Gypsy Sorcery And Fortune Telling
by
Charles Godfrey Leland
Late President of the Gypsy-Lore Society
London: T. Fisher Unwin
1891
ILLUSTRATED BY INCANTATIONS, SPECIMENS OF
MEDICAL MAGIC, ANECDOTES, TALES
PREFACE
CHAPTER I
THE ORIGIN OF WITCHCRAFT, SHAMANISM, AND SORCERY--VINDICTIVE AND
MISCHIEVOUS MAGIC
CHAPTER II
CHARMS AND CONJURATIONS TO CURE THE DISORDERS OF GROWN PEOPLE
CHAPTER III
GYPSY CONJURATIONS AND EXORCISMS--THE CURE OF CHILDREN-HUNGARIAN
GYPSY SPELLS--A CURIOUS OLD ITALIAN "SECRET"--THE MAGIC VIRTUE OF
GARLIC--A FLORENTINE INCANTATION LEARNED FROM A WITCH--LILITH, THE
CHILD-STEALER, AND QUEEN OF THE WITCHES
CHAPTER IV
SOUTH SLAVONIAN AND OTHER GYPSY WITCH-LORE.--THE WORDS FOR A
WITCH--VILAS AND THE SPIRITS OF EARTH AND AIR-WITCHES, EGGSHELLS,
AND EGG-LORE-EGG PROVERBS--OVA DE CRUCIBUS
CHAPTER V
CHARMS OR CONJURATIONS TO CURE OR PROTECT ANIMALS
CHAPTER VI
OF PREGNANCY AND CHARMS, OR FOLK-LORE CONNECTED WITH IT--BOAR'S
TEETH AND CHARMS FOR PREVENTING THE FLOW OF BLOOD
CHAPTER VII
THE RECOVERY OF STOLEN PROPERTY--LOVE-CHARMS--SHOES AND
LOVE-POTIONS, OR PHILTRES
CHAPTER VIII
ROUMANIAN AND TRANSYLVANIAN SORCERIES AND SUPERSTITIONS, CONNECTED
WITH THOSE OF THE GYPSIES
CHAPTER IX
THE RENDEZVOUS OR MEETINGS OF WITCHES, SORCERERS, AND VILAS--A
CONTINUATION OF SOUTH SLAVONIAN GYPSY-LORE
CHAPTER X
OF THE HAUNTS, HOMES, AND HABITS OF WITCHES IN THE SOUTH SLAVIC
LANDS--BOGEYS AND HUMBUGS
CHAPTER XI
GYPSY WITCHCRAFT--THE MAGICAL POWER WHICH IS INNATE IN ALL MEN AND
WOMEN--HOW IT MAY BE CULTIVATED AND DEVELOPED--THE PRINCIPLES OF
FORTUNE-TELLING
CHAPTER XII
ROMANCE BASED ON CHANCE, OR HOPE, AS REGARDS THE FUTURE-FOLK--AND
SORCERY-LORE--AUTHENTIC INSTANCES OF GYPSY PREDICTION
CHAPTER XIII
PROVERBS REFERRING TO WITCHES, GYPSIES, AND FAIRIES
CHAPTER XIV
A GYPSY MAGIC SPELL--HOKKANI BÂSO--LELLIN DUDIKABIN, OR THE GREAT
SECRET--CHILDREN'S RHYMES AND INCANTATIONS--TEN LITTLE INDIAN BOYS
AND TEN LITTLE ACORN GIRLS OF MARCELLUS BURDIGALENSI
CHAPTER XV
GYPSY AMULETS
CHAPTER XVI
GYPSIES, TOADS, AND TOAD-LORE
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The Gypsies, who call themselves Rom or Romany, are a
nomadic culture which originated in India during the Middle Ages. They
migrated widely, particularly to Europe, where they worked as farm
laborers, metalworkers, scrapdealers, and horsetraders. They also made a
living as entertainers, fortune tellers, and grifters. Persecuted by the
Nazis, and discriminated against to this day, the Rom have a long
tradition of magic and shamanism. As Leland points out, these practices
have parallels with those of other traditional pagan cultures around the
world.
This book discusses spells, incantations and talismans used
within Rom culture, as well as the more practical magic they use in their
interaction with the Gorgios--the non-Gypsies. It is this latter
topic which provides some of the most interesting and instructional
reading. Leland gives some generalized methods of fortune-telling which
any prospective psychic would do well to study; as well as the details of
the 'Great Secret', a magic trick in which all of your money disappears...
