1. Not to touch the Earth
AT THE OUTSET of this book two questions
were proposed for answer: Why had the priest
of Aricia to slay his predecessor? And why, before
doing so, had he to pluck the Golden Bough? Of
these two questions the first has now been answered.
The priest of Aricia, if I am right, was one of those
sacred kings or human divinities on whose life the
welfare of the community and even the course of nature
in general are believed to be intimately dependent.
It does not appear that the subjects or worshippers
of such a spiritual potentate form to themselves any
very clear notion of the exact relationship in which
they stand to him; probably their ideas on the point
are vague and fluctuating, and we should err if we
attempted to define the relationship with logical
precision. All that the people know, or rather
imagine, is that somehow they themselves, their cattle,
and their crops are mysteriously bound up with their
divine king, so that according as he is well or ill
the community is healthy or sickly, the flocks and
herds thrive or languish with disease, and the fields
yield an abundant or a scanty harvest. The worst
evil which they can conceive of is the natural death
of their ruler, whether he succumb to sickness or
old age, for in the opinion of his followers such
a death would entail the most disastrous consequences
on themselves and their possessions; fatal epidemics
would sweep away man and beast, the earth would refuse
her increase, nay, the very frame of nature itself
might be dissolved. To guard against these catastrophes
it is necessary to put the king to death while he
is still in the full bloom of his divine manhood, in
order that his sacred life, transmitted in unabated
force to his successor, may renew its youth, and thus
by successive transmissions through a perpetual line
of vigorous incarnations may remain eternally fresh
and young, a pledge and security that men and animals
shall in like manner renew their youth by a perpetual
succession of generations, and that seedtime and harvest,
and summer and winter, and rain and sunshine shall
never fail. That, if my conjecture is right,
was why the priest of Aricia, the King of the Wood
at Nemi, had regularly to perish by the sword of his
successor.
But we have still to ask, What was
the Golden Bough? and why had each candidate for the
Arician priesthood to pluck it before he could slay
the priest? These questions I will now try to
answer.
It will be well to begin by noticing
two of those rules or taboos by which, as we have
seen, the life of divine kings or priests is regulated.
The first of the rules to which I would call the reader’s
attention is that the divine personage may not touch
the ground with his foot. This rule was observed
by the supreme pontiff of the Zapotecs in Mexico;
he profaned his sanctity if he so much as touched
the ground with his foot. Montezuma, emperor of
Mexico, never set foot on the ground; he was always
carried on the shoulders of noblemen, and if he lighted
anywhere they laid rich tapestry for him to walk upon.
For the Mikado of Japan to touch the ground with his
foot was a shameful degradation; indeed, in the sixteenth
century, it was enough to deprive him of his office.
Outside his palace he was carried on men’s shoulders;
within it he walked on exquisitely wrought mats.
The king and queen of Tahiti might not touch the ground
anywhere but within their hereditary domains; for
the ground on which they trod became sacred. In
travelling from place to place they were carried on
the shoulders of sacred men. They were always
accompanied by several pairs of these sanctified attendants;
and when it became necessary to change their bearers,
the king and queen vaulted on to the shoulders of their
new bearers without letting their feet touch the ground.
It was an evil omen if the king of Dosuma touched
the ground, and he had to perform an expiatory ceremony.
Within his palace the king of Persia walked on carpets
on which no one else might tread; outside of it he
was never seen on foot but only in a chariot or on
horseback. In old days the king of Siam never
set foot upon the earth, but was carried on a throne
of gold from place to place. Formerly neither
the kings of Uganda, nor their mothers, nor their
queens might walk on foot outside of the spacious
enclosures in which they lived. Whenever they
went forth they were carried on the shoulders of men
of the Buffalo clan, several of whom accompanied any
of these royal personages on a journey and took it
in turn to bear the burden. The king sat astride
the bearer’s neck with a leg over each shoulder
and his feet tucked under the bearer’s arms.
When one of these royal carriers grew tired he shot
the king onto the shoulders of a second man without
allowing the royal feet to touch the ground. In
this way they went at a great pace and travelled long
distances in a day, when the king was on a journey.
The bearers had a special hut in the king’s
enclosure in order to be at hand the moment they were
wanted. Among the Bakuba, or rather Bushongo,
a nation in the southern region of the Congo, down
to a few years ago persons of the royal blood were
forbidden to touch the ground; they must sit on a hide,
a chair, or the back of a slave, who crouched on hands
and feet; their feet rested on the feet of others.
When they travelled they were carried on the backs
of men; but the king journeyed in a litter supported
on shafts. Among the Ibo people about Awka, in
Southern Nigeria, the priest of the Earth has to observe
many taboos; for example, he may not see a corpse,
and if he meets one on the road he must hide his eyes
with his wristlet. He must abstain from many
foods, such as eggs, birds of all sorts, mutton, dog,
bush-buck, and so forth. He may neither wear
nor touch a mask, and no masked man may enter his
house. If a dog enters his house, it is killed
and thrown out. As priest of the Earth he may
not sit on the bare ground, nor eat things that have
fallen on the ground, nor may earth be thrown at him.
