These may be placed in two classes—those directed against evil beings, witchcraft, &c., and those which may be termed in their object curative of "all the ills that flesh is heir to." First as to CHARMS AND SPELLS AGAINST EVIL BEINGS.These are usually supplied for a consideration by the fortune-tellers, astrologers, or "wise men" of a neighbourhood. The following is a correct copy of one of these documents which was found over the door of a house in the neighbourhood of Burnley. Its occupier had "Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Trine, Sextile, Dragon's Head, Dragon's Tail, I charge you all to gard this hause from all evils spirits whatever, and gard it from all Desorders, and from aney thing being taken wrangasly, and give this famaly good Ealth & Welth." Another individual, well known to the writer, was so far convinced that certain casualties that happened to his cattle arose from the practice of witchcraft, that he unconsciously resorted to Baal-worship, and consumed a live calf in the fire, in order to counteract the influences of his unknown enemies. At the same time, almost every door about his house had its horse-shoe nailed to it as a charm, to protect all within it from demons and witches. A CHARM, WRITTEN IN CYPHER, AGAINST WITCHCRAFT AND EVIL SPIRITS.Early in the nineteenth century, some men engaged in pulling down a barn, or shippon, at West Bradford, about two miles north of Clitheroe, were attracted by seeing a small square piece of wood fall from one of the beams, and from it dropped a paper, folded as a small letter, but measuring, when opened, 7¼ by 6 inches. A sort of superscription was in large and unknown characters, and inside the paper was nearly covered with a species of hieroglyphics, mixed with strange symbols; and in the top left corner a table or square of thirty-six small squares, filled with characters in red ink, the great bulk of the writing being in black ink. The charm belongs to Jeremiah Garnett, Esq., of Roefield, Clitheroe, and it was Line 1. "apanton [or awanton] + hora + camab. + naadgrass + pynavet ayias + araptenas. 2. "+ quo + signasque + payns [or pagns ? pagus] + sut gosikl + tetragrammaton + 3. "inverma + amo + ? [apparently an abbreviation for Theos, God] + dominus + deus + hora + [here a hole in the paper has destroyed a word] + fiat + fiat + fiat + 4. "ut dicitur decimo septimo capitulo Sancti MatthÆi a vigesimo carmine 5. "fide demoveatis montes, fiat secundum fidem, si sit, vel fuerit 6. "ut cunque fascinum vel dÆmon habitat vel perturbat hanc 7. "personam, vel hunc locum, vel hanc bestiam, adjuro te, abÌre 8. "Sine perturbatione, molestia, vel tumultu minime, nomine 9. "Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sanctu. Amen. Pater noster qui es 10. "in coelis, sanctificetur nomen tuum, veniat regnum tuum, fiat voluntas 11. "tuo, sicut in coelo etiam in terra, panem nostrum quotidianum da 12. "nobis in diem, et remitte nobis peccata nostra, etenim ipsi 13. "remittimus omnibus qui nobis debent; et ne nos inducas in tentat- 14. "-ionem, sed libera nos a malo. Fiat." It will be seen that the first three lines of this charm are a sort of gibberish, with an admixture of Greek and Latin words, constituting in itself a charm, supposed to be efficacious in expelling or restraining evil spirits. With the fourth line, then, we begin our translation. "As it is said in the seventeenth chapter of St. Matthew, at the twentieth verse, 'By faith ye may remove mountains: be it according to [my] faith,' "Agla + On [or En] Tetragrammaton." In a charm cited in the Heptameron, or Mercurial Elements of Peter de Abano, these are called "the three secret names." The first two are names given to the Deity by the Jewish cabalists. The third (which is also the last word in the second line of the charm) is one also frequently in use amongst Talmudists and Jewish writers, meaning literally "four-lettered," as descriptive of the sacred and unpronounceable name ("Jehovah," written in Hebrew by four letters). The word is here endorsed, as if to authenticate the whole charm, and to show that it is the production of an artist who understood his business; for "tetragrammaton," and "fiat," are words of such potency, that a charm without them would be of no efficacy whatever. The Rev. Richard Garnett adds to his account of this charm (in May, 1825):—"I should think that the document is of no great antiquity, probably not more than thirty or forty years old. It was doubtless manufactured by some country 'wise man,' a regular dealer in such articles. There are, I believe, several persons within twenty miles of Blackburn, who still carry on a trade of this sort." [In the Heptameron, already quoted, is "The Conjuration of the Lord's Day," which runs thus:—"I conjure and confirm upon you, ye strong and holy angels of God ... [here follow various names of angels, including those 'who rule in the fourth heaven'], and by the name of his star, which is Sol, and by his