1. The Principles of Magic
IF we analyse the principles of thought
on which magic is based, they will probably be found
to resolve themselves into two: first, that like
produces like, or that an effect resembles its cause;
and, second, that things which have once been in contact
with each other continue to act on each other at a
distance after the physical contact has been severed.
The former principle may be called the Law of Similarity,
the latter the Law of Contact or Contagion. From
the first of these principles, namely the Law of Similarity,
the magician infers that he can produce any effect
he desires merely by imitating it: from the second
he infers that whatever he does to a material object
will affect equally the person with whom the object
was once in contact, whether it formed part of his
body or not. Charms based on the Law of Similarity
may be called Homoeopathic or Imitative Magic.
Charms based on the Law of Contact or Contagion may
be called Contagious Magic. To denote the first
of these branches of magic the term Homoeopathic is
perhaps preferable, for the alternative term Imitative
or Mimetic suggests, if it does not imply, a conscious
agent who imitates, thereby limiting the scope of
magic too narrowly. For the same principles which
the magician applies in the practice of his art are
implicitly believed by him to regulate the operations
of inanimate nature; in other words, he tacitly assumes
that the Laws of Similarity and Contact are of universal
application and are not limited to human actions.
In short, magic is a spurious system of natural law
as well as a fallacious guide of conduct; it is a false
science as well as an abortive art. Regarded as
a system of natural law, that is, as a statement of
the rules which determine the sequence of events throughout
the world, it may be called Theoretical Magic:
regarded as a set of precepts which human beings observe
in order to compass their ends, it may be called Practical
Magic. At the same time it is to be borne in mind
that the primitive magician knows magic only on its
practical side; he never analyses the mental processes
on which his practice is based, never reflects on
the abstract principles involved in his actions.
With him, as with the vast majority of men, logic
is implicit, not explicit: he reasons just as
he digests his food in complete ignorance of the intellectual
and physiological processes which are essential to
the one operation and to the other. In short,
to him magic is always an art, never a science; the
very idea of science is lacking in his undeveloped
mind. It is for the philosophic student to trace
the train of thought which underlies the magician’s
practice; to draw out the few simple threads of which
the tangled skein is composed; to disengage the abstract
principles from their concrete applications; in short,
to discern the spurious science behind the bastard
art.
If my analysis of the magician’s
logic is correct, its two great principles turn out
to be merely two different misapplications of the
association of ideas. Homoeopathic magic is founded
on the association of ideas by similarity: contagious
magic is founded on the association of ideas by contiguity.
Homoeopathic magic commits the mistake of assuming
that things which resemble each other are the same:
contagious magic commits the mistake of assuming that
things which have once been in contact with each other
are always in contact. But in practice the two
branches are often combined; or, to be more exact,
while homoeopathic or imitative magic may be practised
by itself, contagious magic will generally be found
to involve an application of the homoeopathic or imitative
principle. Thus generally stated the two things
may be a little difficult to grasp, but they will
readily become intelligible when they are illustrated
by particular examples. Both trains of thought
are in fact extremely simple and elementary.
It could hardly be otherwise, since they are familiar
in the concrete, though certainly not in the abstract,
to the crude intelligence not only of the savage, but
of ignorant and dull-witted people everywhere.
Both branches of magic, the homoeopathic and the contagious,
may conveniently be comprehended under the general
name of Sympathetic Magic, since both assume that
things act on each other at a distance through a secret
sympathy, the impulse being transmitted from one to
the other by means of what we may conceive as a kind
of invisible ether, not unlike that which is postulated
by modern science for a precisely similar purpose,
namely, to explain how things can physically affect
each other through a space which appears to be empty.
It may be convenient to tabulate as
follows the branches of magic according to the laws
of thought which underlie them:
Sympathetic Magic
(Law of Sympathy)
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Homoeopathic Magic Contagious Magic
(Law of Similarity) (Law of Contact)
I will now illustrate these two great
branches of sympathetic magic by examples, beginning
with homoeopathic magic.
2. Homoeopathic or Imitative Magic
PERHAPS the most familiar application
of the principle that like produces like is the attempt
which has been made by many peoples in many ages to
injure or destroy an enemy by injuring or destroying
an image of him, in the belief that, just as the image
suffers, so does the man, and that when it perishes
he must die. A few instances out of many may
be given to prove at once the wide diffusion of the
practice over the world and its remarkable persistence
through the ages. For thousands of years ago
it was known to the sorcerers of ancient India, Babylon,
and Egypt, as well as of Greece and Rome, and at this
day it is still resorted to by cunning and malignant
savages in Australia, Africa, and Scotland. Thus
the North American Indians, we are told, believe that
by drawing the figure of a person in sand, ashes,
or clay, or by considering any object as his body,
and then pricking it with a sharp stick or doing it
any other injury, they inflict a corresponding injury
on the person represented. For example, when
an Ojebway Indian desires to work evil on any one,
he makes a little wooden image of his enemy and runs
a needle into its head or heart, or he shoots an arrow
into it, believing that wherever the needle pierces
or the arrow strikes the image, his foe will the same
instant be seized with a sharp pain in the corresponding
part of his body; but if he intends to kill the person
outright, he burns or buries the puppet, uttering certain
magic words as he does so. The Peruvian Indians
moulded images of fat mixed with grain to imitate
the persons whom they disliked or feared, and then
burned the effigy on the road where the intended victim
was to pass. This they called burning his soul.
A Malay charm of the same sort is
as follows. Take parings of nails, hair, eyebrows,
spittle, and so forth of your intended victim, enough
to represent every part of his person, and then make
them up into his likeness with wax from a deserted
bees’ comb. Scorch the figure slowly by
holding it over a lamp every night for seven nights,
and say:
“It is not wax that I am scorching,
It is the liver, heart, and spleen of
So-and-so that I scorch.”
After the seventh time burn the figure,
and your victim will die. This charm obviously
combines the principles of homoeopathic and contagious
magic; since the image which is made in the likeness
of an enemy contains things which once were in contact
with him, namely, his nails, hair, and spittle.
Another form of the Malay charm, which resembles the
Ojebway practice still more closely, is to make a
corpse of wax from an empty bees’ comb and of
the length of a footstep; then pierce the eye of the
image, and your enemy is blind; pierce the stomach,
and he is sick; pierce the head, and his head aches;
pierce the breast, and his breast will suffer.
If you would kill him outright, transfix the image
from the head downwards; enshroud it as you would
a corpse; pray over it as if you were praying over
the dead; then bury it in the middle of a path where
your victim will be sure to step over it. In order
that his blood may not be on your head, you should
say:
“It is not I who am
burying him,
It is Gabriel who is
burying him.”
Thus the guilt of the murder will
be laid on the shoulders of the archangel Gabriel,
who is a great deal better able to bear it than you
are.
If homoeopathic or imitative magic,
working by means of images, has commonly been practised
for the spiteful purpose of putting obnoxious people
out of the world, it has also, though far more rarely,
been employed with the benevolent intention of helping
others into it. In other words, it has been used
to facilitate childbirth and to procure offspring
for barren women. Thus among the Bataks of Sumatra
a barren woman, who would become a mother, will make
a wooden image of a child and hold it in her lap, believing
that this will lead to the fulfilment of her wish.
In the Babar Archipelago, when a woman desires to
have a child, she invites a man who is himself the
father of a large family to pray on her behalf to
Upulero, the spirit of the sun. A doll is made
of red cotton, which the woman clasps in her arms,
as if she would suckle it. Then the father of
many children takes a fowl and holds it by the legs
to the woman’s head, saying, “O Upulero,
make use of the fowl; let fall, let descend a child,
I beseech you, I entreat you, let a child fall and
descend into my hands and on my lap.” Then
he asks the woman, “Has the child come?”
and she answers, “Yes, it is sucking already.”
After that the man holds the fowl on the husband’s
head, and mumbles some form of words. Lastly,
the bird is killed and laid, together with some betel,
on the domestic place of sacrifice. When the
ceremony is over, word goes about in the village that
the woman has been brought to bed, and her friends
come and congratulate her. Here the pretence
that a child has been born is a purely magical rite
designed to secure, by means of imitation or mimicry,
that a child really shall be born; but an attempt
is made to add to the efficacy of the rite by means
of prayer and sacrifice. To put it otherwise,
magic is here blent with and reinforced by religion.
Among some of the Dyaks of Borneo,
when a woman is in hard labour, a wizard is called
in, who essays to facilitate the delivery in a rational
manner by manipulating the body of the sufferer.
Meantime another wizard outside the room exerts himself
to attain the same end by means which we should regard
as wholly irrational. He, in fact, pretends to
be the expectant mother; a large stone attached to
his stomach by a cloth wrapt round his body represents
the child in the womb, and, following the directions
shouted to him by his colleague on the real scene
of operations, he moves this make-believe baby about
on his body in exact imitation of the movements of
the real baby till the infant is born.
The same principle of make-believe,
so dear to children, has led other peoples to employ
a simulation of birth as a form of adoption, and even
as a mode of restoring a supposed dead person to life.
If you pretend to give birth to a boy, or even to
a great bearded man who has not a drop of your blood
in his veins, then, in the eyes of primitive law and
philosophy, that boy or man is really your son to
all intents and purposes. Thus Diodorus tells
us that when Zeus persuaded his jealous wife Hera
to adopt Hercules, the goddess got into bed, and clasping
the burly hero to her bosom, pushed him through her
robes and let him fall to the ground in imitation of
a real birth; and the historian adds that in his own
day the same mode of adopting children was practised
by the barbarians. At the present time it is
said to be still in use in Bulgaria and among the Bosnian
Turks. A woman will take a boy whom she intends
to adopt and push or pull him through her clothes;
ever afterwards he is regarded as her very son, and
inherits the whole property of his adoptive parents.
Among the Berawans of Sarawak, when a woman desires
to adopt a grownup man or woman, a great many people
assemble and have a feast. The adopting mother,
seated in public on a raised and covered seat, allows
the adopted person to crawl from behind between her
legs. As soon as he appears in front he is stroked
with the sweet-scented blossoms of the areca palm
and tied to a woman. Then the adopting mother
and the adopted son or daughter, thus bound together,
waddle to the end of the house and back again in front
of all the spectators. The tie established between
the two by this graphic imitation of childbirth is
very strict; an offence committed against an adopted
child is reckoned more heinous than one committed against
a real child. In ancient Greece any man who had
been supposed erroneously to be dead, and for whom
in his absence funeral rites had been performed, was
treated as dead to society till he had gone through
the form of being born again. He was passed through
a woman’s lap, then washed, dressed in swaddling-clothes,
and put out to nurse. Not until this ceremony
had been punctually performed might he mix freely
with living folk. In ancient India, under similar
circumstances, the supposed dead man had to pass the
first night after his return in a tub filled with
a mixture of fat and water; there he sat with doubled-up
fists and without uttering a syllable, like a child
in the womb, while over him were performed all the
sacraments that were wont to be celebrated over a pregnant
woman. Next morning he got out of the tub and
went through once more all the other sacraments he
had formerly partaken of from his youth up; in particular,
he married a wife or espoused his old one over again
with due solemnity.
Another beneficent use of homoeopathic
magic is to heal or prevent sickness. The ancient
Hindoos performed an elaborate ceremony, based on
homoeopathic magic, for the cure of jaundice.
Its main drift was to banish the yellow colour to
yellow creatures and yellow things, such as the sun,
to which it properly belongs, and to procure for the
patient a healthy red colour from a living, vigorous
source, namely, a red bull. With this intention,
a priest recited the following spell: “Up
to the sun shall go thy heart-ache and thy jaundice:
in the colour of the red bull do we envelop thee!
We envelop thee in red tints, unto long life.