According to ancient Brahmanic ritual a king at his
inauguration trod on a tiger’s skin and a golden
plate; he was shod with shoes of boar’s skin,
and so long as he lived thereafter he might not stand
on the earth with his bare feet.
But besides persons who are permanently
sacred or tabooed and are therefore permanently forbidden
to touch the ground with their feet, there are others
who enjoy the character of sanctity or taboo only
on certain occasions, and to whom accordingly the prohibition
in question only applies at the definite seasons during
which they exhale the odour of sanctity. Thus
among the Kayans or Bahaus of Central Borneo, while
the priestesses are engaged in the performance of
certain rites they may not step on the ground, and
boards are laid for them to tread on. Warriors,
again, on the war-path are surrounded, so to say,
by an atmosphere of taboo; hence some Indians of North
America might not sit on the bare ground the whole
time they were out on a warlike expedition. In
Laos the hunting of elephants gives rise to many taboos;
one of them is that the chief hunter may not touch
the earth with his foot. Accordingly, when he
alights from his elephant, the others spread a carpet
of leaves for him to step upon.
Apparently holiness, magical virtue,
taboo, or whatever we may call that mysterious quality
which is supposed to pervade sacred or tabooed persons,
is conceived by the primitive philosopher as a physical
substance or fluid, with which the sacred man is charged
just as a Leyden jar is charged with electricity; and
exactly as the electricity in the jar can be discharged
by contact with a good conductor, so the holiness
or magical virtue in the man can be discharged and
drained away by contact with the earth, which on this
theory serves as an excellent conductor for the magical
fluid. Hence in order to preserve the charge
from running to waste, the sacred or tabooed personage
must be carefully prevented from touching the ground;
in electrical language he must be insulated, if he
is not to be emptied of the precious substance or
fluid with which he, as a vial, is filled to the brim.
And in many cases apparently the insulation of the
tabooed person is recommended as a precaution not
merely for his own sake but for the sake of others;
for since the virtue of holiness or taboo is, so to
say, a powerful explosive which the smallest touch
may detonate, it is necessary in the interest of the
general safety to keep it within narrow bounds, lest
breaking out it should blast, blight, and destroy whatever
it comes into contact with.
2. Not to see the Sun
THE SECOND rule to be here noted is
that the sun may not shine upon the divine person.
This rule was observed both by the Mikado and by the
pontiff of the Zapotecs. The latter “was
looked upon as a god whom the earth was not worthy
to hold, nor the sun to shine upon.” The
Japanese would not allow that the Mikado should expose
his sacred person to the open air, and the sun was
not thought worthy to shine on his head. The
Indians of Granada, in South America, “kept
those who were to be rulers or commanders, whether
men or women, locked up for several years when they
were children, some of them seven years, and this
so close that they were not to see the sun, for if
they should happen to see it they forfeited their lordship,
eating certain sorts of food appointed; and those who
were their keepers at certain times went into their
retreat or prison and scourged them severely.”
Thus, for example, the heir to the throne of Bogota,
who was not the son but the sister’s son of the
king, had to undergo a rigorous training from his
infancy; he lived in complete retirement in a temple,
where he might not see the sun nor eat salt nor converse
with a woman; he was surrounded by guards who observed
his conduct and noted all his actions; if he broke
a single one of the rules laid down for him, he was
deemed infamous and forfeited all his rights to the
throne. So, too, the heir to the kingdom of Sogamoso,
before succeeding to the crown, had to fast for seven
years in the temple, being shut up in the dark and
not allowed to see the sun or light. The prince
who was to become Inca of Peru had to fast for a month
without seeing light.
3. The Seclusion of Girls at Puberty
NOW it is remarkable that the foregoing
two rules—not to touch the ground and not
to see the sun—are observed either separately
or conjointly by girls at puberty in many parts of
the world. Thus amongst the negroes of Loango
girls at puberty are confined in separate huts, and
they may not touch the ground with any part of their
bare body. Among the Zulus and kindred tribes
of South Africa, when the first signs of puberty show
themselves “while a girl is walking, gathering
wood, or working in the field, she runs to the river
and hides herself among the reeds for the day, so as
not to be seen by men. She covers her head carefully
with her blanket that the sun may not shine on it
and shrivel her up into a withered skeleton, as would
result from exposure to the sun’s beams.
After dark she returns to her home and is secluded”
in a hut for some time. With the Awa-nkonde,
a tribe at the northern end of Lake Nyassa, it is a
rule that after her first menstruation a girl must
be kept apart, with a few companions of her own sex,
in a darkened house. The floor is covered with
dry banana leaves, but no fire may be lit in the house,
which is called “the house of the Awasungu,”
that is, “of maidens who have no hearts.”
In New Ireland girls are confined
for four or five years in small cages, being kept
in the dark and not allowed to set foot on the ground.
The custom has been thus described by an eye-witness.
