THERE is no ground for supposing
that the dwellers in a Highland clachan two or three centuries ago were
more superstitious than the rest of the Scottish people. The ideas which
they entertained in regard to the supernatural, and the interference of
supernatural beings with the affairs of men, were part of the common stock
of beliefs which prevailed everywhere in Scotland at that time. When a
professor of law 1 in the University of Glasgow could write in the year
1730 that "nothing seems plainer to me than that there may be and have
been witches, and that perhaps such are now actually existing; which I
intend, God willing, to clear in a larger work concerning the criminal
law," the folk of the clachan might well be allowed to take precautions,
by every art known to them, against the machinations of these wicked
beings whose existence was vouched for by such high authority. In 1768 it
caused John Wesley much sorrow to observe "that most of the men of
learning in Europe had given up belief in witches and apparitions, in
direct opposition to the Bible and to the suffrage of the wisest and best
men in all ages and nations." During the seventeenth century much of the
time of the courts of the church and the courts of law in Scotland was
taken up with the trial of witches, and that grim superstition dominated
the minds of the doctors of theology and of law as well as the minds of
the peasantry. Although a Highland clachan 2 supplied the last witch that
was burnt in Scotland, it does not appear that there was ever such an
epidemic oi witchcraft in the Highlands as broke out in England and in the
lowlands of Scotland in the seventeenth century, and over the continent of
Europe at an earlier period; nor did the Highland clergy and people
inflict such cruel tortures, in the name of religion, on these unfortunate
creatures as were inflicted on them elsewhere.
Instead of making general
observations and reflections on the subject of Highland superstition, or
attempting to deal with too many phases of it, I shall deal with only one
aspect of it in this chapter, namely, the point of view of a householder
in a clachan two hundred years ago. In view of the fact that there is but
little of contemporary written evidence1 to guide us, and that
our knowledge of the superstitious beliefs and practices of three
centuries ago is mainly derived from traditions, and rhymes, and survivals
that have floated down with the years, and which have been added to and
subtracted from in the process, one is fully aware of the difficulty of
putting oneself into the position of such a man, and of understanding his
thoughts and his outlook on the world around him. But although the writer
may not have adequate knowledge and discrimination to apply this method
satisfactorily, and may be attributing to the clachan householder thoughts
which he never had and a pagan ritual which he never practised, the method
itself is quite sound. Such a man would have received from his fathers a
deposit of way-wisdom which would enable him, if he used it for his
guidance, to escape most of the ills of life which resulted from the
interference of wicked beings, human and superhuman, with man’s affairs;
and he would feel that it was the duty of a prudent householder to take
every precaution to ward off danger and disease and misfortune from his
wife and family and cattle. The superstition that does not make people
do something is not worth considering, and cannot be regarded
seriously as superstition. But the clachan dwellers of two hundred years
ago did something to avert dangers which were real to their minds;
and it is with these practices and ceremonies which were performed in good
faith, and for a useful purpose, that this chapter will be mainly taken
up. Ghosts, and goblins, and glaistigs, and gruagachs, and water-kelpies,
and the other numerous beings that haunted woods, and rivers, and mountain
lochs, may be put aside; for, although their existence served to provide a
subject on which the Celtic mind could exercise its powers of imagination
and reflection, they neither inspired such fear nor entered so closely
into the daily life of the people as some other creatures of evil
influence. The sources from which our prudent householder had reason to
suspect most danger were witches, and fairies, and persons of an evil eye;
and it was to guard himself from the spells of these and to counteract
their designs that the considerable deposit of way-wisdom which still
survives in Gaelic rhymes and incantations came into existence.
Witchcraft.