May this person go unscathed and be free of yellow
colour! The cows whose divinity is Rohini, they
who, moreover, are themselves red (rohinih)—in
their every form and every strength we do envelop
thee. Into the parrots, into the thrush, do we
put thy jaundice, and, furthermore, into the yellow
wagtail do we put thy jaundice.” While he
uttered these words, the priest, in order to infuse
the rosy hue of health into the sallow patient, gave
him water to sip which was mixed with the hair of
a red bull; he poured water over the animal’s
back and made the sick man drink it; he seated him
on the skin of a red bull and tied a piece of the
skin to him. Then in order to improve his colour
by thoroughly eradicating the yellow taint, he proceeded
thus. He first daubed him from head to foot with
a yellow porridge made of tumeric or curcuma (a yellow
plant), set him on a bed, tied three yellow birds,
to wit, a parrot, a thrush, and a yellow wagtail, by
means of a yellow string to the foot of the bed; then
pouring water over the patient, he washed off the
yellow porridge, and with it no doubt the jaundice,
from him to the birds. After that, by way of
giving a final bloom to his complexion, he took some
hairs of a red bull, wrapt them in gold leaf, and
glued them to the patient’s skin. The ancients
held that if a person suffering from jaundice looked
sharply at a stone-curlew, and the bird looked steadily
at him, he was cured of the disease. “Such
is the nature,” says Plutarch, “and such
the temperament of the creature that it draws out and
receives the malady which issues, like a stream, through
the eyesight.” So well recognised among
birdfanciers was this valuable property of the stone-curlew
that when they had one of these birds for sale they
kept it carefully covered, lest a jaundiced person
should look at it and be cured for nothing. The
virtue of the bird lay not in its colour but in its
large golden eye, which naturally drew out the yellow
jaundice. Pliny tells of another, or perhaps the
same, bird, to which the Greeks gave their name for
jaundice, because if a jaundiced man saw it, the disease
left him and slew the bird. He mentions also
a stone which was supposed to cure jaundice because
its hue resembled that of a jaundiced skin.
One of the great merits of homoeopathic
magic is that it enables the cure to be performed
on the person of the doctor instead of on that of
his victim, who is thus relieved of all trouble and
inconvenience, while he sees his medical man writhe
in anguish before him. For example, the peasants
of Perche, in France, labour under the impression
that a prolonged fit of vomiting is brought about by
the patient’s stomach becoming unhooked, as
they call it, and so falling down. Accordingly,
a practitioner is called in to restore the organ to
its proper place. After hearing the symptoms he
at once throws himself into the most horrible contortions,
for the purpose of unhooking his own stomach.
Having succeeded in the effort, he next hooks it up
again in another series of contortions and grimaces,
while the patient experiences a corresponding relief.
Fee five francs. In like manner a Dyak medicine-man,
who has been fetched in a case of illness, will lie
down and pretend to be dead. He is accordingly
treated like a corpse, is bound up in mats, taken out
of the house, and deposited on the ground. After
about an hour the other medicine-men loose the pretended
dead man and bring him to life; and as he recovers,
the sick person is supposed to recover too. A
cure for a tumour, based on the principle of homoeopathic
magic, is prescribed by Marcellus of Bordeaux, court
physician to Theodosius the First, in his curious
work on medicine. It is as follows. Take
a root of vervain, cut it across, and hang one end
of it round the patient’s neck, and the other
in the smoke of the fire. As the vervain dries
up in the smoke, so the tumour will also dry up and
disappear. If the patient should afterwards prove
ungrateful to the good physician, the man of skill
can avenge himself very easily by throwing the vervain
into water; for as the root absorbs the moisture once
more, the tumour will return. The same sapient
writer recommends you, if you are troubled with pimples,
to watch for a falling star, and then instantly, while
the star is still shooting from the sky, to wipe the
pimples with a cloth or anything that comes to hand.
Just as the star falls from the sky, so the pimples
will fall from your body; only you must be very careful
not to wipe them with your bare hand, or the pimples
will be transferred to it.
Further, homoeopathic and in general
sympathetic magic plays a great part in the measures
taken by the rude hunter or fisherman to secure an
abundant supply of food. On the principle that
like produces like, many things are done by him and
his friends in deliberate imitation of the result
which he seeks to attain; and, on the other hand,
many things are scrupulously avoided because they bear
some more or less fanciful resemblance to others which
would really be disastrous.
Nowhere is the theory of sympathetic
magic more systematically carried into practice for
the maintenance of the food supply than in the barren
regions of Central Australia. Here the tribes
are divided into a number of totem clans, each of
which is charged with the duty of multiplying their
totem for the good of the community by means of magical
ceremonies. Most of the totems are edible animals
and plants, and the general result supposed to be
accomplished by these ceremonies is that of supplying
the tribe with food and other necessaries. Often
the rites consist of an imitation of the effect which
the people desire to produce; in other words, their
magic is homoeopathic or imitative. Thus among
the Warramunga the headman of the white cockatoo totem
seeks to multiply white cockatoos by holding an effigy
of the bird and mimicking its harsh cry. Among
the Arunta the men of the witchetty grub totem perform
ceremonies for multiplying the grub which the other
members of the tribe use as food. One of the
ceremonies is a pantomime representing the fully-developed
insect in the act of emerging from the chrysalis.
A long narrow structure of branches is set up to imitate
the chrysalis case of the grub. In this structure
a number of men, who have the grub for their totem,
sit and sing of the creature in its various stages.
Then they shuffle out of it in a squatting posture,
and as they do so they sing of the insect emerging
from the chrysalis. This is supposed to multiply
the numbers of the grubs. Again, in order to
multiply emus, which are an important article of food,
the men of the emu totem paint on the ground the sacred
design of their totem, especially the parts of the
emu which they like best to eat, namely, the fat and
the eggs. Round this painting the men sit and
sing. Afterwards performers, wearing head-dresses
to represent the long neck and small head of the emu,
mimic the appearance of the bird as it stands aimlessly
peering about in all directions.
The Indians of British Columbia live
largely upon the fish which abound in their seas and
rivers. If the fish do not come in due season,
and the Indians are hungry, a Nootka wizard will make
an image of a swimming fish and put it into the water
in the direction from which the fish generally appear.
This ceremony, accompanied by a prayer to the fish
to come, will cause them to arrive at once. The
islanders of Torres Straits use models of dugong and
turtles to charm dugong and turtle to their destruction.
The Toradjas of Central Celebes believe that things
of the same sort attract each other by means of their
indwelling spirits or vital ether. Hence they
hang up the jawbones of deer and wild pigs in their
houses, in order that the spirits which animate these
bones may draw the living creatures of the same kind
into the path of the hunter. In the island of
Nias, when a wild pig has fallen into the pit prepared
for it, the animal is taken out and its back is rubbed
with nine fallen leaves, in the belief that this will
make nine more wild pigs fall into the pit, just as
the nine leaves fell from the tree. In the East
Indian islands of Saparoea, Haroekoe, and Noessa Laut,
when a fisherman is about to set a trap for fish in
the sea, he looks out for a tree, of which the fruit
has been much pecked at by birds. From such a
tree he cuts a stout branch and makes of it the principal
post in his fish-trap; for he believes that, just as
the tree lured many birds to its fruit, so the branch
cut from that tree will lure many fish to the trap.
The western tribes of British New
Guinea employ a charm to aid the hunter in spearing
dugong or turtle. A small beetle, which haunts
coco-nut trees, is placed in the hole of the spear-haft
into which the spear-head fits. This is supposed
to make the spear-head stick fast in the dugong or
turtle, just as the beetle sticks fast to a man’s
skin when it bites him. When a Cambodian hunter
has set his nets and taken nothing, he strips himself
naked, goes some way off, then strolls up to the net
as if he did not see it, lets himself be caught in
it, and cries, “Hillo! what’s this?
I’m afraid I’m caught.” After
that the net is sure to catch game. A pantomime
of the same sort has been acted within the living
memory in our Scottish Highlands. The Rev. James
Macdonald, now of Reay in Caithness, tells us that
in his boyhood when he was fishing with companions
about Loch Aline and they had had no bites for a long
time, they used to make a pretence of throwing one
of their fellows overboard and hauling him out of
the water, as if he were a fish; after that the trout
or silloch would begin to nibble, according as the
boat was on fresh or salt water. Before a Carrier
Indian goes out to snare martens, he sleeps by himself
for about ten nights beside the fire with a little
stick pressed down on his neck. This naturally
causes the fall-stick of his trap to drop down on the
neck of the marten. Among the Galelareese, who
inhabit a district in the northern part of Halmahera,
a large island to the west of New Guinea, it is a
maxim that when you are loading your gun to go out
shooting, you should always put the bullet in your
mouth before you insert it in the gun; for by so doing
you practically eat the game that is to be hit by
the bullet, which therefore cannot possibly miss the
mark. A Malay who has baited a trap for crocodiles,
and is awaiting results, is careful in eating his
curry always to begin by swallowing three lumps of
rice successively; for this helps the bait to slide
more easily down the crocodile’s throat.
He is equally scrupulous not to take any bones out
of his curry; for, if he did, it seems clear that
the sharp-pointed stick on which the bait is skewered
would similarly work itself loose, and the crocodile
would get off with the bait. Hence in these circumstances
it is prudent for the hunter, before he begins his
meal, to get somebody else to take the bones out of
his curry, otherwise he may at any moment have to
choose between swallowing a bone and losing the crocodile.
This last rule is an instance of the
things which the hunter abstains from doing lest,
on the principle that like produces like, they should
spoil his luck. For it is to be observed that
the system of sympathetic magic is not merely composed
of positive precepts; it comprises a very large number
of negative precepts, that is, prohibitions.
It tells you not merely what to do, but also what to
leave undone. The positive precepts are charms:
the negative precepts are taboos. In fact the
whole doctrine of taboo, or at all events a large
part of it, would seem to be only a special application
of sympathetic magic, with its two great laws of similarity
and contact. Though these laws are certainly not
formulated in so many words nor even conceived in the
abstract by the savage, they are nevertheless implicitly
believed by him to regulate the course of nature quite
independently of human will. He thinks that if
he acts in a certain way, certain consequences will
inevitably follow in virtue of one or other of these
laws; and if the consequences of a particular act
appear to him likely to prove disagreeable or dangerous,
he is naturally careful not to act in that way lest
he should incur them. In other words, he abstains
from doing that which, in accordance with his mistaken
notions of cause and effect, he falsely believes would
injure him; in short, he subjects himself to a taboo.
Thus taboo is so far a negative application of practical
magic. Positive magic or sorcery says, “Do
this in order that so and so may happen.”
Negative magic or taboo says, “Do not do this,
lest so and so should happen.” The aim of
positive magic or sorcery is to produce a desired event;
the aim of negative magic or taboo is to avoid an
undesirable one. But both consequences, the desirable
and the undesirable, are supposed to be brought about
in accordance with the laws of similarity and contact.
And just as the desired consequence is not really effected
by the observance of a magical ceremony, so the dreaded
consequence does not really result from the violation
of a taboo. If the supposed evil necessarily
followed a breach of taboo, the taboo would not be
a taboo but a precept of morality or common sense.
It is not a taboo to say, “Do not put your hand
in the fire”; it is a rule of common sense,
because the forbidden action entails a real, not an
imaginary evil. In short, those negative precepts
which we call taboo are just as vain and futile as
those positive precepts which we call sorcery.
The two things are merely opposite sides or poles of
one great disastrous fallacy, a mistaken conception
of the association of ideas. Of that fallacy,
sorcery is the positive, and taboo the negative pole.
If we give the general name of magic to the whole
erroneous system, both theoretical and practical, then
taboo may be defined as the negative side of practical
magic. To put this in tabular form:
Magic
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Theoretical Practical
(Magic as a (Magic as a
pseudo-science) pseudo-art)
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Positive Magic Negative Magic
or Sorcery or Taboo
I have made these remarks on taboo
and its relations to magic because I am about to give
some instances of taboos observed by hunters, fishermen,
and others, and I wished to show that they fall under
the head of Sympathetic Magic, being only particular
applications of that general theory. Thus, among
the Esquimaux boys are forbidden to play cat’s
cradle, because if they did so their fingers might
in later life become entangled in the harpoon-line.