“I heard from a teacher about some strange custom
connected with some of the young girls here, so I
asked the chief to take me to the house where they
were. The house was about twenty-five feet in
length, and stood in a reed and bamboo enclosure, across
the entrance to which a bundle of dried grass was
suspended to show that it was strictly ‘tabu.’
Inside the house were three conical structures about
seven or eight feet in height, and about ten or twelve
feet in circumference at the bottom, and for about
four feet from the ground, at which point they tapered
off to a point at the top. These cages were made
of the broad leaves of the pandanus-tree, sewn quite
close together so that no light and little or no air
could enter. On one side of each is an opening
which is closed by a double door of plaited cocoa-nut
tree and pandanus-tree leaves. About three feet
from the ground there is a stage of bamboos which
forms the floor. In each of these cages we were
told there was a young woman confined, each of whom
had to remain for at least four or five years, without
ever being allowed to go outside the house. I
could scarcely credit the story when I heard it; the
whole thing seemed too horrible to be true. I
spoke to the chief, and told him that I wished to
see the inside of the cages, and also to see the girls
that I might make them a present of a few beads.
He told me that it was ‘tabu,’
forbidden for any men but their own relations to look
at them; but I suppose the promised beads acted as
an inducement, and so he sent away for some old lady
who had charge, and who alone is allowed to open the
doors. While we were waiting we could hear the
girls talking to the chief in a querulous way as if
objecting to something or expressing their fears.
The old woman came at length and certainly she did
not seem a very pleasant jailor or guardian; nor did
she seem to favour the request of the chief to allow
us to see the girls, as she regarded us with anything
but pleasant looks. However, she had to undo
the door when the chief told her to do so, and then
the girls peeped out at us, and, when told to do so,
they held out their hands for the beads. I, however,
purposely sat at some distance away and merely held
out the beads to them, as I wished to draw them quite
outside, that I might inspect the inside of the cages.
This desire of mine gave rise to another difficulty,
as these girls were not allowed to put their feet to
the ground all the time they were confined in these
places. However, they wished to get the beads,
and so the old lady had to go outside and collect
a lot of pieces of wood and bamboo, which she placed
on the ground, and then going to one of the girls,
she helped her down and held her hand as she stepped
from one piece of wood to another until she came near
enough to get the beads I held out to her. I
then went to inspect the inside of the cage out of
which she had come, but could scarely put my head
inside of it, the atmosphere was so hot and stifling.
It was clean and contained nothing but a few short
lengths of bamboo for holding water. There was
only room for the girl to sit or lie down in a crouched
position on the bamboo platform, and when the doors
are shut it must be nearly or quite dark inside.
The girls are never allowed to come out except once
a day to bathe in a dish or wooden bowl placed close
to each cage. They say that they perspire profusely.
They are placed in these stifling cages when quite
young, and must remain there until they are young
women, when they are taken out and have each a great
marriage feast provided for them. One of them
was about fourteen or fifteen years old, and the chief
told us that she had been there for five years, but
would soon be taken out now. The other two were
about eight and ten years old, and they have to stay
there for several years longer.”
In Kabadi, a district of British New
Guinea, “daughters of chiefs, when they are
about twelve or thirteen years of age, are kept indoors
for two or three years, never being allowed, under
any pretence, to descend from the house, and the house
is so shaded that the sun cannot shine on them.”
Among the Yabim and Bukaua, two neighbouring and kindred
tribes on the coast of Northern New Guinea, a girl
at puberty is secluded for some five or six weeks in
an inner part of the house; but she may not sit on
the floor, lest her uncleanliness should cleave to
it, so a log of wood is placed for her to squat on.
Moreover, she may not touch the ground with her feet;
hence if she is obliged to quit the house for a short
time, she is muffled up in mats and walks on two halves
of a coco-nut shell, which are fastened like sandals
to her feet by creeping plants. Among the Ot
Danoms of Borneo girls at the age of eight or ten
years are shut up in a little room or cell of the house,
and cut off from all intercourse with the world for
a long time. The cell, like the rest of the house,
is raised on piles above the ground, and is lit by
a single small window opening on a lonely place, so
that the girl is in almost total darkness. She
may not leave the room on any pretext whatever, not
even for the most necessary purposes. None of
her family may see her all the time she is shut up,
but a single slave woman is appointed to wait on her.
During her lonely confinement, which often lasts seven
years, the girl occupies herself in weaving mats or
with other handiwork. Her bodily growth is stunted
by the long want of exercise, and when, on attaining
womanhood, she is brought out, her complexion is pale
and wax-like. She is now shown the sun, the earth,
the water, the trees, and the flowers, as if she were
newly born. Then a great feast is made, a slave
is killed, and the girl is smeared with his blood.
In Ceram girls at puberty were formerly shut up by
themselves in a hut which was kept dark. In Yap,
one of the Caroline Islands, should a girl be overtaken
by her first menstruation on the public road, she may
not sit down on the earth, but must beg for a coco-nut
shell to put under her. She is shut up for several
days in a small hut at a distance from her parents’
house, and afterwards she is bound to sleep for a
hundred days in one of the special houses which are
provided for the use of menstruous women.
