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Chapter 5. The Magical Control of the Weather
1. The Public Magician
The reader may remember that we were led to plunge into the
labyrinth of magic by a consideration of two different types of
man-god. This is the clue which has guided our devious steps
through the maze, and brought us out at last on higher ground,
whence, resting a little by the way, we can look back over the path
we have already traversed and forward to the longer and steeper
road we have still to climb.
As a result of the foregoing discussion, the two types of human
gods may conveniently be distinguished as the religious and the
magical man-god respectively. In the former, a being of an order
different from and superior to man is supposed to become
incarnate, for a longer or a shorter time, in a human body,
manifesting his super-human power and knowledge by miracles
wrought and prophecies uttered through the medium of the fleshly
tabernacle in which he has deigned to take up his abode. This may
also appropriately be called the inspired or incarnate type of
man-god. In it the human body is merely a frail earthly vessel
filled with a divine and immortal spirit. On the other hand, a
man-god of the magical sort is nothing but a man who possesses in
an unusually high degree powers which most of his fellows
arrogate to themselves on a smaller scale; for in rude society there
is hardly a person who does not dabble in magic. Thus, whereas a
man-god of the former or inspired type derives his divinity from a
deity who has stooped to hide his heavenly radiance behind a dull
mask of earthly mould, a man-god of the latter type draws his
extraordinary power from a certain physical sympathy with nature.
He is not merely the receptacle of a divine spirit. His whole being,
body and soul, is so delicately attuned to the harmony of the world
that a touch of his hand or a turn of his head may send a thrill
vibrating through the universal framework of things; and
conversely his divine organism is acutely sensitive to such slight
changes of environment as would leave ordinary mortals wholly
unaffected. But the line between these two types of man-god,
however sharply we may draw it in theory, is seldom to be traced
with precision in practice, and in what follows I shall not insist on
it.
We have seen that in practice the magic art may be employed for
the benefit either of individuals or of the whole community, and
that according as it is directed to one or other of these two objects
it may be called private or public magic. Further, I pointed out that
the public magician occupies a position of great influence, from
which, if he is a prudent and able man, he may advance step by
step to the rank of a chief or king. Thus an examination of public
magic conduces to an understanding of the early kingship, since in
savage and barbarous society many chiefs and kings appear to owe
their authority in great measure to their reputation as magicians.
Among the objects of public utility which magic may be employed
to secure, the most essential is an adequate supply of food. The
examples cited in preceding pages prove that the purveyors of food
the hunter, the fisher, the farmer all resort to magical practices in
the pursuit of their various callings; but they do so as private
individuals for the benefit of themselves and their families, rather
than as public functionaries acting in the interest of the whole
people. It is otherwise when the rites are performed, not by the
hunters, the fishers, the farmers themselves, but by professional
magicians on their behalf. In primitive society, where uniformity
of occupation is the rule, and the distribution of the community
into various classes of workers has hardly begun, every man is
more or less his own magician; he practises charms and
incantations for his own good and the injury of his enemies. But a
great step in advance has been taken when a special class of
magicians has been instituted; when, in other words, a number of
men have been set apart for the express purpose of benefiting the
whole community by their skill, whether that skill be directed to
the healing of diseases, the forecasting of the future, the regulation
of the weather, or any other object of general utility. The
impotence of the means adopted by most of these practitioners to
accomplish their ends ought not to blind us to the immense
importance of the institution itself. Here is a body of men relieved,
at least in the higher stages of savagery, from the need of earning
their livelihood by hard manual toil, and allowed, nay, expected
and encouraged, to prosecute researches into the secret ways of
nature. It was at once their duty and their interest to know more
than their fellows, to acquaint themselves with everything that
could aid man in his arduous struggle with nature, everything that
could mitigate his sufferings and prolong his life. The properties of
drugs and minerals, the causes of rain and drought, of thunder and
lightning, the changes of the seasons, the phases of the moon, the
daily and yearly journeys of the sun, the motions of the stars, the
mystery of life, and the mystery of death, all these things must
have excited the wonder of these early philosophers, and
stimulated them to find solutions of problems that were doubtless
often thrust on their attention in the most practical form by the
importunate demands of their clients, who expected them not
merely to understand but to regulate the great processes of nature
for the good of man. That their first shots fell very far wide of the
mark could hardly be helped. The slow, the never-ending approach
to truth consists in perpetually forming and testing hypotheses,
accepting those which at the time seem to fit the facts and
rejecting the others. The views of natural causation embraced by
the savage magician no doubt appear to us manifestly false and
absurd; yet in their day they were legitimate hypotheses, though
they have not stood the test of experience. Ridicule and blame are
the just meed, not of those who devised these crude theories, but of
those who obstinately adhered to them after better had been
propounded. Certainly no men ever had stronger incentives in the
pursuit of truth than these savage sorcerers. To maintain at least a
show of knowledge was absolutely necessary; a single mistake
detected might cost them their life. This no doubt led them to
practise imposture for the purpose of concealing their ignorance;
but it also supplied them with the most powerful motive for
substituting a real for a sham knowledge, since, if you would
appear to know anything, by far the best way is actually to know it.
Thus, however justly we may reject the extravagant pretensions of
magicians and condemn the deceptions which they have practised
on mankind, the original institution of this class of men has, take it
all in all, been productive of incalculable good to humanity. They
were the direct predecessors, not merely of our physicians and
surgeons, but of our investigators and discoverers in every branch
of natural science. They began the work which has since been
carried to such glorious and beneficent issues by their successors
in after ages; and if the beginning was poor and feeble, this is to be
imputed to the inevitable difficulties which beset the path of
knowledge rather than to the natural incapacity or wilful fraud of
the men themselves.
2. The Magical Control of Rain
Of the things which the public magician sets himself to do for the good of
the tribe, one of the chief is to control the weather and especially to ensure
an adequate fall of rain. Water is an essential of life, and in most countries
the supply of it depends upon showers. Without rain vegetation withers,
animals and men languish and die. Hence in savage communities the rain-maker
is a very important personage; and often a special class of magicians exists
for the purpose of regulating the heavenly water-supply. The methods by which
they attempt to discharge the duties of their office are commonly, though not
always, based on the principle of homoeopathic or imitative magic. If they
wish to make rain they simulate it by sprinkling water or mimicking clouds: if
their object is to stop rain and cause drought, they avoid water and resort to
warmth and fire for the sake of drying up the too abundant moisture. Such
attempts are by no means confined, as the cultivated reader might imagine, to
the naked inhabitants of those sultry lands like Central Australia and some
parts of Eastern and Southern Africa, where often for months together the
pitiless sun beats down out of a blue and cloudless sky on the parched and
gaping earth. They are, or used to be, common enough among outwardly civilised
folk in the moister climate of Europe. I will now illustrate them by instances
drawn from the practice both of public and private magic.
Thus, for example, in a village near Dorpat, in Russia, when rain was much
wanted, three men used to climb up the fir-trees of an old sacred grove. One
of them drummed with a hammer on a kettle or small cask to imitate thunder;
the second knocked two fire-brands together and made the sparks fly, to
imitate lightning; and the third, who was called the rain-maker, had a bunch
of twigs with which he sprinkled water from a vessel on all sides. To put an
end to drought and bring down rain, women and girls of the village of Ploska
are wont to go naked by night to the boundaries of the village and there pour
water on the ground. In Halmahera, or Gilolo, a large island to the west of
New Guinea, a wizard makes rain by dipping a branch of a particular kind of
tree in water and then scattering the moisture from the dripping bough over
the ground. In New Britain the rain-maker wraps some leaves of a red and green
striped creeper in a banana-leaf, moistens the bundle with water, and buries
it in the ground; then he imitates with his mouth the plashing of rain.
