Matthew Hopkins in popular culture

Matthew Hopkins (ca. 1620–1647) was an English witchhunter whose career flourished during the time of the English Civil War. Between 1644 and 1645, Hopkins and his associates were responsible for the deaths of more accused witches than had been executed in the previous 100 years.[1]

In fiction

Literature

As I gazed out my Window Glass
Matthew Hopkins Did by me pass
I asked him, pray, where was he Going
said he, Only Satan may be knowing

and by his Side there walk'd a Man
in a way that only Satan can
and in his eye a wicked Gleam
that proved he was high in Satan's esteem.

Art thou a witch? he asked askance,
or rogue or Ghoul or ghost or Nonce?
Quoth I, I am sainted AUGUSTINE
and thou art but a Daemon Swine

PALE his face that moment went
all his evil powers spent
I took some water from a shelf
and pour'd it onto the Hopkins elf.

at this the Hopkin he did shriek
and writhing, did he grow a beak
then after a beastly croke
the monstre disappeared in smoke

THIS proves how GOD and Church prevail
AND Daemons and sinners can do naught but wail.
FOR torment you a crone of Christian disposition
THEN surely your doom Christ will make his mission.[1]

  1. ^ From the notebook of Jacob Bright, Maldon (Thomas Plume Library), referenced in Donald Pennington, 'The War and the People' in: John Morrill, Reactions to the English Civil War, 1642-1649, Palgrave Macmillan, 1984 ISBN 0-312-66443-5

Theatre

Film

In music

In other media

References

Notes

Bibliography

  • Russell, Jeffrey B (1981), A History of Witchcraft, Thames & Hudson, ISBN 0-500-28634-5 
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