THE PROPHET OF BETHELNIE—STATE OF MEDICAL PRACTICES—DR.
ADAM DONALD—HIS HISTORY AND CLAIMS CRITICALLY VIEWED—SUPERSTITIOUS BELIEF
IN WITCHES AND OCCULT SKILL.
Medica, Anatomy, and Surgery, on reasonable terms, and in
such a way as would "render his future studies easy and agreeable." And
for lack of independently established practitioners with the requisite
skill, it became a common practice with kirk-sessions to get a midwife
trained for the parish at their charge.
Yet the needs of humanity are in all ages the same. And
hence the emergence of men, and women too, claiming to possess a skill
which, if not of the schools, nor altogether so exact or definite as a
more inquisitive age would have demanded, was on the whole accepted as
adequate to the varied exigencies for which it was sought. Science was not
then in the ascendant; faith spread its wings unhampered by doubts about
the existence of the supernatural, and critical methods had hardly yet
found place. One of the most notable of this class of persons of whom I
have seen any reliable record was "Doctor" Adam Donald, known as "the
Prophet of Bethelnie." Adam, whose fame was widely spread during a period
of some thirty years from about the middle of the century, was born in
1703, and died in 1780. Dr. James Anderson [The
Bee, Vol. VI. 1791.] published an account of the prophet
ten years after his death; and he had the kindness to accompany it with a
fairly well executed woodcut portiait of him. Apparently Adam knew for
what purpose the picture was taken, as he desired a certain sentiment to
be inscribed below it. And the woodcut enables us to know that he had been
a goggle-eyed man, with a double chin, long hair, and a short neck, whose
characteristié attitude seems to have been that of standing with his feet
apart, his arms hanging loosely by his sides, and his hands placed back to
back in front of him, the helpless look of the long crooked fingers
suggesting the notion that his wrists have been at least partially
dislocated. His dress is a Kilmarnock cap, a long square-tailed coat, with
heavy flaps and spreading collar, a waistcoat of corresponding expanse,
knee breeches, and shoes with bnckles.
Dr. Anderson, who, it must be said, does not seem to
have looked upon the prophet with any excess of respect, expressly says
that Adam had "remarked with what a superstitious veneration the ignorant
people around him contemplated that uncouth figure he inherited from
nature, and shrewdly availed himself of this propensity for obtaining a
subsistence through life." To this end he "affected an uncommon
reservedness of manner; pretended to be extremely studious, spoke little,
and what he said was uttered in half sentences with awkward gesticulations
and an uncouth tone of voice, to excite consternation and elude
detectiQn." Rather a remorseless analysis of the elements of the prophet’s
influence it must be allowed.
In those days the fairies played queer antics; nor was
the quiet region of Bethelnie exempt from their operations. And thus it
was that when Adam Donald’s mother gave birth to a fine boy the "gweed
neibours" whipt the child away to Elfiand, and left the poor cottar and
his wife a mere changeling in his place—a sallow mis-shapen unthriven
creature. How then could Adam Donald be like other bairns mentally or
physically’? The defects of his ill-compacted body prevented him gaining a
livelihood by hard physical labour; and he thus amongst other things took
to amusing himself in his earlier years with such books as chance enabled
him to obtain; "and though he could scarcely read the English language,
yet he carefully picked up books in all languages that fell in his way."
Dr. Anderson says he had in his possession books bought at the sale of the
prophet’s effects after his death in French, Latin, Greek, Italian, and
Spanish. "He delighted chiefly in large books that contained plates of any
sort; and Gerard’s large Herbal, with wooden cuts, might be sMd to be his
constant vade mecum, which was displayed with much parade on the table, or
the shelf, among other books of a like portly appearance, to all his
visitors."
Bethelnie, erstwhile the seat of the parish church (now
of Meldrum), and dowered with the legend of the pious Percock, who warded
off the plague by creeping round the parish on his bare knees, and
planting a tree to mark the spot where his self-sacrificing labour began
and ended, was still fortunate in the possession of a church crumbling to
ruin, and a picturesque and finely situated churchyard. This latter spot
it Was the practice of the prophet to visit all alone at suitably eerie
hours. How could it be doubted that his purpose was to hold converse with
departed spirits, and to be by them "informed of many things that no
mortal knowledge could reach I"
The prophetic fame of Adam Donald grew, as it needs
must, in the circumstances, until people came from far and near to consult
him; and ultimately "scarcely anything was deemed beyond the reach of his
knowledge." " When articles of dress or
furniture were amissing he was consulted; and his answers were so general
and cautiously worded, that though they could scarcely be at all
understood at the time, yet when any of the things lost Were accidentally
found at a future period the people were easily able to perceive that his
mysterious answer plainly indicated where the goods had been if they had
had the ingenuity to expound it." We must not forget that this latter
sentimeut is merely the personal opinion of the sceptical Dr. Anderson,
speaking against
The ‘sponsible voice o’ a haill countra side!