Amongst the Omaha Indians of North America, when the corn is withering for
want of rain, the members of the sacred Buffalo Society fill a large vessel
with water and dance four times round it. One of them drinks some of the water
and spirts it into the air, making a fine spray in imitation of a mist or
drizzling rain. Then he upsets the vessel, spilling the water on the ground;
whereupon the dancers fall down and drink up the water, getting mud all over
their faces. Lastly, they squirt the water into the air, making a fine mist.
This saves the corn. In spring-time the Natchez of North America used to club
together to purchase favourable weather for their crops from the wizards. If
rain was needed, the wizards fasted and danced with pipes full of water in
their mouths. The pipes were perforated like the nozzle of a watering-can, and
through the holes the rain-maker blew the water towards that part of the sky
where the clouds hung heaviest. But if fine weather was wanted, he mounted the
roof of his hut, and with extended arms, blowing with all his might, he
beckoned to the clouds to pass by. When the rains do not come in due season
the people of Central Angoniland repair to what is called the rain-temple.
Here they clear away the grass, and the leader pours beer into a pot which is
buried in the ground, while he says, Master Chauta, you have hardened your
heart towards us, what would you have us do? We must perish indeed. Give your
children the rains, there is the beer we have given you. Then they all
partake of the beer that is left over, even the children being made to sip it.
Next they take branches of trees and dance and sing for rain. When they return
to the village they find a vessel of water set at the doorway by an old woman;
so they dip their branches in it and wave them aloft, so as to scatter the
drops. After that the rain is sure to come driving up in heavy clouds. In
these practices we see a combination of religion with magic; for while the
scattering of the water-drops by means of branches is a purely magical
ceremony, the prayer for rain and the offering of beer are purely religious
rites. In the Mara tribe of Northern Australia the rain-maker goes to a pool
and sings over it his magic song. Then he takes some of the water in his
hands, drinks it, and spits it out in various directions. After that he throws
water all over himself, scatters it about, and returns quietly to the camp.
Rain is supposed to follow. The Arab historian Makrizi describes a method of
stopping rain which is said to have been resorted to by a tribe of nomads
called Alqamar in Hadramaut. They cut a branch from a certain tree in the
desert, set it on fire, and then sprinkled the burning brand with water. After
that the vehemence of the rain abated, just as the water vanished when it fell
on the glowing brand. Some of the Eastern Angamis of Manipur are said to
perform a some-what similar ceremony for the opposite purpose, in order,
namely, to produce rain. The head of the village puts a burning brand on the
grave of a man who has died of burns, and quenches the brand with water, while
he prays that rain may fall. Here the putting out the fire with water, which
is an imitation of rain, is reinforced by the influence of the dead man, who,
having been burnt to death, will naturally be anxious for the descent of rain
to cool his scorched body and assuage his pangs.
Other people besides the Arabs have used fire as a means of stopping rain.
Thus the Sulka of New Britain heat stones red hot in the fire and then put
them out in the rain, or they throw hot ashes in the air. They think that the
rain will soon cease to fall, for it does not like to be burned by the hot
stones or ashes. The Telugus send a little girl out naked into the rain with a
burning piece of wood in her hand, which she has to show to the rain. That is
supposed to stop the downpour. At Port Stevens in New South Wales the
medicine-men used to drive away rain by throwing fire-sticks into the air,
while at the same time they puffed and shouted. Any man of the Anula tribe in
Northern Australia can stop rain by simply warming a green stick in the fire,
and then striking it against the wind.
In time of severe drought the Dieri of Central Australia, loudly lamenting
the impoverished state of the country and their own half-starved condition,
call upon the spirits of their remote predecessors, whom they call Mura-muras,
to grant them power to make a heavy rain-fall. For they believe that the
clouds are bodies in which rain is generated by their own ceremonies or those
of neighbouring tribes, through the influence of the Mura-muras. The way in
which they set about drawing rain from the clouds is this. A hole is dug about
twelve feet long and eight or ten broad, and over this hole a conical hut of
logs and branches is made. Two wizards, supposed to have received a special
inspiration from the Mura-muras, are bled by an old and influential man with a
sharp flint; and the blood, drawn from their arms below the elbow, is made to
flow on the other men of the tribe, who sit huddled together in the hut. At
the same time the two bleeding men throw handfuls of down about, some of which
adheres to the blood-stained bodies of their comrades, while the rest floats
in the air. The blood is thought to represent the rain, and the down the
clouds. During the ceremony two large stones are placed in the middle of the
hut; they stand for gathering clouds and presage rain. Then the wizards who
were bled carry away the two stones for about ten or fifteen miles, and place
them as high as they can in the tallest tree. Meanwhile the other men gather
gypsum, pound it fine, and throw it into a water-hole. This the Mura-muras
see, and at once they cause clouds to appear in the sky. Lastly, the men,
young and old, surround the hut, and, stooping down, butt at it with their
heads, like so many rams. Thus they force their way through it and reappear on
the other side, repeating the process till the hut is wrecked. In doing this
they are forbidden to use their hands or arms; but when the heavy logs alone
remain, they are allowed to pull them out with their hands. The piercing of
the hut with their heads symbolises the piercing of the clouds; the fall of
the hut, the fall of the rain. Obviously, too, the act of placing high up in
trees the two stones, which stand for clouds, is a way of making the real
clouds to mount up in the sky. The Dieri also imagine that the foreskins taken
from lads at circumcision have a great power of producing rain. Hence the
Great Council of the tribe always keeps a small stock of foreskins ready for
use. They are carefully concealed, being wrapt up in feathers with the fat of
the wild dog and of the carpet snake. A woman may not see such a parcel opened
on any account. When the ceremony is over, the foreskin is buried, its virtue
being exhausted. After the rains have fallen, some of the tribe always undergo
a surgical operation, which consists in cutting the skin of their chest and
arms with a sharp flint. The wound is then tapped with a flat stick to
increase the flow of blood, and red ochre is rubbed into it. Raised scars are
thus produced. The reason alleged by the natives for this practice is that
they are pleased with the rain, and that there is a connexion between the rain
and the scars. Apparently the operation is not very painful, for the patient
laughs and jokes while it is going on. Indeed, little children have been seen
to crowd round the operator and patiently take their turn; then after being
operated on, they ran away, expanding their little chests and singing for the
rain to beat upon them. However, they were not so well pleased next day, when
they felt their wounds stiff and sore. In Java, when rain is wanted, two men
will sometimes thrash each other with supple rods till the blood flows down
their backs; the streaming blood represents the rain, and no doubt is supposed
to make it fall on the ground. The people of Egghiou, a district of Abyssinia,
used to engage in sanguinary conflicts with each other, village against
village, for a week together every January for the purpose of procuring rain.
Some years ago the emperor Menelik forbade the custom. However, the following
year the rain was deficient, and the popular outcry so great that the emperor
yielded to it, and allowed the murderous fights to be resumed, but for two
days a year only. The writer who mentions the custom regards the blood shed on
these occasions as a propitiatory sacrifice offered to spirits who control the
showers; but perhaps, as in the Australian and Javanese ceremonies, it is an
imitation of rain. The prophets of Baal, who sought to procure rain by cutting
themselves with knives till the blood gushed out, may have acted on the same
principle.
There is a widespread belief that twin children possess magical powers
over nature, especially over rain and the weather. This curious superstition
prevails among some of the Indian tribes of British Columbia, and has led them
often to impose certain singular restrictions or taboos on the parents of
twins, though the exact meaning of these restrictions is generally obscure.
Thus the Tsimshian Indians of British Columbia believe that twins control the
weather; therefore they pray to wind and rain, Calm down, breath of the
twins. Further, they think that the wishes of twins are always fulfilled;
hence twins are feared, because they can harm the man they hate. They can also
call the salmon and the olachen or candle-fish, and so they are known by a
name which means making plentiful. In the opinion of the Kwakiutl Indians of
British Columbia twins are transformed salmon; hence they may not go near
water, lest they should be changed back again into the fish. In their
childhood they can summon any wind by motions of their hands, and they can
make fair or foul weather, and also cure diseases by swinging a large wooden
rattle. The Nootka Indians of British Columbia also believe that twins are
somehow related to salmon. Hence among them twins may not catch salmon, and
they may not eat or even handle the fresh fish. They can make fair or foul
weather, and can cause rain to fall by painting their faces black and then
washing them, which may represent the rain dripping from the dark clouds. The
Shuswap Indians, like the Thompson Indians, associate twins with the grizzly
bear, for they call them young grizzly bears. According to them, twins
remain throughout life endowed with supernatural powers. In particular they
can make good or bad weather. They produce rain by spilling water from a
basket in the air; they make fine weather by shaking a small flat piece of
wood attached to a stick by a string; they raise storms by strewing down on
the ends of spruce branches.
The same power of influencing the weather is attributed to twins by the
Baronga, a tribe of Bantu negroes who, inhabit the shores of Delagoa Bay in
South-eastern Africa. They bestow the name of Tilo, that is, the sky, on a
woman who has given birth to twins, and the infants themselves are called the
children of the sky. Now when the storms which generally burst in the months
of September and October have been looked for in vain, when a drought with its
prospect of famine is threatening, and all nature, scorched and burnt up by a
sun that has shone for six months from a cloudless sky, is panting for the
beneficent showers of the South African spring, the women perform ceremonies
to bring down the longed-for rain on the parched earth. Stripping themselves
of all their garments, they assume in their stead girdles and head-dresses of
grass, or short petticoats made of the leaves of a particular sort of creeper.
Thus attired, uttering peculiar cries and singing ribald songs, they go about
from well to well, cleansing them of the mud and impurities which have
accumulated in them. The wells, it may be said, are merely holes in the sand
where a little turbid unwholesome water stagnates. Further, the women must
repair to the house of one of their gossips who has given birth to twins, and
must drench her with water, which they carry in little pitchers. Having done
so they go on their way, shrieking out their loose songs and dancing immodest
dances. No man may see these leaf-clad women going their rounds. If they meet
a man, they maul him and thrust him aside. When they have cleansed the wells,
they must go and pour water on the graves of their ancestors in the sacred
grove. It often happens, too, that at the bidding of the wizard they go and
pour water on the graves of twins. For they think that the grave of a twin
ought always to be moist, for which reason twins are regularly buried near a
lake. If all their efforts to procure rain prove abortive, they will remember
that such and such a twin was buried in a dry place on the side of a hill. No
wonder, says the wizard in such a case, that the sky is fiery. Take up his
body and dig him a grave on the shore of the lake. His orders are at once
obeyed, for this is supposed to be the only means of bringing down the rain.
Some of the foregoing facts strongly support an interpretation which
Professor Oldenberg has given of the rules to be observed by a Brahman who
would learn a particular hymn of the ancient Indian collection known as the
Samaveda. The hymn, which bears the name of the Sakvari¯ song, was believed to
embody the might of Indra's weapon, the thunderbolt; and hence, on account of
the dreadful and dangerous potency with which it was thus charged, the bold
student who essayed to master it had to be isolated from his fellow-men, and
to retire from the village into the forest. Here for a space of time, which
might vary, according to different doctors of the law, from one to twelve
years, he had to observe certain rules of life, among which were the
following. Thrice a day he had to touch water; he must wear black garments and
eat black food; when it rained, he might not seek the shelter of a roof, but
had to sit in the rain and say, Water is the Sakvari¯ song; when the
lightning flashed, he said, That is like the Sakvari¯ song; when the thunder
pealed, he said, The Great One is making a great noise. He might never cross
a running stream without touching water; he might never set foot on a ship
unless his life were in danger, and even then he must be sure to touch water
when he went on board; for in water, so ran the saying, lies the virtue of
the Sakvari¯ song. When at last he was allowed to learn the song itself, he
had to dip his hands in a vessel of water in which plants of all sorts had
been placed. If a man walked in the way of all these precepts, the rain-god
Parjanya, it was said, would send rain at the wish of that man. It is clear,
as Professor Oldenberg well points out, that all these rules are intended to
bring the Brahman into union with water, to make him, as it were, an ally of
the water powers, and to guard him against their hostility. The black garments
and the black food have the same significance; no one will doubt that they
refer to the rain-clouds when he remembers that a black victim is sacrificed
to procure rain; 'it is black, for such is the nature of rain.' In respect of
another rain-charm it is said plainly, 'He puts on a black garment edged with
black, for such is the nature of rain.' We may therefore assume that here in
the circle of ideas and ordinances of the Vedic schools there have been
preserved magical practices of the most remote antiquity, which were intended
to prepare the rain-maker for his office and dedicate him to it.
It is interesting to observe that where an opposite result is desired,
primitive logic enjoins the weather-doctor to observe precisely opposite rules
of conduct. In the tropical island of Java, where the rich vegetation attests
the abundance of the rainfall, ceremonies for the making of rain are rare, but
ceremonies for the prevention of it are not uncommon. When a man is about to
give a great feast in the rainy season and has invited many people, he goes to
a weather-doctor and asks him to prop up the clouds that may be lowering. If
the doctor consents to exert his professional powers, he begins to regulate
his behaviour by certain rules as soon as his customer has departed. He must
observe a fast, and may neither drink nor bathe; what little he eats must be
eaten dry, and in no case may he touch water. The host, on his side, and his
servants, both male and female, must neither wash clothes nor bathe so long as
the feast lasts, and they have all during its continuance to observe strict
chastity. The doctor seats himself on a new mat in his bedroom, and before a
small oil-lamp he murmurs, shortly before the feast takes place, the following
prayer or incantation: Grandfather and Grandmother Sroekoel (the name seems
to be taken at random; others are sometimes used), return to your country.
Akkemat is your country. Put down your water-cask, close it properly, that not
a drop may fall out. While he utters this prayer the sorcerer looks upwards,
burning incense the while. So among the Toradjas the rain-doctor, whose
special business it is to drive away rain, takes care not to touch water
before, during, or after the discharge of his professional duties. He does not
bathe, he eats with unwashed hands, he drinks nothing but palm wine, and if he
has to cross a stream he is careful not to step in the water. Having thus
prepared himself for his task he has a small hut built for himself outside of
the village in a rice-field, and in this hut he keeps up a little fire, which
on no account may be suffered to go out. In the fire he burns various kinds of
wood, which are supposed to possess the property of driving off rain; and he
puffs in the direction from which the rain threatens to come, holding in his
hand a packet of leaves and bark which derive a similar cloud-compelling
virtue, not from their chemical composition, but from their names, which
happen to signify something dry or volatile. If clouds should appear in the
sky while he is at work, he takes lime in the hollow of his hand and blows it
towards them. The lime, being so very dry, is obviously well adapted to
disperse the damp clouds. Should rain afterwards be wanted, he has only to
pour water on his fire, and immediately the rain will descend in sheets.