sign, and by the immense Amongst other charms against evil may be named that of our ancestors, who, when eating eggs, were careful to break the shells, lest the witches should use them to their disadvantage. We do the same for a similar reason; it is accounted unlucky to leave them whole. They avoided cutting their nails on a Friday, because bad luck would follow; but we have improved upon their practice, and lay down the whole theory as follows:— "Cut your nails on a Monday, cut them for news; Cut them on Tuesday, a new pair of shoes; Cut them on Wednesday, cut them for health; Cut them on Thursday, cut them for wealth; Cut them on Friday, cut them for woe; Cut them on Saturday, a journey you'll go; Cut them on Sunday, you cut them for evil, For all the next week you'll be ruled by the Devil." Most grandmothers will exclaim, "God bless you!" when they hear a child sneeze, and they sum up the philosophy of the subject with the following lines, which used to delight the writer in days of his childhood:— "Sneeze on a Monday, you sneeze for danger; Sneeze on a Tuesday, you kiss a stranger; Sneeze on a Wednesday, you sneeze for a letter; Sneeze on a Thursday, for something better; Sneeze on a Friday, you sneeze for sorrow; Sneeze on a Saturday, your sweetheart to-morrow; Sneeze on a Sunday, your safety seek, The Devil will have you the whole of the week." These lines may be taken either as charms or spells to produce the effect predicted; or as omens or warnings of the results to follow. In most parts of Lancashire it is customary for children to repeat the following invocation every evening on retiring to bed, after saying the Lord's Prayer and the Apostles' Creed:— "Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, Bless the bed that I lie on; There are four corners to my bed, And four angels overspread, Two at the feet, two at the head. If any ill thing me betide, Beneath your wings my body hide. Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, Bless the bed that I lie on. Amen." The influence of the "evil eye" is felt as strongly in this county as in any other part of the world, and various means are resorted to in order to prevent its effects. "Drawing blood above the mouth" of the person suspected is the favourite antidote in the neighbourhood of Burnley; and in the district of Craven, a few miles within the borders of Yorkshire, a person who was well disposed towards his neighbours is believed to have slain a pear-tree which grew opposite his house by directing towards it "the first morning glances" of his evil eye. In Lancashire our boys spit over their fingers in order The ancients performed certain rites and ceremonies at the changes of the moon; and hence that luminary has added some curious items to the popular creed. Old Mother Bunch's Garland is an authority on these matters, and amongst many other things it teaches expectant females who desire to pry into futurity, to cross their hands on the appearance of the new moon, and exclaim— "All hail! new Moon; all hail to thee! I pray thee, good Moon, declare to me This night who my true love shall be." We have noticed, in the introductory chapter, various other minor charms and spells to avert evil, or "bad luck," and to secure "good luck" or fortune for a coming period, usually a year. THE CROW CHARM AND THE LADY-BIRD CHARM.The following charms are repeated by children throughout Lancashire and Yorkshire:— Crow Charm."Crow, crow, get out of my sight, Or else I'll eat thy liver and lights." Lady-Bird Charm."Lady-bird, lady-bird, eigh [hie] thy way home, Thy house is on fire, thy children all roam; Except little Nan, who sits in her pan, Weaving gold laces as fast as she can." I remember as a child sitting out of doors on an evening One of the present editors has often joined in the lady-bird charm, in the East Riding of Yorkshire, where it ran— "Cusha-coo-lady, fly away home, Thy house is a-fire and all thy bairns gone," &c. PIMPERNEL.According to a MS. on Magic, preserved in Chetham's Library, Manchester, "the herb pimpernel is good to prevent witchcraft, as Mother Bumby doth affirm;" and the following lines must be used when it is gathered:— "Herb pimpernel I have thee found Growing upon Christ Jesus' ground; The same gift the Lord Jesus gave unto thee, When He shed his blood upon the tree. Arise up, pimpernel, and go with me, And God bless me, And all that shall wear thee. Amen." Say this fifteen days together, twice a day; morning early THE MOUNTAIN ASH, OR WICKEN OR WIGGEN TREE.The anti-witching properties of this tree are held in very high esteem in the northern counties of England. No witch will come near it; and it is believed that its smallest twig crossing the path of a witch, will effectually stop her career. To prevent the churn being bewitched, so that the butter will not come, the churn-staff must be made of the wiggen-tree. So cattle must be protected from witchery by sprigs of wiggen over or in the shippons. All honest people