The Anatomy of Melancholy by Robert Burton
page 269 of 2094 (12%)
page 269 of 2094 (12%)
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kind out of most approved physicians. Cornelius Gemma, _lib. 2. de nat.
mirac. c. 4._ relates of a young maid, called Katherine Gualter, a cooper's daughter, _an._ 1571. that had such strange passions and convulsions, three men could not sometimes hold her; she purged a live eel, which he saw, a foot and a half long, and touched it himself; but the eel afterwards vanished; she vomited some twenty-four pounds of fulsome stuff of all colours, twice a day for fourteen days; and after that she voided great balls of hair, pieces of wood, pigeon's dung, parchment, goose dung, coals; and after them two pounds of pure blood, and then again coals and stones, or which some had inscriptions bigger than a walnut, some of them pieces of glass, brass, &c. besides paroxysms of laughing, weeping and ecstasies, &c. _Et hoc (inquit) cum horore vidi_, this I saw with horror. They could do no good on her by physic, but left her to the clergy. Marcellus Donatus, _lib. 2. c. 1. de med. mirab._ hath such another story of a country fellow, that had four knives in his belly, _Instar serrae dentatos_, indented like a saw, every one a span long, and a wreath of hair like a globe, with much baggage of like sort, wonderful to behold: how it should come into his guts, he concludes, _Certe non alio quam daemonis astutia et dolo_, (could assuredly only have been through the artifice of the devil). Langius, _Epist. med. lib. 1. Epist. 38._ hath many relations to this effect, and so hath Christophorus a Vega: Wierus, Skenkius, Scribanius, all agree that they are done by the subtlety and illusion of the devil. If you shall ask a reason of this, 'tis to exercise our patience; for as [1250]Tertullian holds, _Virtus non est virtus, nisi comparem habet aliquem, in quo superando vim suam ostendat_ 'tis to try us and our faith, 'tis for our offences, and for the punishment of our sins, by God's permission they do it, _Carnifices vindictae justae Dei_, as [1251]Tolosanus styles them, Executioners of his will; or rather as David, Ps. 78. ver. 49. "He cast upon them the fierceness of his anger, indignation, wrath, and vexation, by sending out of evil angels:" so did he afflict Job, Saul, the Lunatics and |
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