The relation of witches to the
prince of the power of the air was not clearly defined, but it was
understood that there were traffickings between them. The possession of
supernatural gifts like the evil eye or second sight might be the
privilege of honest persons who had no desire for such embarrassing
endowments, but the power of witchcraft was regarded as an acquired rather
than a natural wickedness. The persons who gained favour from the devil,
to the extent of securing his co-operation in malevolent schemes, were
generally old and lonely women of some oddity of aspect or manner. They
had the power of transforming themselves into the shape of various beasts,
especially into the shape of cats and hares. They could raise storms and
sink ships; they could take the produce from a man’s croft and cows, and
strike his children and cattle with wasting diseases; and, in short, visit
him with every evil feared of man. There was scarcely any limit to their
power, and, according to a Gaelic proverb, gheibh baobli a guidhe ged nach
faigh a h-anam trocair (a wicked woman will get her desire although her
soul will not get mercy). Their designs were effected by means of spells,
and incantations, and secret arts known only to those who had been
initiated into the service of Satan; but these designs could be frustrated
if proper and timely precautions were taken against them. There was no
part of their business in which witches displayed greater cunning and
activity than in stealing their neighbours’ milk, or abstracting the
substance from it. The percentage of butter-fat in milk sometimes gives
rise to long and ingenious arguments in our modern law courts, but the
clachan folk settled these matters in a simpler way, and if a cow’s milk
was not up to standard in quantity or quality, they concluded that a witch
had been at work. The prevalence of this phase of superstition• and the
numerous ceremonies to which it gave rise, show what an important place
the cow occupied in the economy of a Highland household. It was one of the
chief means of subsistence, and its welfare was a matter that could not be
lightly regarded. Particular care had to be exercised over the stock on
certain nights of the year when witches were known to be busily engaged in
their unlawful practices. On Beltane eve especially, precautionary
measures were taken to counteract their designs, for carelessness on that
night might result in the loss of milk and butter for the whole season.
Tar, iron, dung, urine, juniper, and mountain ash were some of the outward
and sensible signs used in the ritual that was performed in the name of
the Trinity and apostles and saints to ward off witches from the byre.
Fairies.
These silent-moving people were more
real to the mind of the clachan dwellers than any other class of
supernatural beings which interfered with their affairs. It is difficult
to reconstruct the fairy creed of two or three centuries ago, as the
traditions which survive are a disorderly jumble which attribute to them
the most contradictory qualities, in aspect, and habits, and powers. But
they are generally represented as little people of social and convivial
habits dwelling underground. They were ordinarily invisible, but sometimes
showed themselves; and on these occasions it was observed that their
favourite colour in dress was green. They did not inspire such terror in
the clachan as witches did; but although they occasionally rendered some
good service to those to whom they were well disposed, it was considered
that intimacy and traffickings with them were not productive of good in
the long run. They had children and cattle of their own which they
sometimes left in place of mortal children and cattle that
had been snatched
away by them. They were excellent hosts, and gave such lively
entertainment by music and dance to those persons who were lured by them
into their dwellings that the passage of time was not observed by these,
although they had been dancing for a year and a day. Sounds were sometimes
heard underground, as if a smith were hammering on an anvil; and it was
understood that the fairies were then busy making the elf-arrows which
they shot at cows and men. These arrows left no mark of injury on the spot
which they struck, but if a spent arrow was found near the place where a
man or beast was pining away with a wasting sickness of which there was no
apparent cause, it was concluded that a fairy had done the mischief. They
could take away its toradh (substance) from land, and corn, and
milk; and thus an easy explanation was provided of what must have been
common enough in those days, milk that could not be converted into butter,
and corn that consisted mostly of lights. But while fairies were not above
stealing the produce of byre and barn, they had a special predilection for
children; and the fairy changeling figures as the commonest character in
popular stories. Adult fairies are generally represented as of pleasing
and attractive appearance, so much so that susceptible mortals of both
sexes sometimes fell in love with a leannan-sith, a fairy
sweetheart; but there does not seem to have been anything attractive about
the fairy youngsters who were occasionally substituted for the rightful
occupants of clachan cradles. But it was probably only the shotts among
fairy infants that were exchanged in this fashion. There is no doubt that
