The Witchcraft and Folklore of Dartmoor

by Ruth E St Leger-Gordon

Hardcover, 1972

Status

Available

Call number

398.042

Collection

Publication

Bell Publishing Company (1972), 196 pages

User reviews

LibraryThing member alaudacorax
This is a bit of a mixed bag.

The author has an easy writing style and the first fourteen chapters are a good, entertaining read. The area seems to have engendered a wonderfully varied collection of legends and strange beliefs and supernatural denizens. Quite unexpected by me were the old legends of
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Sir Francis Drake’s magical powers, but the area is well-supplied with the more familiar spectral black dogs (and white ones, intriguingly), headless horsemen, devil’s hunts, wandering standing stones and so on.

It’s quite clear in the content that the author walked the moor herself and was quite familiar with the locations of her subjects. Reading up on the Dartmoor lore she has collected and her descriptions of places connected with it fired me to track down the locations with map and Google. In doing so, I’ve been given a lot of ideas for routes for a forthcoming walking holiday in the area – walks and intriguing locations that I’d otherwise have completely missed. I’ll certainly be taking this book with me as I’m sure it will add an extra dimension to the holiday – I’m sure that these old legends will add an extra frisson to those walks and locations and I’d thoroughly recommend it to prospective holiday-makers.

However, after those chapters, in the chapters where the author gets onto the subject of witchcraft, the book goes downhill rapidly.

Going on the foregoing chapters, I was expecting entertaining legends and folk-tales of long-gone or quite mythical Dartmoor witches. Instead, the chapters are concerned with the ‘witches’ of her own day or not too long before – the kind of people who supposedly magicked away warts and burns and adder-bites, or put the evil eye on people – together with some vague generalising about witchcraft in the wider world. This stuff was clearly as much of a hobby-horse with the author as Dartmoor and its legends, but I felt it didn’t fit in this particular book. Indeed, I don’t think it is too strong to say that it spoils an otherwise good book. She is often writing as an absolute believer and I’m not sure whether to accuse her of gullibility or embroidery (perhaps both) but most of this section was too much for this old sceptic to swallow and I found it heavy-going and boring.
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Language

Physical description

196 p.; 8.1 inches

ISBN

0517140187 / 9780517140185

Local notes

NWC

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