wishing to have sound sleep must keep the witches from their beds by having a branch of wiggen at their bed-heads. The charms against the malevolence of witches and of evil beings were very numerous. A horse-shoe nailed to the door protected the family domicile; a hag-stone, penetrated with a hole, and attached to the key of the stable, preserved the horse within from being ridden by the witch; and when hung up at the bed-head, was a safeguard to the master himself. A hot heater, put into the churn, kept witches and evil beings from spoiling the cream or retarding the butter. The baking of dough was protected by a cross, and so was the kneading-trough barred against fiendly visitation. Another class of charms was of those used by and amongst the witches themselves. In the "Confession of James Device, prisoner at Lancaster," charged with being a witch and practicing witchcraft, before "William Sands, James Anderton, and "Upon Good Friday I will fast while I may, Untill I heare them knell Our Lord's own bell. Lord in his messe With his twelve Apostles good;— What hath he in his hand? Ligh in leath wand: What hath he in his other hand? Heaven's doore keys. Steck, Steck Hell door, Let Chrizun child Goe to its mother mild. What is yonder that casts a light so farrandly? Mine own dear Sonne that's naild to the tree. He is naild sore by the head and hand; And Holy harne Panne. Well is that man That Friday spell can, His child to learne:— A cross of Blue and another of Red, As Good Lord was to the Roode. Gabriel laid him down to sleep Upon the ground of Holy weepe:— Good Lord came walking by, Sleepest thou, wakest thou, Gabriel? No, Lord, I am sted with stick and stake, That I can neither sleepe nor wake. Rise up, Gabriel, and go with me, The stick nor the stake shall never deere thee. Sweet Jesus. Our Lord. Amen." But James Device's charm was not the only one brought to light in this memorable trial;—the witches themselves were liable to be bewitched by others of superior power, nor were their domestic preparations altogether free from the malevolent effects of an envious practitioner. In these cases counter charms were of frequent necessity, and none of these seem to be of greater efficacy than the following one from the "Examination of Anne Whittle, alias Chattox [a celebrated Lancashire "Three biters hast thou bitten. The Heart, ill Eye, ill Tongue. Three bitter shall be thy Boote, Father, Sonne, and Holy Ghost:—a God's name. Five Paternosters, five Avies and a Creede, In worship of five woundes of our Lorde." The Scotch appear to have held similar notions on these subjects with ourselves, for in Sinclair's "Satan's Invisible World Discovered" we find the following charm, "To preserve the house and those in it from danger at night:"— "Who sains the house the night? They that sains it ilk a night, Saint Bryde and her brate; Saint Colme and his hat; Saint Michael and his spear; Keep this house from the weir— From running thiefe— And burning thiefe— And from and ill Rea:— That be the gate can gae:— And from an ill wight:— That be the gate can light. Nine reeds about the house; Keep it all the night. What is that what I see, So red, so bright, beyond the sea? 'Tis he was pierced through the hands, Through the feet, through the throat, Through the tongue, Through the liver and the lung. Well is them that well may Fast on Good Friday." CHARMS TO CURE SICKNESS, WOUNDS, CATTLE DISTEMPER, ETC.Many are the charms and spells which operate against disease or sickness in two ways—they either ward it off, if CHARMS FOR THE TOOTHACHE."The following," says the Rev. W. Thornber, of Blackpool, "is a foolish charm, yet much accredited amongst us [in the Fylde] for the toothache:"— "Peter sat weeping on a marble stone. Jesus came near and said, 'What aileth thee, O Peter?' He answer'd and said, 'My Lord and my God!' He that can say this, and believeth it for my sake, Never more shall have the toothache." Our "wise men" still sell the following charm for the cure of continued toothache, but it must be worn inside the vest or stays, and over the left breast:— "Ass Sant Petter sat at the geats of Jerusalm our Blessed Lord and Sevour Jesus Crist Pased by and Sead, What Eleth thee hee sead Lord my Teeth ecketh hee sead arise and folow mee and thy Teeth shall never Eake Eney moor. Fiat + Fiat + Fiat." VERVAIN, FOR WOUNDS, ETC.A magical MS. in Chetham's Library, Manchester, of the time of Queen Elizabeth, supplies the following metrical prayer, to be said in gathering this herb:— "All-hele, thou holy herb, Vervin, Growing on the ground; In the Mount of Calvary There wast thou found; Thou helpest many a grief, And stanchest many a wound. In the name of sweet Jesus I take thee from the ground. O Lord, effect the same That I do now go about." The following lines, according to the same authority, were to be said when pulling it:— "In the name of God, on Mount Olivet First I thee found; In the name of Jesus I pull thee from the ground." CHARMS TO STOP BLEEDING.In an ancient 8vo. MS. volume, described by Dr. Whitaker, in his History of Whalley, entitled Liber Loci Benedicti de Whalley, commencing with the translation of the convent from Stanlaw (in 1296) and ending about the year 1346, are the following monkish charms (in Latin) for stopping hÆmorrhage:— "For staunching bleeding from the Nostrils, or from Wounds, an approved remedy.—O God, be Thou merciful to this Thy servant N., nor allow to flow from his body more than one drop of blood. So may it please the Son of God. So his mother Mary. In the name of the Father, stop, O blood! In the name of the Son, stop, O blood! In the name of the Holy Ghost, stop, O blood! In the name of the Holy Trinity. "To staunch Bleeding.—A soldier of old thrust a lance into the side of the Saviour: immediately there flowed thence blood and water,—the blood of Redemption, and the water of Baptism. In the name of the Father + may the blood cease. In the name of the Son + may the blood remain. In the name of the Holy Ghost + may no more blood flow from the mouth, the vein, or the nose." To particular persons was attached the virtue of stopping bleeding by a word; and a woman of Marton, near Blackpool, whose maiden name was Bamber, was so celebrated for her success, that she was sought for to stop hÆmorrhage throughout a district of twenty miles around. TOUCHING FOR THE KING'S EVIL.The records of the Corporation of Preston contain two votes of money, to enable persons to go from Preston to be touched for the evil. Both are in the reign of James II. CURES FOR WARTS.Steal a piece of meat from a butcher's stall or his basket, and, after having well rubbed the parts affected with the stolen morsel, bury it under a gateway at four lane ends, or, in case of emergency, in any secluded place. All this must be done so secretly as to escape detection; and as the portion of meat decays, the warts will disappear. This practice is very prevalent in Lancashire, and two of my female acquaintances having tried the remedy, stoutly maintain its efficacy. The following superstition prevails in the neighbourhood of Manchester: Take a piece of twine, making upon it as many knots as there are warts to be removed; touch each wart with the corresponding knot; then bury the twine in a moist place, saying at the same time, "There is none to redeem it besides thee." As the process of decay goes on [in the twine] the warts gradually disappear. A snail hung upon a thorn is another favourite spell against warts; as the snail wastes away, so do the warts. Again, take a bag of stones, equal in number with the CURE FOR HYDROCEPHALUS IN CATTLE.Dr. Whitaker mentions what he designates as "one practical superstition" in the district about Pendle, and peculiar to that neighbourhood. "The hydrocephalus (he says) is a disease incident to adolescent animals, and is supposed by the shepherds and herdsmen to be contagious; but in order to arrest the progress of the disease, whenever a young beast had died of this complaint, it was usual, and it has, I believe, been practised by farmers yet alive, to cut off the head and convey it for interment into the nearest part of the adjoining county. Stiperden, a desert plain upon the border of Yorkshire, was the place of skulls." Whitaker thinks the practice may have originated in some confused and fanciful analogy to the case of Azazel (Numbers xvi. 22), an analogy between the removal of sin and disease—that as the transgressions of the people were laid upon the head of the scape-goat, the diseases of the herd should be laid upon the head of the deceased animal. CATTLE DISORDERS.—THE SHREW TREE IN CARNFORTH.On an elevation in the township of Carnforth, in the parish of Warton, called Moothaw [? Moot Hall], the ancient Saxon courts were held. Near this place stood CHARMS FOR AGUE."Casting out the ague" was but another name for "casting out the devil," for it was his possession of the sufferer that caused the body to shiver and shake. One man, of somewhat better education than his neighbours, acquired a reputation for thus removing the ague by exorcism, and was much resorted to for many years for relief. STINGING OF NETTLES.This was at once removed by the saying aloud of some charm in doggerel verse. JAUNDICE.Persons in the Fylde district suffering from this disorder were some years ago cured at the rate of a shilling per head, by a person living at the Fold, who, by some charm or incantation, performed on the urine of the afflicted person, suspended in a bottle over the smoke of his fire, was believed to effect most wonderful cures. TO PROCURE SLEEP BY CHANGING THE DIRECTION OF THE BED.There are two superstitions respecting restlessness. One is that it is caused by the bed standing north and south, "There are four corners to her bed, Four angels at her head: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, God bless the bed that she lies on. New Moon, new Moon, God bless me, God bless this house and family." |