In the island of Mabuiag, Torres Straits,
when the signs of puberty appear on a girl, a circle
of bushes is made in a dark corner of the house.
Here, decked with shoulder-belts, armlets, leglets
just below the knees, and anklets, wearing a chaplet
on her head, and shell ornaments in her ears, on her
chest, and on her back, she squats in the midst of
the bushes, which are piled so high round about her
that only her head is visible. In this state of
seclusion she must remain for three months. All
this time the sun may not shine upon her, but at night
she is allowed to slip out of the hut, and the bushes
that hedge her in are then changed. She may not
feed herself or handle food, but is fed by one or
two old women, her maternal aunts, who are especially
appointed to look after her. One of these women
cooks food for her at a special fire in the forest.
The girl is forbidden to eat turtle or turtle eggs
during the season when the turtles are breeding; but
no vegetable food is refused her. No man, not
even her own father, may come into the house while
her seclusion lasts; for if her father saw her at
this time he would certainly have bad luck in his
fishing, and would probably smash his canoe the very
next time he went out in it. At the end of the
three months she is carried down to a freshwater creek
by her attendants, hanging on to their shoulders in
such a way that her feet do not touch the ground,
while the women of the tribe form a ring round her,
and thus escort her to the beach. Arrived at
the shore, she is stripped of her ornaments, and the
bearers stagger with her into the creek, where they
immerse her, and all the other women join in splashing
water over both the girl and her bearers. When
they come out of the water one of the two attendants
makes a heap of grass for her charge to squat upon.
The other runs to the reef, catches a small crab,
tears off its claws, and hastens back with them to
the creek. Here in the meantime a fire has been
kindled, and the claws are roasted at it. The
girl is then fed by her attendants with the roasted
claws. After that she is freshly decorated, and
the whole party marches back to the village in a single
rank, the girl walking in the centre between her two
old aunts, who hold her by the wrists. The husbands
of her aunts now receive her and lead her into the
house of one of them, where all partake of food, and
the girl is allowed once more to feed herself in the
usual manner. A dance follows, in which the girl
takes a prominent part, dancing between the husbands
of the two aunts who had charge of her in her retirement.
Among the Yaraikanna tribe of Cape
York Peninsula, in Northern Queensland, a girl at
puberty is said to live by herself for a month or
six weeks; no man may see her, though any woman may.
She stays in a hut or shelter specially made for her,
on the floor of which she lies supine. She may
not see the sun, and towards sunset she must keep
her eyes shut until the sun has gone down, otherwise
it is thought that her nose will be diseased.
During her seclusion she may eat nothing that lives
in salt water, or a snake would kill her. An
old woman waits upon her and supplies her with roots,
yams, and water. Some Australian tribes are wont
to bury their girls at such seasons more or less deeply
in the ground, perhaps in order to hide them from
the light of the sun.
Among the Indians of California a
girl at her first menstruation “was thought
to be possessed of a particular degree of supernatural
power, and this was not always regarded as entirely
defiling or malevolent. Often, however, there
was a strong feeling of the power of evil inherent
in her condition. Not only was she secluded from
her family and the community, but an attempt was made
to seclude the world from her. One of the injunctions
most strongly laid upon her was not to look about
her. She kept her head bowed and was forbidden
to see the world and the sun. Some tribes covered
her with a blanket. Many of the customs in this
connection resembled those of the North Pacific Coast
most strongly, such as the prohibition to the girl
to touch or scratch her head with her hand, a special
implement being furnished her for the purpose.
Sometimes she could eat only when fed and in other
cases fasted altogether.”
Among the Chinook Indians who inhabited
the coast of Washington State, when a chief’s
daughter attained to puberty, she was hidden for five
days from the view of the people; she might not look
at them nor at the sky, nor might she pick berries.
It was believed that if she were to look at the sky,
the weather would be bad; that if she picked berries,
it would rain; and that when she hung her towel of
cedar-bark on a spruce-tree, the tree withered up at
once. She went out of the house by a separate
door and bathed in a creek far from the village.
She fasted for some days, and for many days more she
might not eat fresh food.
Amongst the Aht or Nootka Indians
of Vancouver Island, when girls reach puberty they
are placed in a sort of gallery in the house “and
are there surrounded completely with mats, so that
neither the sun nor any fire can be seen. In
this cage they remain for several days. Water
is given them, but no food. The longer a girl
remains in this retirement the greater honour is it
to the parents; but she is disgraced for life if it
is known that she has seen fire or the sun during
this initiatory ordeal.” Pictures of the
mythical thunder-bird are painted on the screens behind
which she hides. During her seclusion she may
neither move nor lie down, but must always sit in
a squatting posture. She may not touch her hair
with her hands, but is allowed to scratch her head
with a comb or a piece of bone provided for the purpose.
To scratch her body is also forbidden, as it is believed
that every scratch would leave a scar. For eight
months after reaching maturity she may not eat any
fresh food, particularly salmon; moreover, she must
eat by herself, and use a cup and dish of her own.
In the Tsetsaut tribe of British Columbia
a girl at puberty wears a large hat of skin which
comes down over her face and screens it from the sun.
