Satanism And Witchcraft

Science Fiction & Fantasy, Mystery & Suspense, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Satanism And Witchcraft by Jules Michelet, @AnnieRoseBooks
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Jules Michelet ISBN: 1230001033243
Publisher: @AnnieRoseBooks Publication: January 7, 2018
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Jules Michelet
ISBN: 1230001033243
Publisher: @AnnieRoseBooks
Publication: January 7, 2018
Imprint:
Language: English

SPRENGER said, before 1500: "We should speak of the Heresy of the Sorceresses, not of the Sorcerers; the latter are of small account." So another writer under Louis XIII.: "For one Sorcerer, ten thousand Sorceresses."

"Nature makes them Sorceresses,"—the genius peculiar to woman and her temperament. She is born a creature of Enchantment. In virtue of regularly recurring periods of exaltation, she is a Sibyl; in virtue of love, a Magician. By the fineness of her intuitions, the cunning of her wiles—often fantastic, often beneficent—she is a Witch, and casts spells, at least and lowest lulls pain to sleep and softens the blow of calamity.

All primitive peoples start alike; this we see again and again in the accounts given by travellers. Man hunts and fights. Woman contrives and dreams; she is the mother of fancy, of the gods. She possesses glimpses of the second sight, and has wings to soar into the infinitude of longing and imagination. The better to count the seasons, she scans the sky. But earth has her heart as well. Her eyes stoop to the amorous flowers; a flower herself in her young beauty, she learns to know them as playfellows and intimates. A woman, she asks them to heal the men she loves.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

SPRENGER said, before 1500: "We should speak of the Heresy of the Sorceresses, not of the Sorcerers; the latter are of small account." So another writer under Louis XIII.: "For one Sorcerer, ten thousand Sorceresses."

"Nature makes them Sorceresses,"—the genius peculiar to woman and her temperament. She is born a creature of Enchantment. In virtue of regularly recurring periods of exaltation, she is a Sibyl; in virtue of love, a Magician. By the fineness of her intuitions, the cunning of her wiles—often fantastic, often beneficent—she is a Witch, and casts spells, at least and lowest lulls pain to sleep and softens the blow of calamity.

All primitive peoples start alike; this we see again and again in the accounts given by travellers. Man hunts and fights. Woman contrives and dreams; she is the mother of fancy, of the gods. She possesses glimpses of the second sight, and has wings to soar into the infinitude of longing and imagination. The better to count the seasons, she scans the sky. But earth has her heart as well. Her eyes stoop to the amorous flowers; a flower herself in her young beauty, she learns to know them as playfellows and intimates. A woman, she asks them to heal the men she loves.

More books from Fiction & Literature

Cover of the book Plagued: The Midamerica Zombie Half-Breed Experiment by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book Wendell Berry and Higher Education by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book Chroniques italiennes by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book So Damn Beautiful: Children's Home 5 (So Damn Beautiful, #2) by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book Dark Asset by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book Dreams, Demons, and the Woman of a Thousand Years by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book Le Nouveau Christianisme de Saint-Simon by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book Opere. Vol. I by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book Seven Minor Epics of the English Renaissance (1596-1624) by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book Das Erwachen by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book The Amethyst Cross by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book Mobius Dick by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book The Prince of India or Why Constantinople Fell, both volumes in a single file by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book Helix by Jules Michelet
Cover of the book Tonight I'm Someone Else by Jules Michelet
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy