Essayer OR - Gratuit

Fingers, frog's and fairies

BBC History UK

|

February 2025

Fortune telling was all the rage in the 16th and 17th centuries, and practitioners would stop at nothing to tap in to the supernatural. Martha McGill tells a story of Highland seers, tarot cards and encounters with the spirit world

- Martha McGill

Fingers, frog's and fairies

As the younger son of a baron, Goodwin Wharton was determined to live well. Inconveniently, he had no money, but he was not short of ideas. He invented various devices, including one “for the squenching of public fires”. He went diving for sunken treasure. He got elected to parliament in 1679, only to damage his political fortunes with an incendiary speech claiming that the soon-to-be King James II & VII wanted to “destroy us all”. He even tried eating the still-palpitating heart of a mole, a traditional charm for foretelling the future. He hoped it would help him win at gambling. But nothing worked out.

By 1683 Wharton was desperate, and he found himself entering a “scurvy” tavern in a “poor beggarly alley” in London’s Covent Garden. Among the inglorious clientele was Mary Parish, an impoverished ‘cunning’- woman in her fifties. Wharton wanted a more effective gambling charm. Instead, he got a partner. Over the next 20 years Parish advised Wharton on his affairs, procured magical items for him and sent him on treasure hunts. She also conceived - by her own reckoning - 106 of Wharton’s children, although only one or two made it to adulthood.

Perhaps most striking were the pair’s dealings with the spirit world. Parish promised to introduce Wharton to the fairy queen, but problems kept arising: the way was flooded, the queen was on her period, a fairy duke had tried to poison her with chocolate. Nor did Wharton ever see Parish’s angelic advisors, though they apparently shaved his hair while he slept to give him a noble forehead.

But by 1687, Wharton had learned to communicate with higher powers. The voice of the Lord guided him while he gambled, and assured him he would seduce at least 500 women, including Mary, wife of James II. This never came to pass, but Wharton’s fortunes did recover in time: he re-entered politics and became one of the lords commissioners of the Admiralty in 1697–99.

The world of spirits

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE BBC History UK

BBC History UK

BBC History UK

The stories we tell

LIZANNE HENDERSON enjoys a new history of folklore through the ages that explores some lesser-known avenues

time to read

1 mins

November 2025

BBC History UK

BBC History UK

"Africa exerted a profound influence on cultures of resistance to slavery, yet its role is often overlooked"

SUDHIR HAZAREESINGH speaks to Danny Bird about how enslaved people, who needed no lessons in freedom from white abolitionists, organised themselves to fight their oppressors

time to read

9 mins

November 2025

BBC History UK

BBC History UK

The first British curry

ELEANOR BARNETT prepares a dish with Indian influences that was designed to appeal to Georgian English tastes

time to read

2 mins

November 2025

BBC History UK

Emperor Jahangir and Shah Abbas literally bestride the world like colossi

WATCHING THE RECENT SPECTACLE OF THOSE latter-day emperors President Xi of China and India's Narendra Modi hugging each other at the summit in Tianjin, my mind cast back to an earlier image of a pan-Asian summit.

time to read

3 mins

November 2025

BBC History UK

BBC History UK

THE SLIPPERY TRUTH OF THE DREYFUS AFFAIR

The wrongful conviction for treason of a Jewish army captain in France in the late 19th century not only tore the country apart, but also, as Mike Rapport reveals, sparked a flood of ‘fake news’ that has echoes in our own turbulent times.

time to read

10 mins

November 2025

BBC History UK

BBC History UK

Spectral beasts and hounds from hell

From infernal black dogs attacking churches to ravening, red-eyed brutes on remote roads, Britain has long been haunted by fearsome canine phantoms.

time to read

8 mins

November 2025

BBC History UK

Of ruins and revenants

Across Britain, hundreds of once-thriving medieval settlements were abandoned for reasons ranging from disease to economic collapse.

time to read

2 mins

November 2025

BBC History UK

BBC History UK

Why are we so hung up with historical dates?

From 1066 to 1918, our obsession with battles, elections and even voyages of discovery risks distorting a true understanding of the past

time to read

11 mins

November 2025

BBC History UK

The physicist as hero

JIMENA CANALES argues that a new study of Einstein misses some of the complexity in his story

time to read

2 mins

November 2025

BBC History UK

Different class

MILES TAYLOR is absorbed by a study of how Britain's hereditary peers have negotiated changing times

time to read

2 mins

November 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size