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Popular Tales From the Norse p. cxxxi From the middle of the fourteenth to the middle of the seventeenth century the history of Europe teems with processes against witches and sorcerers. Before the Reformation it reached its height, in the Catholic world, with the famous bull of Innocent the Eighth in 1481, the infamous Malleus Maleficarum, the first of the long list of witch-finding books, and the zeal with which the State lent all the terrors of the law to assist the ecclesiastical inquisitors. Before the tribunals of those inquisitors, in p. cxxxii the fifteenth century, innumerable victims were arraigned on the double charge
of heresy and sorcery--for the crimes ran in couples, both being children and
sworn servants of the Devil. Would that the historian could say that with the
era of the Reformation these abominations ceased! The Roman Hierarchy, with
her bulls and inquisitors, had sown a bitter crop, which both she and the Protestant
Churches were destined to reap; but in no part of the world were the labourers
more eager and willing, when the fields were "black" to harvest, than
in those very reformed communities which had just shaken off the yoke of Rome,
and which had sprung in many cases from the very heretics whom she had persecuted
and burnt, accusing them, at the same time, of the most malignant sorceries.
1 Their excuse is, that no p. cxxxiii one is before his age. The intense personality given to the Devil in the Middle
Age had possessed the whole mind of Europe. We must take them as we find them,
with their bright fancy, their earnest faith, their stern fanaticism, their
revolting superstition, just as when we look upon a picture we know that those
brilliant hues and tones, that spirit which informs the whole, could never be
were it not for the vulgar earths and oil out of which the glorious work of
art is mixed and made. Strangely monotonous are all the witch trials of which
Europe has so many to show. At first the accused denies, then under torture
she confesses, then relapses and denies; tortured again, she confesses again,
amplifies her story, and accuses others. When given to the stake, she not seldom
asserts all her confessions to be false, which is ascribed to the power which
the fiend still has over her. Then she is burnt and her ashes given to the winds.
Those who wish to read one, unexampled perhaps for barbarity and superstition,
and more curious than the rest from the prominence given in it to a man, may
find it in the trial of Dr. Fian, the Scotch wizard, "which Doctor was
register to the devill, that sundrie times preached at North Baricke (North
Berwick, in East Lothian) Kirke to a number of notorious Witches." 1
But p. cxxxiv we advise no one to venture on a perusal of this tract who is not prepared
to meet with the most unutterable accusations and crimes, the most cruel tortures,
and the most absurd confessions, followed as usual by the stoutest denial of
all that had been confessed; when torture had done her worst on poor human nature,
and the soul reasserted at the last her supremacy over the body. 1
One p. cxxxv characteristic of all these witch trials is the fact. that in spite of their unholy connection and intrigues with the Evil One, no witch ever attained to wealth and station by the aid of the Prince of Darkness. The pleasure to do ill is all the pleasure they feel. This fact alone might have opened the eyes of their persecutors, for if the Devil had the worldly power which they represented him to have, p. cxxxvi he might at least have raised seine of his votaries to temporal rank, and to the pomps and the vanities of this world. An old German proverb expresses this notorious fact, by saying, that "every seven years a witch is three halfpence richer;" and so with all the unholy means of Hell at their command, they dragged out their lives, along with their black cats, in poverty and wretchedness. To this fate at last came the worshippers of the great goddess Freyja, whom our forefathers adored as the goddess of love and plenty; and whose car was drawn by those animals which popular superstition has ever since assigned to the "old witch" of our English villages. The North was not free, any more than the rest of the Protestant world, from this direful superstition, which ran p. cxxxvii over Europe like a pestilence in the sixteenth century. In Sweden especially, the witches and their midnight ridings to Blokulla, the black hill, gave occasion to processes as absurd and abominable as the trial of Dr. Fian and the witch-findings of Hopkins. In Denmark, the sorceresses were supposed to meet at Tromsoe, high up in Finmark, or even on Hecla in Iceland. The Norse witches met at a Blokolle of their own, or on the Dovrefell, or at other places in Norway or Finmark. As might be expected, we find many traces of witchcraft in these Tales, but it may be doubted whether these may not be referred rather to the old heathen belief in such arts still lingering in the popular mind than to the processes of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, which were far p. cxxxviii more a craze and mania of the educated classes acting under a mistaken religious fanaticism against popular superstitions than a movement arising from the mass of the community. Still, in the Mastermaid, p. 71, the witch of a sister-in-law, who had rolled the apple over to the Prince, and so charmed him, was torn to pieces between twenty-four horses. The old queen in "The Lassie and her Godmother," p. 188, tries to persuade her son to have the young queen burnt alive for a wicked witch, who was dumb, and had eaten her own babes. In "East o' the Sun and West o' the Moon," p. 22, it is a wicked stepmother who has bewitched the prince. In "Bushy Bride," p. 322, the ugly bride charms the king to sleep, and is at last thrown, with her wicked mother, into a pit full of snakes. In "The Twelve Wild Ducks," p. 51, the wicked stepmother persuades the king that Snow-white and Rosy-red is a witch, and almost persuades him to burn her alive. In "Tatterhood," p. 345, a whole troop of witches come to keep their revels on Christmas eve in the Queen's Palace, and snap off the young Princess's head. It is hard, indeed, in tales where Trolls play so great a part, to keep witch and Troll separate; but the above instances will shew that the belief in the one, as distinct from the other, exists in the popular superstitions of the North. The frequent transformation of men into beasts, in these Tales, is another striking feature. This power the gods of the Norseman possessed in common with those of all other mythologies. Europa and her Bull, Leda and her Swan, will occur at once to the reader's mind; and to come to closer resemblances, just as Athene appears in the p. cxxxix Odyssey as an eagle or a swallow perched on the roof of the hall, 1 so Odin flies off as a falcon, and Loki takes the form of a horse or bird. This was only part of that omnipotence which all gods enjoy. But the belief that men, under certain conditions, could also take the shape of animals, is primeval, and the traditions of every race can tell of such transformations. Herodotus had heard how the Neurians, a Slavonic race, passed for wizards amongst the Scythians and the Greeks settled round the Black Sea, because each of them, once in the year, became a wolf for a few days, and then returned to his natural shape. Pliny, Pomponius Mela, and St. Augustin, in his great treatise, De Civitate Dei, tell the same story, and Virgil in his Eclogues has sung the same belief. 2 The Latins called such a man a turnskin,--versipellis, an expression which exactly agrees with the Icelandic expression for the same thing, and which is probably the true original of our turncoat. In Petronius the superstition appears in its full shape, and is worth repeating. At the banquet of Trimalchion, Niceros gives the following account of the turnskins of Nero's time:-- "It happened that my master was gone to Capua to dispose of some second-hand
goods. I took the opportunity and persuaded our guest to walk with me to the
fifth milestone. He was a valiant soldier, and a sort of grim water-drinking
Pluto. About cock-crow, when the moon was shining as bright as mid-day, we came
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