CHAPTER II.
How Water became Holy.
Change from Paganism to Christianity-Columba-Spirits of Fountains-Hurtful Wells-Stone Circles-Superstitions regarding them-Standing Stones and Springs-Innis Maree-Maelrubha-Influence of early Saints-Names of Wells-Stone-coverings-Sacred Buildings and Springs-Privilege of Sanctuary-Some Examples-Freedstoll-Preceptory of Torphichen and St. John's Well-Cross of Macduff and Nine-wells.
We come next to ask how water became
holy in the
folklore sense of the word. Fortunately we get a
glimpse of springs at the very time when they passed from
pagan to Christian auspices. The change made
certain differences, but did not take away their
miraculous powers. We get this
glimpse in the pages of Adamnan, St. Columba's
biographer, who narrates an
incident in
connection with the saint's
missionary work among the Picts in the
latter half of the sixth
century. Adamnan tells us of a
certain fountain "
famous among the
heathen people, which the
foolish men, having their senses blinded by the devil, worshipped as God. For those, who drank of this fountain, or purposely washed their hands or feet in it, were allowed by God to be struck by [25]demoniacal art, and went home either leprous or purblind, or at least
suffering from weakness or other kind of
infirmity. By all these things the pagans were seduced and paid
divine honour to the fountain." Columba made use of the
popular belief in the interests of the new
faith, and blessed the fountain in the name of Christ in order to
expel the demons. He then took a
draught of the water and washed his hands and feet in it, to show that it could no longer do harm. According to Adamnan the demons
deserted the fountain, and many cures were afterwards
wrought by it. In Ireland more than a
century earlier, St. Patrick visited the fountain of Findmaige, called Slan. Offerings were
wont to be made to it, and it was worshipped as a god by the Magi of the
district.
It is
difficult to
determine exactly from what standpoint our
pagan ancestors regarded wells. The nature-spirits inhabiting them, styled demons by Adamnan, were
malignant in
disposition, if we judge by the case he mentions; but we must not therefore
conclude that they were so in every
instance. Perhaps it is safe to
infer that most of them were
considered favourable to man, or the
reverse,
according as they were or were not propitiated by him. Even in
modern times, some springs have been regarded as hurtful. The well of St. Chad, at Lichfield, for
instance, causes ague to anyone drinking its water. Even its
connection with the saint has not removed its hurtful qualities. In west Highland [26]Folk-Tales
allusion is made to
poison wells, and such are even yet regarded with a
certain amount of fear. In the
article on the
parish of Kilsyth in the "Old Statistical Account of Scotland," it is stated that Kittyfrist Well, beside the road leading over the hill to Stirling, was believed to be
noxious. Successive wayfarers, when
tired and heated by their climb up hill, may have drunk injudiciously of the cold water, and
thus the
superstition may have originated.
Stone circles have given rise to much
discussion. They are perhaps best known by their
popular name of Druidical temples. Whatever were the other purposes served by them, there is hardly any
doubt that they were
primarily associated with interments. Dr. Joseph Anderson has pointed out that a
certain archæological
succession can be traced. Thus we find first,
burial cairns minus stones round them, then cairns
plus stones, and finally, stones minus cairns. At one time there was a widely-spread
belief that men could be transformed into standing stones by the
aid of magic. This
power was attributed to the Druids. There are also traditions of saints
thus settling their
heathen opponents. When speaking of the
island of Lewis, Martin says, "Several other stones are to be seen here in
remote places, and some of them standing on one end. Some of the
ignorant vulgar say that they were men by enchantment turned into stones. Such monoliths are still known to the Gaelic-speaking inhabitants of Lewis as Fir Chreig, i.e., false men. We learn from the "New Statistical [27]Account of Scotland" that the two standing stones at West Skeld, in Shetland, were believed by the islanders to have been originally wizards or giants. Close to the roadside on Maughold Head, in the Isle of Man, stands an
ancient runic cross. A
local tradition states that the
cross was once an old woman, who, when carrying a
bundle of wool, cursed the wind for hindering her on her
journey, and was petrified in
consequence.
