Charms written on slips of paper and carried about the
person for the purpose of curing the toothache were not uncommon
throughout the North of Scotland within recent years, and indeed may still
be in use. Two of these written charms are in the National Museum, and are
here described.
1. The first is written on a slip of paper 8 inches in
length by 2½ inches in breadth. It was written and sold in 1855 by
a professional witch named Kate M’Aulay, residing at Kishorn, Lochcarron,
Ross-shire, and reads as follows :—
"Petter was Laying and his head upon a marrable ston
weping and Christ Came by and said what else [ails] thou Petter Petter
answered and sad Lord god my twoth Raise thou Petter and bee healed and
whosoever shall carry these Lines in my name shall never feel the twothick.
Kett McAulay."
The paper, which was folded eight times, was worn for
at least a year in a small silk bag, hung round the neck of a shepherd,
who had given half-a-crown, to the witch for the charm; which, however,
was to lose its efficacy when looked at.
2. The second charm was given in 1869 to a domestic
servant in Dingwall, by the wife of a gamekeeper at Garve, Ross-shire. It
is of similar import to the one already mentioned, and is written on a
half-sheet of notepaper. The spelling is more uncouth than in the first
specimen. It reads as follows:—
"Petter Sate Weapn on a Marabl Stone Christ Came Passn
By and asynd watht eleth the Petter Petter ansered and sayed my Lord my
Gode my tothe Christ ansered an sayed those that will carry those lines in
my Name shall Be Heald for my Nam Sake. Amen.
Jessy McKenzie."
This charm has also probably been carried about the
person in the same manner as the previous one as it has been folded seven
times.
In Orkney the toothache was supposed to be caused by a
worm gnawing at the affected tooth, and to drive it away, a copy of the
above lines, called "Wormy lines," written on a slip of paper, was sewed
into some part of the dress of the person affected, and carried about as
long as the paper lasted. In Brand’s time a spoken charm appears to have
been in use in Orkney for the cure of the toothache, as he writes:
"There is a Charm likewise they make use of for the
toothach, whereof I had the following instance from an Honest Man worthy
of Credit. Some years ago, there was one who used this Charm, for the
abating the pain of one living in Eda, tormented therewith, and tho’ the
action then was at a distance, the Charmer not being present with the
Patient, yet according to the most exact calculation of the time when the
charm was performed by the Charmer, there fell a living worm out of the
Patient’s Mouth when he was at supper."
A similarly worded charm, formerly in use in
Aberdeenshire, is printed by the Rev. Dr Gregor. It was also in common use
in England and Ireland.