glass boxes with curiosities inside them as snake skins, a monkey’s skull, a dried bat pinned to a board and many fine big crystals that glinted rose pink, opal, sapphire and emerald in the light from the long windows.
‘That quadrant was given to the late earl by Sir Walter Raleigh on his return from his voyage of discovery to the Caribees,’ my lady said pointing to a fine instrument lying beside a pair of globes. ‘Should you like to make experiments here?’
I picked up the box with the monkey’s skull.
‘If my lady will allow me. How like this is to a man’s skull in little.’
At that the door was thrust violently open and an old stout man strode in. At once he came up to me and seized the glass box from my hand. He turned and bowed to the countess.
‘Forgive me madam but this clumsy boy might have let it drop.’
‘This is my new page Amyntas Boston, Dr Gilbert, who helps me with my work at Ramsbury.’
‘Where are you from boy?’
‘From Salisbury sir.’
‘I knew a Boston in Salisbury, he that was sometime mayor of St Edmunds and thought himself a great laborant in the chemical arts.’
‘He was my father sir.’
‘Many times I have bid him come to my service,’ the countess said, ‘and he would not but now I have his child.’
‘He was a puffer madam and not worthy of your service, a mere mechanical.’
‘My father was not a mere puffer sir as you are pleased to say but a physician and philosopher.’ Something more of what my father had told me concerning this Gilbert had returned to me, that he had dabbled in necromancy with Dr John Dee and been the instrument of his own brother, Sir Humphrey his death on his return voyage from Atlantis which was as my father told me two years before my birth. And had my father been with them, as well he might have as physician to the fleet, I had never entered this world.
‘I say again madam this insolent boy’s father was a mere mechanical and he is unfit for your service. I will try him with some questions and then you shall see.’
‘Will you be tried Amyntas?’ my lady asked, seating herself in the chair from which she was used to oversee the work.
‘I will do my best to answer to anything madam, as long as you do not take my answers for mere impertinence.’
‘Have at you both then,’ she said and let fall her fine lawn handkerchief as at a joust, a sign that we should begin.
‘Under what sign should Amara dulcis be gathered and against what diseases is it sovereign?’
‘There are those who say that it is a mercurial plant and should therefore be gathered under that sign on Tuesday in the month of July, and that it is a remedy against witchcraft if hung about the neck. But the true use of woody nightshade, as it is known to the country people in these parts, is as an infusion in white wine to open obstructions of the liver and spleen and therefore against yellow or black jaundice and the dropsy.’
‘Do you not believe then that diseases vary by the operation of the stars and are to be cured by herbs whose planet is contrary to that of the disease or in some cases in sympathy with it, as the herbs of Venus cure diseases of the loins and generation?’
‘Sir my father taught me that the efficacy of which herbs are sovereign against which diseases is a matter of experience and experiment.’
‘So that if my lady, the countess, were sick you would not seek out the cause but only apply some remedy of your own approving?’
‘I would seek out the cause in nature and the body sir, not in the stars.’
‘Then you have no guiding principle but would make the body of your lady a laboratory for experiment, trying first this remedy, then that? You reject the wisdom of the great Paracelsus or perhaps you do not know it in your rustic learning.’
‘My father and I often read together in Paracelsus, his writing. But there was much that my father did not accept.’
‘As…?’
‘As that doctrine that sees man as the microcosmos of the whole world, and his tria prima. But of his saying that some minerals may be efficacious as remedies or of the value of experiment then my father held that these might be followed but always with extreme care.’
‘And for the cure of witchcraft?’
‘My father believed that witchcraft lies in the minds of those that hold themselves bewitched as a delusion or fancy, and so too in the minds of those that deem themselves to have power as witches.’
‘Do you not believe in the power of Satan?’
‘My father said that such questions were the domain of priests not physicians.’
And angels and demons that they may be conjured up and converse with men?’
My father had indeed told me of this conjuring by means of a crystal ball or polished mirror in which some men called skryers professed to descry such visions which for reward they would describe to others who saw nothing of themselves, and that the famous Dr Dee was so cozened for many years by divers rogues until men thought he was mad or a necromancer, who was in truth merely deceived.
‘I do not see sir why angels and demons who may have the freedom of the heavens should allow themselves to be confined in a glass or sphere for the benefit of one person.’
‘Do you not believe in good and evil?’
‘I believe in good men and evil men.’
‘Are you then an atheist Master Boston?’
‘My lady knows otherwise for I join her in the reading of her psalms and in her daily prayers in chapel, in private or in public devotion.’
‘But it may be that at such times your thoughts stray elsewhere.’
‘As all men’s do at times but that is not a hanging matter or who should escape the gallows.’
‘Then perhaps you are a papist in disguise.’
‘My allegiance is to the queen’s majesty and the church she is head of.’
‘And God and his son.’
‘He is the creator of heaven and earth and his son our teacher of the way we should follow.’
‘Is this what your father taught you?’
‘These are my own thoughts sir from reading in the scriptures.’
‘And does it not speak there of angels and devils and of the witch of Endor?’
‘Indeed. But many things in the scriptures are to be understood not word for word but as an image or symbol as Our Lord used his parables for instruction.’
‘And divination, the foretelling of future matters? Our fate in the stars?’
‘Our fate may indeed be there sir but it is not to be found out by divination for then we might seek to change it and no man can change the courses of the stars.’
‘Then you are a traitor to her majesty for did she not ask Dr Dee to cast her horoscope and that of the Queen of Scots when first she came to the throne and he foretold the fate of them both exactly as it came about. Was her majesty then deceived?’
‘Her majesty in her wisdom left nothing undone that might be judged by some to be efficacious. But had Dr Dee foreseen the opposite fates for her majesty and the Queen of Scots would he have dared to name them? Therefore I think he spoke as a courtier not as one who can see truly into the future.’
And your father, the puffer, did he not foretell the future and seek the tincture of immortality and of transformation in the soot and smoke of the furnace? Did you blow the bellows for him boy?’
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