Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft by Walter Scott

(6 User reviews)   5341
By Robert Nguyen Posted on Dec 30, 2025
In Category - Exploration
Scott, Walter, 1771-1832 Scott, Walter, 1771-1832
English
Hey, I just finished this fascinating book from 1830 called 'Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft.' It’s not a novel—it’s Sir Walter Scott trying to make sense of our long, dark obsession with ghosts, witches, and the devil. Think of it as a fireside chat with a brilliant but skeptical historian. He sifts through centuries of wild stories, from medieval witch trials to local Scottish hauntings, asking the big question: why were people so convinced? It’s creepy, thoughtful, and surprisingly relevant. If you've ever wondered where our monster myths really come from, this is your backstage pass.
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drawing-room, and fell, remaining speechless until he had been bled. Dieted for weeks on pulse and water, he so far recovered that to friends outside his family but little change in him was visible. In that condition, in the month after his seizure, he was writing these Letters, and also a fourth series of the "Tales of a Grandfather." The slight softening of the brain found after death had then begun. But the old delight in anecdote and skill in story-telling that, at the beginning of his career, had caused a critic of his "Border Minstrelsy" to say that it contained the germs of a hundred romances, yet survived. It gave to Scott's "Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft" what is for us now a pathetic charm. Here and there some slight confusion of thought or style represents the flickering of a light that flashes yet with its old brilliancy. There is not yet the manifest suggestion of the loss of power that we find presently afterwards in "Count Robert of Paris" and "Castle Dangerous," published in 1831 as the Fourth Series of "Tales of My Landlord," with which he closed his life's work at the age of sixty. Milton has said that he who would not be frustrate of his hope to write well in laudable things, ought himself to be a true poem. Scott's life was a true poem, of which the music entered into all he wrote. If in his earlier days the consciousness of an unlimited productive power tempted him to make haste to be rich, that he might work out, as founder of a family, an ideal of life touched by his own genius of romance, there was not in his desire for gain one touch of sordid greed, and his ideal of life only brought him closer home to all its duties. Sir Walter Scott's good sense, as Lord Cockburn said, was a more wonderful gift than his genius. When the mistake of a trade connection with James Ballantyne brought ruin to him in 1826, he repudiated bankruptcy, took on himself the burden of a debt of £130,000, and sacrificed his life to the successful endeavour to pay off all. What was left unpaid at his death was cleared afterwards by the success of his annotated edition of his novels. No tale of physical strife in the battlefield could be as heroic as the story of the close of Scott's life, with five years of a death-struggle against adversity, animated by the truest sense of honour. When the ruin was impending he wrote in his diary, "If things go badly in London, the magic wand of the Unknown will be shivered in his grasp. The feast of fancy will be over with the feeling of independence. He shall no longer have the delight of waking in the morning with bright ideas in his mind, hasten to commit them to paper, and count them monthly, as the means of planting such scaurs and purchasing such wastes; replacing dreams of fiction by other prospective visions of walks by 'Fountain-heads, and pathless groves; Places which pale passion loves.' This cannot be; but I may work substantial husbandry--_i.e._ write history, and such concerns." It was under pressure of calamity like this that Sir Walter Scott was compelled to make himself known as the author of "Waverley." Closely upon this followed the death of his wife, his thirty years' companion. "I have been to her room," he wrote in May, 1826; "there was no voice in it--no stirring; the pressure of the coffin was visible on the bed, but it...

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This isn't a story in the traditional sense. Instead, Sir Walter Scott, the famous novelist, sits you down for a series of ten long letters. He walks you through the entire history of supernatural belief in Europe, especially in Britain. He covers everything: ancient demons, the witch trials that tore communities apart, ghost stories, and even accounts of people making pacts with the devil. Scott acts as your guide, presenting these often-horrifying tales not just to scare you, but to understand the fear, superstition, and sometimes outright fraud that fueled them.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was Scott's voice. He's a man of the early 1800s, standing at a crossroads between old superstition and new science. You can feel his rational mind wrestling with these spooky legends. He doesn't just dismiss them; he tries to figure out the human psychology behind them. Was it mental illness? Political scapegoating? Mass hysteria? Reading this today, it makes you look at our own modern myths and conspiracy theories differently. It's a masterclass in how stories shape our reality, for better or worse.

Final Verdict

Perfect for history buffs who like their facts served with a side of goosebumps, or for anyone who loves true crime podcasts about historical mysteries. It's not a fast-paced thriller, but a slow, rich, and intellectually satisfying deep dive. If you enjoy peeling back the layers of why we believe what we believe, you'll find Scott a witty and compelling companion for the journey.



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Patricia Young
8 months ago

Compatible with my e-reader, thanks.

Matthew Lee
1 year ago

I stumbled upon this title and the emotional weight of the story is balanced perfectly. I learned so much from this.

Jessica Wright
1 year ago

Honestly, it creates a vivid world that you simply do not want to leave. Exceeded all my expectations.

John Allen
1 year ago

If you enjoy this genre, the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. Absolutely essential reading.

Nancy Brown
1 year ago

Great read!

5
5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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