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ORTIS imaginatio generat casum: 'A
strong imagination begetteth
chance,'
say learned clearks. I am one of those that feele a very great conflict
and power of imagination. All men are shockt therewith, and some
overthrowne
by it. One impression of it pierceth me, and for want of strength to
resist
her, my endevour to avoid it. I could live with the only assistance of
holy and merry-hearted men. The sight of others anguishes doth sensibly
drive me into anguish; and my sense hath often usurped the sense of a
third
man. If one cough continually, he provokes my lungs and throat. I am
more
unwilling to visit the sicke dutie doth engage me unto, than those to
whom
I am little beholding, and regard least. I apprehend the evill which I
studie, and place it in me. I deeme it not strange that she brings both
agues and death to such as give her scope to worke her will and applaud
her. Simon Thomas was a great Physitian in his daies. I remember upon a
time comming by chance to visit a rich old man that dwelt in Tholouse,
and who was troubled with the cough of the lungs, who discoursing with
the said Simon Thomas of the meanes of his recoverie, he told him, that
one of the best was, to give me occasion to be delighted in his
companie,
and that fixing his eyes upon the liveliness and freshness of my face
and
setting his thoughts upon the jolitie and vigor, wherewith my youthful
age did then flourish, and filling all his senses with my flourishing
estate,
his habitude might thereby be amended, and his health recovered. But he
forgot to say, that mine might also be empaired and infected. Gallus
Vibius
did so well enure his minde to comprehend the essence and motions of
folly,
that he so transported his judgement from out his seat, as he could
never
afterwards bring it to his right place againe; and might rightly boast
to have become a foole through wisdome. Some there are, that through
feare
anticipate the hang-mans hand; as he did, whose friends having obtained
his pardon, and putting away the cloth wherewith he was hoodwinkt, that
he might heare it read, was found starke dead upon the scaffold,
wounded
only by the stroke of imagination. Wee sweat, we shake, we grow pale,
and
we blush at the motions of our imaginations; and wallowing in our beds
we feele our bodies agitated and turmoiled at their apprehensions, yea
in such manner as sometimes we are ready to yeeld up the spirit. And
burning
youth (although asleepe) is often therewith so possessed and enfolded,
that dreaming it doth satisfy and enjoy her amorous desires.
Ut quasi transactis
sæpe
omnibu' rebu' profundant Fluminis ingentes fluctus,
vestemnque
cruentent. -- LUCRET. 1. iv. 1027.
And if all things were done,
they
powre foorth streames,
And bloodie their night-garment
in their dreames.
And although it be not strange to
see
some men have hornes growing upon their head in one night, that had
none
when they went to bed: notwithstanding the fortune or success of Cyppus
King of Italie is memorable, who because the day before he had with
earnest
affection assisted and beene attentive at a bul-baiting, and having all
night long dreamed of hornes in his head, by the very force of
imagination
brought them forth the next morning in his forehead. An earnest passion
gave the son of Croesus his voice, which Nature denied him. And
Antiochus
got an ague, by the excellent beautie of Stratonice so deeply imprinted
in his minde. Plinie reporteth to have seene Lucius Cossitius upon his
marriage day to have beene transformed from a woman to a man. Pontanus
and others recount the like metamorphosies to have hapned in Italie
these
ages past: And through a vehement desire of him and his mother.
Vota puer solvit,
que
femina voverat Iphis. -- OVID . Met. 1. ix. 794.
Iphis a boy, the vowes then
paid,
Which he vow'd when he was a
maid.
