PLANTS IN WITCHCRAFT.
The vast proportions which the great
witchcraft movement assumed in bygone years explains
the magic properties which we find ascribed to so
many plants in most countries. In the nefarious
trade carried on by the representatives of this cruel
system of sorcery certain plants were largely employed
for working marvels, hence the mystic character which
they have ever since retained. It was necessary,
however, that these should be plucked at certain phases
of the moon or seasons of the year, or from some spot
where the sun was supposed not to have shone on it.
Hence Shakespeare makes one of his witches speak of
“root of hemlock digg’d i’ the dark,”
and of “slips of yew sliver’d in the moon’s
eclipse,” a practice which was long kept up.
The plants, too, which formed the witches’ pharmacopoeia,
were generally selected either from their legendary
associations or by reason of their poisonous and soporific
qualities. Thus, two of those most frequently
used as ingredients in the mystic cauldron were the
vervain and the rue, these plants having been specially
credited with supernatural virtues. The former
probably derived its notoriety from the fact of its
being sacred to Thor, an honour which marked it out,
like other lightning plants, as peculiarly adapted
for occult uses. It was, moreover, among the sacred
plants of the Druids, and was only gathered by them,
“when the dog-star arose, from unsunned spots.”
At the same time, it is noteworthy that many of the
plants which were in repute with witches for working
their marvels were reckoned as counter-charms, a fact
which is not surprising, as materials used by wizards
and others for magical purposes have generally been
regarded as equally efficacious if employed against
their charms and spells. Although vervain, therefore,
as the “enchanters’ plant,” was
gathered by witches to do mischief in their incantations,
yet, as Aubrey says, it “hinders witches from
their will,” a circumstance to which Drayton
further refers when he speaks of the vervain as “’gainst
witchcraft much avayling.” Rue, likewise,
which entered so largely into magic rites, was once
much in request as an antidote against such practices;
and nowadays, when worn on the person in conjunction
with agrimony, maiden-hair, broom-straw, and ground
ivy, it is said in the Tyrol to confer fine vision,
and to point out the presence of witches.
It is still an undecided question
as to why rue should out of all other plants have
gained its widespread reputation with witches, but
M. Maury supposes that it was on account of its being
a narcotic and causing hallucinations. At any
rate, it seems to have acquired at an early period
in this country a superstitious reverence, for, as
Mr. Conway says, “We find the missionaries
sprinkling holy water from brushes made of it, whence
it was called ’herb of grace’.”
Respecting the rendezvous of witches,
it may be noted that they very frequently resorted
to hills and mountains, their meetings taking place
“on the mead, on the oak sward, under the lime,
under the oak, at the pear tree.” Thus
the fairy rings which are often to be met with on the
Sussex downs are known as hag-tracks, from the belief
that “they are caused by hags and witches, who
dance there at midnight." Their love for sequestered
and romantic localities is widely illustrated on the
Continent, instances of which have been collected together
by Grimm, who remarks how “the fame of particular
witch mountains extends over wide kingdoms.”
According to a tradition current in Friesland, no
woman is to be found at home on a Friday, because
on that day they hold their meetings and have dances
on a barren heath. Occasionally, too, they show
a strong predilection for certain trees, to approach
which as night-time draws near is considered highly
dangerous. The Judas tree (Cercis siliquastrum)
was one of their favourite retreats, perhaps on account
of its traditionary association with the apostle.
The Neapolitan witches held their tryst under a walnut
tree near Benevento, and at Bologna the peasantry
tell how these evil workers hold a midnight meeting
beneath the walnut trees on St. John’s Eve.
The elder tree is another haunt under whose branches
witches are fond of lurking, and on this account caution
must be taken not to tamper with it after dark.
Again, in the Netherlands, experienced shepherds are
careful not to let their flocks feed after sunset,
for there are wicked elves that prepare poison in
certain plants nightwort being one of these.
Nor does any man dare to sleep in a meadow or pasture
after sunset, for, as the shepherds say, he would
have everything to fear. A Tyrolese legend
relates how a boy who had climbed a tree, “overlooked
the ghastly doings of certain witches beneath its
boughs. They tore in pieces the corpse of a woman,
and threw the portions in the air. The boy caught
one, and kept it by him; but the witches, on counting
the pieces, found that one was missing, and so replaced
it by a scrap of alderwood, when instantly the dead
came to life again.”
Similarly, also, they had their favourite
flowers, one having been the foxglove, nicknamed “witches’
bells,” from their decorating their fingers
with its blossoms; while in some localities the hare-bell
is designated the “witches’ thimble.”
On the other hand, flowers of a yellow or greenish
hue were distasteful to them.
In the witchcraft movement it would
seem that certain plants were in requisition for particular
purposes, these workers of darkness having utilised
the properties of herbs to special ends. A plant
was not indiscriminately selected, but on account
of possessing some virtue as to render it suitable
for any design that the witches might have in view.
Considering, too, how multitudinous and varied were
their actions, they had constant need of applying
to the vegetable world for materials with which to
carry out their plans. But foremost amongst their
requirements was the power of locomotion wherewith
to enable them with supernatural rapidity to travel
from one locality to another. Accordingly, one
of their most favourite vehicles was a besom or broom,
an implement which, it has been suggested, from its
being a type of the winds, is an appropriate utensil
“in the hands of the witches, who are windmakers
and workers in that element.” According to
the Asiatic Register for 1801, the Eastern
as well as the European witches “practise their
spells by dancing at midnight, and the principal instrument
they use on such occasions is a broom.”
Hence, in Hamburg, sailors, after long toiling against
a contrary wind, on meeting another ship sailing in
an opposite direction, throw an old broom before the
vessel, believing thereby to reverse the wind.
As, too, in the case of vervain and rue, the besom,
although dearly loved by witches, is still extensively
used as a counter-charm against their machinations it
being a well-known belief both in England and Germany
that no individual of this stamp can step over a besom
laid inside the threshold. Hence, also, in Westphalia,
at Shrovetide, white besoms with white handles are
tied to the cows’ horns; and, in the rites connected
with the Midsummer fires kept up in different parts
of the country, the besom holds a prominent place.
In Bohemia, for instance, the young men collect for
some weeks beforehand as many worn-out brooms as they
can lay their hands on. These, after dipping
in tar, they light running with them from
one bonfire to another and when burnt out
they are placed in the fields as charms against blight.
The large ragwort known in Ireland as the
“fairies’ horse” has long
been sought for by witches when taking their midnight
journeys. Burns, in his “Address to the
Deil,” makes his witches “skim the muirs
and dizzy crags” on “rag-bred nags”
with “wicked speed.” The same legendary
belief prevails in Cornwall, in connection with the
Castle Peak, a high rock to the south of the Logan
stone. Here, writes Mr. Hunt, “many
a man, and woman too, now quietly sleeping in the
churchyard of St. Levan, would, had they the power,
attest to have seen the witches flying into the Castle
Peak on moonlight nights, mounted on the stems of
the ragwort.” Amongst other plants used
for a similar purpose were the bulrush and reed, in
connection with-which may be quoted the Irish tale
of the rushes and cornstalks that “turn into
horses the moment you bestride them.”
In Germany witches were said to use hay for transporting
themselves through the air.
When engaged in their various occupations
they often considered it expedient to escape detection
by assuming invisibility, and for this object sought
the assistance of certain plants, such as the fern-seed.
In Sweden, hazel-nuts were supposed to have the power
of making invisible, and it may be remembered how
in one of Andersen’s stories the elfin princess
has the faculty of vanishing at will, by putting a
wand in her mouth. But these were not the only
plants supposed to confer invisibility, for German
folk-lore tells us how the far-famed luck-flower was
endowed with the same wonderful property; and by the
ancients the heliotrope was credited with a similar
virtue, but which Boccaccio, in his humorous tale
of Calandrino in the “Decameron,” applies
to the so-called stone. “Heliotrope is a
stone of such extraordinary virtue that the bearer
of it is effectually concealed from the sight of all
present.”
Dante in his “Inferno,” xxi, further
alludes to it:
“Amid this dread exuberance of woe
Ran naked spirits winged with horrid fear,
Nor hope had they of crevice where to
hide,
Or heliotrope to charm them out of view.”
In the same way the agate was said
to render a person invisible, and to turn the swords
of foes against themselves. The Swiss peasants
affirm that the Ascension Day wreaths of the amaranth
make the wearer invisible, and in the Tyrol the mistletoe
is credited with this property.
But some plants, as we have already
pointed out, were credited with the magic property
of revealing the presence of witches, and of exposing
them engaged in the pursuit of plying their nefarious
calling. In this respect the St. John’s
wort was in great request, and hence it was extensively
worn as an amulet, especially in Germany on St. John’s
Eve, a time when not only witches by common report
peopled the air, but evil spirits wandered about on
no friendly errand. Thus the Italian name of
“devil-chaser,” from the circumstance of
its scaring away the workers of darkness, by bringing
their hidden deeds to light. This, moreover,
accounts for the custom so prevalent in most European
countries of decorating doorways and windows with
its blossoms on St. John’s Eve. In our
own country Stowe speaks of it as its having been
placed over the doors together with green birch, fennel,
orpine, and white lilies, whereas in France the peasantry
still reverence it as dispersing every kind of unseen
evil influence. The elder was invested with similar
properties, which seem to have been more potent than
even those attributed to the St. John’s wort.
According to an old tradition, any baptized person
whose eyes were anointed with the green juice of its
inner bark could see witches in any part of the world.
