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Love magic could be very simple or extraordinarily complex. A
fifteenth-century manuscript known as the Munich handbook contains
various spells, all demonic in nature. The spell to obtain the love of a
woman is very elaborate.
While reciting incantations, the magician takes the blood of a dove and
uses it to draw a naked woman on the skin of a female dog. He writes the
names of demons on various parts of this image, and as he does so he
commands the demons to afflict those parts of the actual woman's body,
so that she will be inflamed with love of him. He fumigates the image
with the smoke of myrrh and saffron, all the time conjuring the demons
to afflict her so that day and night she will think of nothing but him.
He hangs the image around his neck, goes out to a secret place either
alone or with three trustworthy companions, and with his sword traces a
circle on the ground, with the names of demons all around its edge. Then
he stands inside the circle and conjures the demons. They come (the
handbook promises) in the form of six servants, ready to do his will. He
tells them to go and fetch the woman for him without doing her any harm,
and they do so. On arriving she is a bit perplexed but willing to do as
the magician wishes. As long as she is there, one of the demons takes on
her form and carries on for her back at home so that her strange
departure will not be noticed.
Dogs also played a part in other love spells:
- Obtain a hand mirror with a copper backing (a metal associated
with Aphrodite).
- Write the subject of the spell and corresponding mystical
characters on the back of the mirror.
- Take the mirror to a spot where a dog and a bitch are copulating.
- Reflect the copulation in the mirror.
When the victim looked into this mirror, they were stricken with lust
for the owner of the mirror.
The grimoire Salomonis Clavicula offered a love pentacle
as a means for achieving love. This pentacle is a magic design covered
with mystic symbols and Latin words, underscored by a French legend. The
Latin translates to, "For this is now bone of my bones, and flesh
of my flesh and they shall be one flesh. Genesis II. 23, 24." The
French translates to, "It has great virtue since it compels the
Spirits of Venus to obey and to force any woman whatever to come
instantly" .
Another fifteenth-century document contained equally-convoluted means
by which a woman could be seduced. Under a heading which reads
"Experiments which King Solomon devised for the love and courting a
a certain noble queen, and they are experiments of nature" are
listed a collection of magic tricks, presumably useful for entertaining
Solomon's beloved:
He tells how to make a hollow ring leap and run through the house, how
to carry fire in your shirt of hands, how to cause a person to strip,
how to make a great flame explode in the face of a companion, and so
forth. All these tricks are presumably meant as ways to a woman's heart.
At the very end, however, the "experiments" abruptly change
their tone and character; if up to this point they have been
"experiments of nature," the last of them hardly qualifies for
this description. It tells how to make a lead ring on the day and at the
hour when Venus is dominant. Ater making the ring one should fast
through the day, then go out at night and offer sacrifice with the blood
of a dove. Writing with this blood on the skin of a hare, one should
inscribe the name and sign of the "angel" Abamixtra. After
this ceremony has been carried out, one should approach the desired
woman with ring in hand, and she will obey one's every wish. Certain key
words in the instruction are given in cipher, but not enough to obscure
the sense.
Many spells were much simpler. In 1485 Innsbruck, a baptized Jewish
woman was accused of reciting a blasphemous spell which went as follows:
"May N. love me as much as Mary loved her Son when she gave him
birth" . Another woman kissed a man she desired while holding the
consecrated host in her mouth.
Some so-called aphrodisiacs seem quite ridiculous.
To arouse a woman's lust, one manuscript advises soaking wool in the
blood of a bat and putting it under her head while she is sleeping. The
testicles of a stag or bull, or the tail of a fox, will arouse a woman
to sexual desire. Putting ants' eggs in her bath will arouse her so
violently that willy-nilly she will seek intercourse. More questionable
still is the advice of one compiler that if you write "pax + pix +
abyra + syth + samasic" on a hazel stick and hit a woman on the
head with it three times, then immediately kiss her, you will be assured
of her love. A woman, on the other hand, can arouse her husband to love
by mixing a herb with earthworms and giving it to him in his food.
