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The Devil’s Dictionary

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The Devil’s Dictionary

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King’s Evil
n. A malady that was formerly cured by the touch of the sovereign, but has now to be treated by the physicians. Thus ’the most pious Edward” of England used to lay his royal hand upon the ailing subjects and make them whole --
                  a crowd of wretched souls
  That stay his cure: their malady convinces
  The great essay of art; but at his touch,
  Such sanctity hath Heaven given his hand,
  They presently amend,
as the “Doctor” in Macbeth hath it. This useful property of the royal hand could, it appears, be transmitted along with other crown properties; for according to “Malcolm,”
                          ’tis spoken
  To the succeeding royalty he leaves
  The healing benediction.
  But the gift somewhere dropped out of the line of succession: the
later sovereigns of England have not been tactual healers, and the
disease once honored with the name “king’s evil” now bears the humbler
one of “scrofula,” from scrofa, a sow. The date and author of the
following epigram are known only to the author of this dictionary, but
it is old enough to show that the jest about Scotland’s national
disorder is not a thing of yesterday.
  Ye Kynge his evill in me laye,
  Wh. he of Scottlande charmed awaye.
  He layde his hand on mine and sayd:
  “Be gone!” Ye ill no longer stayd.
  But O ye wofull plyght in wh.
  I’m now y-pight: I have ye itche!
  The superstition that maladies can be cured by royal taction is
dead, but like many a departed conviction it has left a monument of
custom to keep its memory green. The practice of forming a line and
shaking the President’s hand had no other origin, and when that great
dignitary bestows his healing salutation on
                      strangely visited people,
  All swoln and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye,
  The mere despair of surgery,
he and his patients are handing along an extinguished torch which once was kindled at the altar-fire of a faith long held by all classes of men. It is a beautiful and edifying “survival” — one which brings the sainted past close home in our “business and bosoms.”