Hence the tree was extremely obnoxious to witches,
a fact which probably accounts for its having been
so often planted near cottages. Its magic influence
has also caused it to be introduced into various rites,
as in Styria on Bertha Night (January 6th), when the
devil goes about in great force. As a safeguard,
persons are recommended to make a magic circle, in
the centre of which they should stand with elder-berries
gathered on St. John’s Night. By so doing
the mystic fern seed may be obtained, which possesses
the strength of thirty or forty men. In Germany,
too, a species of wild radish is said to reveal witches,
as also is the ivy, and saxifrage enables its bearer
to see witches on Walpurgis Night.
But, in spite of plants of this kind,
witches somehow or other contrived to escape detection
by the employment of the most subtle charms and spells.
They generally, too, took the precaution of avoiding
such plants as were antagonistic to them, displaying
a cunning ingenuity in most of their designs which
it was by no means easy to forestall. Hence in
the composition of their philtres and potions
they infused the juices of the most deadly herbs,
such as that of the nightshade or monkshood; and to
add to the potency of these baleful draughts they considered
it necessary to add as many as seven or nine of the
most poisonous plants they could obtain, such, for
instance, as those enumerated by one of the witches
in Ben Jonson’s “Masque of Queens,”
who says:
“And I ha’ been plucking plants
among
Hemlock, Henbane, Adder’s Tongue;
Nightshade, Moonwort, Libbard’s
bane,
And twice, by the dogs, was like to be
ta’en.”
Another plant used by witches in their
incantations was the sea or horned poppy, known in
mediaeval times as Ficus infernolis; hence it
is further noticed by Ben Jonson in the “Witches’
Song”:
“Yes, I have brought to help our
vows,
Horned poppy, cypress boughs,
The fig tree wild that grows on tombs,
And juice that from the larch tree comes.”
Then, of course, there was the wondrous
moonwort (Botrychium lunaria), which was doubly
valuable from its mystic virtue, for, as Culpepper
tells us, it was believed to open locks and possess
other magic virtues. The mullein, popularly termed
the hag-taper, was also in request, and the honesty
(Lunaria biennis), “in sorceries excelling,”
was equally employed. By Scotch witches the woodbine
was a favourite plant, who, in effecting magical
cures, passed their patients nine times through a
girth or garland of green woodbine.
Again, a popular means employed by
witches of injuring their enemies was by the briony.
Coles, in his “Art of Simpling,” for instance,
informs us how, “they take likewise the roots
of mandrake, according to some, or, as I rather suppose,
the roots of briony, which simple folk take for the
true mandrake, and make thereof an ugly image, by which
they represent the person on whom they intend to exercise
their witchcraft.” And Lord Bacon, speaking
of the mandrake, says “Some plants
there are, but rare, that have a mossie or downy root,
and likewise that have a number of threads, like beards,
as mandrakes, whereof witches and impostours make
an ugly image, giving it the form of a face at the
top of the root, and leave those strings to make a
broad beard down to the foot.” The witchcraft
literature of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
contains numerous allusions to the diabolical practice a
superstition immortalised by Shakespeare. The
mandrake, from its supposed mysterious character,
was intimately associated with witches, and Ben Jonson,
in his “Masque of Queens,” makes one of
the hags who has been gathering this plant say,
“I last night lay all alone
On the ground, to hear the mandrake groan;
And plucked him up, though he grew full
low,
And, as I had done, the cock did crow.”
We have already incidentally spoken
of the vervain, St. John’s wort, elder, and
rue as antagonistic to witchcraft, but to these may
be added many other well-known plants, such as the
juniper, mistletoe, and blackthorn. Indeed, the
list might be greatly extended the vegetable
kingdom having supplied in most parts of the world
almost countless charms to counteract the evil designs
of these malevolent beings. In our own country
the little pimpernel, herb-paris, and cyclamen
were formerly gathered for this purpose, and the angelica
was thought to be specially noisome to witches.
The snapdragon and the herb-betony had the reputation
of averting the most subtle forms of witchcraft, and
dill and flax were worn as talismans against
sorcery. Holly is said to be antagonistic to
witches, for, as Mr. Folkard says, “in its
name they see but another form of the word ‘holy,’
and its thorny foliage and blood-red berries are suggestive
of the most Christian associations.” Then
there is the rowan-tree or mountain-ash, which has
long been considered one of the most powerful antidotes
against works of darkness of every kind, probably
from its sacred associations with the worship of the
Druids. Hence it is much valued in Scotland, and
the following couplet, of which there are several
versions, still embodies the popular faith:
“Rowan-tree and red thread,
Put the witches to their speed.”