Here the taboo is obviously an application of the law
of similarity, which is the basis of homoeopathic
magic: as the child’s fingers are entangled
by the string in playing cat’s cradle, so they
will be entangled by the harpoonline when he is a
man and hunts whales. Again, among the Huzuls
of the Carpathian Mountains the wife of a hunter may
not spin while her husband is eating, or the game will
turn and wind like the spindle, and the hunter will
be unable to hit it. Here again the taboo is
clearly derived from the law of similarity. So,
too, in most parts of ancient Italy women were forbidden
by law to spin on the highroads as they walked, or
even to carry their spindles openly, because any such
action was believed to injure the crops. Probably
the notion was that the twirling of the spindle would
twirl the corn-stalks and prevent them from growing
straight. So, too, among the Ainos of Saghalien
a pregnant woman may not spin nor twist ropes for
two months before her delivery, because they think
that if she did so the child’s guts might be
entangled like the thread. For a like reason
in Bilaspore, a district of India, when the chief
men of a village meet in council, no one present should
twirl a spindle; for they think that if such a thing
were to happen, the discussion, like the spindle, would
move in a circle and never be wound up. In some
of the East Indian islands any one who comes to the
house of a hunter must walk straight in; he may not
loiter at the door, for were he to do so, the game
would in like manner stop in front of the hunter’s
snares and then turn back, instead of being caught
in the trap. For a similar reason it is a rule
with the Toradjas of Central Celebes that no one may
stand or loiter on the ladder of a house where there
is a pregnant woman, for such delay would retard the
birth of the child; and in various parts of Sumatra
the woman herself in these circumstances is forbidden
to stand at the door or on the top rung of the house-ladder
under pain of suffering hard labour for her imprudence
in neglecting so elementary a precaution. Malays
engaged in the search for camphor eat their food dry
and take care not to pound their salt fine. The
reason is that the camphor occurs in the form of small
grains deposited in the cracks of the trunk of the
camphor tree. Accordingly it seems plain to the
Malay that if, while seeking for camphor, he were
to eat his salt finely ground, the camphor would be
found also in fine grains; whereas by eating his salt
coarse he ensures that the grains of the camphor will
also be large. Camphor hunters in Borneo use
the leathery sheath of the leaf-stalk of the Penang
palm as a plate for food, and during the whole of the
expedition they will never wash the plate, for fear
that the camphor might dissolve and disappear from
the crevices of the tree. Apparently they think
that to wash their plates would be to wash out the
camphor crystals from the trees in which they are imbedded.
The chief product of some parts of Laos, a province
of Siam, is lac. This is a resinous gum exuded
by a red insect on the young branches of trees, to
which the little creatures have to be attached by hand.
All who engage in the business of gathering the gum
abstain from washing themselves and especially from
cleansing their heads, lest by removing the parasites
from their hair they should detach the other insects
from the boughs. Again, a Blackfoot Indian who
has set a trap for eagles, and is watching it, would
not eat rosebuds on any account; for he argues that
if he did so, and an eagle alighted near the trap,
the rosebuds in his own stomach would make the bird
itch, with the result that instead of swallowing the
bait the eagle would merely sit and scratch himself.
Following this train of thought the eagle hunter also
refrains from using an awl when he is looking after
his snares; for surely if he were to scratch with an
awl, the eagles would scratch him. The same disastrous
consequence would follow if his wives and children
at home used an awl while he is out after eagles,
and accordingly they are forbidden to handle the tool
in his absence for fear of putting him in bodily danger.
Among the taboos observed by savages
none perhaps are more numerous or important than the
prohibitions to eat certain foods, and of such prohibitions
many are demonstrably derived from the law of similarity
and are accordingly examples of negative magic.
Just as the savage eats many animals or plants in
order to acquire certain desirable qualities with
which he believes them to be endowed, so he avoids
eating many other animals and plants lest he should
acquire certain undesirable qualities with which he
believes them to be infected. In eating the former
he practises positive magic; in abstaining from the
latter he practises negative magic. Many examples
of such positive magic will meet us later on; here
I will give a few instances of such negative magic
or taboo. For example, in Madagascar soldiers
are forbidden to eat a number of foods lest on the
principle of homoeopathic magic they should be tainted
by certain dangerous or undesirable properties which
are supposed to inhere in these particular viands.
Thus they may not taste hedgehog, “as it is
feared that this animal, from its propensity of coiling
up into a ball when alarmed, will impart a timid shrinking
disposition to those who partake of it.”
Again, no soldier should eat an ox’s knee, lest
like an ox he should become weak in the knees and unable
to march. Further, the warrior should be careful
to avoid partaking of a cock that has died fighting
or anything that has been speared to death; and no
male animal may on any account be killed in his house
while he is away at the wars. For it seems obvious
that if he were to eat a cock that had died fighting,
he would himself be slain on the field of battle;
if he were to partake of an animal that had been speared,
he would be speared himself; if a male animal were
killed in his house during his absence, he would himself
be killed in like manner and perhaps at the same instant.
Further, the Malagasy soldier must eschew kidneys,
because in the Malagasy language the word for kidney
is the same as that for “shot”; so shot
he would certainly be if he ate a kidney.
The reader may have observed that
in some of the foregoing examples of taboos the magical
influence is supposed to operate at considerable distances;
thus among the Blackfeet Indians the wives and children
of an eagle hunter are forbidden to use an awl during
his absence, lest the eagles should scratch the distant
husband and father; and again no male animal may be
killed in the house of a Malagasy soldier while he
is away at the wars, lest the killing of the animal
should entail the killing of the man. This belief
in the sympathetic influence exerted on each other
by persons or things at a distance is of the essence
of magic. Whatever doubts science may entertain
as to the possibility of action at a distance, magic
has none; faith in telepathy is one of its first principles.
A modern advocate of the influence of mind upon mind
at a distance would have no difficulty in convincing
a savage; the savage believed in it long ago, and
what is more, he acted on his belief with a logical
consistency such as his civilised brother in the faith
has not yet, so far as I am aware, exhibited in his
conduct. For the savage is convinced not only
that magical ceremonies affect persons and things
afar off, but that the simplest acts of daily life
may do so too. Hence on important occasions the
behaviour of friends and relations at a distance is
often regulated by a more or less elaborate code of
rules, the neglect of which by the one set of persons
would, it is supposed, entail misfortune or even death
on the absent ones. In particular when a party
of men are out hunting or fighting, their kinsfolk
at home are often expected to do certain things or
to abstain from doing certain others, for the sake
of ensuring the safety and success of the distant
hunters or warriors. I will now give some instances
of this magical telepathy both in its positive and
in its negative aspect.
In Laos when an elephant hunter is
starting for the chase, he warns his wife not to cut
her hair or oil her body in his absence; for if she
cut her hair the elephant would burst the toils, if
she oiled herself it would slip through them.
When a Dyak village has turned out to hunt wild pigs
in the jungle, the people who stay at home may not
touch oil or water with their hands during the absence
of their friends; for if they did so, the hunters
would all be “butter-fingered” and the
prey would slip through their hands.
Elephant-hunters in East Africa believe
that, if their wives prove unfaithful in their absence,
this gives the elephant power over his pursuer, who
will accordingly be killed or severely wounded.
Hence if a hunter hears of his wife’s misconduct,
he abandons the chase and returns home. If a
Wagogo hunter is unsuccessful, or is attacked by a
lion, he attributes it to his wife’s misbehaviour
at home, and returns to her in great wrath. While
he is away hunting, she may not let any one pass behind
her or stand in front of her as she sits; and she
must lie on her face in bed. The Moxos Indians
of Bolivia thought that if a hunter’s wife was
unfaithful to him in his absence he would be bitten
by a serpent or a jaguar. Accordingly, if such
an accident happened to him, it was sure to entail
the punishment, and often the death, of the woman,
whether she was innocent or guilty. An Aleutian
hunter of sea-otters thinks that he cannot kill a single
animal if during his absence from home his wife should
be unfaithful or his sister unchaste.
The Huichol Indians of Mexico treat
as a demi-god a species of cactus which throws the
eater into a state of ecstasy. The plant does
not grow in their country, and has to be fetched every
year by men who make a journey of forty-three days
for the purpose. Meanwhile the wives at home
contribute to the safety of their absent husbands
by never walking fast, much less running, while the
men are on the road. They also do their best
to ensure the benefits which, in the shape of rain,
good crops, and so forth, are expected to flow from
the sacred mission. With this intention they subject
themselves to severe restrictions like those imposed
upon their husbands. During the whole of the
time which elapses till the festival of the cactus
is held, neither party washes except on certain occasions,
and then only with water brought from the distant country
where the holy plant grows. They also fast much,
eat no salt, and are bound to strict continence.
Any one who breaks this law is punished with illness,
and, moreover, jeopardises the result which all are
striving for. Health, luck, and life are to be
gained by gathering the cactus, the gourd of the God
of Fire; but inasmuch as the pure fire cannot benefit
the impure, men and women must not only remain chaste
for the time being, but must also purge themselves
from the taint of past sin. Hence four days after
the men have started the women gather and confess
to Grandfather Fire with what men they have been in
love from childhood till now. They may not omit
a single one, for if they did so the men would not
find a single cactus. So to refresh their memories
each one prepares a string with as many knots as she
has had lovers. This she brings to the temple,
and, standing before the fire, she mentions aloud
all the men she has scored on her string, name after
name. Having ended her confession, she throws
the string into the fire, and when the god has consumed
it in his pure flame, her sins are forgiven her and
she departs in peace. From now on the women are
averse even to letting men pass near them. The
cactus-seekers themselves make in like manner a clean
breast of all their frailties. For every peccadillo
they tie a knot on a string, and after they have “talked
to all the five winds” they deliver the rosary
of their sins to the leader, who burns it in the fire.
Many of the indigenous tribes of Sarawak
are firmly persuaded that were the wives to commit
adultery while their husbands are searching for camphor
in the jungle, the camphor obtained by the men would
evaporate. Husbands can discover, by certain knots
in the tree, when the wives are unfaithful; and it
is said that in former days many women were killed
by jealous husbands on no better evidence than that
of these knots. Further, the wives dare not touch
a comb while their husbands are away collecting the
camphor; for if they did so, the interstices between
the fibres of the tree, instead of being filled with
the precious crystals, would be empty like the spaces
between the teeth of a comb. In the Kei Islands,
to the southwest of New Guinea, as soon as a vessel
that is about to sail for a distant port has been
launched, the part of the beach on which it lay is
covered as speedily as possible with palm branches,
and becomes sacred. No one may thenceforth cross
that spot till the ship comes home. To cross
it sooner would cause the vessel to perish. Moreover,
all the time that the voyage lasts three or four young
girls, specially chosen for the duty, are supposed
to remain in sympathetic connexion with the mariners
and to contribute by their behaviour to the safety
and success of the voyage. On no account, except
for the most necessary purpose, may they quit the
room that has been assigned to them. More than
that, so long as the vessel is believed to be at sea
they must remain absolutely motionless, crouched on
their mats with their hands clasped between their knees.
They may not turn their heads to the left or to the
right or make any other movement whatsoever.
If they did, it would cause the boat to pitch and
toss; and they may not eat any sticky stuff, such as
rice boiled in coco-nut milk, for the stickiness of
the food would clog the passage of the boat through
the water. When the sailors are supposed to have
reached their destination, the strictness of these
rules is somewhat relaxed; but during the whole time
that the voyage lasts the girls are forbidden to eat
fish which have sharp bones or stings, such as the
sting-ray, lest their friends at sea should be involved
in sharp, stinging trouble.
Where beliefs like these prevail as
to the sympathetic connexion between friends at a
distance, we need not wonder that above everything
else war, with its stern yet stirring appeal to some
of the deepest and tenderest of human emotions, should
quicken in the anxious relations left behind a desire
to turn the sympathetic bond to the utmost account
for the benefit of the dear ones who may at any moment
be fighting and dying far away. Hence, to secure
an end so natural and laudable, friends at home are
apt to resort to devices which will strike us as pathetic
or ludicrous, according as we consider their object
or the means adopted to effect it. Thus in some
districts of Borneo, when a Dyak is out head-hunting,
his wife or, if he is unmarried, his sister must wear
a sword day and night in order that he may always
be thinking of his weapons; and she may not sleep
during the day nor go to bed before two in the morning,
lest her husband or brother should thereby be surprised
in his sleep by an enemy. Among the Sea Dyaks
of Banting in Sarawak the women strictly observe an
elaborate code of rules while the men are away fighting.
Some of the rules are negative and some are positive,
but all alike are based on the principles of magical
homoeopathy and telepathy. Amongst them are the
following. The women must wake very early in
the morning and open the windows as soon as it is light;
otherwise their absent husbands will oversleep themselves.