The reader will observe how exactly the Javanese and Toradja observances,
which are intended to prevent rain, form the antithesis of the Indian
observances, which aim at producing it. The Indian sage is commanded to touch
water thrice a day regularly as well as on various special occasions; the
Javanese and Toradja wizards may not touch it at all. The Indian lives out in
the forest, and even when it rains he may not take shelter; the Javanese and
the Toradja sit in a house or a hut. The one signifies his sympathy with water
by receiving the rain on his person and speaking of it respectfully; the
others light a lamp or a fire and do their best to drive the rain away. Yet
the principle on which all three act is the same; each of them, by a sort of
childish make-believe, identifies himself with the phenomenon which he desires
to produce. It is the old fallacy that the effect resembles its cause: if you
would make wet weather, you must be wet; if you would make dry weather, you
must be dry.
In South-eastern Europe at the present day ceremonies are observed for the
purpose of making rain which not only rest on the same general train of
thought as the preceding, but even in their details resemble the ceremonies
practised with the same intention by the Baronga of Delagoa Bay. Among the
Greeks of Thessaly and Macedonia, when a drought has lasted a long time, it is
customary to send a procession of children round to all the wells and springs
of the neighbourhood. At the head of the procession walks a girl adorned with
flowers, whom her companions drench with water at every halting-place, while
they sing an invocation, of which the following is part:
Perperia all fresh bedewed,
Freshen all the neighbourhood;
By the woods, on the highway,
As thou goest, to God now pray:
O my God, upon the plain,
Send thou us a still, small rain;
That the fields may fruitful be,
And vines in blossom we may see;
That the grain be full and sound,
And wealthy grow the folks around.
In time of drought the Serbians strip a girl to her skin and clothe her
from head to foot in grass, herbs, and flowers, even her face being hidden
behind a veil of living green. Thus disguised she is called the Dodola, and
goes through the village with a troop of girls. They stop before every house;
the Dodola keeps turning herself round and dancing, while the other girls form
a ring about her singing one of the Dodola songs, and the housewife pours a
pail of water over her. One of the songs they sing runs thus:
We go through the village;
The clouds go in the sky;
We go faster,
Faster go the clouds;
They have overtaken us,
And wetted the corn and the vine.
At Poona in India, when rain is needed, the boys dress up one of their
number in nothing but leaves and call him King of Rain. Then they go round to
every house in the village, where the house-holder or his wife sprinkles the
Rain King with water, and gives the party food of various kinds. When they
have thus visited all the houses, they strip the Rain King of his leafy robes
and feast upon what they have gathered.
Bathing is practised as a rain-charm in some parts of Southern and Western
Russia. Sometimes after service in church the priest in his robes has been
thrown down on the ground and drenched with water by his parishioners.
Sometimes it is the women who, without stripping off their clothes, bathe in
crowds on the day of St. John the Baptist, while they dip in the water a
figure made of branches, grass, and herbs, which is supposed to represent the
saint. In Kursk, a province of Southern Russia, when rain is much wanted, the
women seize a passing stranger and throw him into the river, or souse him from
head to foot. Later on we shall see that a passing stranger is often taken for
a deity or the personification of some natural power. It is recorded in
official documents that during a drought in 1790 the peasants of Scheroutz and
Werboutz collected all the women and compelled them to bathe, in order that
rain might fall. An Armenian rain-charm is to throw the wife of a priest into
the water and drench her. The Arabs of North Africa fling a holy man,
willy-nilly, into a spring as a remedy for drought. In Minahassa, a province
of North Celebes, the priest bathes as a rain-charm. In Central Celebes when
there has been no rain for a long time and the rice-stalks begin to shrivel
up, many of the villagers, especially the young folk, go to a neighbouring
brook and splash each other with water, shouting noisily, or squirt water on
one another through bamboo tubes. Sometimes they imitate the plump of rain by
smacking the surface of the water with their hands, or by placing an inverted
gourd on it and drumming on the gourd with their fingers.
Women are sometimes supposed to be able to make rain by ploughing, or
pretending to plough. Thus the Pshaws and Chewsurs of the Caucasus have a
ceremony called ploughing the rain, which they observe in time of drought.
Girls yoke themselves to a plough and drag it into a river, wading in the
water up to their girdles. In the same circumstances Armenian girls and women
do the same. The oldest woman, or the priest's wife, wears the priest's dress,
while the others, dressed as men, drag the plough through the water against
the stream. In the Caucasian province of Georgia, when a drought has lasted
long, marriageable girls are yoked in couples with an ox-yoke on their
shoulders, a priest holds the reins, and thus harnessed they wade through
rivers, puddles, and marshes, praying, screaming, weeping, and laughing. In a
district of Transylvania when the ground is parched with drought, some girls
strip themselves naked, and, led by an older woman, who is also naked, they
steal a harrow and carry it across the fields to a brook, where they set it
afloat. Next they sit on the harrow and keep a tiny flame burning on each
corner of it for an hour. Then they leave the harrow in the water and go home.
A similar rain-charm is resorted to in some parts of India; naked women drag a
plough across a field by night, while the men keep carefully out of the way,
for their presence would break the spell.
Sometimes the rain-charm operates through the dead. Thus in New Caledonia
the rain-makers blackened themselves all over, dug up a dead body, took the
bones to a cave, jointed them, and hung the skeleton over some taro leaves.
Water was poured over the skeleton to run down on the leaves. They believed
that the soul of the deceased took up the water, converted it into rain, and
showered it down again. In Russia, if common report may be believed, it is not
long since the peasants of any district that chanced to be afflicted with
drought used to dig up the corpse of some one who had drunk himself to death
and sink it in the nearest swamp or lake, fully persuaded that this would
ensure the fall of the needed rain. In 1868 the prospect of a bad harvest,
caused by a prolonged drought, induced the inhabitants of a village in the
Tarashchansk district to dig up the body of a Raskolnik, or Dissenter, who had
died in the preceding December. Some of the party beat the corpse, or what was
left of it, about the head, exclaiming, Give us rain! while others poured
water on it through a sieve. Here the pouring of water through a sieve seems
plainly an imitation of a shower, and reminds us of the manner in which
Strepsiades in Aristophanes imagined that rain was made by Zeus. Sometimes, in
order to procure rain, the Toradjas make an appeal to the pity of the dead.
Thus, in the village of Kalingooa, there is the grave of a famous chief, the
grandfather of the present ruler. When the land suffers from unseasonable
drought, the people go to this grave, pour water on it, and say, O
grandfather, have pity on us; if it is your will that this year we should eat,
then give rain. After that they hang a bamboo full of water over the grave;
there is a small hole in the lower end of the bamboo, so that the water drips
from it continually. The bamboo is always refilled with water until rain
drenches the ground. Here, as in New Caledonia, we find religion blent with
magic, for the prayer to the dead chief, which is purely religious, is eked
out with a magical imitation of rain at his grave. We have seen that the
Baronga of Delagoa Bay drench the tombs of their ancestors, especially the
tombs of twins, as a raincharm. Among some of the Indian tribes in the region
of the Orinoco it was customary for the relations of a deceased person to
disinter his bones a year after burial, burn them, and scatter the ashes to
the winds, because they believed that the ashes were changed into rain, which
the dead man sent in return for his obsequies. The Chinese are convinced that
when human bodies remain unburied, the souls of their late owners feel the
discomfort of rain, just as living men would do if they were exposed without
shelter to the inclemency of the weather. These wretched souls, therefore, do
all in their power to prevent the rain from falling, and often their efforts
are only too successful. Then drought ensues, the most dreaded of all
calamities in China, because bad harvests, dearth, and famine follow in its
train. Hence it has been a common practice of the Chinese authorities in time
of drought to inter the dry bones of the unburied dead for the purpose of
putting an end to the scourge and conjuring down the rain.