It is believed that if she were to expose her face
to the sun or to the sky, rain would fall. The
hat protects her face also against the fire, which
ought not to strike her skin; to shield her hands
she wears mittens. In her mouth she carries the
tooth of an animal to prevent her own teeth from becoming
hollow. For a whole year she may not see blood
unless her face is blackened; otherwise she would
grow blind. For two years she wears the hat and
lives in a hut by herself, although she is allowed
to see other people. At the end of two years
a man takes the hat from her head and throws it away.
In the Bilqula or Bella Coola tribe of British Columbia,
when a girl attains puberty she must stay in the shed
which serves as her bedroom, where she has a separate
fireplace. She is not allowed to descend to the
main part of the house, and may not sit by the fire
of the family. For four days she is bound to remain
motionless in a sitting posture. She fasts during
the day, but is allowed a little food and drink very
early in the morning. After the four days’
seclusion she may leave her room, but only through
a separate opening cut in the floor, for the houses
are raised on piles. She may not yet come into
the chief room. In leaving the house she wears
a large hat which protects her face against the rays
of the sun. It is believed that if the sun were
to shine on her face her eyes would suffer. She
may pick berries on the hills, but may not come near
the river or sea for a whole year. Were she to
eat fresh salmon she would lose her senses, or her
mouth would be changed into a long beak.
Amongst the Tlingit (Thlinkeet) or
Kolosh Indians of Alaska, when a girl showed signs
of womanhood she used to be confined to a little hut
or cage, which was completely blocked up with the exception
of a small air-hole. In this dark and filthy
abode she had to remain a year, without fire, exercise,
or associates. Only her mother and a female slave
might supply her with nourishment. Her food was
put in at the little window; she had to drink out
of the wing-bone of a white-headed eagle. The
time of her seclusion was afterwards reduced in some
places to six or three months or even less. She
had to wear a sort of hat with long flaps, that her
gaze might not pollute the sky; for she was thought
unfit for the sun to shine upon, and it was imagined
that her look would destroy the luck of a hunter, fisher,
or gambler, turn things to stone, and do other mischief.
At the end of her confinement her old clothes were
burnt, new ones were made, and a feast was given,
at which a slit was cut in her under lip parallel
to the mouth, and a piece of wood or shell was inserted
to keep the aperture open. Among the Koniags,
an Esquimau people of Alaska, a girl at puberty was
placed in a small hut in which she had to remain on
her hands and feet for six months; then the hut was
enlarged a little so as to allow her to straighten
her back, but in this posture she had to remain for
six months more. All this time she was regarded
as an unclean being with whom no one might hold intercourse.
When symptoms of puberty appeared
on a girl for the first time, the Guaranis of Southern
Brazil, on the borders of Paraguay, used to sew her
up in her hammock, leaving only a small opening in
it to allow her to breathe. In this condition,
wrapt up and shrouded like a corpse, she was kept
for two or three days or so long as the symptoms lasted,
and during this time she had to observe a most rigorous
fast. After that she was entrusted to a matron,
who cut the girl’s hair and enjoined her to
abstain most strictly from eating flesh of any kind
until her hair should be grown long enough to hide
her ears. In similar circumstances the Chiriguanos
of South-eastern Bolivia hoisted the girl in her hammock
to the roof, where she stayed for a month: the
second month the hammock was let half-way down from
the roof; and in the third month old women, armed with
sticks, entered the hut and ran about striking everything
they met, saying they were hunting the snake that
had wounded the girl.
Among the Matacos or Mataguayos, an
Indian tribe of the Gran Chaco, a girl at puberty
has to remain in seclusion for some time. She
lies covered up with branches or other things in a
corner of the hut, seeing no one and speaking to no
one, and during this time she may eat neither flesh
nor fish. Meantime a man beats a drum in front
of the house. Among the Yuracares, an Indian
tribe of Eastern Bolivia, when a girl perceives the
signs of puberty, her father constructs a little hut
of palm leaves near the house. In this cabin he
shuts up his daughter so that she cannot see the light,
and there she remains fasting rigorously for four
days.
Amongst the Macusis of British Guiana,
when a girl shows the first signs of puberty, she
is hung in a hammock at the highest point of the hut.
For the first few days she may not leave the hammock
by day, but at night she must come down, light a fire,
and spend the night beside it, else she would break
out in sores on her neck, throat, and other parts
of her body. So long as the symptoms are at their
height, she must fast rigorously. When they have
abated, she may come down and take up her abode in
a little compartment that is made for her in the darkest
corner of the hut. In the morning she may cook
her food, but it must be at a separate fire and in
a vessel of her own. After about ten days the
magician comes and undoes the spell by muttering charms
and breathing on her and on the more valuable of the
things with which she has come in contact. The
pots and drinking-vessels which she used are broken
and the fragments buried. After her first bath,
the girl must submit to be beaten by her mother with
thin rods without uttering a cry. At the end of
the second period she is again beaten, but not afterwards.