The women may not oil their hair, or the men will
slip. The women may neither sleep nor doze by
day, or the men will be drowsy on the march. The
women must cook and scatter popcorn on the verandah
every morning; so will the men be agile in their movements.
The rooms must be kept very tidy, all boxes being
placed near the walls; for if any one were to stumble
over them, the absent husbands would fall and be at
the mercy of the foe. At every meal a little rice
must be left in the pot and put aside; so will the
men far away always have something to eat and need
never go hungry. On no account may the women
sit at the loom till their legs grow cramped, otherwise
their husbands will likewise be stiff in their joints
and unable to rise up quickly or to run away from
the foe. So in order to keep their husbands’
joints supple the women often vary their labours at
the loom by walking up and down the verandah.
Further, they may not cover up their faces, or the
men would not to be able to find their way through
the tall grass or jungle. Again, the women may
not sew with a needle, or the men will tread on the
sharp spikes set by the enemy in the path. Should
a wife prove unfaithful while her husband is away,
he will lose his life in the enemy’s country.
Some years ago all these rules and more were observed
by the women of Banting, while their husbands were
fighting for the English against rebels. But
alas! these tender precautions availed them little;
for many a man, whose faithful wife was keeping watch
and ward for him at home, found a soldier’s
grave.
In the island of Timor, while war
is being waged, the high-priest never quits the temple;
his food is brought to him or cooked inside; day and
night he must keep the fire burning, for if he were
to let it die out, disaster would be fall the warriors
and would continue so long as the hearth was cold.
Moreover, he must drink only hot water during the
time the army is absent; for every draught of cold
water would damp the spirits of the people, so that
they could not vanquish the enemy. In the Kei
Islands, when the warriors have departed, the women
return indoors and bring out certain baskets containing
fruits and stones. These fruits and stones they
anoint and place on a board, murmuring as they do
so, “O lord sun, moon, let the bullets rebound
from our husbands, brothers, betrothed, and other
relations, just as raindrops rebound from these objects
which are smeared with oil.” As soon as
the first shot is heard, the baskets are put aside,
and the women, seizing their fans, rush out of the
houses. Then, waving their fans in the direction
of the enemy, they run through the village, while
they sing, “O golden fans! let our bullets hit,
and those of the enemy miss.” In this custom
the ceremony of anointing stones, in order that the
bullets may recoil from the men like raindrops from
the stones, is a piece of pure homoeopathic or imitative
magic; but the prayer to the sun, that he will be
pleased to give effect to the charm, is a religious
and perhaps later addition. The waving of the
fans seems to be a charm to direct the bullets towards
or away from their mark, according as they are discharged
from the guns of friends or foes.
An old historian of Madagascar informs
us that “while the men are at the wars, and
until their return, the women and girls cease not day
and night to dance, and neither lie down nor take food
in their own houses. And although they are very
voluptuously inclined, they would not for anything
in the world have an intrigue with another man while
their husband is at the war, believing firmly that
if that happened, their husband would be either killed
or wounded. They believe that by dancing they
impart strength, courage, and good fortune to their
husbands; accordingly during such times they give
themselves no rest, and this custom they observe very
religiously.”
Among the Tshi-speaking peoples of
the Gold Coast the wives of men who are away with
the army paint themselves white, and adorn their persons
with beads and charms. On the day when a battle
is expected to take place, they run about armed with
guns, or sticks carved to look like guns, and taking
green paw-paws (fruits shaped somewhat like a melon),
they hack them with knives, as if they were chopping
off the heads of the foe. The pantomime is no
doubt merely an imitative charm, to enable the men
to do to the enemy as the women do to the paw-paws.
In the West African town of Framin, while the Ashantee
war was raging some years ago, Mr. Fitzgerald Marriott
saw a dance performed by women whose husbands had
gone as carriers to the war. They were painted
white and wore nothing but a short petticoat.
At their head was a shrivelled old sorceress in a very
short white petticoat, her black hair arranged in a
sort of long projecting horn, and her black face,
breasts, arms, and legs profusely adorned with white
circles and crescents. All carried long white
brushes made of buffalo or horse tails, and as they
danced they sang, “Our husbands have gone to
Ashanteeland; may they sweep their enemies off the
face of the earth!”
Among the Thompson Indians of British
Columbia, when the men were on the war-path, the women
performed dances at frequent intervals. These
dances were believed to ensure the success of the expedition.
The dancers flourished their knives, threw long sharp-pointed
sticks forward, or drew sticks with hooked ends repeatedly
backward and forward. Throwing the sticks forward
was symbolic of piercing or warding off the enemy,
and drawing them back was symbolic of drawing their
own men from danger. The hook at the end of the
stick was particularly well adapted to serve the purpose
of a life-saving apparatus. The women always
pointed their weapons towards the enemy’s country.
They painted their faces red and sang as they danced,
and they prayed to the weapons to preserve their husbands
and help them to kill many foes. Some had eagle-down
stuck on the points of their sticks. When the
dance was over, these weapons were hidden. If
a woman whose husband was at the war thought she saw
hair or a piece of a scalp on the weapon when she
took it out, she knew that her husband had killed
an enemy. But if she saw a stain of blood on
it, she knew he was wounded or dead. When the
men of the Yuki tribe in California were away fighting,
the women at home did not sleep; they danced continually
in a circle, chanting and waving leafy wands.
For they said that if they danced all the time, their
husbands would not grow tired. Among the Haida
Indians of the Queen Charlotte Islands, when the men
had gone to war, the women at home would get up very
early in the morning and pretend to make war by falling
upon their children and feigning to take them for slaves.
This was supposed to help their husbands to go and
do likewise. If a wife were unfaithful to her
husband while he was away on the war-path, he would
probably be killed. For ten nights all the women
at home lay with their heads towards the point of the
compass to which the war-canoes had paddled away.
Then they changed about, for the warriors were supposed
to be coming home across the sea. At Masset the
Haida women danced and sang war-songs all the time
their husbands were away at the wars, and they had
to keep everything about them in a certain order.
It was thought that a wife might kill her husband
by not observing these customs. When a band of
Carib Indians of the Orinoco had gone on the war-path,
their friends left in the village used to calculate
as nearly as they could the exact moment when the
absent warriors would be advancing to attack the enemy.
Then they took two lads, laid them down on a bench,
and inflicted a most severe scourging on their bare
backs. This the youths submitted to without a
murmur, supported in their sufferings by the firm
conviction, in which they had been bred from childhood,
that on the constancy and fortitude with which they
bore the cruel ordeal depended the valour and success
of their comrades in the battle.
Among the many beneficent uses to
which a mistaken ingenuity has applied the principle
of homoeopathic or imitative magic, is that of causing
trees and plants to bear fruit in due season.
In Thüringen the man who sows flax carries the seed
in a long bag which reaches from his shoulders to
his knees, and he walks with long strides, so that
the bag sways to and fro on his back. It is believed
that this will cause the flax to wave in the wind.
In the interior of Sumatra rice is sown by women who,
in sowing, let their hair hang loose down their back,
in order that the rice may grow luxuriantly and have
long stalks. Similarly, in ancient Mexico a festival
was held in honour of the goddess of maize, or “the
long-haired mother,” as she was called.
It began at the time “when the plant had attained
its full growth, and fibres shooting forth from the
top of the green ear indicated that the grain was
fully formed. During this festival the women
wore their long hair unbound, shaking and tossing it
in the dances which were the chief feature in the
ceremonial, in order that the tassel of the maize
might grow in like profusion, that the grain might
be correspondingly large and flat, and that the people
might have abundance.” In many parts of
Europe dancing or leaping high in the air are approved
homoeopathic modes of making the crops grow high.
Thus in Franche-Comté they say that you should dance
at the Carnival in order to make the hemp grow tall.
The notion that a person can influence
a plant homoeopathically by his act or condition comes
out clearly in a remark made by a Malay woman.
Being asked why she stripped the upper part of her
body naked in reaping the rice, she explained that
she did it to make the rice-husks thinner, as she
was tired of pounding thick-husked rice. Clearly,
she thought that the less clothing she wore the less
husk there would be on the rice. The magic virtue
of a pregnant woman to communicate fertility is known
to Bavarian and Austrian peasants, who think that
if you give the first fruit of a tree to a woman with
child to eat, the tree will bring forth abundantly
next year. On the other hand, the Baganda believe
that a barren wife infects her husband’s garden
with her own sterility and prevents the trees from
bearing fruit; hence a childless woman is generally
divorced. The Greeks and Romans sacrificed pregnant
victims to the goddesses of the corn and of the earth,
doubtless in order that the earth might teem and the
corn swell in the ear. When a Catholic priest
remonstrated with the Indians of the Orinoco on allowing
their women to sow the fields in the blazing sun,
with infants at their breasts, the men answered, “Father,
you don’t understand these things, and that
is why they vex you. You know that women are accustomed
to bear children, and that we men are not. When
the women sow, the stalk of the maize bears two or
three ears, the root of the yucca yields two or three
basketfuls, and everything multiplies in proportion.
Now why is that? Simply because the women know
how to bring forth, and know how to make the seed
which they sow bring forth also. Let them sow,
then; we men don’t know as much about it as they
do.”
Thus on the theory of homoeopathic
magic a person can influence vegetation either for
good or for evil according to the good or the bad
character of his acts or states: for example,
a fruitful woman makes plants fruitful, a barren woman
makes them barren. Hence this belief in the noxious
and infectious nature of certain personal qualities
or accidents has given rise to a number of prohibitions
or rules of avoidance: people abstain from doing
certain things lest they should homoeopathically infect
the fruits of the earth with their own undesirable
state or condition. All such customs of abstention
or rules of avoidance are examples of negative magic
or taboo. Thus, for example, arguing from what
may be called the infectiousness of personal acts
or states, the Galelareese say that you ought not
to shoot with a bow and arrows under a fruit-tree,
or the tree will cast its fruit even as the arrows
fall to the ground; and that when you are eating water-melon
you ought not to mix the pips which you spit out of
your mouth with the pips which you have put aside
to serve as seed; for if you do, though the pips you
spat out may certainly spring up and blossom, yet
the blossoms will keep falling off just as the pips
fell from your mouth, and thus these pips will never
bear fruit. Precisely the same train of thought
leads the Bavarian peasant to believe that if he allows
the graft of a fruit-tree to fall on the ground, the
tree that springs from that graft will let its fruit
fall untimely. When the Chams of Cochinchina
are sowing their dry rice fields and desire that no
shower should fall, they eat their rice dry in order
to prevent rain from spoiling the crop.
In the foregoing cases a person is
supposed to influence vegetation homoeopathically.
He infects trees or plants with qualities or accidents,
good or bad, resembling and derived from his own.
But on the principle of homoeopathic magic the influence
is mutual: the plant can infect the man just
as much as the man can infect the plant. In magic,
as I believe in physics, action and reaction are equal
and opposite. The Cherokee Indians are adepts
in practical botany of the homoeopathic sort.
Thus wiry roots of the catgut plant are so tough that
they can almost stop a plowshare in the furrow.
Hence Cherokee women wash their heads with a decoction
of the roots to make the hair strong, and Cherokee
ball-players wash themselves with it to toughen their
muscles. It is a Galelareese belief that if you
eat a fruit which has fallen to the ground, you will
yourself contract a disposition to stumble and fall;
and that if you partake of something which has been
forgotten (such as a sweet potato left in the pot
or a banana in the fire), you will become forgetful.
The Galelareese are also of opinion that if a woman
were to consume two bananas growing from a single
head she would give birth to twins. The Guarani
Indians of South America thought that a woman would
become a mother of twins if she ate a double grain
of millet. In Vedic times a curious application
of this principle supplied a charm by which a banished
prince might be restored to his kingdom. He had
to eat food cooked on a fire which was fed with wood
which had grown out of the stump of a tree which had
been cut down. The recuperative power manifested
by such a tree would in due course be communicated
through the fire to the food, and so to the prince,
who ate the food which was cooked on the fire which
was fed with the wood which grew out of the tree.
The Sudanese think that if a house is built of the
wood of thorny trees, the life of the people who dwell
in that house will likewise be thorny and full of
trouble.