My selfe traveling on a time by
Vitry
in France, hapned to see a man, whom the Bishop of Soissons has in
confirmation,
named Germane, and all the inhabitants thereabout have both knowne and
seene to be a woman-childe, untill she was two and twentie yeares of
age,
called by the name of Marie. He was, when I saw him, of good yeares,
and
had a long beard, and was yet unmarried. He saith, that upon a time,
leaping,
and straining himselfe to overleape another, he wot not how, but where
before he was a woman, he suddenly felt the instrument of a man to come
out of him: and to this day the maidens of that towne and countrie have
a song in use, by which they warne one another, when they are leaping,
not to straine themselves overmuch, or open thir legs too wide, for
feare
they should bee turned to boies, as Marie Germane was. It is no great
wonder,
that such accidents doe often happen, for if imagination have power in
such things, it is so continually annexed, and so forcibly fastened to
this subject, that lest she should so often fall into the relaps of the
same thought, and sharpnesse of desire, it is better one time for all
to
incorporate this virile part unto wenches. Some will not sticke to
ascribe
the scarres of King Dagobert, or the cicatrices of Saint Francis unto
the
power of Imagination. Othersome will say, that by the force of it,
bodies
are sometimes removed from their places. And Celsus reports of a
Priest,
whose soule was ravished into such an extasie, that for a long time the
body remained void of all respiration and sense. Saint Augustine
speaketh
of another, who if hee but heard any lamentable and wailefull cries,
would
suddenly fall into a swone, and bee so forcibly carried from himselfe,
that did any chide and braule never so loud, pinch and thumpe him never
so much, be could not be made to stirre, untill hee came to himselfe
againe.
Then would he say, he had heard sundry strange voyces, comming as it
were
from a farre, and perceiving his pinches and bruses, wondered at them.
And that it was not an obstinate conceit, or wilfull humour in him, or
against his f eeling sense, it plainly appeared by this, because during
his extasie, he seemed to have neither pulse nor breath. It is very
likely
that the principall credit of visions, of enchantments, and such
extraordinary
effects, proceedeth from the power of imaginations, working especially
in the mindes of the vulgar sort, as the weakest and seeliest, whose
conceit
and beleefe is so seized upon, that they imagine to see what they see
not.
I am yet in doubt, these pleasant bonds, wherewith our world is so
fettered,
and France so pestered, that nothing else is spoken of, are haply but
the
impressions of apprehension, and effects of feare. For I know by
experience,
that some one, for whom I may as well answer as for my selfe, and in
whom
no manner of suspition either of weaknesse or enchantment might fall,
hearing
a companion of his make report of an extraordinary faint sowning,
wherein
he was fallen, at such a time as he least looked for it and wrought him
no small shame, whereupon the horrour of his report did so strongly
strike
his imagination, as he ranne the same fortune, and fell into a like
drooping.
And was thence forward subject to fall into like fits: So did the
passionate
remembrance of his inconvenience possesse and tyrannize him; but his
fond
doting was in time remedied by another kinde of raving. For himselfe
avowing
and publishing aforehand the infirmitie he was subject unto, the
contention
of his soule was solaced upon this, that bearing his evil as expected,
his dutie thereby diminished, and he grieved lesse thereat. And when at
his choice, he hath had law and power (his thought being cleered and
unmasked,
his body finding it selfe in his right due place) to make the same to
be
felt, seized upon, and apprehended by others knowledge: he hath fully
and
perfectly recovered himselfe. If a man have once beene capable, he
cannot
afterward be incapable, except by a just and absolute weaknesse. Such a
mischief is not to be feared, but in the enterprises where our minde is
beyond all measure bent with desire and respect; and chiefly where
opportunitie
comes unexpected, and requires a sudden dispatch. There is no meanes
for
a man to recover himselfe from his trouble; I know some, who have found
to come unto it with their bodies as it were halfe glutted elsewhere,
thereby
to stupifie or allay the heat of that furie, and who through age, finde
themselves lesse unable, by how much more they be lesse able: And
another,
w ho hath also found good, in that a friend of his assured him to bee