She is now “clean,” and can mix again
with people. Other Indians of Guiana, after keeping
the girl in her hammock at the top of the hut for a
month, expose her to certain large ants, whose bite
is very painful. Sometimes, in addition to being
stung with ants, the sufferer has to fast day and
night so long as she remains slung up on high in her
hammock, so that when she comes down she is reduced
to a skeleton.
When a Hindoo maiden reaches maturity
she is kept in a dark room for four days, and is forbidden
to see the sun. She is regarded as unclean; no
one may touch her. Her diet is restricted to boiled
rice, milk, sugar, curd, and tamarind without salt.
On the morning of the fifth day she goes to a neighbouring
tank, accompanied by five women whose husbands are
alive. Smeared with turmeric water, they all
bathe and return home, throwing away the mat and other
things that were in the room. The Rarhi Brahmans
of Bengal compel a girl at puberty to live alone,
and do not allow her to see the face of any male.
For three days she remains shut up in a dark room,
and has to undergo certain penances. Fish, flesh,
and sweetmeats are forbidden her; she must live upon
rice and ghee. Among the Tiyans of Malabar a
girl is thought to be polluted for four days from the
beginning of her first menstruation. During this
time she must keep to the north side of the house,
where she sleeps on a grass mat of a particular kind,
in a room festooned with garlands of young coco-nut
leaves. Another girl keeps her company and sleeps
with her, but she may not touch any other person,
tree or plant. Further, she may not see the sky,
and woe betide her if she catches sight of a crow or
a cat! Her diet must be strictly vegetarian,
without salt, tamarinds, or chillies. She is
armed against evil spirits by a knife, which is placed
on the mat or carried on her person.
In Cambodia a girl at puberty is put
to bed under a mosquito curtain, where she should
stay a hundred days. Usually, however, four,
five, ten, or twenty days are thought enough; and even
this, in a hot climate and under the close meshes
of the curtain, is sufficiently trying. According
to another account, a Cambodian maiden at puberty
is said to “enter into the shade.”
During her retirement, which, according to the rank
and position of her family, may last any time from
a few days to several years, she has to observe a
number of rules, such as not to be seen by a strange
man, not to eat flesh or fish, and so on. She
goes nowhere, not even to the pagoda. But this
state of seclusion is discontinued during eclipses;
at such times she goes forth and pays her devotions
to the monster who is supposed to cause eclipses by
catching the heavenly bodies between his teeth.
This permission to break her rule of retirement and
appear abroad during an eclipse seems to show how
literally the injunction is interpreted which forbids
maidens entering on womanhood to look upon the sun.
A superstition so widely diffused
as this might be expected to leave traces in legends
and folk-tales. And it has done so. The old
Greek story of Danae, who was confined by her father
in a subterranean chamber or a brazen tower, but impregnated
by Zeus, who reached her in the shape of a shower
of gold, perhaps belongs to this class of tales.
It has its counterpart in the legend which the Kirghiz
of Siberia tell of their ancestry. A certain
Khan had a fair daughter, whom he kept in a dark iron
house, that no man might see her. An old woman
tended her; and when the girl was grown to maidenhood
she asked the old woman, “Where do you go so
often?” “My child,” said the old
dame, “there is a bright world. In that
bright world your father and mother live, and all
sorts of people live there. That is where I go.”
The maiden said, “Good mother, I will tell nobody,
but show me that bright world.” So the
old woman took the girl out of the iron house.
But when she saw the bright world, the girl tottered
and fainted; and the eye of God fell upon her, and
she conceived. Her angry father put her in a
golden chest and sent her floating away (fairy gold
can float in fairyland) over the wide sea. The
shower of gold in the Greek story, and the eye of God
in the Kirghiz legend, probably stand for sunlight
and the sun. The idea that women may be impregnated
by the sun is not uncommon in legends, and there are
even traces of it in marriage customs.
4. Reasons for the Seclusion of Girls at Puberty
THE MOTIVE for the restraints so commonly
imposed on girls at puberty is the deeply engrained
dread which primitive man universally entertains of
menstruous blood. He fears it at all times but
especially on its first appearance; hence the restrictions
under which women lie at their first menstruation
are usually more stringent than those which they have
to observe at any subsequent recurrence of the mysterious
flow. Some evidence of the fear and of the customs
based on it has been cited in an earlier part of this
work; but as the terror, for it is nothing less, which
the phenomenon periodically strikes into the mind
of the savage has deeply influenced his life and institutions,
it may be well to illustrate the subject with some
further examples.
Thus in the Encounter Bay tribe of
South Australia there is, or used to be, a “superstition
which obliges a woman to separate herself from the
camp at the time of her monthly illness, when if a
young man or boy should approach, she calls out, and
he immediately makes a circuit to avoid her.
If she is neglectful upon this point, she exposes
herself to scolding, and sometimes to severe beating
by her husband or nearest relation, because the boys
are told from their infancy, that if they see the
blood they will early become grey-headed, and their
strength will fail prematurely.” The Dieri
of Central Australia believe that if women at these
times were to eat fish or bathe in a river, the fish
would all die and the water would dry up. The
Arunta of the same region forbid menstruous women to
gather the irriakura bulbs, which form a staple
article of diet for both men and women. They
think that were a woman to break this rule, the supply
of bulbs would fail.
