HISTORY (OCCult, 1960s) [_A History of Witchcraft, Magic and Occultism_, by W.B. Crow, Wilshire Book Company, 1968; pp. 228-30, 255; a very extensive overview of arcane and supernatural subjects, at times in lovely detail with decent citations] *Pacts with the Devil*. The authority for such pacts is *Isaias* (*Isaiah*) xxviii which in the Vulgate translation reads: "For you have said we have entered into a league with death, and we have made a covenant with hell." Both Origen and Augustine mention these pacts and the scholastic philosophers distinguish between express and implied pacts. The former consists in actually evoking the demon, the latter in merely expecting help from him. The demon here refers to any evil spirit, and there were vast numbers of such. When the witch-cult was at its height anyone interested in joining might receive a visit from one dressed in black. He would be the devil, or more correctly the devil's represenative. He would sometimes get the victim to sign a written pact, and the signature was almost always in the blood of the person signing it. Sometimes the whoel document was in blood. {NOTE: The drawing of blood for making pacts is not peculiar to the diabolical ones. Pacts between friends or between lovers were sometimes made in this way. There was sometimes even the drinking of blood in this connection.} If the victim could not write, the sign taking the place of the signature was a circle, as the usual cross was now taboo. The pact sometimes had to be made at cross-roads. The agreement was that the devil should give the victim everything he or she desired, in the way of knowledge, wealth, success, pleasure and vengeance against enemies, and in return the victim would renounce the Catholic religion, repudiate his own Baptism, would worship the devil, abandon all desire for Eternal Salvation and utterly deliver his own soul to Hell at death. The pact was to last for seven or nine years, or for life. Sometimes the victim died after the expiration of a number of years, sometimes the pact was then renewed. A pact with the devil or with any demons is not legally binding, according to the opinion of theologians. Sometimes it was repudiated and the victims reconciled with the Church.... *The Faust Legend*. This story is based on old Jewish legends. {NOTE: H.M. Leon: The Origin and Development of the Faust Legend, *Proteus* No. 6, April 1932.} It was first published by Spiess, 1587. Soon thereafter it was made into a play: *The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus* by Marlowe, about 1589. The best known version was by Goethe, *Faust*, two parts, 1790-1833, only the first part of which recounts the legend, the second wandering off into the depths of occult philosophy. Some other plays on the same theme have been composed, but the operas are better known *viz.* Spohr: *Faust*, 1816; Berlioz: *Damnation de Faust*, 1846; Gounod: *Faust e Margoerito*, 1859; Boito: *Mefistophele*, 1868, and Zollner: *Faust* 1887. Wagner wrote a *Faust* overture and Liszt a *Faust* symphony. It is now believed that an actual person called Dr. Johann Faust or Faustus existed, that he was an alchemist, astrologer and magician, born at Knittlingen, Wurttemberg about 1480 and died about 1538. In the original legend Faust first appears as an old disillusioned man. He calls up the devil by his magic arts, agrees to sign a pact whereby he is given twenty-four years of further life, during which he is to have much knowledge and unbounded pleasures. He has a number of adventures, but at the expiration of the time he is claimed by the devil and carried down to hell. In Goethe's *Faust*, Part I, Faust is first seen meditating in a high-vaulted narrow Gothic chamber, contemplating suicide. He is saved by the sound of holiday-makers, singing an Easter hymn. He goes for a walk with his assistant Wagner and they see a poodle which follows Faust home. Faust performs magic and the poodle is transformed into a devil called Mephistopheles. On a second visit a pact is arranged and signed in Faust's blood. Mephistopheles explains that blood has unique properties. They then go to a tavern cellar in Leipzig, where Mephistopheles produces drinks by magic, but a brawl ensues. They next go to a witch's kitchen, where there is a great cauldron, watched by apes. The witch arrives and after fantastic rites gives Faust a drink of the magical brew. Soon Faust meets a beautiful maiden Margaret, whom he tempts with jewels, produced by Mephistopheles, and eventually seduces. She kills their newborn child and is cast into prison. Meanwhile Faust and the devil attend the Walpurgis Night celebrations of the witches on the Harz mountains, and and Oberon and Titania's Golden Wedding is performed. Finally Faust and Mephistopheles try to rescue Margaret from prison, but she has gone mad and refuses to be rescued. The second part includes Faust's journey to the Mothers, the Conjuration of Helen of Troy, the Creation of the Homunculus, the Classical Walpugis Night and the ultimate salvation of Faust and Margaret. -------------------------------------------------------------- [Ibid, p. 255] ... In the long reign of Louis XIV (*r.* 1643-1715), famed for splendour, there was a very dark side under the surface. An epidemic of poisoning spread from Italy to France. It was particularly used to get rid of unwanted husbands. The poison was a solution in water of arsenical salt, and it was well known under the name of *Aqua Tophania*, after an Italian murderess who used it on a large scale, or *Manna of St. Nicholas of Barri*, which was the name used to elude the customs, it being alleged to be a miraculous medicine oozing from the tomb of that saint. Moreover there was an organi- zation for getting rid of new born babies. Two women were running this trade. They were known as La Voisin and La Vigoreux. They termed themselves midwives, and also went in for fortune-telling. They were burnt at the stake in 1680. La Voisin also organized Black Masses. She had a furnace at her house for the disposal of the bodies of unwanted babies, and on some occasions a child was sacrificed during the Black Mass, its blood being mingled in the Sacred Chalice. Many priests were executed for celebrating these monstrous rites. The altar was covered with black, there were black candles. Beneath the altar cloth was a mattress, and when the rite was celebrated a naked woman was placed on the altar, her legs hanging down in front. Her arms were stretched out and grasped two of the candlesticks. Her head rested on a pillow. The priest consecrated the bread and wine in the usual way, but after the consecration they were polluted in a manner too indecent to describe [likely either consumption of children's flesh or the hearts of doves or some sexual fluids - nocT]. Another kind of Black Mass was one in which the Host was mixed with ashes from a cremated murdered child, and blood from another. Then there was a Mass of Virility in which blood, flour and very disgusting substances were mingled with the Sacred Species, for making love-philtres. {NOTE: J.K. Huysmans: *La Bas*, Paris, 1891. Trans. London, 1943. [this text is a classic in Satanic literature - nocT]}. [while not the best of retellings, this is a classical reference in Satanic legend and history concerning the Midwives of Louis the XIV and, at times, their involvement in the plot to take his life] -----------------------------------------------------------