this superstition was the cause of much cruelty being inflicted on pining
and ill-conditioned children in those days. If a child was troublesome
beyond the ordinary, or if he was not thriving, or if there was an unusual
expression on his face, or if he had a voracious appetite, or if he was
different in any way from other children, the suspicion grew in his
parents’ minds that he was not their own but a fairy changeling, and
various devices were resorted to in order to test the matter. His true
pedigree could be discovered by dropping him into a river, or by exposing
him on the hillside for the night, or by suspending him over a hot fire,
or by running at him with a red hot piece of iron. The fairies paid
particular attention to women in childbed, and on these occasions mother
and child were watched day and night with the utmost care. Various
preservatives were used, such as putting a piece of cold iron in the
mother’s bed, sprinkling the bedposts and doors with maistir or
urine, and carrying fire, sunwise, round the bed or house in which the
mother lay. All these arts, if performed to the accompaniment of mystic
words generally known to the class of women who acted as midwives, served
to drive away the fairies. If they were persistent and sought entrance to
the sick-room by door or window, they could generally be kept out by
throwing in their faces water into which fire or some strongly-smelling
stuff had been thrown. One of the most remarkable things about the fairies
was their aversion from iron, and a clachan householder who had a bit of
iron on his person and a few powerful rhymes in his memory to invoke the
aid of the Trinity could generally protect himself from fairy influence.
Within recent years there lived in the Highlands persons who had as much
paganism in their minds as Christianity, and whose chief use for the
family Bible was to place it against the doorstep at night to keep away
fairies and witches. But although in later times the Bible was used as a
protective agent in the same way as iron and fire, its use for such
purposes was unknown in the period of which we are speaking, for the good
reason that the book itself was unknown. It is on record that in the grace
before meat used by a Skyeman who lived in the second half of the
nineteenth century one of the petitions ran thus: "O Blessed One, preserve
the aged and the young, our wives and our children, our sheep and our
cattle from the power and dominion of the fairies, and from the malicious
effects of every evil eye. Let a straight path lie before us, and a happy
end to our journey."
Evil Eye.
The belief that an evil influence
can be exerted from the eye is one of the most ancient and universal of
human beliefs, and has probably arisen from the fact that this physical
organ in some persons is naturally of a forbidding and fearsome cast. The
glance of such an eye gives an uncomfortable sensation to those on whom it
falls, and it would be easy to exaggerate its power and to extend the
range of its operation till at last the superstition reached the height at
which we know it, The clachan dwellers did not trouble themselves with the
philosophy of the evil eye, but they believed that it could do mischief to
their cattle, and sheep, and boats, and other gear; and their chief
interest in the matter was to protect themselves from its sinister
influence. It sometimes happened that persons possessed an evil eye who
had no desire to do mischief with it, but in most cases envy and love of
gain were at the back of it. The love of gain also played some part in the
cure of diseases caused by the evil eye, and it was part of the ritual to
give a gratuity to the person who had the colas or knowledge which
was recited on these occasions. These rhymes were not common property, but
were handed down from generation to generation; and those skilled persons
in the community who possessed them found that considerable personal
authority and pecuniary advantage accrued to them from their lore. Water,
and especially spring water in which silver or pebbles or the feet of a
black cat had been dipped, was invariably used in the ritual of prevention
and cure; while nails, iron, hair balls, cinders, urine, threads, juniper,
rowan, St. Columba’s plant, and various other plants had some magic virtue
when properly prepared and used with the right form of words. As an
example of these charms, the rhyme known as Eolas a’ Chronachaidh may be
given:
"Let me perform for you a
charm for the evil eye,
From the breast of holy St. Patrick;
Against swelling of neck and stoppage of bowels,
Against an old bachelor’s eye and an old wife’s eye.
If a man’s eye may it flame like resin,
If a woman’s eye may she want her breast,
A cold plunge and coldness to her blood,
And to her gear, to her men,
To her cattle and sheep."
The boundary line between religion and superstition is
s~ indefinite as to be exceedingly difficult to define, and although these
incantations have only an antiquarian and literary interest to us now and
appear to us to be merely pagan survivals, their use by clachan dwellers
two centuries ago had a religious significance; and these forms of words
when used on their lips have as much right to be called Christian prayers
as some forms of words used by their successors in the twentieth century.