In some Australian tribes the seclusion
of menstruous women was even more rigid, and was enforced
by severer penalties than a scolding or a beating.
Thus “there is a regulation relating to camps
in the Wakelbura tribe which forbids the women coming
into the encampment by the same path as the men.
Any violation of this rule would in a large camp be
punished with death. The reason for this is the
dread with which they regard the menstrual period
of women. During such a time, a woman is kept
entirely away from the camp, half a mile at least.
A woman in such a condition has boughs of some tree
of her totem tied round her loins, and is constantly
watched and guarded, for it is thought that should
any male be so unfortunate as to see a woman in such
a condition, he would die. If such a woman were
to let herself be seen by a man, she would probably
be put to death. When the woman has recovered,
she is painted red and white, her head covered with
feathers, and returns to the camp.”
In Muralug, one of the Torres Straits
Islands, a menstruous woman may not eat anything that
lives in the sea, else the natives believe that the
fisheries would fail. In Galela, to the west of
New Guinea, women at their monthly periods may not
enter a tobacco-field, or the plants would be attacked
by disease. The Minangkabauers of Sumatra are
persuaded that if a woman in her unclean state were
to go near a rice-field, the crop would be spoiled.
The Bushmen of South Africa think
that, by a glance of a girl’s eye at the time
when she ought to be kept in strict retirement, men
become fixed in whatever positions they happen to occupy,
with whatever they were holding in their hands, and
are changed into trees that talk. Cattle-rearing
tribes of South Africa hold that their cattle would
die if the milk were drunk by a menstruous woman;
and they fear the same disaster if a drop of her blood
were to fall on the ground and the oxen were to pass
over it. To prevent such a calamity women in
general, not menstruous women only, are forbidden
to enter the cattle enclosure; and more than that,
they may not use the ordinary paths in entering the
village or in passing from one hut to another.
They are obliged to make circuitous tracks at the
back of the huts in order to avoid the ground in the
middle of the village where the cattle stand or lie
down. These women’s tracks may be seen
at every Caffre village. Among the Baganda, in
like manner, no menstruous woman might drink milk
or come into contact with any milk-vessel; and she
might not touch anything that belonged to her husband,
nor sit on his mat, nor cook his food. If she
touched anything of his at such a time it was deemed
equivalent to wishing him dead or to actually working
magic for his destruction. Were she to handle
any article of his, he would surely fall ill; were
she to touch his weapons, he would certainly be killed
in the next battle. Further, the Baganda would
not suffer a menstruous woman to visit a well; if
she did so, they feared that the water would dry up,
and that she herself would fall sick and die, unless
she confessed her fault and the medicine-man made
atonement for her. Among the Akikuyu of British
East Africa, if a new hut is built in a village and
the wife chances to menstruate in it on the day she
lights the first fire there, the hut must be broken
down and demolished the very next day. The woman
may on no account sleep a second night in it; there
is a curse both on her and on it.
According to the Talmud, if a woman
at the beginning of her period passes between two
men, she thereby kills one of them. Peasants of
the Lebanon think that menstruous women are the cause
or many misfortunes; their shadow causes flowers to
wither and trees to perish, it even arrests the movements
of serpents; if one of them mounts a horse, the animal
might die or at least be disabled for a long time.
The Guayquiries of the Orinoco believe
that when a woman has her courses, everything upon
which she steps will die, and that if a man treads
on the place where she has passed, his legs will immediately
swell up. Among the Bri-bri Indians of Costa Rica
a married woman at her periods uses for plates only
banana leaves, which, when she has done with them,
she throws away in a sequestered spot; for should a
cow find and eat them, the animal would waste away
and perish. Also she drinks only out of a special
vessel, because any person who should afterwards drink
out of the same vessel would infallibly pine away
and die.
Among most tribes of North American
Indians the custom was that women in their courses
retired from the camp or the village and lived during
the time of their uncleanness in special huts or shelters
which were appropriated to their use. There they
dwelt apart, eating and sleeping by themselves, warming
themselves at their own fires, and strictly abstaining
from all communications with men, who shunned them
just as if they were stricken with the plague.