provided
with a counter-battery of forcible enchantments, to preserve him in any
such conflict: It is not amisse I relate how it was. An Earle of very
good
place, with whom I was familiarly acquainted, being married to a very
faire
Lady, who had long beene solicited for love by one assisting at the
wedding,
did greatly trouble his friends; but most of all an old Lady his
kins-woman,
who was chiefe at the marriage, and in whose hous e it was solemnized,
as she that much feared such sorceries and witchcrafts: which shee gave
mee to understand, I comforted her as well as I could, and desired her
to relie upon me. I had by chance a peece of golden plate in my trunke,
wherein were ingraven certaine celestiall figures good against the
Sunne-beames,
and for the head-ach, being fitly laid upon the suture of the head: and
that it might the better he kept there, it was sewed to a riband, to be
fasteded under the chin. A fond doting c onceit, and cosin-germane to
that
we now speake of. James Peletier had whilest he lived in my house
bestowed
that singular gift upon mee; I advised my selfe to put it to some use,
and told the Earle, he might haply be in danger, and come to some
misfortune
as others had done, the rather because some were present, that would
not
sticke to procure him some ill lucke, and which was worse, some
spitefull
shame; but neverthelesse I willed him boldly to go to be d: For I would
shew him the part of a true friend, and in his need, spare not for his
good to employ a miracle, which was in my power; alwaies provided, that
on his honour he would promise me faithfully to keepe it very secret;
which
was only, that when about mid-night he should have his candle brought
hime
if he had had no good successe in his businesse, he should make such
and
such a signe to me. It fel out his mind was so quailed, and his eares
so
dulled, that by reason of the bond wherewith the trouble of his
imagination
had tied him, hee could not run on poste: and at the houre appointed,
made
the signe agreed upon betweene us, I came and whispered him in the
eare,
that under pretence to put us all out of his chaluber, he should rise
out
of his bed, and in jesting manner take my night-gowne which I had on,
and
put it upon himselfe (which he might well doe, because wee were much of
one stature) and keepe it on till he had performed my Appointment,
which
was, that when we should he gone o ut of the chamber, he should
withdraw
himselfe to make water, and using certaine jestures I had shewed him,
speake
such words thrice over. And every time hee spake them he should girt
the
ribband, which I put into his hands, and very carefully place the plate
thereto fastened, just upon his kidneyes, and the whole figure, in such
a posture. All which when he had accordingly done, and the last time so
fastened the ribband, that it might neither be untide nor stirred from
his place, he should then bo ldly and confidently returne to his
charge,
and not forget to spread my night-gowne upon his bed, but so as it
might
cover them both. These fopperies are the chiefe of the effect. Our
thought
being unable so to free it selfe, but some strange meanes will proceed
from some abstruse learning: There inanitie gives them weight and
credit.
To conclude, it is most certaine, my Characters proved more venerian
than
solare, more in action than in prohibition. It was a ready and curious
humour drew me to this effect, farre from my nature. I am an enemie to
craftie and fained actions, and hate all suttletie in my hands, not
only
recreative, but also profitable. If the action be not vicious, the
course
to it is faultie. Amasis King of Egypt tooke to wife Laodice, a very
beauteous
young virgin of Greece, and he that before had in every other place
found
and showed himselfe a lustie gallant, found himselfe so short, when he
came to grapple with her , that he threatned to kill her, supposing it
had beene some charme or sorcerie. As in all things that consist in the
fantasia, she addrest him to devotion. And having made his vowes and
promises
to Venus, he found himselfe divinely freed, even from the first night,
of his oblations and sacrifices. Now they wrong us to receive and admit
us with their wanton, squeamish, quarellous countenances, which setting
us afire, extinguish us. Pythagoras his neece was wont to say, that a
woman
which lies with a man ought, together with her petiecoate, leave off
all
bashfulnesse, and with her petiecoate, take the same againe. The minde
of the assailant molested with sundry different alarums, is easily
dismaid.