Animals, again, often play an important part in these weather-charms. The
Anula tribe of Northern Australia associate the dollar-bird with rain, and
call it the rain-bird. A man who has the bird for his totem can make rain at a
certain pool. He catches a snake, puts it alive into the pool, and after
holding it under water for a time takes it out, kills it, and lays it down by
the side of the creek. Then he makes an arched bundle of grass stalks in
imitation of a rainbow, and sets it up over the snake. After that all he does
is to sing over the snake and the mimic rainbow; sooner or later the rain will
fall. They explain this procedure by saying that long ago the dollar-bird had
as a mate at this spot a snake, who lived in the pool and used to make rain by
spitting up into the sky till a rainbow and clouds appeared and rain fell. A
common way of making rain in many parts of Java is to bathe a cat or two cats,
a male and a female; sometimes the animals are carried in procession with
music. Even in Batavia you may from time to time see children going about with
a cat for this purpose; when they have ducked it in a pool, they let it go.
Among the Wambugwe of East Africa, when the sorcerer desires to make rain,
he takes a black sheep and a black calf in bright sunshine, and has them
placed on the roof of the common hut in which the people live together. Then
he slits the stomachs of the animals and scatters their contents in all
directions. After that he pours water and medicine into a vessel; if the charm
has succeeded, the water boils up and rain follows. On the other hand, if the
sorcerer wishes to prevent rain from falling, he withdraws into the interior
of the hut, and there heats a rock-crystal in a calabash. In order to procure
rain the Wagogo sacrifice black fowls, black sheep, and black cattle at the
graves of dead ancestors, and the rain-maker wears black clothes during the
rainy season. Among the Matabele the rain-charm employed by sorcerers was made
from the blood and gall of a black ox. In a district of Sumatra, in order to
procure rain, all the women of the village, scantily clad, go to the river,
wade into it, and splash each other with the water. A black cat is thrown into
the stream and made to swim about for a while, then allowed to escape to the
bank, pursued by the splashing of the women. The Garos of Assam offer a black
goat on the top of a very high mountain in time of drought. In all these cases
the colour of the animal is part of the charm; being black, it will darken the
sky with rain-clouds. So the Bechuanas burn the stomach of an ox at evening,
because they say, The black smoke will gather the clouds and cause the rain
to come. The Timorese sacrifice a black pig to the Earth-goddess for rain, a
white or red one to the Sun-god for sunshine. The Angoni sacrifice a black ox
for rain and a white one for fine weather. Among the high mountains of Japan
there is a district in which, if rain has not fallen for a long time, a party
of villagers goes in procession to the bed of a mountain torrent, headed by a
priest, who leads a black dog. At the chosen spot they tether the beast to a
stone, and make it a target for their bullets and arrows. When its life-blood
bespatters the rocks, the peasants throw down their weapons and lift up their
voices in supplication to the dragon divinity of the stream, exhorting him to
send down forthwith a shower to cleanse the spot from its defilement. Custom
has prescribed that on these occasions the colour of the victim shall be
black, as an emblem of the wished-for rain-clouds. But if fine weather is
wanted, the victim must be white, without a spot.
The intimate association of frogs and toads with water has earned for
these creatures a widespread reputation as custodians of rain; and hence they
often play a part in charms designed to draw needed showers from the sky. Some
of the Indians of the Orinoco held the toad to be the god or lord of the
waters, and for that reason feared to kill the creature. They have been known
to keep frogs under a pot and to beat them with rods when there was a drought.
It is said that the Aymara Indians often make little images of frogs and other
aquatic animals and place them on the tops of the hills as a means of bringing
down rain. The Thompson Indians of British Columbia and some people in Europe
think that to kill a frog will cause rain to fall. In order to procure rain
people of low caste in the Central Provinces of India will tie a frog to a rod
covered with green leaves and branches of the nîm tree (Azadirachta
Indica) and carry it from door to door singing:
Send soon, O frog, the jewel of water!
And ripen the wheat and millet in the field.
The Kapus or Reddis are a large caste of cultivators and landowners in the
Madras Presidency. When rain fails, women of the caste will catch a frog and
tie it alive to a new winnowing fan made of bamboo. On this fan they spread a
few margosa leaves and go from door to door singing, Lady frog must have her
bath. Oh! rain-god, give a little water for her at least. While the Kapu
women sing this song, the woman of the house pours water over the frog and
gives an alms, convinced that by so doing she will soon bring rain down in
torrents.
Sometimes, when a drought has lasted a long time, people drop the usual
hocus-pocus of imitative magic altogether, and being far too angry to waste
their breath in prayer they seek by threats and curses or even downright
physical force to extort the waters of heaven from the supernatural being who
has, so to say, cut them off at the main. In a Japanese village, when the
guardian divinity had long been deaf to the peasants' prayers for rain, they
at last threw down his image and, with curses loud and long, hurled it head
foremost into a stinking rice-field. There, they said, you may stay
yourself for a while, to see how you will feel after a few days' scorching
in this broiling sun that is burning the life from our cracking fields. In
the like circumstances the Feloupes of Senegambia cast down their fetishes and
drag them about the fields, cursing them till rain falls.
The Chinese are adepts in the art of taking the kingdom of heaven by
storm. Thus, when rain is wanted they make a huge dragon of paper or wood to
represent the rain-god, and carry it about in procession; but if no rain
follows, the mock-dragon is execrated and torn to pieces. At other times they
threaten and beat the god if he does not give rain; sometimes they publicly
depose him from the rank of deity. On the other hand, if the wished-for rain
falls, the god is promoted to a higher rank by an imperial decree. In April
1888 the mandarins of Canton prayed to the god Lung-wong to stop the incessant
downpour of rain; and when he turned a deaf ear to their petitions they put
him in a lock-up for five days. This had a salutary effect. The rain ceased
and the god was restored to liberty. Some years before, in time of drought,
the same deity had been chained and exposed to the sun for days in the
courtyard of his temple in order that he might feel for himself the urgent
need of rain. So when the Siamese need rain, they set out their idols in the
blazing sun; but if they want dry weather, they unroof the temples and let the
rain pour down on the idols. They think that the inconvenience to which the
gods are thus subjected will induce them to grant the wishes of their
worshippers.