There is a fruitful branch of homoeopathic
magic which works by means of the dead; for just as
the dead can neither see nor hear nor speak, so you
may on homoeopathic principles render people blind,
deaf and dumb by the use of dead men’s bones
or anything else that is tainted by the infection
of death. Thus among the Galelareese, when a
young man goes a-wooing at night, he takes a little
earth from a grave and strews it on the roof of his
sweetheart’s house just above the place where
her parents sleep. This, he fancies, will prevent
them from waking while he converses with his beloved,
since the earth from the grave will make them sleep
as sound as the dead. Burglars in all ages and
many lands have been patrons of this species of magic,
which is very useful to them in the exercise of their
profession. Thus a South Slavonian housebreaker
sometimes begins operations by throwing a dead man’s
bone over the house, saying, with pungent sarcasm,
“As this bone may waken, so may these people
waken”; after that not a soul in the house can
keep his or her eyes open. Similarly, in Java
the burglar takes earth from a grave and sprinkles
it round the house which he intends to rob; this throws
the inmates into a deep sleep. With the same intention
a Hindoo will strew ashes from a pyre at the door
of the house; Indians of Peru scatter the dust of
dead men’s bones; and Ruthenian burglars remove
the marrow from a human shin-bone, pour tallow into
it, and having kindled the tallow, march thrice round
the house with this candle burning, which causes the
inmates to sleep a death-like sleep. Or the Ruthenian
will make a flute out of a human leg-bone and play
upon it; whereupon all persons within hearing are overcome
with drowsiness. The Indians of Mexico employed
for this maleficent purpose the left fore-arm of a
woman who had died in giving birth to her first child;
but the arm had to be stolen. With it they beat
the ground before they entered the house which they
designed to plunder; this caused every one in the
house to lose all power of speech and motion; they
were as dead, hearing and seeing everything, but perfectly
powerless; some of them, however, really slept and
even snored. In Europe similar properties were
ascribed to the Hand of Glory, which was the dried
and pickled hand of a man who had been hanged.
If a candle made of the fat of a malefactor who had
also died on the gallows was lighted and placed in
the Hand of Glory as in a candlestick, it rendered
motionless all persons to whom it was presented; they
could not stir a finger any more than if they were
dead. Sometimes the dead man’s hand is itself
the candle, or rather bunch of candles, all its withered
fingers being set on fire; but should any member of
the household be awake, one of the fingers will not
kindle. Such nefarious lights can only be extinguished
with milk. Often it is prescribed that the thief’s
candle should be made of the finger of a new-born
or, still better, unborn child; sometimes it is thought
needful that the thief should have one such candle
for every person in the house, for if he has one candle
too little somebody in the house will wake and catch
him. Once these tapers begin to burn, there is
nothing but milk that will put them out. In the
seventeenth century robbers used to murder pregnant
women in order thus to extract candles from their wombs.
An ancient Greek robber or burglar thought he could
silence and put to flight the fiercest watchdogs by
carrying with him a brand plucked from a funeral pyre.
Again, Servian and Bulgarian women who chafe at the
restraints of domestic life will take the copper coins
from the eyes of a corpse, wash them in wine or water,
and give the liquid to their husbands to drink.
After swallowing it, the husband will be as blind
to his wife’s peccadilloes as the dead man was
on whose eyes the coins were laid.
Further, animals are often conceived
to possess qualities of properties which might be
useful to man, and homoeopathic or imitative magic
seeks to communicate these properties to human beings
in various ways. Thus some Bechuanas wear a ferret
as a charm, because, being very tenacious of life,
it will make them difficult to kill. Others wear
a certain insect, mutilated, but living, for a similar
purpose. Yet other Bechuana warriors wear the
hair of a hornless ox among their own hair, and the
skin of a frog on their mantle, because a frog is
slippery, and the ox, having no horns, is hard to
catch; so the man who is provided with these charms
believes that he will be as hard to hold as the ox
and the frog. Again, it seems plain that a South
African warrior who twists tufts of rat’s hair
among his own curly black locks will have just as
many chances of avoiding the enemy’s spear as
the nimble rat has of avoiding things thrown at it;
hence in these regions rats’ hair is in great
demand when war is expected. One of the ancient
books of India prescribes that when a sacrifice is
offered for victory, the earth out of which the altar
is to be made should be taken from a place where a
boar has been wallowing, since the strength of the
boar will be in that earth. When you are playing
the one-stringed lute, and your fingers are stiff,
the thing to do is to catch some long-legged field
spiders and roast them, and then rub your fingers
with the ashes; that will make your fingers as lithe
and nimble as the spiders’ legs—at
least so think the Galelareese. To bring back
a runaway slave an Arab will trace a magic circle on
the ground, stick a nail in the middle of it, and
attach a beetle by a thread to the nail, taking care
that the sex of the beetle is that of the fugitive.
As the beetle crawls round and round, it will coil
the thread about the nail, thus shortening its tether
and drawing nearer to the centre at every circuit.
So by virtue of homoeopathic magic the runaway slave
will be drawn back to his master.
Among the western tribes of British
New Guinea, a man who has killed a snake will burn
it and smear his legs with the ashes when he goes
into the forest; for no snake will bite him for some
days afterwards. If a South Slavonian has a mind
to pilfer and steal at market, he has nothing to do
but to burn a blind cat, and then throw a pinch of
its ashes over the person with whom he is higgling;
after that he can take what he likes from the booth,
and the owner will not be a bit the wiser, having
become as blind as the deceased cat with whose ashes
he has been sprinkled. The thief may even ask
boldly, “Did I pay for it?” and the deluded
huckster will reply, “Why, certainly.”
Equally simple and effectual is the expedient adopted
by natives of Central Australia who desire to cultivate
their beards. They prick the chin all over with
a pointed bone, and then stroke it carefully with
a magic stick or stone, which represents a kind of
rat that has very long whiskers. The virtue of
these whiskers naturally passes into the representative
stick or stone, and thence by an easy transition to
the chin, which, consequently, is soon adorned with
a rich growth of beard. The ancient Greeks thought
that to eat the flesh of the wakeful nightingale would
prevent a man from sleeping; that to smear the eyes
of a blear-sighted person with the gall of an eagle
would give him the eagle’s vision; and that
a raven’s eggs would restore the blackness of
the raven to silvery hair. Only the person who
adopted this last mode of concealing the ravages of
time had to be most careful to keep his mouth full
of oil all the time he applied the eggs to his venerable
locks, else his teeth as well as his hair would be
dyed raven black, and no amount of scrubbing and scouring
would avail to whiten them again. The hair-restorer
was in fact a shade too powerful, and in applying
it you might get more than you bargained for.
The Huichol Indians admire the beautiful
markings on the backs of serpents. Hence when
a Huichol woman is about to weave or embroider, her
husband catches a large serpent and holds it in a cleft
stick, while the woman strokes the reptile with one
hand down the whole length of its back; then she passes
the same hand over her forehead and eyes, that she
may be able to work as beautiful patterns in the web
as the markings on the back of the serpent.
On the principle of homoeopathic magic,
inanimate things, as well as plants and animals, may
diffuse blessing or bane around them, according to
their own intrinsic nature and the skill of the wizard
to tap or dam, as the case may be, the stream of weal
or woe. In Samaracand women give a baby sugar
candy to suck and put glue in the palm of its hand,
in order that, when the child grows up, his words
may be sweet and precious things may stick to his hands
as if they were glued. The Greeks thought that
a garment made from the fleece of a sheep that had
been torn by a wolf would hurt the wearer, setting
up an itch or irritation in his skin. They were
also of opinion that if a stone which had been bitten
by a dog were dropped in wine, it would make all who
drank of that wine to fall out among themselves.
Among the Arabs of Moab a childless woman often borrows
the robe of a woman who has had many children, hoping
with the robe to acquire the fruitfulness of its owner.
The Caffres of Sofala, in East Africa, had a great
dread of being struck with anything hollow, such as
a reed or a straw, and greatly preferred being thrashed
with a good thick cudgel or an iron bar, even though
it hurt very much. For they thought that if a
man were beaten with anything hollow, his inside would
waste away till he died. In eastern seas there
is a large shell which the Buginese of Celebes call
the “old man” (kadjâwo). On
Fridays they turn these “old men” upside
down and place them on the thresholds of their houses,
believing that whoever then steps over the threshold
of the house will live to be old. At initiation
a Brahman boy is made to tread with his right foot
on a stone, while the words are repeated, “Tread
on this stone; like a stone be firm”; and the
same ceremony is performed, with the same words, by
a Brahman bride at her marriage. In Madagascar
a mode of counteracting the levity of fortune is to
bury a stone at the foot of the heavy house-post.
The common custom of swearing upon a stone may be
based partly on a belief that the strength and stability
of the stone lend confirmation to an oath. Thus
the old Danish historian Saxo Grammaticus tells us
that “the ancients, when they were to choose
a king, were wont to stand on stones planted in the
ground, and to proclaim their votes, in order to foreshadow
from the steadfastness of the stones that the deed
would be lasting.”
But while a general magical efficacy
may be supposed to reside in all stones by reason
of their common properties of weight and solidity,
special magical virtues are attributed to particular
stones, or kinds of stone, in accordance with their
individual or specific qualities of shape and colour.
For example, the Indians of Peru employed certain
stones for the increase of maize, others for the increase
of potatoes, and others again for the increase of
cattle. The stones used to make maize grow were
fashioned in the likeness of cobs of maize, and the
stones destined to multiply cattle had the shape of
sheep.
In some parts of Melanesia a like
belief prevails that certain sacred stones are endowed
with miraculous powers which correspond in their nature
to the shape of the stone. Thus a piece of water-worn
coral on the beach often bears a surprising likeness
to a bread-fruit. Hence in the Banks Islands
a man who finds such a coral will lay it at the root
of one of his bread-fruit trees in the expectation
that it will make the tree bear well. If the result
answers his expectation, he will then, for a proper
remuneration, take stones of less-marked character
from other men and let them lie near his, in order
to imbue them with the magic virtue which resides
in it. Similarly, a stone with little discs upon
it is good to bring in money; and if a man found a
large stone with a number of small ones under it,
like a sow among her litter, he was sure that to offer
money upon it would bring him pigs. In these and
similar cases the Melanesians ascribe the marvellous
power, not to the stone itself, but to its indwelling
spirit; and sometimes, as we have just seen, a man
endeavours to propitiate the spirit by laying down
offerings on the stone. But the conception of
spirits that must be propitiated lies outside the
sphere of magic, and within that of religion.
Where such a conception is found, as here, in conjunction
with purely magical ideas and practices, the latter
may generally be assumed to be the original stock
on which the religious conception has been at some
later time engrafted. For there are strong grounds
for thinking that, in the evolution of thought, magic
has preceded religion. But to this point we shall
return presently.
The ancients set great store on the
magical qualities of precious stones; indeed it has
been maintained, with great show of reason, that such
stones were used as amulets long before they were worn
as mere ornaments. Thus the Greeks gave the name
of tree-agate to a stone which exhibits tree-like
markings, and they thought that if two of these gems
were tied to the horns or necks of oxen at the plough,
the crop would be sure to be plentiful. Again,
they recognised a milkstone which produced an abundant
supply of milk in women if only they drank it dissolved
in honey-mead. Milk-stones are used for the same
purpose by Greek women in Crete and Melos at the present
day; in Albania nursing mothers wear the stones in
order to ensure an abundant flow of milk. Again,
the Greeks believed in a stone which cured snake-bites,
and hence was named the snake-stone; to test its efficacy
you had only to grind the stone to powder and sprinkle
the powder on the wound. The wine-coloured amethyst
received its name, which means “not drunken,”
because it was supposed to keep the wearer of it sober;
and two brothers who desired to live at unity were
advised to carry magnets about with them, which, by
drawing the twain together, would clearly prevent
them from falling out.
The ancient books of the Hindoos lay
down a rule that after sunset on his marriage night
a man should sit silent with his wife till the stars
begin to twinkle in the sky. When the pole-star
appears, he should point it out to her, and, addressing
the star, say, “Firm art thou; I see thee, the
firm one. Firm be thou with me, O thriving one!”
Then, turning to his wife, he should say, “To
me Brihaspati has given thee; obtaining offspring
through me, thy husband, live with me a hundred autumns.”