And he whom imagination hath once made to suffer this shame (and she
hath
caused the same to be felt but in the first acquaintances; because they
are then burning and violent, and in the first acquaintance and comming
together, or triall a man gives of himselfe, he is much more afraid and
qu aint to misse the marke he shoots at) having begun ill he fals into
an ague or spite of this accident, which afterward continueth in
succeeding
occasions. Married men because time is at their command, and they may
go
to it when they list, ought never to presse or importune their
enterprise,
unlesse they be readie. And it is better undecently to faile in
hanseling
the nuptiall bed, full of agitation and fits, by waiting for some or
other
fitter occasion, and more private opportunitie, less sudden an d
alarmed,
than to fall into a perpetual miserie, by apprehending an astonishment
and desperation of the first refusall. Before possession taken, a
patient
ought by sallies, and divers times, lightly assay and offer himselfe
without
vexing or opiniating himselfe, definitively to convince himselfe. Such
as know their members docile and tractable by nature, let them only
endevour
to countercosin their fantasia. Men have reason to checke the indocile
libe rtie of this member, for so importunately insinuating himselfe
when
we have no need of him, and so importunately, or as I may say
impertinently
failing, at what time we have most need of him; and so imperiously
contesting
by his authority with our will, refusing with such fiercenes and
obstinacie
our solicitations both mentall and manuall. Neverthelesse if a man
inasmuch
as he doth gormandize and devour his rebellion, and drawes a triall by
his condemnation, would pay me for to plead his cause, I w ould
peradventure
make other of our members to be suspected to have (in envy of his
importance,
and sweetnesse of his use) devised this imposture, and framed this set
quarrell against him. and by some malicious complot armed the world
against
him, enviously charging him alone with a fault common to them all. For
I referre to your thought, whether there be any one particular part of
our body that doth not sometimes refuse her particular operation to our
will and wish, and that doth not often exercise and practise against
our
will. All of them have their proper passions, which without any leave
of
ours doe either awaken or lull them asleepe. How often doe the forced
motions
and changes of our faces witnesse the secretest and most lurking
thoughts
we have, and bewray them to by-standers? The same cause that doth
animate
this member, doth also, unwitting to us, embolden our heart, our lungs,
and our pulses. The sight of a pleasing object, reflecting
imperceptibly
on us, the flame of a contagiou s or aguish emotion. Is there nought
besides
these muscles and veines, that rise and fall without the consent, not
only
of our will, but also of our thought? We cannot command our haire to
stand
on end, nor our skinne to startle for desire or feare. Our hands are
often
carried where we direct them not. Our tongue and voice are sometimes to
seeke of their faculties, the one loseth her speech, the other her
nimblenesse.
Even when we have nothin g to feed upon, we would willingly forbid it:
the appetites to eat, or list to drinke, doe not leave to move the
parts
subject to them, even as this other appetite, and so, though it be out
of season, forsaketh us, when he thinks good. Those instruments that
serve
to discharge the belly, have their proper compressions and dilatations,
besides our intent, and against our meaning, as those are destined to
discharge
the kidneys. And that which, the better to authorize our wills power,
Saint
Augustin alleageth, to have seene one, who could at all times command
his
posterior, to let as many scapes as he would, and which Vives endeareth
by the example of an other in his daies, who could let tunable and
organized
ones, following the tune of any voice propounded into his eares,
inferreth
the pure obedience of that member: than which none is commonly more
indiscreet
anid tumultuous. Seeing my selfe know one so skittish and mutinous,
that
these fortie yeares keepes his master in such awe, that, will he or
nill
be, he will with a continuall breath, constant and unintermitted
custome
breake winde at his pleasure, and so brings him to his grave. And would
to God I knew it but by histories how that many times our belly being
restrained
thereof, bring us even to the gates of a pining and languishijig heath:
And that the Emperour, who gave us free leave to vent at all times, and
every where, had also given us the power to doe it. But our will, by
whose
privilege we advance this reproch, how much more likely, and consonant
to trueth may we tax it of rebellion, and accuse it of sedition, by
reason
of its unrulinesse and disobedience. Will shee at all times doe that
which
we would have her willingly to doe? Is shee not often willing to effect
that which we forbid her to desire? and that to our manifest prejudice
and dammage? Doth she suffer herselfe to be directed by the conclusions
of our reason? To conclude, I would urge in defence of my client, that
it would please the judges to consider , that concerning this matter,
his
cause being inseparably conjoyned to a comfort, and indistinctly; yet
will
not a man addresse himselfe but to him, both by the arguments and
charges,
which call no way appertaine to his said consort. For, his effect is
indeed
sometime importunately to invite, but to refuse never: and also to
invite
silently and quietly. Therefore is the sawcinesse and illegalitie of
the
accusers seene. Howsoever it be, protesting that advocates and judges
may
wrangle, contend, and give sentence, what and how they please, Nature
will
in the meane time follow her course; who, had she endued this member
with
any particular privilege, yet had she done but right, and shewed but
reason.