But its fame has not been confined
to any one locality, and as far south as Cornwall
the peasant, when he suspects that his cow has been
“overlooked,” twists an ashen twig round
its horns. Indeed, so potent is the ash as a
counter charm to sorcery, that even the smallest twig
renders their actions impotent; and hence, in an old
ballad entitled “Laidley Wood,” in the
“Northumberland Garland,” it is said:
“The spells were vain, the hag returned
To the queen in sorrowful
mood,
Crying that witches have no power,
Where there is row’n-tree
wood.”
Hence persons carry an ashen twig
in their pocket, and according to a Yorkshire proverb:
“If your whipsticks made of row’n,
You may ride your nag through any town;”
But, on the other hand, “Woe
to the lad without a rowan-tree gall.”
Possessed of such virtues, it is not surprising that
the mystic ash should have been held in the highest
repute, in illustration of which we find many an amusing
anecdote. Thus, according to a Herefordshire
tradition, some years ago two hogsheads full of money
were concealed in an underground cellar belonging
to the Castle of Penyard, where they were kept by
supernatural force. A farmer, however, made up
his mind to get them out, and employed for the purpose
twenty steers to draw down the iron door of the vault.
On the door being slightly opened, a jackdaw was seen
sitting on one of the casks, but the door immediately
closed with a bang a voice being heard
to say,
“Had it not been
For your quicken tree goad,
And your yew tree pin,
You and your cattle
Had all been drawn in.”
Another anecdote current in Yorkshire
is interesting, showing how fully superstitions of
this kind are believed: “A woman
was lately in my shop, and in pulling out her purse
brought out also a piece of stick a few inches long.
I asked her why she carried that in her pocket.
‘Oh,’ she replied, ‘I must not lose
that, or I shall be done for.’ ‘Why
so?’ I inquired. ‘Well,’ she
answered, ’I carry that to keep off the witches;
while I have that about me, they cannot hurt me.’
On my adding that there were no witches nowadays,
she instantly replied, ’Oh, yes! there are thirteen
at this very time in the town, but so long as I have
my rowan-tree safe in my pocket they cannot hurt me.’”
Occasionally when the dairymaid churned
for a long time without making butter, she would stir
the cream with a twig of mountain ash, and beat the
cow with another, thus breaking the witch’s spell.
But, to prevent accidents of this kind, it has long
been customary in the northern countries to make the
churn-staff of ash. For the same reason herd-boys
employ an ash-twig for driving cattle, and one may
often see a mountain-ash growing near a house.
On the Continent the tree is in equal repute, and
in Norway and Denmark rowan branches are usually put
over stable doors to keep out witches, a similar notion
prevailing in Germany. No tree, perhaps, holds
such a prominent place in witchcraft-lore as the mountain-ash,
its mystic power having rarely failed to render fruitless
the evil influence of these enemies of mankind.
In our northern counties witches are
said to dislike the bracken fern, “because it
bears on its root the initial C, which may be seen
on cutting the root horizontally." and in most
places equally distasteful to them is the yew, perhaps
for no better reason than its having formerly been
much planted in churchyards. The herb-bennett
(Geum urbanum), like the clover, from its trefoiled
leaf, renders witches powerless, and the hazel has
similar virtues. Among some of the plants considered
antagonistic to sorcery on the Continent may be mentioned
the water-lily, which is gathered in the Rhine district
with a certain formula. In Tuscany, the lavender
counteracts the evil eye, and a German antidote against
the hurtful effects of any malicious influence was
an ointment made of the leaves of the marsh-mallow.
In Italy, an olive branch which has been blessed keeps
the witch from the dwelling, and in some parts of
the Continent the plum-tree is used. Kolb, writes
Mr. Black, who became one of the first “wonder-doctors”
of the Tyrol, “when he was called to assist
any bewitched person, made exactly at midnight the
smoke of five different sorts of herbs, and while they
were burning the bewitched was gently beaten with a
martyr-thorn birch, which had to be got the same night.
This beating the patient with thorn was thought to
be really beating the hag who had caused the evil.”
Some seasons, too, have been supposed
to be closely associated with the witches, as in Germany,
where all flax must be spun before Twelfth Night,
for one who spins afterwards is liable to be bewitched.
Lastly, to counteract the spell of
the evil eye, from which many innocent persons were
believed to suffer in the witchcraft period, many
flowers have been in requisition among the numerous
charms used. Thus, the Russian maidens still
hang round the stem of the birch-tree red ribbon,
the Brahmáns gather rice, and in Italy rue is
in demand. The Scotch peasantry pluck twigs of
the ash, the Highland women the groundsel, and the
German folk wear the radish. In early times the
ringwort was recommended by Apuleius, and later on
the fern was regarded as a preservative against this
baneful influence. The Chinese put faith in the
garlic; and, in short, every country has its own special
plants. It would seem, too, that after a witch
was dead and buried, precautionary measures were taken
to frustrate her baneful influence. Thus, in
Russia, aspen is laid on a witch’s grave, the
dead sorceress being then prevented from riding abroad.