With superstitions
thus clinging to standing-stones it is not to be wondered that springs in their neighbourhood should have been regarded with
special reverence. In the "Old Statistical Account of Scotland"
allusion is made to Tobir-Chalaich, i.e., Old Wife's Well, situated near a stone circle in the
parish of Keith, Banffshire, and to another well not far from a second circle in the same
parish. The
latter spring ceased to be visited about the middle of last
century. Till then offerings were left at it by persons seeking its
aid. The writer of the
article on the
island of Barry, Inverness-shire, in the same work, says, "Here, i.e., at Castle-Bay, there are
several Druidical temples. Near one of these is a well which must have been once
famous for its
medicinal quality, as also for curing and preventing the effects of
fascination. It is called Tobbar-nam-buadh or the Well of Virtues." Under the heading "Beltane," in "Jamieson's Scottish Dictionary," the following occurs:-"A town in Perthshire, on the borders of the Highlands, is called Tillie (or Tullie) Beltane, i.e., the
eminence or rising ground [28]of the fire of Baal. In the neighbourhood is a Druidical
temple of eight
upright stones, where it is
supposed the fire was kindled. At some
distance from this, is another
temple of the same kind, but smaller, and near it a well still held in great
veneration. On Beltane morning,
superstitious people go to this well and drink of it, then they make a
procession round it, as I am informed, nine times; after this, they in like manner go round the
temple." Gallstack Well, at Drumlanrig, in Dumfriesshire, is near a group of standing stones. From examples like the above, we may
infer that some
mysterious connection was
supposed to
exist between standing stones and their
adjacent wells. In the Tullie Beltane
instance indeed, stones and well were associated together in the same
superstitious rite.
A
striking instance of Christianity borrowing from
paganism is to be seen in the
reverence paid to the well of Innis Maree, in Loch Maree, in Ross-shire. This well has been
famous from an unknown past. It is
dedicated to St. Maelrubha, after whom both loch and
island are named. Maelrubha belonged to the
monastery of Bangor, in Ireland. In the year 673, at the age of thirty-one, he settled at Applecrossan, now Applecross, in Ross-shire, and there founded a church as the
nucleus of a conventual
establishment. Over this
monastery he presided for fifty-one years, and died a
natural death in 722. A
legend, disregarding
historical probabilities, relates that he was slain by a band of
pagan Norse rovers, [29]and that his body was left in the
forest to be devoured by wild beasts. His
grave is still pointed out in Applecross churchyard, the spot being
marked by a
pillar slab with an
antique cross carved on it. For centuries after his death he was regarded as the
patron saint, not only of Applecross, but of a wide
district around. Pennant, who visited Innis Maree in 1772,
thus describes its
appearance: "The shores are neat and gravelly; the whole
surface covered thickly with a beautiful
grove of oak,
ash, willow, wicken, birch, fir, hazel, and
enormous hollies. In the midst is a circular dike of stones, with a regular
narrow entrance, the inner part has been used for ages as a
burial-place, and is still in use. I
suspect the dyke to have been originally Druidical, and that the
ancient superstition of Paganism had been taken up by the saint, as the readiest
method of making a
conquest over the minds of the inhabitants. A
stump of a tree is shown as an
altar,
probably the
memorial of one of stone; but the
curiosity of the place is the well of the saint; of
power unspeakable in cases of
lunacy." Whatever Pennant meant by Druidical, there is
reason to believe that the spot was the
scene of pre-Christian rites. In the
popular imagination the outlines of Maelrubha's
character seem to have become mixed up with those of the
heathen divinity worshipped in the
district. Two circumstances point to this. Firstly, as Sir Arthur Mitchell remarks in the fourth
volume of the "Proceedings of the Society of [30]Antiquaries of Scotland," "The people of the place speak often of the God Mourie instead of St. Mourie, which may have resulted from his having supplanted the old god." Secondly, as the same writer shows, by
reference to old kirk
session records, it was
customary in the
parish to
sacrifice a bull to St. Mourie. This was done on the saint's day, the 25th of August. The
practice was still in
existence in the
latter half of the 17th
century, and was then denounced as idolatrous.
We
thus see that the sacredness of springs can be traced back
through Christianity to
paganism, though there is no
doubt that in some instances it took its rise from
association with early saints. In deciding the question of
origin, however, care must be taken, for, as already indicated, the
reverence anciently paid to wells led to their
selection by the early missionaries. The
holy wells
throughout the land keep alive their names. An
excellent example of a saint's
influence on a
particular district is met with in the case of St. Angus, at Balquhidder, in Perthshire. In his "Notes in Balquhidder" in the "Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland," vol. ix. (new
series), Mr. J. Mackintosh Gow remarks, "Saint Angus, the
patron saint of the
district, is said to have come to the
glen from the eastward, and to have been so much struck with its marvellous beauty that he blessed it. The remains of the stone on which he sat to rest are still
visible in the
gable of one of the farm buildings [31]at Easter Auchleskine, and the turn of the road is yet called 'Beannachadh Aonghais' (Angus's blessing). At this spot it was the
custom in the old days for people going westward to show their
respect for the saint by repeating, 'Beannaich Aonghais ann san Aoraidh' (Bless Angus in the
oratory or
chapel), at the same time reverently taking off their bonnets. The saint, going west, had settled at a spot below the present kirk, and near to a stone circle, the remains of which, and of the
oratory, persons now living
remember to have seen." After alluding to another stone circle in a haugh below the
parish church manse, Mr. Gow mentions that this haugh is the
stance of the old market of Balquhidder, long a
popular one in the
district. It was held on the saint's day in April and named Feill-Aonghais, after him. In the
immediate neighbourhood there is a
knoll called "Tom Aonghais," i.e., Angus's hillock. In the grounds of Edinchip there is a curing well called in Gaelic, "Fuaran n'druibh chasad," i.e., the Whooping-cough Well, beside the
burn "Alt cean dhroma." "It is formed of a water-worn pot hole in the limestone rock which forms the bed of the
burn, and is ten or twelve inches in
diameter at the top and six inches deep. There must be a spring running into the
hollow through a
fissure, as no sooner is it emptied than it
immediately refills, and contains about two quarts of water. The well can easily be
distinguished by the large moss-covered
boulder, [32]round and flat, like a crushed
ball, and about seven feet in
diameter, which overshadows it, and a young
ash tree of
several stems growing by its side." This well was
famous for the cure of whooping-cough, and children were brought to it
till within
recent years. The water was given in a spoon made from the horn of a living
cow. When the patients could not visit the spring in person, a bottleful of the healing
liquid was taken to their homes, and there administered. The
district round the lower waters of Loch Awe, now comprising the
united parishes of Glenorchy and Inishail was held to be under the
patronage of Connan. There is a well at Dalmally
dedicated to him. According to a
local tradition he dwelt beside the well and blessed its water.