Author of the only immortall worke of mortall man. Divine worke
according
to Socrates; and love, desire of immortalitie, and immortall Damon
himselfe.
Some man peradventure, by the effects of imagination leaveth the pox or
kings evill heere, which hi s companion carrieth into Spaine againe:
loe
heere why in such cases men are accustomed to require a prepared minde,
wherefore doe physitians labour and practise before hand the conceit
and
credence of their patients, with so many false promises of their
recovery
and health, unlesse it be that the effect of imagination may supple and
prepare the imposture of one of their decoction? They knew that one of
their trades-masters hath left written, how some men have been found,
in
whom the only sight of a potion hath wrought his due operation: all
which
humour or caprice is now come into my minde, upon the report which an
apothecarie,
whilome a servant in my fathers house, was wont to tell me, a man by
knowledge
simple, and by birth a Switzer; a nation little vaine-glorious, and not
much given to lying, which was, that for a long time he had knowne a
merchant
in Tholouse, sickish, and much troubled with the stone, and who often
had
need of glisters, who according to the fits and occurrences of his
evill,
caused them diversly to be prescribed by physitians. Which being
brought
him, no accustomed forme to them belonging was omitted, and would often
taste whether they were too hot, and view them well. and lying along
upon
his bed, on his bellie, and all complements performed, only injection
excepted,
which ceremony ended, the apothecarie gone, and the patient lying in
his
bed, even as if he had received a glister indeed, he found and felt the
very same effect which they doe that have effectually taken them. And
if
the physitian saw it had not wrought sufficiently, he would accordingly
give him two or three more in the same manner. My witnesse protesteth,
that the sicke mans wife, to save charges (for he paid for them as if
he
had received them) having sometimes assaid to make them onely with luke
warme water, the effect discovered the craft, and being found not to
worke
at all, they were forced to returne to the former, and use the
apothecarie.
A woman supposing to have swallowed a pinne with her bread, cried and
vexed
her-selfe, even as if she had felt an intolerable paine in her throat,
where she imagined the same to sticke; but because there appeared
neither
swelling or alteration, a skilfull man deeming it to be but a fantasie
conceived, or opinion, apprehended by eating of some gretty peece of
bread,
which haply might pricke her in the swallow, made her to vomit, and
unknonne
to her, cast a pin in that which she had vomi ted. Which the woman
perceiving
and imagining she had cast the same, was presently eased of her paine.
I have knowne a gentleman, who having feasted a company of very honest
gentlemen and gentlewomen, in his owne house, by way of sport, and in
jest,
boasted two or three daies after (for there was no such thing) that he
had made them eat of a baked cat; where the gentlewoman of the companie
apprehended such horror, that falling into a violent ague and distemper
of her stomacke, she could by no meane s he recovered. Even brute
beasts,
as well as we, are seene to be subject to the power of imagination;
witnesse
some dogs, who for sorrow of their masters death are seene to die, and
whom we ordinarily see to startle and harke in their sleep, and horses
to neigh and struggle. But all this may be referred to the narrow
future
of the spirit and the body, entercommunicating their fortunes one unto
another. It is another thing that imagination doth sometime s worke,
not
only against her own body, but also against that of others. And even as
one body ejecteth a disease to his neighhour, as doth evidently appeare
by the plague, pox, or sore eies, that goe from one to another:
Dum spectant oculi
læsos,
læduntur et ipsi: Multaque corporibus
transitione
nocent.-- OVID. Am. 1. ii. 219.
Eies become sore, while they
looke
on sore eies:
By passage many ills our limmes
surprise.
Likewise the imagination moved and
tossed
by some vehemence, doth cast some darts, that may offend a strange
object.
Antiquitie hath held, that certaine women of Scithia, being provoked
and
vexed against some men, had the power to kill them only with their
looke.
The tortoises and the estriges hatch their egges with their looks only,
a signe that they have some ejaculative vertue. And concerning witches
they are said to have offensive and harme-working eies.
My tender Lambs I cannot see,
By what bad eie, bewitched be.