The intention of the ceremony is plainly to guard
against the fickleness of fortune and the instability
of earthly bliss by the steadfast influence of the
constant star. It is the wish expressed in Keats’s
last sonnet:
Bright star! would I were
steadfast as thou art—
Not in lone splendour hung
aloft the night.
Dwellers by the sea cannot fail to
be impressed by the sight of its ceaseless ebb and
flow, and are apt, on the principles of that rude
philosophy of sympathy and resemblance which here engages
our attention, to trace a subtle relation, a secret
harmony, between its tides and the life of man, of
animals, and of plants. In the flowing tide they
see not merely a symbol, but a cause of exuberance,
of prosperity, and of life, while in the ebbing tide
they discern a real agent as well as a melancholy
emblem of failure, of weakness, and of death.
The Breton peasant fancies that clover sown when the
tide is coming in will grow well, but that if the plant
be sown at low water or when the tide is going out,
it will never reach maturity, and that the cows which
feed on it will burst. His wife believes that
the best butter is made when the tide has just turned
and is beginning to flow, that milk which foams in
the churn will go on foaming till the hour of high
water is past, and that water drawn from the well
or milk extracted from the cow while the tide is rising
will boil up in the pot or saucepan and overflow into
the fire. According to some of the ancients,
the skins of seals, even after they had been parted
from their bodies, remained in secret sympathy with
the sea, and were observed to ruffle when the tide
was on the ebb. Another ancient belief, attributed
to Aristotle, was that no creature can die except
at ebb tide. The belief, if we can trust Pliny,
was confirmed by experience, so far as regards human
beings, on the coast of France. Philostratus also
assures us that at Cadiz dying people never yielded
up the ghost while the water was high. A like
fancy still lingers in some parts of Europe. On
the Cantabrian coast they think that persons who die
of chronic or acute disease expire at the moment when
the tide begins to recede. In Portugal, all along
the coast of Wales, and on some parts of the coast
of Brittany, a belief is said to prevail that people
are born when the tide comes in, and die when it goes
out. Dickens attests the existence of the same
superstition in England. “People can’t
die, along the coast,” said Mr. Pegotty, “except
when the tide’s pretty nigh out. They can’t
be born, unless it’s pretty nigh in—not
properly born till flood.” The belief that
most deaths happen at ebb tide is said to be held
along the east coast of England from Northumberland
to Kent. Shakespeare must have been familiar with
it, for he makes Falstaff die “even just between
twelve and one, e’en at the turning o’
the tide.” We meet the belief again on the
Pacific coast of North America among the Haidas.
Whenever a good Haida is about to die he sees a canoe
manned by some of his dead friends, who come with
the tide to bid him welcome to the spirit land.
“Come with us now,” they say, “for
the tide is about to ebb and we must depart.”
At Port Stephens, in New South Wales, the natives always
buried their dead at flood tide, never at ebb, lest
the retiring water should bear the soul of the departed
to some distant country.
To ensure a long life the Chinese
have recourse to certain complicated charms, which
concentrate in themselves the magical essence emanating,
on homoeopathic principles, from times and seasons,
from persons and from things. The vehicles employed
to transmit these happy influences are no other than
grave-clothes. These are provided by many Chinese
in their lifetime, and most people have them cut out
and sewn by an unmarried girl or a very young woman,
wisely calculating that, since such a person is likely
to live a great many years to come, a part of her capacity
to live long must surely pass into the clothes, and
thus stave off for many years the time when they shall
be put to their proper use. Further, the garments
are made by preference in a year which has an intercalary
month; for to the Chinese mind it seems plain that
grave-clothes made in a year which is unusually long
will possess the capacity of prolonging life in an
unusually high degree. Amongst the clothes there
is one robe in particular on which special pains have
been lavished to imbue it with this priceless quality.
It is a long silken gown of the deepest blue colour,
with the word “longevity” embroidered
all over it in thread of gold. To present an
aged parent with one of these costly and splendid mantles,
known as “longevity garments,” is esteemed
by the Chinese an act of filial piety and a delicate
mark of attention. As the garment purports to
prolong the life of its owner, he often wears it, especially
on festive occasions, in order to allow the influence
of longevity, created by the many golden letters with
which it is bespangled, to work their full effect
upon his person. On his birthday, above all,
he hardly ever fails to don it, for in China common
sense bids a man lay in a large stock of vital energy
on his birthday, to be expended in the form of health
and vigour during the rest of the year. Attired
in the gorgeous pall, and absorbing its blessed influence
at every pore, the happy owner receives complacently
the congratulations of friends and relations, who
warmly express their admiration of these magnificent
cerements, and of the filial piety which prompted
the children to bestow so beautiful and useful a present
on the author of their being.
Another application of the maxim that
like produces like is seen in the Chinese belief that
the fortunes of a town are deeply affected by its
shape, and that they must vary according to the character
of the thing which that shape most nearly resembles.
Thus it is related that long ago the town of Tsuen-cheu-fu,
the outlines of which are like those of a carp, frequently
fell a prey to the depredations of the neighbouring
city of Yung-chun, which is shaped like a fishing-net,
until the inhabitants of the former town conceived
the plan of erecting two tall pagodas in their midst.
These pagodas, which still tower above the city of
Tsuen-cheu-fu, have ever since exercised the happiest
influence over its destiny by intercepting the imaginary
net before it could descend and entangle in its meshes
the imaginary carp. Some forty years ago the wise
men of Shanghai were much exercised to discover the
cause of a local rebellion. On careful enquiry
they ascertained that the rebellion was due to the
shape of a large new temple which had most unfortunately
been built in the shape of a tortoise, an animal of
the very worst character. The difficulty was
serious, the danger was pressing; for to pull down
the temple would have been impious, and to let it stand
as it was would be to court a succession of similar
or worse disasters. However, the genius of the
local professors of geomancy, rising to the occasion,
triumphantly surmounted the difficulty and obviated
the danger. By filling up two wells, which represented
the eyes of the tortoise, they at once blinded that
disreputable animal and rendered him incapable of
doing further mischief.
Sometimes homoeopathic or imitative
magic is called in to annul an evil omen by accomplishing
it in mimicry. The effect is to circumvent destiny
by substituting a mock calamity for a real one.
In Madagascar this mode of cheating the fates is reduced
to a regular system. Here every man’s fortune
is determined by the day or hour of his birth, and
if that happens to be an unlucky one his fate is sealed,
unless the mischief can be extracted, as the phrase
goes, by means of a substitute. The ways of extracting
the mischief are various. For example, if a man
is born on the first day of the second month (February),
his house will be burnt down when he comes of age.
To take time by the forelock and avoid this catastrophe,
the friends of the infant will set up a shed in a
field or in the cattle-fold and burn it. If the
ceremony is to be really effective, the child and
his mother should be placed in the shed and only plucked,
like brands, from the burning hut before it is too
late. Again, dripping November is the month of
tears, and he who is born in it is born to sorrow.
But in order to disperse the clouds that thus gather
over his future, he has nothing to do but to take the
lid off a boiling pot and wave it about. The drops
that fall from it will accomplish his destiny and
so prevent the tears from trickling from his eyes.
Again, if fate has decreed that a young girl, still
unwed, should see her children, still unborn, descend
before her with sorrow to the grave, she can avert
the calamity as follows. She kills a grasshopper,
wraps it in a rag to represent a shroud, and mourns
over it like Rachel weeping for her children and refusing
to be comforted. Moreover, she takes a dozen
or more other grasshoppers, and having removed some
of their superfluous legs and wings she lays them
about their dead and shrouded fellow. The buzz
of the tortured insects and the agitated motions of
their mutilated limbs represent the shrieks and contortions
of the mourners at a funeral. After burying the
deceased grasshopper she leaves the rest to continue
their mourning till death releases them from their
pain; and having bound up her dishevelled hair she
retires from the grave with the step and carriage
of a person plunged in grief. Thenceforth she
looks cheerfully forward to seeing her children survive
her; for it cannot be that she should mourn and bury
them twice over. Once more, if fortune has frowned
on a man at his birth and penury has marked him for
her own, he can easily erase the mark in question by
purchasing a couple of cheap pearls, price three halfpence,
and burying them. For who but the rich of this
world can thus afford to fling pearls away?
3. Contagious Magic
THUS far we have been considering
chiefly that branch of sympathetic magic which may
be called homoeopathic or imitative. Its leading
principle, as we have seen, is that like produces like,
or, in other words, that an effect resembles its cause.
The other great branch of sympathetic magic, which
I have called Contagious Magic, proceeds upon the
notion that things which have once been conjoined must
remain ever afterwards, even when quite dissevered
from each other, in such a sympathetic relation that
whatever is done to the one must similarly affect
the other. Thus the logical basis of Contagious
Magic, like that of Homoeopathic Magic, is a mistaken
association of ideas; its physical basis, if we may
speak of such a thing, like the physical basis of
Homoeopathic Magic, is a material medium of some sort
which, like the ether of modern physics, is assumed
to unite distant objects and to convey impressions
from one to the other. The most familiar example
of Contagious Magic is the magical sympathy which
is supposed to exist between a man and any severed
portion of his person, as his hair or nails; so that
whoever gets possession of human hair or nails may
work his will, at any distance, upon the person from
whom they were cut. This superstition is world-wide;
instances of it in regard to hair and nails will be
noticed later on in this work.
Among the Australian tribes it was
a common practice to knock out one or more of a boy’s
front teeth at those ceremonies of initiation to which
every male member had to submit before he could enjoy
the rights and privileges of a full-grown man.
The reason of the practice is obscure; all that concerns
us here is the belief that a sympathetic relation
continued to exist between the lad and his teeth after
the latter had been extracted from his gums. Thus
among some of the tribes about the river Darling,
in New South Wales, the extracted tooth was placed
under the bark of a tree near a river or water-hole;
if the bark grew over the tooth, or if the tooth fell
into the water, all was well; but if it were exposed
and the ants ran over it, the natives believed that
the boy would suffer from a disease of the mouth.
Among the Murring and other tribes of New South Wales
the extracted tooth was at first taken care of by an
old man, and then passed from one headman to another,
until it had gone all round the community, when it
came back to the lad’s father, and finally to
the lad himself. But however it was thus conveyed
from hand to hand, it might on no account be placed
in a bag containing magical substances, for to do
so would, they believed, put the owner of the tooth
in great danger. The late Dr. Howitt once acted
as custodian of the teeth which had been extracted
from some novices at a ceremony of initiation, and
the old men earnestly besought him not to carry them
in a bag in which they knew that he had some quartz
crystals. They declared that if he did so the
magic of the crystals would pass into the teeth, and
so injure the boys. Nearly a year after Dr. Howitt’s
return from the ceremony he was visited by one of
the principal men of the Murring tribe, who had travelled
some two hundred and fifty miles from his home to
fetch back the teeth. This man explained that
he had been sent for them because one of the boys
had fallen into ill health, and it was believed that
the teeth had received some injury which had affected
him. He was assured that the teeth had been kept
in a box apart from any substances, like quartz crystals,
which could influence them; and he returned home bearing
the teeth with him carefully wrapt up and concealed.
The Basutos are careful to conceal
their extracted teeth, lest these should fall into
the hands of certain mythical beings who haunt graves,
and who could harm the owner of the tooth by working
magic on it. In Sussex some fifty years ago a
maid-servant remonstrated strongly against the throwing
away of children’s cast teeth, affirming that
should they be found and gnawed by any animal, the
child’s new tooth would be, for all the world,
like the teeth of the animal that had bitten the old
one. In proof of this she named old Master Simmons,
who had a very large pig’s tooth in his upper
jaw, a personal defect that he always averred was
caused by his mother, who threw away one of his cast
teeth by accident into the hog’s trough.
A similar belief has led to practices intended, on
the principles of homoeopathic magic, to replace old
teeth by new and better ones. Thus in many parts
of the world it is customary to put extracted teeth
in some place where they will be found by a mouse or
a rat, in the hope that, through the sympathy which
continues to subsist between them and their former
owner, his other teeth may acquire the same firmness
and excellence as the teeth of these rodents.