Gypsy life has a romantic appeal, and Leland, who popularized Gypsy
lore in this and other books played no small part in this image-making.
However, Leland makes it abudantly clear that life on the road was hard.
The Rom people are to be admired for their survival skills in a hostile
world, and for the longevity and persistance of their culture.
PREFACE
THIS work contains a collection of the
customs, usages, and ceremonies current among gypsies, as regards
fortune-telling, witch-doctoring, love-philtering, and other sorcery,
illustrated by many anecdotes and instances, taken either from works as
yet very little known to the English reader or from personal experiences.
Within a very few years, since Ethnology and Archćology have received a
great inspiration, and much enlarged their scope through Folk-lore,
everything relating to such subjects is studied with far greater interest
and to much greater profit than was the case when they were cultivated in
a languid, half-believing, half-sceptical spirit which was in reality
rather one of mere romance than reason. Now that we seek with resolution
to find the whole truth, be it based on materialism, spiritualism, or
their identity, we are amazed to find that the realm of marvel and
mystery, of wonder and poetry, connected with what we vaguely call
"magic," far from being explained away or exploded, enlarges
p. vi
before us as we proceed, and that not into a mere cloudland, gorgeous
land, but into a country of reality in which men of science who would once
have disdained the mere thought thereof are beginning to stray. Hypnotism
has really revealed far greater wonders than were ever established by the
fascinatores of old or by mesmerists of more modern times. Memory,
the basis of thought according to PLATO, which was once held to be a
determined quantity, has been proved, (the word is not too bold), by
recent physiology, to be practically infinite, and its perfect development
to be identical with that of intellect, so that we now see plainly before
us the power to perform much which was once regarded as miraculous. Not
less evident is it that men of science or practical inventors, such as
DARWIN, WALLACE, HUXLEY, TYNDALE, GALTON, JOULE, LOCKYER, and EDISON, have
been or are all working in common with theosophists, spiritualists, Folk-lorists,
and many more, not diversely but all towards a grand solution of the
Unknown.
Therefore there is nothing whatever in the past relating to the
influences which have swayed man, however strange, eccentric,
superstitious, or even repulsive they may seem, which is not of great and
constantly increasing value. And if we of the present time begin already
to see this, how much more important will these facts be to the men of the
future, who, by virtue of more widely extended knowledge and comparison,
will be better able than we are to draw wise conclusions undreamed of now.
But the chief conclusion for us is to collect as much as we can, while it
is yet extant, of all the strange lore of the olden time, instead of
wasting time in forming idle theories about it.
In a paper read before the Congrčs des Traditions populaires in
Paris, 1889, on the relations of gypsies to Folk-lore, I set forth my
belief that these people have always been the humble priests of what is
really the practical religion of all peasants and poor people; that is
their magical ceremonies and medicine. Very few have any conception of the
degree to which gypsies have been the colporteurs of what in Italy is
called "the old faith," or witchcraft.
p. vii
As regards the illustrative matter given, I am much indebted to DR.
WLISLOCKI, who has probably had far more intimate personal experience of
gypsies than any other learned man who ever lived, through our mutual
friend, Dr. ANTHON HERRMANN, editor of the Ethnologische Mitteilungen,
Budapest, who is also himself an accomplished Romany scholar and
collector, and who has kindly taken a warm interest in this book, and
greatly aided it. To these I may add Dr. FRIEDRICH S. KRAUSS, of Vienna,
whose various works on the superstitions and Folk-lore of the South
Slavonians--kindly presented by him to me--contain a vast mine of
material, nearly all that of which he treats being common property between
peasants and the Romany, as other sources abundantly indicate. With this
there is also much which I collected personally among gypsies and
fortune-tellers, and similar characters, it being true as regards this
work and its main object, that there is much cognate or allied information
which is quite as valuable as gypsy-lore itself, as all such subjects
mutually explain one of the others.
Gypsies, as I have said, have done more than any race or class on the
face of the earth to disseminate among the multitude a belief in
fortune-telling, magical or sympathetic cures, amulets and such small
sorceries as now find a place in Folk-lore. Their women have all pretended
to possess occult power since prehistoric times. By the exercise of their
wits they have actually acquired a certain art of reading character or
even thought, which, however it be allied to deceit, is in a way true in
itself, and well worth careful examination. MATTHEW ARNOLD has dwelt on it
with rare skill in his poem of "The Gypsy Scholar." Even deceit and
imposture never held its own as a system for ages without some ground-work
of truth, and that which upheld the structure of gypsy sorcery has never
been very carefully examined. I trust that I have done this in a rational
and philosophic spirit, and have also illustrated my remarks in a manner
which will prove attractive to the general reader.