Many of these incantations, no doubt, go back to pagan times, but they
were adapted to changing circumstances and to the gradual access of light
and knowledge, and the names of heathen gods gave place to those of
Christ, and the Virgin, and Apostles, and Christian saints. A very
beautiful eolas which was got by Mr. Alexander Carmichael in Uist
may be given. It was recited to protect cows from the evil eye. The plant
referred to as Torranan had to be procured during the flow of the
tide, and, while placing it under the milk pail, the person using it had
to repeat the colas three times and to make a circle, sunwise,
three times over the pail.
"Let me pluck thee, Torranan!
With all thy blessedness and all thy virtue,
The nine blessings came with the nine parts,
By the virtue of the Torranan.
The hand of St. Bride with me,
I am now to pluck thee.
Let me pluck thee Torranan!
With thine increase as to sea and land;
With the flowing tide that shall know no ebbing.
By the assistance of the chaste St. Bride,
The holy St. Columba directing me,
And St. Michael, of high crested steeds,
Imparting virtue to the matter the while,
Darling plant of all virtue,
I am now plucking thee !"‘
Preventive and Cure Charms.
Although superstition was more prevalent two centuries
ago than now, it must not be supposed that the Highland people did nothing
else but chant charms to protect themselves from malevolent spirits which
awaited them at every corner. Probably the majority of clachan dwellers
paid little attention to these things, and, although they inherited the
whole circle of superstitious beliefs which have been attributed to them
since Martin wrote on the subject in his Description of the Western
isles, their lives were not more shadowed by these than ours are by
the spectres of the modern world. In every age superstition is a matter of
degree, and of two men who have exactly the same intellectual notions in
regard to the unseen world and the power of the beings that inhabit it,
one will walk warily and with a fearful eye, muttering his charms, and the
other will walk with a light heart, whistling a tune, past churchyards and
haunted lochs and fairy knolls. Even when superstition belongs to the
spirit of the age the majority of people are not really or profoundly
superstitious, no more than the majority of people are really or
profoundly Christian when Christianity is the spirit of the age. Only a
few choice spirits carry their beliefs to their logical conclusion and
have faith enough in their ritual and way-wisdom to practise them on
ordinary occasions. Extraordinary occasions are quite a different matter,
and neither great faith nor great superstition are required to make human
beings do things at such times. But if our prudent householder in
the clachan was one of these choice spirits, there was no end to the
ceremonies which he would perform and the incantations which he would use
to protect himself and his family and his cattle from diseases and
disasters. When a child was born, or a cow calved, or man or beast
suffered from colic, or toothache, or sprain, or bleeding, there were
appropriate words and actions to be said and done. The rhyme for healing
sore eyes may be given as an example of a cure charm. The performer spat
into a vessel containing clear water and repeated the incantation:
"A charm for sore smarting eyes,
The best charm under the sun,
The charm of God, the All-great,
Charm of Mary, charm of God,
Charm of each priest and cleric,
Charm of Michael the strenuous,
Who bestowed on the sun its strength."’
As an example of the sian or protective charm the
following may be given. This could protect a man from harm from the time
he left the presence of the charmer till he came back, and it was usually
said over those who were going into battle:
"The charm that Mary placed on her Son be on you,
Charm from slaying, charm from wounding,
Charm between breast anti knee,
Charm between knee and breast,
Charm of the Three in One on you,
From top of head to sole of foot,
Charm of seven paters once on you,
Charm of seven paters twice on you,
Charm of seven paters thrice on you,
Charm of seven paters four times on you,
Charm of seven paters five times on you,
Charm of seven paters six times on you,
Charm of the seven paters, of the seven paters, going sunwise in lucky
hour on you, to keep you from harm and accident."
Customs and Rites.