In
addition to springs named after
particular saints, there are some
bearing the
general appellation of Saints' Wells or Holy Wells. There are Holy Rood and Holy Wood Wells, also Holy Trinity and Chapel Wells. There are likewise Priors', Monks', Cardinals', Bishops', Priests', Abbots', and Friars' Wells. Various springs have names pointing to no
ecclesiastical connection whatever. To this class belong those known as Virtue Wells, and those others named from the
various diseases to be cured by them. On the Rutherford
estate, in the
parish of West Linton, Peeblesshire, there is a
mineral spring called Heaven-aqua Well. Considering the name, one
might form great expectations as to its virtues. There is much
force in the remarks of Dr. J. Hill Burton, in his "Book Hunter." [33]He says, "The unnoticeable smallness of many of these
consecrated wells makes their very
reminiscence and still semi-
sacred character all the more . The
stranger in Ireland, or the Highlands of Scotland, hears rumours of a
distinguished well, miles on miles off. He thinks he will find an
ancient edifice over it, or some other
conspicuous adjunct. Nothing of the kind. He has been lured all that
distance, over rock and
bog, to see a
tiny spring bubbling out of the rock, such as he may see hundreds of in a
tolerable walk any day. Yet, if he
search in old topographical authorities, he will find that the little well has ever been an important
feature of the
district; that
century after
century it has been unforgotten; and, with
diligence he may perhaps
trace it to some
incident in the life of the saint, dead more than 1200 years ago, whose name it bears." There are a few wells with a more or less ornamental stone covering, such as St. Margaret's Well, in the Queen's Park, Edinburgh, and St. Michael's Well, at Linlithgow. St. Ninian's Well, at Stirling, and also at Kilninian, in Mull; St. Ashig's Well, in Skye; St. Peter's Well, at Houston, in Renfrewshire; Holy Rood Well, at Stenton, in Haddingtonshire; and the Well of Spa, at Aberdeen, also belong to this class.
As already indicated, standing stones and the wells near them were associated together in the same
ritual act. A
curious parallelism can be traced between this
practice and one connected with Christian places of
worship. Near the Butt of Lewis are the ruins of a [34]
chapel anciently
dedicated to St. Mulvay, and known in the
district as Teampull-mòr. The spot was
till quite lately the
scene of rites connected with the cure of
insanity. The
patient was made to walk seven times round the ruins, and was then sprinkled with water from St. Ronan's Well hard by. In Orkney it was believed that invalids would
recover health by walking round the Cross-kirk of Wasbister and the adjoining loch in
silence before sunrise. In some instances
sacred sites were walked round without
reference to wells, and, in others, wells without
reference to
sacred sites. But when the two were neighbours they were often included in the same
ceremony. In the early days when Christianity was preached, the structures of the new
faith were
occasionally planted close to groups of standing stones, and it may be assumed that in some instances, at least, the
latter served to
supply materials for building the
former. Even in our own day it is not uncommon for Highlanders to speak of going to the clachan, i.e., the stones, to
indicate that they are going to church. The
reverence paid to the
pagan sites was
thus transferred to the Christian, and any fountain in the
vicinity received a large share of such
reverence.