Magitians are but ill respondents
for
me. So it is, that by experience wee see women to transferre divers
markes
of their fantasies, unto children they beare in their wombes: witnes
she
that brought forth a blacke-a-more. There was also presented unto
Charles,
King of Bohemia, an Emperor, a young girle, borne about Pisa, all shagd
and hairy over and over, which her mother said, to have beene conceived
so, by reason of an image of Saint John Baptist, that was so painted,
and
hung over her bed. That the like is in beasts, is witnessed by Jacob's
sheep, and also by partridges and hares, that grow white by the snow
upon
mountaines. There was lately seene a cat about my owne house, so
earnestly
eyeing a bird, sitting upon a tree, that heseeing the cat, they both so
wistly fixed th eir looks one upon another, so long, that at last the
bird
fell downe as dead in the cat's pawes, either drunken by his owne
strong
imagination, or drawne by some attractive power of the cat. Those that
love hawking, have haply heard the Falkner tale, who earnestly fixing
his
sight upon a kite in the aire, laid a wager that with the only force of
his looke, he would make it come stooping downe to the ground, and as
some
report did it many times. The histories I borrow, I referre to the
consciences
of those I take them from. The discourses are mine, and hold together
by
the proofe of reason, not of experiences: each man may adde his example
to them: and who hath none, considering the number and varietie of
accidentes
let him not leave to think, there are store of them. If I come not well
for my selfe, let another come for me. So in the studie wherein I treat
of our manners and motions, the fabulous testimonies, alwaies provided
they be likely and possible, may serve to the purpose, as well as the
true,
whether it hapned or no, be it at Rome or at Paris, to John or Peter,
it
is alwaies a tricke of humane capacitie, of which I am profitably
advised
by this report. I see it and reape profit by it, as well in shadow as
in
bodie. And in divers lessons that often histories afford, I commonly
make
use of that which is most rare and memorable. Some writers there are
whose
end is but to relate the events. Mine, if I could attaine to it, should
be to declare what may come to passe, tou ching the same. It is justly
allowed in schooles, to suppose similitudes, when they have none. Yet
doe
not I so, and concerning that point, in superstitious religion, I
exceed
all historicall credit. To the examples I here set down, of what I have
read, heard done, or seene, I have forbid my selfe so much as to dare
to
change the least, or alter the idlest circumstances. My conscience doth
not falsifie the least jot. I wot not whether my insight doth.
Concerning
this subject I doe sometimes ent er into conceit, that it may well
become
a divine, a philosopher, or rather men of exquisite conscience, and
exact
wisdome, to write histories. How can they otherwise engage their credit
on a popular reputation? How can they answer for the thoughts of
unknowne
persons? And make their bare conjectures passe for current paiment? Of
the actions of divers members, acted in their presence, they would
refuse
to beare witness of them, if by a judge they were put to their
corporall
oath. And there is no man so familiarly knowne to them, of whose inward
intention they would undertake to answer at full. I hold it lesse
hazardous
to write of things past than present; forasmuch as the writer is not
bound
to give account but of a borrowed trueth. Some perswade mee to write
the
affaires of my time, imagining I can see them with a sight lesse
blinded
with passion, than other men, and perhaps neerer, by reason of the
accesse
which fortune hath given me to the chiefest of divers factions. But
they
will not say, how for the glory of Salust, I would not take the paines;
as one that am a vowed enemy of observance, to assiduitie, and to
constancie,
and that there is nothing so contrarie to my style as a continued
narration.
I doe so often for want of breath breake off and interrupt my selfe. I
have neither composition nor explication of any worth. I am as ignorant
as a childe of the phrases and vowels belonging to common things. And
therefore
have I atte mpted to say what I can, accommodating the matter to my
power.
Should I take any man for a guide, measure might differ from his. For,
my libertie being so farre, I might haply publish judgements, agreeing
with me, and consonant to reason, yet unlawfull and punishable.
Plutarke
would peradventure tell us of that which he had written, that it is the
workes of others, that his examples are in all and everie where true,
that
they are profitable to posteritie, and presented with a lustre, that
lights
and directs us unto vertue, and that is his worke. It is not dangerous,
as in a medicinable drug, whether an old tale or report, be it thus or
thus, so or so.