Thus, to take examples, the Creek
and kindred Indians of the United States compelled
women at menstruation to live in separate huts at
some distance from the village. There the women
had to stay, at the risk of being surprised and cut
off by enemies. It was thought “a most
horrid and dangerous pollution” to go near the
women at such times; and the danger extended to enemies
who, if they slew the women, had to cleanse themselves
from the pollution by means of certain sacred herbs
and roots. The Stseelis Indians of British Columbia
imagined that if a menstruous woman were to step over
a bundle of arrows, the arrows would thereby be rendered
useless and might even cause the death of their owner;
and similarly that if she passed in front of a hunter
who carried a gun, the weapon would never shoot straight
again. Among the Chippeways and other Indians
of the Hudson Bay Territory, menstruous women are excluded
from the camp, and take up their abode in huts of
branches. They wear long hoods, which effectually
conceal the head and breast. They may not touch
the household furniture nor any objects used by men;
for their touch “is supposed to defile them,
so that their subsequent use would be followed by
certain mischief or misfortune,” such as disease
or death. They must drink out of a swan’s
bone. They may not walk on the common paths nor
cross the tracks of animals. They “are
never permitted to walk on the ice of rivers or lakes,
or near the part where the men are hunting beaver,
or where a fishing-net is set, for fear of averting
their success. They are also prohibited at those
times from partaking of the head of any animal, and
even from walking in or crossing the track where the
head of a deer, moose, beaver, and many other animals
have lately been carried, either on a sledge or on
the back. To be guilty of a violation of this
custom is considered as of the greatest importance;
because they firmly believe that it would be a means
of preventing the hunter from having an equal success
in his future excursions.” So the Lapps
forbid women at menstruation to walk on that part of
the shore where the fishers are in the habit of setting
out their fish; and the Esquimaux of Bering Strait
believe that if hunters were to come near women in
their courses they would catch no game. For a
like reason the Carrier Indians will not suffer a
menstruous woman to cross the tracks of animals; if
need be, she is carried over them. They think
that if she waded in a stream or a lake, the fish would
die.
Amongst the civilised nations of Europe
the superstitions which cluster round this mysterious
aspect of woman’s nature are not less extravagant
than those which prevail among savages. In the
oldest existing cyclopaedia—the Natural
History of Pliny—the list of dangers
apprehended from menstruation is longer than any furnished
by mere barbarians. According to Pliny, the touch
of a menstruous woman turned wine to vinegar, blighted
crops, killed seedlings, blasted gardens, brought
down the fruit from trees, dimmed mirrors, blunted
razors, rusted iron and brass (especially at the waning
of the moon), killed bees, or at least drove them
from their hives, caused mares to miscarry, and so
forth. Similarly, in various parts of Europe,
it is still believed that if a woman in her courses
enters a brewery the beer will turn sour; if she touches
beer, wine, vinegar, or milk, it will go bad; if she
makes jam, it will not keep; if she mounts a mare,
it will miscarry; if she touches buds, they will wither;
if she climbs a cherry tree, it will die. In
Brunswick people think that if a menstruous woman assists
at the killing of a pig, the pork will putrefy.
In the Greek island of Calymnos a woman at such times
may not go to the well to draw water, nor cross a
running stream, nor enter the sea. Her presence
in a boat is said to raise storms.
Thus the object of secluding women
at menstruation is to neutralise the dangerous influences
which are supposed to emanate from them at such times.
That the danger is believed to be especially great
at the first menstruation appears from the unusual
precautions taken to isolate girls at this crisis.
Two of these precautions have been illustrated above,
namely, the rules that the girls may not touch the
ground nor see the sun. The general effect of
these rules is to keep her suspended, so to say, between
heaven and earth. Whether enveloped in her hammock
and slung up to the roof, as in South America, or
raised above the ground in a dark and narrow cage,
as in New Ireland, she may be considered to be out
of the way of doing mischief, since, being shut off
both from the earth and from the sun, she can poison
neither of these great sources of life by her deadly
contagion. In short, she is rendered harmless
by being, in electrical language, insulated.
But the precautions thus taken to isolate or insulate
the girl are dictated by a regard for her own safety
as well as for the safety of others. For it is
thought that she herself would suffer if she were
to neglect the prescribed regimen. Thus Zulu
girls, as we have seen, believe that they would shrivel
to skeletons if the sun were to shine on them at puberty,
and the Macusis imagine that, if a young woman were
to transgress the rules, she would suffer from sores
on various parts of her body. In short, the girl
is viewed as charged with a powerful force which,
if not kept within bounds, may prove destructive both
to herself and to all with whom she comes in contact.
To repress this force within the limits necessary
for the safety of all concerned is the object of the
taboos in question.
The same explanation applies to the
observance of the same rules by divine kings and priests.
The uncleanness, as it is called, of girls at puberty
and the sanctity of holy men do not, to the primitive
mind, differ materially from each other. They
are only different manifestations of the same mysterious
energy which, like energy in general, is in itself
neither good nor bad, but becomes beneficent or maleficent
according to its application. Accordingly, if,
like girls at puberty, divine personages may neither
touch the ground nor see the sun, the reason is, on
the one hand, a fear lest their divinity might, at
contact with earth or heaven, discharge itself with
fatal violence on either; and, on the other hand, an
apprehension that the divine being, thus drained of
his ethereal virtue, might thereby be incapacitated
for the future performance of those magical functions,
upon the proper discharge of which the safety of the
people and even of the world is believed to hang.
Thus the rules in question fall under the head of
the taboos which we examined in an earlier part of
this book; they are intended to preserve the life
of the divine person and with it the life of his subjects
and worshippers. Nowhere, it is thought, can his
precious yet dangerous life be at once so safe and
so harmless as when it is neither in heaven nor in
earth, but, as far as possible, suspended between
the two.