In
former times, both south and north of the Tweed, churches and churchyards were regarded with
special veneration as affording an
asylum to offenders against the law. In England the Right of Sanctuary was held in great
respect during Anglo-Saxon times, and after the Norman Conquest laws were passed [35]regulating the privileges of such shelters. When a robber or murderer was pursued, he was free from
capture if he could reach the
sacred precincts. But he had to enter unarmed. His stay there was only
temporary. After going
through certain formalities he was allowed to travel,
cross in hand, to some neighbouring seaport to
quit his country for ever. In the
reign of Henry VIII., however, a
statute was passed forbidding criminals
thus to leave their
native land on the ground that they would
disclose state secrets, and teach
archery to the enemies of the
realm. In the north of England, Durham and Beverley contained noted sanctuaries. In
various churches there was a stone seat called the Freedstoll or Stool of Peace, on which the
criminal, when seated, was
absolutely safe. Such a seat, dating from the Norman
period, is still to be seen in the Priory Church at Hexham, where the
sanctuary was in great
request by fugitives from the
debatable land between England and Scotland. The only other Freedstoll still to be found in England is in Beverley Minster. The Right of Sanctuary was
formally abolished in England in the
reign of James I., but did not
cease to be respected
till much later. Such being the regard in the middle ages for churches and their burying-grounds, it is easy to
understand why fountains in their
immediate neighbourhood were also reverenced. Several sanctuaries north of the Tweed were specially
famous. In his "Scotland in the Middle Ages," Professor Cosmo Innes remarks, [36]"Though all were equally
sacred by the
canon, it would seem that the
superior sanctity of some churches, from the relics presented there, or the
reverence of their
patron saints, afforded a surer
asylum, and
thus attracted fugitives to their shrines rather than to the altars of
common parish churches." The churches of Stow, Innerleithen, and Tyningham were asylums at one time specially favoured. The church on St. Charmaig's Island, in the Sound of Jura-styled also Eilean Mòr or the Great Island-was
formerly a noted place of
refuge among the Inner Hebrides. So much
sanctity attached to the church of Applecross that the
privileged ground around it extended six miles in every
direction. In
connection with his visit to Arran, Martin
thus describes what had once been a
sanctuary in that
island: "There is an
eminence of about a thousand paces in
compass on the sea-coast in Druim-cruey
village, and it is fenced about with a stone wall; of old it was a
sanctuary, and whatever number of men or
cattle could get within it were secured from the assaults of their enemies, the place being
privileged by
universal consent." The
enclosure was
probably an
ancient burying-ground.
The Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, otherwise known as the Knights of Rhodes, and also as the Hospitallers, received
recognition in Scotland as an Order about the middle of the twelfth
century. They had possessions in almost every county, but their chief seat was at Torphichen, in Linlithgowshire, [37]where the ruins of their preceptory can still be seen. This preceptory formed the
heart of the
famous sanctuary of Torphichen. In the graveyard stands a stone, resembling an
ordinary milestone with a Maltese
cross carved on its top. All the ground enclosed in a circle, having a
radius of one mile from this stone, formed a
sanctuary for criminals and debtors. Other four stones placed at the
cardinal points showed the limits of the
sanctuary on their
respective sides. At some
distance to the east of the preceptory is St. John's Well, "to which," the writer of the
article in the "New Statistical Account of Scotland" says, "the Knights of St. John used to go in days of
yore for a morning
draught;" and he adds, "whether its virtues were
medicinal or of a more
hallowed character tradition can not exactly
inform us, but still its waters are
thought to
possess peculiar healing powers, if not still rarer qualities which
operate in
various cases as a
charm." Perhaps no Scottish
sanctuary has been more talked about than the one at Holyrood Abbey, intended originally for law-breakers in
general, but latterly for debtors only. De Quincey found a
temporary home within its precincts. Through
recent legislation,
chiefly through the Debtors (Scotland) Act of 1880, the
sanctuary has been rendered
unnecessary, and its privileges, though never
formally abolished, have
accordingly passed away.
In a pass of the Ochils, near Newburgh, overlooking Strathearn, is a block of freestone three [38]and a half feet high, four and a half feet long, and nearly four feet
broad at the
base. This formed the
pedestal of the
celebrated cross of Macduff, and is all that remains of that
ancient monument. The
shaft of the
cross was destroyed at the time of the Reformation, in the sixteenth
century. In
former days the spot was held to be a
privilege and
liberty of
girth. When anyone claiming
kinship to Macduff, Earl of Fife, within the ninth
degree committed slaughter in hot blood and took
refuge at the
cross, he could
atone for his crime by the
payment of nine cows and a colpindach or year-old
cow. Those who could not make good their
kinship were slain on the spot. Certain
ancient burial mounds, at one time to be seen in the
immediate neighbourhood, were popularly believed to be the graves of those who
thus met their death, and a
local superstition asserted that their shrieks could be heard by night. A fountain, known as the Nine Wells, gushes out not far from the
site of the
cross, and in it
tradition says that the manslayer who was
entitled to
claim the
privilege of
sanctuary washed his hands,
thereby freeing himself from the stain of blood.