For example, in Germany it is said to be an almost
universal maxim among the people that when you have
had a tooth taken out you should insert it in a mouse’s
hole. To do so with a child’s milk-tooth
which has fallen out will prevent the child from having
toothache. Or you should go behind the stove
and throw your tooth backwards over your head, saying
“Mouse, give me your iron tooth; I will give
you my bone tooth.” After that your other
teeth will remain good. Far away from Europe,
at Raratonga, in the Pacific, when a child’s
tooth was extracted, the following prayer used to be
recited:
“Big rat! little rat!
Here is my old tooth.
Pray give me a new one.”
Then the tooth was thrown on the thatch
of the house, because rats make their nests in the
decayed thatch. The reason assigned for invoking
the rats on these occasions was that rats’ teeth
were the strongest known to the natives.
Other parts which are commonly believed
to remain in a sympathetic union with the body, after
the physical connexion has been severed, are the navel-string
and the afterbirth, including the placenta. So
intimate, indeed, is the union conceived to be, that
the fortunes of the individual for good or evil throughout
life are often supposed to be bound up with one or
other of these portions of his person, so that if
his navel-string or afterbirth is preserved and properly
treated, he will be prosperous; whereas if it be injured
or lost, he will suffer accordingly. Thus certain
tribes of Western Australia believe that a man swims
well or ill, according as his mother at his birth
threw the navel-string into water or not. Among
the natives on the Pennefather River in Queensland
it is believed that a part of the child’s spirit
(cho-i) stays in the afterbirth. Hence
the grandmother takes the afterbirth away and buries
it in the sand. She marks the spot by a number
of twigs which she sticks in the ground in a circle,
tying their tops together so that the structure resembles
a cone. When Anjea, the being who causes conception
in women by putting mud babies into their wombs, comes
along and sees the place, he takes out the spirit
and carries it away to one of his haunts, such as
a tree, a hole in a rock, or a lagoon where it may
remain for years. But sometime or other he will
put the spirit again into a baby, and it will be born
once more into the world. In Ponape, one of the
Caroline Islands, the navel-string is placed in a
shell and then disposed of in such a way as shall best
adapt the child for the career which the parents have
chosen for him; for example, if they wish to make
him a good climber, they will hang the navel-string
on a tree. The Kei islanders regard the navel-string
as the brother or sister of the child, according to
the sex of the infant. They put it in a pot with
ashes, and set it in the branches of a tree, that
it may keep a watchful eye on the fortunes of its
comrade. Among the Bataks of Sumatra, as among
many other peoples of the Indian Archipelago, the
placenta passes for the child’s younger brother
or sister, the sex being determined by the sex of the
child, and it is buried under the house. According
to the Bataks it is bound up with the child’s
welfare, and seems, in fact, to be the seat of the
transferable soul, of which we shall hear something
later on. The Karo Bataks even affirm that of
a man’s two souls it is the true soul that lives
with the placenta under the house; that is the soul,
they say, which begets children.
The Baganda believe that every person
is born with a double, and this double they identify
with the afterbirth, which they regard as a second
child. The mother buries the afterbirth at the
root of a plantain tree, which then becomes sacred
until the fruit has ripened, when it is plucked to
furnish a sacred feast for the family. Among
the Cherokees the navel-string of a girl is buried
under a corn-mortar, in order that the girl may grow
up to be a good baker; but the navel-string of a boy
is hung up on a tree in the woods, in order that he
may be a hunter. The Incas of Peru preserved
the navel-string with the greatest care, and gave it
to the child to suck whenever it fell ill. In
ancient Mexico they used to give a boy’s navel-string
to soldiers, to be buried by them on a field of battle,
in order that the boy might thus acquire a passion
for war. But the navel-string of a girl was buried
beside the domestic hearth, because this was believed
to inspire her with a love of home and taste for cooking
and baking.
Even in Europe many people still believe
that a person’s destiny is more or less bound
up with that of his navel-string or afterbirth.
Thus in Rhenish Bavaria the navel-string is kept for
a while wrapt up in a piece of old linen, and then
cut or pricked to pieces according as the child is
a boy or a girl, in order that he or she may grow
up to be a skilful workman or a good sempstress.
In Berlin the midwife commonly delivers the dried
navel-string to the father with a strict injunction
to preserve it carefully, for so long as it is kept
the child will live and thrive and be free from sickness.
In Beauce and Perche the people are careful to throw
the navel-string neither into water nor into fire,
believing that if that were done the child would be
drowned or burned.
Thus in many parts of the world the
navel-string, or more commonly the afterbirth, is
regarded as a living being, the brother or sister
of the infant, or as the material object in which the
guardian spirit of the child or part of its soul resides.
Further, the sympathetic connexion supposed to exist
between a person and his afterbirth or navel-string
comes out very clearly in the widespread custom of
treating the afterbirth or navel-string in ways which
are supposed to influence for life the character and
career of the person, making him, if it is a man,
a nimble climber, a strong swimmer, a skilful hunter,
or a brave soldier, and making her, if it is a woman,
a cunning sempstress, a good baker, and so forth.
Thus the beliefs and usages concerned with the afterbirth
or placenta, and to a less extent with the navel-string,
present a remarkable parallel to the widespread doctrine
of the transferable or external soul and the customs
founded on it. Hence it is hardly rash to conjecture
that the resemblance is no mere chance coincidence,
but that in the afterbirth or placenta we have a physical
basis (not necessarily the only one) for the theory
and practice of the external soul. The consideration
of that subject is reserved for a later part of this
work.
A curious application of the doctrine
of contagious magic is the relation commonly believed
to exist between a wounded man and the agent of the
wound, so that whatever is subsequently done by or
to the agent must correspondingly affect the patient
either for good or evil. Thus Pliny tells us
that if you have wounded a man and are sorry for it,
you have only to spit on the hand that gave the wound,
and the pain of the sufferer will be instantly alleviated.
In Melanesia, if a man’s friends get possession
of the arrow which wounded him, they keep it in a
damp place or in cool leaves, for then the inflammation
will be trifling and will soon subside. Meantime
the enemy who shot the arrow is hard at work to aggravate
the wound by all the means in his power. For this
purpose he and his friends drink hot and burning juices
and chew irritating leaves, for this will clearly
inflame and irritate the wound. Further, they
keep the bow near the fire to make the wound which
it has inflicted hot; and for the same reason they
put the arrow-head, if it has been recovered, into
the fire. Moreover, they are careful to keep the
bow-string taut and to twang it occasionally, for this
will cause the wounded man to suffer from tension
of the nerves and spasms of tetanus. “It
is constantly received and avouched,” says Bacon,
“that the anointing of the weapon that maketh
the wound will heal the wound itself. In this
experiment, upon the relation of men of credit (though
myself, as yet, am not fully inclined to believe it),
you shall note the points following: first, the
ointment wherewith this is done is made of divers
ingredients, whereof the strangest and hardest to
come by are the moss upon the skull of a dead man
unburied, and the fats of a boar and a bear killed
in the act of generation.” The precious
ointment compounded out of these and other ingredients
was applied, as the philosopher explains, not to the
wound but to the weapon, and that even though the injured
man was at a great distance and knew nothing about
it. The experiment, he tells us, had been tried
of wiping the ointment off the weapon without the
knowledge of the person hurt, with the result that
he was presently in a great rage of pain until the
weapon was anointed again. Moreover, “it
is affirmed that if you cannot get the weapon, yet
if you put an instrument of iron or wood resembling
the weapon into the wound, whereby it bleedeth, the
anointing of that instrument will serve and work the
effect.” Remedies of the sort which Bacon
deemed worthy of his attention are still in vogue
in the eastern counties of England. Thus in Suffolk
if a man cuts himself with a bill-hook or a scythe
he always takes care to keep the weapon bright, and
oils it to prevent the wound from festering.
If he runs a thorn or, as he calls it, a bush into
his hand, he oils or greases the extracted thorn.
A man came to a doctor with an inflamed hand, having
run a thorn into it while he was hedging. On
being told that the hand was festering, he remarked,
“That didn’t ought to, for I greased the
bush well after I pulled it out.” If a horse
wounds its foot by treading on a nail, a Suffolk groom
will invariably preserve the nail, clean it, and grease
it every day, to prevent the foot from festering.
Similarly Cambridgeshire labourers think that if a
horse has run a nail into its foot, it is necessary
to grease the nail with lard or oil and put it away
in some safe place, or the horse will not recover.
A few years ago a veterinary surgeon was sent for
to attend a horse which had ripped its side open on
the hinge of a farm gatepost. On arriving at
the farm he found that nothing had been done for the
wounded horse, but that a man was busy trying to pry
the hinge out of the gatepost in order that it might
be greased and put away, which, in the opinion of
the Cambridge wiseacres, would conduce to the recovery
of the animal. Similarly Essex rustics opine
that, if a man has been stabbed with a knife, it is
essential to his recovery that the knife should be
greased and laid across the bed on which the sufferer
is lying. So in Bavaria you are directed to anoint
a linen rag with grease and tie it on the edge of the
axe that cut you, taking care to keep the sharp edge
upwards. As the grease on the axe dries, your
wound heals. Similarly in the Harz Mountains
they say that if you cut yourself, you ought to smear
the knife or the scissors with fat and put the instrument
away in a dry place in the name of the Father, of
the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. As the knife
dries, the wound heals. Other people, however,
in Germany say that you should stick the knife in
some damp place in the ground, and that your hurt
will heal as the knife rusts. Others again, in
Bavaria, recommend you to smear the axe or whatever
it is with blood and put it under the eaves.
The train of reasoning which thus
commends itself to English and German rustics, in
common with the savages of Melanesia and America,
is carried a step further by the aborigines of Central
Australia, who conceive that under certain circumstances
the near relations of a wounded man must grease themselves,
restrict their diet, and regulate their behaviour
in other ways in order to ensure his recovery.
Thus when a lad has been circumcised and the wound
is not yet healed, his mother may not eat opossum,
or a certain kind of lizard, or carpet snake, or any
kind of fat, for otherwise she would retard the healing
of the boy’s wound. Every day she greases
her digging-sticks and never lets them out of her
sight; at night she sleeps with them close to her
head. No one is allowed to touch them. Every
day also she rubs her body all over with grease, as
in some way this is believed to help her son’s
recovery. Another refinement of the same principle
is due to the ingenuity of the German peasant.
It is said that when one of his pigs or sheep breaks
its leg, a farmer of Rhenish Bavaria or Hesse will
bind up the leg of a chair with bandages and splints
in due form. For some days thereafter no one
may sit on that chair, move it, or knock up against
it; for to do so would pain the injured pig or sheep
and hinder the cure. In this last case it is
clear that we have passed wholly out of the region
of contagious magic and into the region of homoeopathic
or imitative magic; the chair-leg, which is treated
instead of the beast’s leg, in no sense belongs
to the animal, and the application of bandages to
it is a mere simulation of the treatment which a more
rational surgery would bestow on the real patient.
The sympathetic connexion supposed
to exist between a man and the weapon which has wounded
him is probably founded on the notion that the blood
on the weapon continues to feel with the blood in his
body. For a like reason the Papuans of Tumleo,
an island off New Guinea, are careful to throw into
the sea the bloody bandages with which their wounds
have been dressed, for they fear that if these rags
fell into the hands of an enemy he might injure them
magically thereby. Once when a man with a wound
in his mouth, which bled constantly, came to the missionaries
to be treated, his faithful wife took great pains
to collect all the blood and cast it into the sea.
Strained and unnatural as this idea may seem to us,
it is perhaps less so than the belief that magic sympathy
is maintained between a person and his clothes, so
that whatever is done to the clothes will be felt
by the man himself, even though he may be far away
at the time. In the Wotjobaluk tribe of Victoria
a wizard would sometimes get hold of a man’s
opossum rug and roast it slowly in the fire, and as
he did so the owner of the rug would fall sick.
If the wizard consented to undo the charm, he would
give the rug back to the sick man’s friends,
bidding them put it in water, “so as to wash
the fire out.” When that happened, the sufferer
would feel a refreshing coolness and probably recover.