The reader may smile at the meteorology of the Far East; but precisely
similar modes of procuring rain have been resorted to in Christian Europe
within our own lifetime. By the end of April 1893 there was great distress in
Sicily for lack of water. The drought had lasted six months. Every day the sun
rose and set in a sky of cloudless blue. The gardens of the Conca d'Oro, which
surround Palermo with a magnificent belt of verdure, were withering. Food was
becoming scarce. The people were in great alarm. All the most approved methods
of procuring rain had been tried without effect. Processions had traversed the
streets and the fields. Men, women, and children, telling their beads, had
lain whole nights before the holy images. Consecrated candles had burned day
and night in the churches. Palm branches, blessed on Palm Sunday, had been
hung on the trees. At Solaparuta, in accordance with a very old custom, the
dust swept from the churches on Palm Sunday had been spread on the fields. In
ordinary years these holy sweepings preserve the crops; but that year, if you
will believe me, they had no effect whatever. At Nicosia the inhabitants,
bare-headed and bare-foot, carried the crucifixes through all the wards of the
town and scourged each other with iron whips. It was all in vain. Even the
great St. Francis of Paolo himself, who annually performs the miracle of rain
and is carried every spring through the market-gardens, either could not or
would not help. Masses, vespers, concerts, illuminations, fire-worksnothing
could move him. At last the peasants began to lose patience. Most of the
saints were banished. At Palermo they dumped St. Joseph in a garden to see the
state of things for himself, and they swore to leave him there in the sun till
rain fell. Other saints were turned, like naughty children, with their faces
to the wall. Others again, stripped of their beautiful robes, were exiled far
from their parishes, threatened, grossly insulted, ducked in horse-ponds. At
Caltanisetta the golden wings of St. Michael the Archangel were torn from his
shoulders and replaced with wings of pasteboard; his purple mantle was taken
away and a clout wrapt about him instead. At Licata the patron saint, St.
Angelo, fared even worse, for he was left without any garments at all; he was
reviled, he was put in irons, he was threatened with drowning or hanging.
Rain or the rope! roared the angry people at him, as they shook their fists
in his face.
Sometimes an appeal is made to the pity of the gods. When their corn is
being burnt up by the sun, the Zulus look out for a heaven bird, kill it,
and throw it into a pool. Then the heaven melts with tenderness for the death
of the bird; it wails for it by raining, wailing a funeral wail. In Zululand
women sometimes bury their children up to the neck in the ground, and then
retiring to a distance keep up a dismal howl for a long time. The sky is
supposed to melt with pity at the sight. Then the women dig the children out
and feel sure that rain will soon follow. They say that they call to the lord
above and ask him to send rain. If it comes they declare that Usondo rains.
In times of drought the Guanches of Teneriffe led their sheep to sacred
ground, and there they separated the lambs from their dams, that their
plaintive bleating might touch the heart of the god. In Kumaon a way of
stopping rain is to pour hot oil in the left ear of a dog. The animal howls
with pain, his howls are heard by Indra, and out of pity for the beast's
sufferings the god stops the rain. Sometimes the Toradjas attempt to procure
rain as follows. They place the stalks of certain plants in water, saying, Go
and ask for rain, and so long as no rain falls I will not plant you again, but
there shall you die. Also they string some fresh-water snails on a cord, and
hang the cord on a tree, and say to the snails, Go and ask for rain, and so
long as no rain comes, I will not take you back to the water. Then the snails
go and weep, and the gods take pity and send rain. However, the foregoing
ceremonies are religious rather than magical, since they involve an appeal to
the compassion of higher powers.
Stones are often supposed to possess the property of bringing on rain,
provided they be dipped in water or sprinkled with it, or treated in some
other appropriate manner. In a Samoan village a certain stone was carefully
housed as the representative of the rain-making god, and in time of drought
his priests carried the stone in procession and dipped it in a stream. Among
the Ta-ta-thi tribe of New South Wales, the rain-maker breaks off a piece of
quartz-crystal and spits it towards the sky; the rest of the crystal he wraps
in emu feathers, soaks both crystal and feathers in water, and carefully hides
them. In the Keramin tribe of New South Wales the wizard retires to the bed of
a creek, drops water on a round flat stone, then covers up and conceals it.
Among some tribes of North-western Australia the rain-maker repairs to a piece
of ground which is set apart for the purpose of rain-making. There he builds a
heap of stones or sand, places on the top of it his magic stone, and walks or
dances round the pile chanting his incantations for hours, till sheer
exhaustion obliges him to desist, when his place is taken by his assistant.
Water is sprinkled on the stone and huge fires are kindled. No layman may
approach the sacred spot while the mystic ceremony is being performed. When
the Sulka of New Britain wish to procure rain they blacken stones with the
ashes of certain fruits and set them out, along with certain other plants and
buds, in the sun. Then a handful of twigs is dipped in water and weighted with
stones, while a spell is chanted. After that rain should follow. In Manipur,
on a lofty hill to the east of the capital, there is a stone which the popular
imagination likens to an umbrella. When rain is wanted, the rajah fetches
water from a spring below and sprinkles it on the stone. At Sagami in Japan
there is a stone which draws down rain whenever water is poured on it. When
the Wakondyo, a tribe of Central Africa, desire rain, they send to the
Wawamba, who dwell at the foot of snowy mountains, and are the happy
possessors of a rain-stone. In consideration of a proper payment, the
Wawamba wash the precious stone, anoint it with oil, and put it in a pot full
of water. After that the rain cannot fail to come. In the arid wastes of
Arizona and New Mexico the Apaches sought to make rain by carrying water from
a certain spring and throwing it on a particular point high up on a rock;
after that they imagined that the clouds would soon gather, and that rain
would begin to fall.
But customs of this sort are not confined to the wilds of Africa and Asia
or the torrid deserts of Australia and the New World. They have been practised
in the cool air and under the grey skies of Europe. There is a fountain called
Barenton, of romantic fame, in those wild woods of Broceliande, where, if
legend be true, the wizard Merlin still sleeps his magic slumber in the
hawthorn shade. Thither the Breton peasants used to resort when they needed
rain. They caught some of the water in a tankard and threw it on a slab near
the spring. On Snowdon there is a lonely tarn called Dulyn, or the Black Lake,
lying in a dismal dingle surrounded by high and dangerous rocks. A row of
stepping-stones runs out into the lake, and if any one steps on the stones and
throws water so as to wet the farthest stone, which is called the Red Altar,
it is but a chance that you do not get rain before night, even when it is hot
weather. In these cases it appears probable that, as in Samoa, the stone is
regarded as more or less divine. This appears from the custom sometimes
observed of dipping a cross in the Fountain of Barenton to procure rain, for
this is plainly a Christian substitute for the old pagan way of throwing water
on the stone. At various places in France it is, or used till lately to be,
the practice to dip the image of a saint in water as a means of procuring
rain. Thus, beside the old priory of Commagny, there is a spring of St.
Gervais, whither the inhabitants go in procession to obtain rain or fine
weather according to the needs of the crops. In times of great drought they
throw into the basin of the fountain an ancient stone image of the saint that
stands in a sort of niche from which the fountain flows. At Collobričres and
Carpentras a similar practice was observed with the images of St. Pons and St.
Gens respectively. In several villages of Navarre prayers for rain used to be
offered to St. Peter, and by way of enforcing them the villagers carried the
image of the saint in procession to the river, where they thrice invited him
to reconsider his resolution and to grant their prayers; then, if he was still
obstinate, they plunged him in the water, despite the remonstrances of the
clergy, who pleaded with as much truth as piety that a simple caution or
admonition administered to the image would produce an equally good effect.
After this the rain was sure to fall within twenty-four hours. Catholic
countries do not enjoy a monopoly of making rain by ducking holy images in
water. In Mingrelia, when the crops are suffering from want of rain, they take
a particularly holy image and dip it in water every day till a shower falls;
and in the Far East the Shans drench the images of Buddha with water when the
rice is perishing of drought. In all such cases the practice is probably at
bottom a sympathetic charm, however it may be disguised under the appearance
of a punishment or a threat.
