled, or else very late, after all the services are past and over. "The party, in some vesture for that purpose, is presented by some confederate or familiar to the prince of devills, sitting now in a throne of infernall majesty, appearing in the form of a man, only labouring to hide his cloven foot. To whom, after bowing and homage done, a petition is presented to be received into his association and protection; and first, if the witch be |
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