In Tanna, one of the New Hebrides, a man who had a
grudge at another and desired his death would try
to get possession of a cloth which had touched the
sweat of his enemy’s body. If he succeeded,
he rubbed the cloth carefully over with the leaves
and twigs of a certain tree, rolled and bound cloth,
twigs, and leaves into a long sausage-shaped bundle,
and burned it slowly in the fire. As the bundle
was consumed, the victim fell ill, and when it was
reduced to ashes, he died. In this last form
of enchantment, however, the magical sympathy may be
supposed to exist not so much between the man and
the cloth as between the man and the sweat which issued
from his body. But in other cases of the same
sort it seems that the garment by itself is enough
to give the sorcerer a hold upon his victim.
The witch in Theocritus, while she melted an image
or lump of wax in order that her faithless lover might
melt with love of her, did not forget to throw into
the fire a shred of his cloak which he had dropped
in her house. In Prussia they say that if you
cannot catch a thief, the next best thing you can
do is to get hold of a garment which he may have shed
in his flight; for if you beat it soundly, the thief
will fall sick. This belief is firmly rooted
in the popular mind. Some eighty or ninety years
ago, in the neighbourhood of Berend, a man was detected
trying to steal honey, and fled, leaving his coat
behind him. When he heard that the enraged owner
of the honey was mauling his lost coat, he was so
alarmed that he took to his bed and died.
Again, magic may be wrought on a man
sympathetically, not only through his clothes and
severed parts of himself, but also through the impressions
left by his body in sand or earth. In particular,
it is a world-wide superstition that by injuring footprints
you injure the feet that made them. Thus the
natives of South-eastern Australia think that they
can lame a man by placing sharp pieces of quartz,
glass, bone, or charcoal in his footprints. Rheumatic
pains are often attributed by them to this cause.
Seeing a Tatungolung man very lame, Mr. Howitt asked
him what was the matter. He said, “some
fellow has put bottle in my foot.”
He was suffering from rheumatism, but believed that
an enemy had found his foot-track and had buried it
in a piece of broken bottle, the magical influence
of which had entered his foot.
Similar practices prevail in various
parts of Europe. Thus in Mecklenburg it is thought
that if you drive a nail into a man’s footprint
he will fall lame; sometimes it is required that the
nail should be taken from a coffin. A like mode
of injuring an enemy is resorted to in some parts
of France. It is said that there was an old woman
who used to frequent Stow in Suffolk, and she was a
witch. If, while she walked, any one went after
her and stuck a nail or a knife into her footprint
in the dust, the dame could not stir a step till it
was withdrawn. Among the South Slavs a girl will
dig up the earth from the footprints of the man she
loves and put it in a flower-pot. Then she plants
in the pot a marigold, a flower that is thought to
be fadeless. And as its golden blossom grows and
blooms and never fades, so shall her sweetheart’s
love grow and bloom, and never, never fade. Thus
the love-spell acts on the man through the earth he
trod on. An old Danish mode of concluding a treaty
was based on the same idea of the sympathetic connexion
between a man and his footprints: the covenanting
parties sprinkled each other’s footprints with
their own blood, thus giving a pledge of fidelity.
In ancient Greece superstitions of the same sort seem
to have been current, for it was thought that if a
horse stepped on the track of a wolf he was seized
with numbness; and a maxim ascribed to Pythagoras
forbade people to pierce a man’s footprints with
a nail or a knife.
The same superstition is turned to
account by hunters in many parts of the world for
the purpose of running down the game. Thus a German
huntsman will stick a nail taken from a coffin into
the fresh spoor of the quarry, believing that this
will hinder the animal from escaping. The aborigines
of Victoria put hot embers in the tracks of the animals
they were pursuing. Hottentot hunters throw into
the air a handful of sand taken from the footprints
of the game, believing that this will bring the animal
down. Thompson Indians used to lay charms on
the tracks of wounded deer; after that they deemed
it superfluous to pursue the animal any further that
day, for being thus charmed it could not travel far
and would soon die. Similarly, Ojebway Indians
placed “medicine” on the track of the first
deer or bear they met with, supposing that this would
soon bring the animal into sight, even if it were
two or three days’ journey off; for this charm
had power to compress a journey of several days into
a few hours. Ewe hunters of West Africa stab
the footprints of game with a sharp-pointed stick
in order to maim the quarry and allow them to come
up with it.
But though the footprint is the most
obvious it is not the only impression made by the
body through which magic may be wrought on a man.
The aborigines of South-eastern Australia believe that
a man may be injured by burying sharp fragments of
quartz, glass, and so forth in the mark made by his
reclining body; the magical virtue of these sharp
things enters his body and causes those acute pains
which the ignorant European puts down to rheumatism.
We can now understand why it was a maxim with the
Pythagoreans that in rising from bed you should smooth
away the impression left by your body on the bed-clothes.
The rule was simply an old precaution against magic,
forming part of a whole code of superstitious maxims
which antiquity fathered on Pythagoras, though doubtless
they were familiar to the barbarous forefathers of
the Greeks long before the time of that philosopher.
4. The Magician’s Progress
WE have now concluded our examination
of the general principles of sympathetic magic.
The examples by which I have illustrated them have
been drawn for the most part from what may be called
private magic, that is from magical rites and incantations
practised for the benefit or the injury of individuals.
But in savage society there is commonly to be found
in addition what we may call public magic, that is,
sorcery practised for the benefit of the whole community.
Wherever ceremonies of this sort are observed for the
common good, it is obvious that the magician ceases
to be merely a private practitioner and becomes to
some extent a public functionary. The development
of such a class of functionaries is of great importance
for the political as well as the religious evolution
of society. For when the welfare of the tribe
is supposed to depend on the performance of these
magical rites, the magician rises into a position
of much influence and repute, and may readily acquire
the rank and authority of a chief or king. The
profession accordingly draws into its ranks some of
the ablest and most ambitious men of the tribe, because
it holds out to them a prospect of honour, wealth,
and power such as hardly any other career could offer.
The acuter minds perceive how easy it is to dupe their
weaker brother and to play on his superstition for
their own advantage. Not that the sorcerer is
always a knave and impostor; he is often sincerely
convinced that he really possesses those wonderful
powers which the credulity of his fellows ascribes
to him. But the more sagacious he is, the more
likely he is to see through the fallacies which impose
on duller wits. Thus the ablest members of the
profession must tend to be more or less conscious
deceivers; and it is just these men who in virtue
of their superior ability will generally come to the
top and win for themselves positions of the highest
dignity and the most commanding authority. The
pitfalls which beset the path of the professional
sorcerer are many, and as a rule only the man of coolest
head and sharpest wit will be able to steer his way
through them safely. For it must always be remembered
that every single profession and claim put forward
by the magician as such is false; not one of them
can be maintained without deception, conscious or
unconscious. Accordingly the sorcerer who sincerely
believes in his own extravagant pretensions is in
far greater peril and is much more likely to be cut
short in his career than the deliberate impostor.
The honest wizard always expects that his charms and
incantations will produce their supposed effect; and
when they fail, not only really, as they always do,
but conspicuously and disastrously, as they often
do, he is taken aback: he is not, like his knavish
colleague, ready with a plausible excuse to account
for the failure, and before he can find one he may
be knocked on the head by his disappointed and angry
employers.
The general result is that at this
stage of social evolution the supreme power tends
to fall into the hands of men of the keenest intelligence
and the most unscrupulous character. If we could
balance the harm they do by their knavery against the
benefits they confer by their superior sagacity, it
might well be found that the good greatly outweighed
the evil. For more mischief has probably been
wrought in the world by honest fools in high places
than by intelligent rascals. Once your shrewd
rogue has attained the height of his ambition, and
has no longer any selfish end to further, he may,
and often does, turn his talents, his experience, his
resources, to the service of the public. Many
men who have been least scrupulous in the acquisition
of power have been most beneficent in the use of it,
whether the power they aimed at and won was that of
wealth, political authority, or what not. In the
field of politics the wily intriguer, the ruthless
victor, may end by being a wise and magnanimous ruler,
blessed in his lifetime, lamented at his death, admired
and applauded by posterity. Such men, to take
two of the most conspicuous instances, were Julius
Caesar and Augustus. But once a fool always a
fool, and the greater the power in his hands the more
disastrous is likely to be the use he makes of it.
The heaviest calamity in English history, the breach
with America, might never have occurred if George the
Third had not been an honest dullard.
Thus, so far as the public profession
of magic affected the constitution of savage society,
it tended to place the control of affairs in the hands
of the ablest man: it shifted the balance of
power from the many to the one: it substituted
a monarchy for a democracy, or rather for an oligarchy
of old men; for in general the savage community is
ruled, not by the whole body of adult males, but by
a council of elders. The change, by whatever causes
produced, and whatever the character of the early
rulers, was on the whole very beneficial. For
the rise of monarchy appears to be an essential condition
of the emergence of mankind from savagery. No
human being is so hide-bound by custom and tradition
as your democratic savage; in no state of society
consequently is progress so slow and difficult.
The old notion that the savage is the freest of mankind
is the reverse of the truth. He is a slave, not
indeed to a visible master, but to the past, to the
spirits of his dead forefathers, who haunt his steps
from birth to death, and rule him with a rod of iron.
What they did is the pattern of right, the unwritten
law to which he yields a blind unquestioning obedience.
The least possible scope is thus afforded to superior
talent to change old customs for the better.
The ablest man is dragged down by the weakest and
dullest, who necessarily sets the standard, since he
cannot rise, while the other can fall. The surface
of such a society presents a uniform dead level, so
far as it is humanly possible to reduce the natural
inequalities, the immeasurable real differences of
inborn capacity and temper, to a false superficial
appearance of equality. From this low and stagnant
condition of affairs, which demagogues and dreamers
in later times have lauded as the ideal state, the
Golden Age, of humanity, everything that helps to raise
society by opening a career to talent and proportioning
the degrees of authority to men’s natural abilities,
deserves to be welcomed by all who have the real good
of their fellows at heart. Once these elevating
influences have begun to operate—and they
cannot be for ever suppressed—the progress
of civilisation becomes comparatively rapid.
The rise of one man to supreme power enables him to
carry through changes in a single lifetime which previously
many generations might not have sufficed to effect;
and if, as will often happen, he is a man of intellect
and energy above the common, he will readily avail
himself of the opportunity. Even the whims and
caprices of a tyrant may be of service in breaking
the chain of custom which lies so heavy on the savage.
And as soon as the tribe ceases to be swayed by the
timid and divided counsels of the elders, and yields
to the direction of a single strong and resolute mind,
it becomes formidable to its neighbours and enters
on a career of aggrandisement, which at an early stage
of history is often highly favourable to social, industrial,
and intellectual progress. For extending its
sway, partly by force of arms, partly by the voluntary
submission of weaker tribes, the community soon acquires
wealth and slaves, both of which, by relieving some
classes from the perpetual struggle for a bare subsistence,
afford them an opportunity of devoting themselves
to that disinterested pursuit of knowledge which is
the noblest and most powerful instrument to ameliorate
the lot of man.
Intellectual progress, which reveals
itself in the growth of art and science and the spread
of more liberal views, cannot be dissociated from
industrial or economic progress, and that in its turn
receives an immense impulse from conquest and empire.
It is no mere accident that the most vehement outbursts
of activity of the human mind have followed close
on the heels of victory, and that the great conquering
races of the world have commonly done most to advance
and spread civilisation, thus healing in peace the
wounds they inflicted in war. The Babylonians,
the Greeks, the Romans, the Arabs are our witnesses
in the past: we may yet live to see a similar
outburst in Japan. Nor, to remount the stream
of history to its sources, is it an accident that
all the first great strides towards civilisation have
been made under despotic and theocratic governments,
like those of Egypt, Babylon, and Peru, where the
supreme ruler claimed and received the servile allegiance
of his subjects in the double character of a king
and a god. It is hardly too much to say that at
this early epoch despotism is the best friend of humanity
and, paradoxical as it may sound, of liberty.
For after all there is more liberty in the best sense—liberty
to think our own thoughts and to fashion our own destinies—under
the most absolute despotism, the most grinding tyranny,
than under the apparent freedom of savage life, where
the individual’s lot is cast from the cradle
to the grave in the iron mould of hereditary custom.
So far, therefore, as the public profession
of magic has been one of the roads by which the ablest
men have passed to supreme power, it has contributed
to emancipate mankind from the thraldom of tradition
and to elevate them into a larger, freer life, with
a broader outlook