Like other peoples, the Greeks and Romans sought to obtain rain by magic,
when prayers and processions had proved ineffectual. For example, in Arcadia,
when the corn and trees were parched with drought, the priest of Zeus dipped
an oak branch into a certain spring on Mount Lycaeus. Thus troubled, the water
sent up a misty cloud, from which rain soon fell upon the land. A similar mode
of making rain is still practised, as we have seen, in Halmahera near New
Guinea. The people of Crannon in Thessaly had a bronze chariot which they kept
in a temple. When they desired a shower they shook the chariot and the shower
fell. Probably the rattling of the chariot was meant to imitate thunder; we
have already seen that mock thunder and lightning form part of a rain-charm in
Russia and Japan. The legendary Salmoneus, King of Elis, made mock thunder by
dragging bronze kettles behind his chariot, or by driving over a bronze
bridge, while he hurled blazing torches in imitation of lightning. It was his
impious wish to mimic the thundering car of Zeus as it rolled across the vault
of heaven. Indeed he declared that he was actually Zeus, and caused sacrifices
to be offered to himself as such. Near a temple of Mars, outside the walls of
Rome, there was kept a certain stone known as the lapis manalis. In time of
drought the stone was dragged into Rome, and this was supposed to bring down
rain immediately.
3. The Magical Control of the Sun
As the magician thinks he can make rain, so he fancies he can cause the sun
to shine, and can hasten or stay its going down. At an eclipse the Ojebways
used to imagine that the sun was being extinguished. So they shot fire-tipped
arrows in the air, hoping thus to rekindle his expiring light. The Sencis of
Peru also shot burning arrows at the sun during an eclipse, but apparently
they did this not so much to relight his lamp as to drive away a savage beast
with which they supposed him to be struggling. Conversely during an eclipse of
the moon some tribes of the Orinoco used to bury lighted brands in the ground;
because, said they, if the moon were to be extinguished, all fire on earth
would be extinguished with her, except such as was hidden from her sight.
During an eclipse of the sun the Kamtchatkans were wont to bring out fire from
their huts and pray the great luminary to shine as before. But the prayer
addressed to the sun shows that this ceremony was religious rather than
magical. Purely magical, on the other hand, was the ceremony observed on
similar occasions by the Chilcotin Indians. Men and women tucked up their
robes, as they do in travelling, and then leaning on staves, as if they were
heavy laden, they continued to walk in a circle till the eclipse was over.
Apparently they thought thus to support the failing steps of the sun as he
trod his weary round in the sky. Similarly in ancient Egypt the king, as the
representative of the sun, walked solemnly round the walls of a temple in
order to ensure that the sun should perform his daily journey round the sky
without the interruption of an eclipse or other mishap. And after the autumnal
equinox the ancient Egyptians held a festival called the nativity of the
sun's walking-stick, because, as the luminary declined daily in the sky, and
his light and heat diminished, he was supposed to need a staff on which to
lean. In New Caledonia when a wizard desires to make sunshine, he takes some
plants and corals to the burial-ground, and fashions them into a bundle,
adding two locks of hair cut from a living child of his family, also two teeth
or an entire jawbone from the skeleton of an ancestor. He then climbs a
mountain whose top catches the first rays of the morning sun. Here he deposits
three sorts of plants on a flat stone, places a branch of dry coral beside
them, and hangs the bundle of charms over the stone. Next morning he returns
to the spot and sets fire to the bundle at the moment when the sun rises from
the sea. As the smoke curls up, he rubs the stone with the dry coral, invokes
his ancestors and says: Sun! I do this that you may be burning hot, and eat
up all the clouds in the sky. The same ceremony is repeated at sunset. The
New Caledonians also make a drought by means of a disc-shaped stone with a
hole in it. At the moment when the sun rises, the wizard holds the stone in
his hand and passes a burning brand repeatedly into the hole, while he says:
I kindle the sun, in order that he may eat up the clouds and dry up our land,
so that it may produce nothing. The Banks Islanders make sunshine by means of
a mock sun. They take a very round stone, called a vat loa or sunstone, wind
red braid about it, and stick it with owls' feathers to represent rays,
singing the proper spell in a low voice. Then they hang it on some high tree,
such as a banyan or a casuarina, in a sacred place.
The offering made by the Brahman in the morning is supposed to produce the
sun, and we are told that assuredly it would not rise, were he not to make
that offering. The ancient Mexicans conceived the sun as the source of all
vital force; hence they named him Ipalnemohuani, He by whom men live. But if
he bestowed life on the world, he needed also to receive life from it. And as
the heart is the seat and symbol of life, bleeding hearts of men and animals
were presented to the sun to maintain him in vigour and enable him to run his
course across the sky. Thus the Mexican sacrifices to the sun were magical
rather than religious, being designed, not so much to please and propitiate
him, as physically to renew his energies of heat, light, and motion. The
constant demand for human victims to feed the solar fire was met by waging war
every year on the neighbouring tribes and bringing back troops of captives to
be sacrificed on the altar. Thus the ceaseless wars of the Mexicans and their
cruel system of human sacrifices, the most monstrous on record, sprang in
great measure from a mistaken theory of the solar system. No more striking
illustration could be given of the disastrous consequences that may flow in
practice from a purely speculative error. The ancient Greeks believed that the
sun drove in a chariot across the sky; hence the Rhodians, who worshipped the
sun as their chief deity, annually dedicated a chariot and four horses to him,
and flung them into the sea for his use. Doubtless they thought that after a
year's work his old horses and chariot would be worn out. From a like motive,
probably, the idolatrous kings of Judah dedicated chariots and horses to the
sun, and the Spartans, Persians, and Massagetae sacrificed horses to him. The
Spartans performed the sacrifice on the top of Mount Taygetus, the beautiful
range behind which they saw the great luminary set every night. It was as
natural for the inhabitants of the valley of Sparta to do this as it was for
the islanders of Rhodes to throw the chariot and horses into the sea, into
which the sun seemed to them to sink at evening. For thus, whether on the
mountain or in the sea, the fresh horses stood ready for the weary god where
they would be most welcome, at the end of his day's journey.
As some people think they can light up the sun or speed him on his way, so
others fancy they can retard or stop him. In a pass of the Peruvian Andes
stand two ruined towers on opposite hills. Iron hooks are clamped into their
walls for the purpose of stretching a net from one tower to the other. The net
is intended to catch the sun. Stories of men who have caught the sun in a
noose are widely spread. When the sun is going southward in the autumn, and
sinking lower and lower in the Arctic sky, the Esquimaux of Iglulik play the
game of cat's cradle in order to catch him in the meshes of the string and so
prevent his disappearance. On the contrary, when the sun is moving northward
in the spring, they play the game of cup-and-ball to hasten his return. When
an Australian blackfellow wishes to stay the sun from going down till he gets
home, he puts a sod in the fork of a tree, exactly facing the setting sun. On
the other hand, to make it go down faster, the Australians throw sand into the
air and blow with their mouths towards the sun, perhaps to waft the lingering
orb westward and bury it under the sands into which it appears to sink at
night.
As some people imagine they can hasten the sun, so others fancy they can
jog the tardy moon. The natives of New Guinea reckon months by the moon, and
some of them have been known to throw stones and spears at the moon, in order
to accelerate its progress and so to hasten the return of their friends, who
were away from home for twelve months working on a tobacco plantation. The
Malays think that a bright glow at sunset may throw a weak person into a
fever. Hence they attempt to extinguish the glow by spitting out water and
throwing ashes at it. The Shuswap Indians believe that they can bring on cold
weather by burning the wood of a tree that has been struck by lightning. The
belief may be based on the observation that in their country cold follows a
thunder-storm. Hence in spring, when these Indians are travelling over the
snow on high ground, they burn splinters of such wood in the fire in order
that the crust of the snow may not melt.