In his capacity of physician—he was, of course, a
skilled cow doctor as well—"Dr." Adam Donald was "chiefly consulted in
cases of lingering disorders that were supposed to owe their origin to
witchcraft or some supernatural agency of this sort." "In these cases he
invariably prescribed the application of certain simple unguents of his
own manufacture to particular parts of the body, accompanied with
particular ceremonies, which he described with all the minuteness he
could, employing the most learned terms he could pick up to denote the
most common things, so that, not being understood, the persons who
consulted him invariably concluded when the cure did not succeed, that
they had failed in some essential particular; and when the cure was
effected he obtained full credit." Very evidently Adam Donald had not been
lacking in some of the qualities on which various others, since his day,
have sought to build a reputation for skill and profundity!
From distances often, twenty, aye thirty miles, they
came to consult him, either as necromancer or physician. Sunday brought
the greatest pressure of business, and on that day duly, for many years,
the prophet’s house was always crowded with visitors of various sorts. His
professional fees were not extravagant, never exceeding sixpence where no
medicines were given, and a shilling was said to have been the highest fee
he was ever known to obtain. On this scale of charges, however, he
contrived to maintain himself comfortably; and on the faith of his
lucrative calling, when pretty far advanced in life, " he prevailed," we
are assured, "on one of the handsomest girls in that neighbourhood to
marry him."
That the prophet of Bethelnie was a man of superior
talent in any way, Dr. Anderson declines to admit. Despite the prudence
with which he conducted his operations, his mental power seemed to be
below the ordinary standard. True, he had the art of concealing his
defects by never vainly attempting to display his knowledge where
detection seemed probable, but his general reserve "seems to have
proceeded from his want of ideas ; and he was more indebted to his
singular appearance than anything else for his celebrity." While he "was
able to impose upon those at a distance by the appearance of much wisdom
he found it more difficult to do so with regard to his own family." His
wife, "whose superior judgment supplied the defects~of his," from motives
of prudence took care to keep the secret, but his daughter did not scruple
to cheat the seer openly, mulcting him of part of his professionally
earned sixpences under his very nose to buy fine clothes, and then openly
laughing at him among her companions. "He never," says Dr. Anderson, "had
any friend with whom he kept up a cordial intercourse; he left no sort of
writings behind him; nor have I ever heard of a single sentence of his
that was worth repeating; unless it be the four lines of poetry which he
desired the painter to put at the bottom of his picture:-
Time doth all things devour;
And time doth all things waste,
And we waste time,
And so are we at last."
Of imitators of the prophet, or rather of
practitioners, more or less renowned, of the same class, there was no
great lack up to a considerably later time. The indispensible
qualification was possession of a certain amount of low cunning; and
ugliness, or oddity of personal appearance, was undoubtedly an advantage.
Hence the readiness with which queer-looking old women were accepted as
witches, and credited with the power of performing various cantrips.
Superstitious belief in the supernatural, and an easy credulity regarding
physical phenomena were the common endowment of the mass of the
population, so that whoever chose to attempt the
role of warlock or
" skeely man," would find the path open and
easy; and once entered thereon it might be hard to say in some cases
whether the witch-doctor made most progress in deceiving others or
deceiving himself. Certain it was that a good many of them came to have a
firm, if somewhat vague and inarticulate belief in their own powers. As
time went on, the business tended to get less reputable and more directly
rascally, inasmuch as the progress of general enlightenment both served to
show the pretensions of its professors in a more contemptible light, and
forced them to resort to extended and often very palpable subterfuges in
order to keep up their credit with those still willing to be duped by
them. And these, beyond question, were a class wonderfully tenacious of
existence. Belief in witchcraft generally, and in the existence and can
of the fairies, held wide sway among the country population till the
close of the century ; and, indeed, for a good while after. The merry
little folks with their green coats were the "gweed neibours," who seldom
did serious harm, except when they played the sort of "plisky" performed
in substituting an uncouth changeling for the infant son of the Bethelnie
cottar. They would do many a good service when the humour was on them; and
happy was he who, when some sturdy male fairy took a bout at thrashing in
his barn floor of an early winter morning, could creep quietly up behind,
and, getting hold of the flail souple, "catch the speed 1" Such cantrips
as an old wife converting herself into the form of a hare, and hirpling
about from "toon" to "toon" at uncanny hours; or in other guises "trailin’
the rape" to deprive a neighbour’s cow of its milk-giving powers,
transferring them to some other cow, or inanimate object even, for her own
behoof, were regarded as serious contingencies, against which protection
was needed. And, of course, it could be had from a class of operators who
sprang into existence, partly from the necessities of the case, and partly
from their own tastes and turn of mind. The more pleasing superstition,
which had respect to wonder-moving tales of Elfiand and its inhabitants,
got gradually attenuated, and died out with the wooden plough and the
small oats; the grosser and less ethereal one lingered much longer; and,
indeed, in regions where primitive ideas are showed to have some footing,
the notion that certain occult powers, derived from an evil source, might
be exercised on man or beast by people of sinister antecedents and
reputation is hardly more than extinct even yet.