The Reformation in Scotland took place in the year
1560, but although, theoretically, there should be a clear line of
demarcation between the old order and the new, it does not appear that
there was any violent breaking away from the past on the part of the
people; and it would be difficult to say precisely what the change
amounted to in actual practice. Customs which prevailed in early Christian
days, and perhaps in pagan times, lingered on long after the Reformation,
and during the seventeenth century a good deal of the time of the clergy
was devoted to the discovery and suppression of rites which were performed
by their parishioners without their leave or blessing. In 1643 it came to
the knowledge of the Presbytery of Inverness that the people of Daviot
were in the habit of worshipping an image called St. Finane; and in 1656
the Presbytery of Dingwall discovered that the inhabitants of western
Ross-shire sacrificed a bull yearly to St. Maolrubha, and made visits to
chapels and holy wells associated with his name to learn the future. The
customs of pouring oblations of milk upon fairy mounds, of adoring saints
who had taken the place of pagan divinities or demons as the patrons of
holy
wells, of burning torches through the corn on St.
John’s day, of raising the devil by the turning of the sieve and the
shear, and of burying a lamb under the threshold to ensure the safety of
the cattle, were observed so generally that in 1649 the clergy of the
Highlands were ordained by the Commission of the General Assembly to
"preach powerfully" against them.’ Divination was also resorted to, and
many of the rites associated with Hallowe’en, now regarded merely as
children’s games, originated from the devices employed by our forefathers
to read the future. One horrible ceremony which was sometimes performed
for divination purposes, and sometimes for other reasons, was known as the
Taghairm. It was also known as "giving his supper to the devil,"
and in one form of Taghairm a live cat was roasted on a spit; but
the reader can find descriptions of this weird superstition in Martin’s
Western Isles and in Superstitions of the Scottish Highlands,
by J. G. Campbell, Tiree; or, if he prefers to read an account of it in
Gaelic, he can find it in the second series of
Caraid nan Gaidheal.
Omens, Luck, Second Sight.
Highlanders of the olden times attached much
significance to omens, and when setting out on a journey, or beginning any
work, they were particularly anxious to avoid persons, and beasts, and
birds, and objects that were known to be unlucky. Certain things could
only be undertaken on certain days. Red-haired men, dark-haired women,
rats, hares, herons, owls, crows, cocks, foxes, magpies—each of these had
its own particular message to convey to the superstitious, according to
the place and posture in which it was seen. A long catalogue might be
drawn up of what the clachan folk considered to be good or bad omens,
lucky or unlucky signs; but such a list could serve no other purpose than
to show how exceedingly difficult it was for a prudent man in those days
to walk circumspectly.
No phase of Highland superstition is better known than
second sight, which included all the phenomena known under the name of
taibhsearachd, mainly relating to ghosts, and wraiths, and phantom
funerals, and spectre coffins, and death sounds, and lights, and other
such visions; but the subject cannot be pursued here. In every Highland
clachan even yet there are persons who see things, but for every
taibhsear who exists now there must have been a score in olden times.
Superstition dies hard, and the writer knows a man who
performed the ceremony of casting into the sea an offering of porridge to
appease the god of the waves and to induce him to grant a liberal supply
of sea-ware. The day of la a’ bhrochain mhoir was well known in the
Highlands in olden times. He also knows two women who have made a corp
creadha in their day and who even now practise secret arts, and obtain
thereby an influence equal at least to that of a parish councillor. Some
years ago a crofter in the western isles was at considerable pains to
extract from a dying neighbour a charm which he was known to possess and
which was reputed to be exceedingly powerful in an emergency, especially
when a horse had a bad colic, and in conversation with the writer
afterwards he summed up his philosophy of the matter in these words,
Faodaidh e bhith nash ‘eu anns an rud ach P àpanachd
ach cha bhiodh feum aige-san air far an robh e a’ dol agus cha mhisd mise
e bhi ‘n cùl mo chinn, which may be translated, The words may be nothing
more than Papistry, but he would have no use for them in the place
he has gone to and I shall be nothing the worse of having them up
my sleeve. |