James Thacher
Demonology, Ghosts and Apparitions
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Table of contents
GHOSTS AND APPARITIONS.
POWER OF IMAGINATION.
ILLUSIONS.
IMAGINATION AND FEAR.
SUPERSTITION.
WITCHCRAFT AND SORCERY.
SALEM WITCHCRAFT.
TRIAL OF SUSANNA MARTIN, JUNE 29, 1692.
TRIAL OF ELIZABETH HOW, JUNE 30, 1692.
TRIAL OF MARTHA CARRYER, AUGUST 2, 1692.
OMENS AND AUGURIES.
MEDICAL QUACKERY.
‘With
spells and charms I break the viper’s jaw,Cleave
solid rocks, oaks from their fissures draw,Whole
woods remove, the airy mountains shake,Earth
forced to groan, and ghosts from graves awake.’Ovid’s
Metamor.There
are mysteries even in nature, which we cannot investigate, paradoxes
which we can never resolve.
GHOSTS AND APPARITIONS.
Such
is the constitution of the human mind, that it never attains to
perfection; it is constantly susceptible of erroneous impressions and
perverse propensities. The faculties of the soul are bound in
thraldom by superstition, and the intellect, under its influence, is
scarcely capable of reflecting on its divine origin, its nobleness
and dignity. The mind that is imbued with a superstitious
temperament, is liable to incessant torment, and is prepared to
inflict the most atrocious evils on mankind; even murder, suicide,
and merciless persecution, have proceeded from, and been sanctioned
by a superstitious spirit. It is this, in its most appalling aspect,
which impels the heathen to a life of mutilation and perpetual pain
and torment of body, which degrades the understanding below that of a
brute. The superstitions practised by the devotees to the Roman
Catholic Church, if less horrible, are equally preposterous and
pernicious. The popular belief in supernatural visitations in the
form of apparitions and spectres, is fostered and encouraged by the
baneful influence of superstition and prejudice. So universal has
been the prevalence of the belief that those conversant with history
can resort to the era when every village had its ghost or witch, as,
in more ancient times, every family had its household gods.
Superstition, is a word of very extensive signification, but for the
purpose of this work, the word applies to those who believe in
witchcraft, magic, and apparitions, or that the divine will is
decided by omens or auguries; that the fortune of individuals can be
affected by things indifferent, by things deemed lucky or unlucky, or
that disease can be cured by words, charms, and incantations. It
means, in short, the belief of what is false and contrary to reason.
Superstition arises from, and is sustained by ignorance and credulity
in the understanding. The subject of supernatural agency and the
reality of witchcraft, has been the occasion of unbounded
speculation, and of much philosophical disquisition, in almost all
nations and ages. While some of the wisest of men have assented to
their actual existence and visible appearance, others equally eminent
have maintained the opinion that the supposed apparitions are to be
accounted for on the principle of feverish dreams and disturbed
imaginations. That our Creator has power to employ celestial spirits
as instruments and messengers, and to create supernatural visions on
the human mind, it would be impious to deny. But we can conceive of
no necessity, at the present day, for the employment of disembodied
spirits in our world; we can hold no intercourse with them, nor
realize the slightest advantage by their agency. To believe in
apparitions is to believe that God suspends the law of nature for the
most trivial purposes, and that he would communicate the power of
doing mischief, and of controling his laws to beings, merely to
gratify their own passions, which is inconsistent with the goodness
of God. We are sufficiently aware that the sacred spirits of our
fathers have ascended to regions prepared for their reception, and
there may they remain undisturbed till the mighty secrets now
concealed shall be revealed for our good. The soul or spirit of man
is immaterial, of course intangible and invisible. If it is not
recognisable by our senses, how can the dead appear to the living?
That disembodied spirits should communicate with surviving objects on
earth, that the ghosts of the murdered should appear to disclose the
murderer, or that the spirit of the wise and good should return to
proffer instructions to the vile and ignorant, must be deemed
unphilosophical.
‘
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