“…34 Morison, for example, depicted Barton's ecstasies in implicitly pornographic terms, describing the audience converging on the spectacle of the woman prostrated on the floor, emphasising her convulsing body, and focusing on her open mouth out of which (he claimed) poured heretical and abhorrent words--clearly a vicious image of female sexuality. 35 Morison's voyeuristic parody of the eroticism of mystical fervour is indirectly indebted to earlier accusations of diabolical possession levelled against visionaries of either sex, and more directly indebted to the accusations of sexual immorality found in the penitential sermon and Act of Attainder. By depicting Barton's body as unsealed and permeable, Morison, in effect, denied her virginal innocence.…”