4. The Magical Control of the Wind
Once more, the savage thinks he can make the wind to blow or to be still.
When the day is hot and a Yakut has a long way to go, he takes a stone which
he has chanced to find in an animal or fish, winds a horse-hair several times
round it, and ties it to a stick. He then waves the stick about, uttering a
spell. Soon a cool breeze begins to blow. In order to procure a cool wind for
nine days the stone should first be dipped in the blood of a bird or beast and
then presented to the sun, while the sorcerer makes three turns contrary to
the course of the luminary. If a Hottentot desires the wind to drop, he takes
one of his fattest skins and hangs it on the end of a pole, in the belief that
by blowing the skin down the wind will lose all its force and must itself
fall. Fuegian wizards throw shells against the wind to make it drop. The
natives of the island of Bibili, off New Guinea, are reputed to make wind by
blowing with their mouths. In stormy weather the Bogadjim people say, The
Bibili folk are at it again, blowing away. Another way of making wind which
is practised in New Guinea is to strike a wind-stone lightly with a stick;
to strike it hard would bring on a hurricane. So in Scotland witches used to
raise the wind by dipping a rag in water and beating it thrice on a stone,
saying:
I knok this rag upone this stane
To raise the wind in the divellis name,
It sall not lye till I please againe.
In Greenland a woman in child-bed and for some time after delivery is
supposed to possess the power of laying a storm. She has only to go out of
doors, fill her mouth with air, and coming back into the house blow it out
again. In antiquity there was a family at Corinth which enjoyed the reputation
of being able to still the raging wind; but we do not know in what manner its
members exercised a useful function, which probably earned for them a more
solid recompense than mere repute among the seafaring population of the
isthmus. Even in Christian times, under the reign of Constantine, a certain
Sopater suffered death at Constantinople on a charge of binding the winds by
magic, because it happened that the corn-ships of Egypt and Syria were
detained afar off by calms or head-winds, to the rage and disappointment of
the hungry Byzantine rabble. Finnish wizards used to sell wind to storm-stayed
mariners. The wind was enclosed in three knots; if they undid the first knot,
a moderate wind sprang up; if the second, it blew half a gale; if the third, a
hurricane. Indeed the Esthonians, whose country is divided from Finland only
by an arm of the sea, still believe in the magical powers of their northern
neighbours. The bitter winds that blow in spring from the north and
north-east, bringing ague and rheumatic inflammations in their train, are set
down by the simple Esthonian peasantry to the machinations of the Finnish
wizards and witches. In particular they regard with special dread three days
in spring to which they give the name of Days of the Cross; one of them falls
on the Eve of Ascension Day. The people in the neighbourhood of Fellin fear to
go out on these days lest the cruel winds from Lappland should smite them
dead. A popular Esthonian song runs:
Wind of the Cross! rushing and mighty!
Heavy the blow of thy wings sweeping past!
Wild wailing wind of misfortune and sorrow,
Wizards of Finland ride by on the blast.
It is said, too, that sailors, beating up against the wind in the Gulf of
Finland, sometimes see a strange sail heave in sight astern and overhaul them
hand over hand. On she comes with a cloud of canvasall her studding-sails
outright in the teeth of the wind, forging her way through the foaming
billows, dashing back the spray in sheets from her cutwater, every sail
swollen to bursting, every rope strained to cracking. Then the sailors know
that she hails from Finland.
The art of tying up the wind in three knots, so that the more knots are
loosed the stronger will blow the wind, has been attributed to wizards in
Lappland and to witches in Shetland, Lewis, and the Isle of Man. Shetland
seamen still buy winds in the shape of knotted handkerchiefs or threads from
old women who claim to rule the storms. There are said to be ancient crones in
Lerwick now who live by selling wind. Ulysses received the winds in a leathern
bag from Aeolus, King of the Winds. The Motumotu in New Guinea think that
storms are sent by an Oiabu sorcerer; for each wind he has a bamboo which he
opens at pleasure. On the top of Mount Agu in Togo, a district of West Africa,
resides a fetish called Bagba, who is supposed to control the wind and the
rain. His priest is said to keep the winds shut up in great pots.
Often the stormy wind is regarded as an evil being who may be intimidated,
driven away, or killed. When storms and bad weather have lasted long and food
is scarce with the Central Esquimaux, they endeavour to conjure the tempest by
making a long whip of seaweed, armed with which they go down to the beach and
strike out in the direction of the wind, crying Taba (it is enough)! Once
when north-westerly winds had kept the ice long on the coast and food was
becoming scarce, the Esquimaux performed a ceremony to make a calm. A fire was
kindled on the shore, and the men gathered round it and chanted. An old man
then stepped up to the fire and in a coaxing voice invited the demon of the
wind to come under the fire and warm himself. When he was supposed to have
arrived, a vessel of water, to which each man present had contributed, was
thrown on the flames by an old man, and immediately a flight of arrows sped
towards the spot where the fire had been. They thought that the demon would
not stay where he had been so badly treated. To complete the effect, guns were
discharged in various directions, and the captain of a European vessel was
invited to fire on the wind with cannon. On the twenty-first of February 1883
a similar ceremony was performed by the Esquimaux of Point Barrow, Alaska,
with the intention of killing the spirit of the wind. Women drove the demon
from their houses with clubs and knives, with which they made passes in the
air; and the men, gathering round a fire, shot him with their rifles and
crushed him under a heavy stone the moment that steam rose in a cloud from the
smouldering embers, on which a tub of water had just been thrown.
The Lengua Indians of the Gran Chaco ascribe the rush of a whirl-wind to
the passage of a spirit and they fling sticks at it to frighten it away. When
the wind blows down their huts, the Payaguas of South America snatch up
firebrands and run against the wind, menacing it with the blazing brands,
while others beat the air with their fists to frighten the storm. When the
Guaycurus are threatened by a severe storm, the men go out armed, and the
women and children scream their loudest to intimidate the demon. During a
tempest the inhabitants of a Batak village in Sumatra have been seen to rush
from their houses armed with sword and lance. The rajah placed himself at
their head, and with shouts and yells they hewed and hacked at the invisible
foe. An old woman was observed to be specially active in the defence of her
house, slashing the air right and left with a long sabre. In a violent
thunderstorm, the peals sounding very near, the Kayans of Borneo have been
seen to draw their swords threateningly half out of their scabbards, as if to
frighten away the demons of the storm. In Australia the huge columns of red
sand that move rapidly across a desert tract are thought by the natives to be
spirits passing along. Once an athletic young black ran after one of these
moving columns to kill it with boomerangs. He was away two or three hours, and
came back very weary, saying he had killed Koochee (the demon), but that
Koochee had growled at him and he must die. Of the Bedouins of Eastern Africa
it is said that no whirl-wind ever sweeps across the path without being
pursued by a dozen savages with drawn creeses, who stab into the centre of the
dusty column in order to drive away the evil spirit that is believed to be
riding on the blast.
In the light of these examples a story told by Herodotus, which his modern
critics have treated as a fable, is perfectly credible. He says, without
however vouching for the truth of the tale, that once in the land of the
Psylli, the modern Tripoli, the wind blowing from the Sahara had dried up all
the water-tanks. So the people took counsel and marched in a body to make war
on the south wind. But when they entered the desert the simoon swept down on
them and buried them to a man. The story may well have been told by one who
watched them disappearing, in battle array, with drums and cymbals beating,
into the red cloud of whirling sand.
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