In some instances, infanticide was thought to have been used in an
attempt to magically force love:
In 1686, Appolonia Mayr, a jilted servant woman, confessed that she had
murdered her newborn baby. The Devil had promised that if she killed her
child, her lover would marry her. She had strangled the infant at a
little hill beyond the Lech bridge, just before the small town of
Friedberg. She still knew the place and could find it. There was a tree
not far away and she had walked into the fields, and it was midday that
it happened. Describing the birth and murder, she said "The Evil
Spirit left her no peace. It was only a moment, the Devil touched it
[the child] as if her were a midwife, it happened quite quickly that the
child came out. She strangled it immediately with the hand, and she felt
no pain in the delivery. The Appolonia walked on: "she left it
lying quite naked, uncovered, and unburied.... The Devil did not go with
her, but remained staying by the child, and she did not look back.
The Black Masses of Madame de Montespan, Guibourg, and La Voisin also
relied on child sacrifice. By 1673, love philtres and amatory masses
were inadequate for the seduction of Louis XIV. Stronger and darker
magic was called for:
A mass was celebrated on the body of a masked but otherwise naked woman,
conceivably Madame de Montespan herself, and at the moment of the
consecration of the bread and wine a child's throat was cut and its
blood drained into the chalice. Simultaneously, a prayer was recited to
the demons Ashtaroth and Asmodeus: 'Prince of Love, I beseech you to
accept the sacrifice of this child...that the love of the King may be
continued...'.
Philtres were of many and very different sorts. Some were intended to
excite and trouble the senses, like the aphrodisiacs. Others were
dangerous drugs administered to cloud the wits and deprive the victim of
all power of self-control.
Thousands of recipes exist for these potions. Since philtres are
meant to be taken orally, they generally ought to be palatable, hence
the typical composition of wine, water, tea, and herbs. Typical
ingrediants are mandrake [also known as love apples], vervain,
ambergris, orange, tobacco, briony, fern seed, dragon blood [a red gum],
catharides [Spanish Fly], rose, and betel nuts. Thousands of recipes
exist for these potions. Nevertheless, some look not at all tasty, such
as the following gem from Girolamo Folengo's 1519 Maccoronea:
"Black dust of tomb, venom of toad, flesh of brigand, lung of ass,
blood of blind infant, corpses from graves, bile of ox". Other
ingredients included the reproductive and internal organs of various
animals and birds.
Philtres could also be baked into a cake. One spell of folk witchery
calls for a woman to get sweaty and then clean the sweat off with flour.
This flour was then to be mixed with oil, egg, and ashes of burnt hair
from every part of her body. This concoction was then to be baked into a
cake and fed to the object of the witch's lust.
One medieval recipe for a love potion calls for ground heart of dove,
liver of sparrow, womb of swallow, and kidney of hare. An equal part of
the caster's own blood, dried and powdered was added, and mixed into a
liquid. "Marvelous success" was promised.
According to folklore, these love potions work best when concocted by
professional witches. "When drunk, the philtre supposedly makes the
recipient fall in love with the giver, which means great care must be
taken that it is administered properly". In the story of Tristan
and Iseult, Iseult's mother gets a love potion to make her uncooperative
daughter fall in love with her fiancé, King Mark of Cornwall. Iseult
believes the philtre is poison and shares it with Tristan, her knight
escort to Cornwall. The two fall in love, which proves fatal to both of
them.
Love spells had to be completed perfectly or disaster could occur.
According to the rather suspect Newes From Scotland [1591],
John Fian, schoolmaster of the Scottish village of Saltpans, attempted
to conduct some of his own love magic.
One day [he] asked a pupil to bring him some of the pubic hair of his
older sister. On the following night the boy, clearly very stupid or
very obedient, attempted to comply. He crept to the bed of the sleeping
girl, pulled back the coverlet, and tried to carry out his task. The
girl awoke and called her mother. The boy, cross-questioned, explained
his conduct and was given some hair to take to the schoolmaster, but
these were taken from the udder of one of the family's cows, not from
the girl.
The mother, it is apparent, suspected Fian of planning to work love
magic and a day or two later her beliefs were justified. For the unlucky
schoolmaster was pursued throughout the village by the now lust-maddened
cow which came 'leaping and dancing upon him...to the great admiration
of all the townsmen of Saltpans.' |