There are many good reasons for believing that the greatest portion of
gypsy magic was brought by the Romany from the East or India. This is
specially true as regards those now dwelling in Eastern Europe.
p. viii
And it is certainly interesting to observe that among these people
there is still extant, on a very extended scale indeed, a Shamanism which
seems to have come from the same Tartar-Altaic source which was found of
yore among the Accadian-Babylonians, Etruscan races, and Indian
hill-tribes. This, the religion of the drum and the demon as a disease-or
devil doctoring-will be found fully illustrated in many curious ways in
these pages. I believe that in describing it I have also shown how many
fragments of this primitive religion, or cult, still exist, under very
different names, in the most enlightened centres of civilization. And I
respectfully submit to my reader, or critic, that I have in no instance,
either in this or any other case, wandered from my real subject, and that
the entire work forms a carefully considered and consistent whole. To
perfect my title, I should perhaps have added a line or two to the effect
that I have illustrated many of the gypsy sorceries by instances of
Folk-lore drawn from other sources; but I believe that it is nowhere
inappropriate, considering the subject as a whole. For those who would lay
stress on omissions in my book, I would say that I have never
intended or pretended to exhaust gypsy superstitions. I have not
even given all that may be found in the works Of WLISLOCKI alone. I have,
according to the limits of the book, cited so much as to fully illustrate
the main subject already described, and this will be of more interest to
the student of history than the details of gypsy chiromancy or more spells
and charms than are necessary to explain the leading ideas.
What is wanted in the present state of Folk-lore, I here repeat, is
collection from original sources, and material, that is from people and
not merely from books. The critics we have--like the poor--always with us,
and a century hence we shall doubtless have far better ones than those in
whom we now rejoice--or sorrow. But material abides no time, and an
immense quantity of it which is world-old perishes every day. For with
general culture and intelligence we are killing all kinds of old faiths,
with wonderful celerity. The time is near at hand when it will all be
incredibly valuable, and then men will wish
p. ix
sorrowfully enough that there had been more collectors to accumulate
and fewer critics to detract from their labours and to discourage them,
For the collector must form his theory, or system great or small, good or
bad, such as it is, in order to gather his facts; and then the theory is
shattered by the critic and the collection made to appear ridiculous. And
so collection ends.
There is another very curious reflection which has been ever present to
my mind while writing this work, and which the reader will do well
carefully to think out for himself. It is that the very first efforts of
the human mind towards the supernatural were gloomy, strange, and wild;
they were of witchcraft and sorcery, dead bodies, defilement, deviltry,
and dirt. Men soon came to believe in the virtue of the repetition of
certain rhymes or spells in connection with dead men's bones, hands, and
other horrors or "relics." To this day this old religion exists exactly as
it did of yore, wherever men are ignorant, stupid, criminal, or
corresponding to their prehistoric ancestors. I myself have seen a dead
man's hand for sale in Venice. According to DR. BLOCK, says a writer in
The St. James's Gazette, January 16, 1889, the corpse-candle
superstition is still firmly enshrined among the tenets of thieves all
over Europe. In reality, according to The Standard, we know little
about the strange thoughts which agitate the minds of the criminal
classes. Their creeds are legends. Most of them are the children and
grandchildren of thieves who have been brought up from their youth in the
densest ignorance, and who, constantly at war with society, seek the aid
of those powers of darkness in the dread efficacy of which they have an
unshaken confidence.
"Fetishism of the rudest type, or what the mythologists have learned to
call 'animism' is part and parcel of the robber's creed. A 'habit and
repute' thief has always in his pocket, or somewhere about his person, a
bit of coal, or chalk, or a 'lucky stone,' or an amulet of some sort on
which he relies for safety in his hour of peril. Omens he firmly trusts
in. Divination is regularly practised by him, as the occasional quarrels
over the Bible and key, and the sieve and shears, testify. The supposed
power of witches and wizards make many of them live in terror, and pay
blackmail, and although they will lie almost without a motive, the
ingenuity with which the most depraved criminal will try to evade 'kissing
the book,' performing this rite with his thumb instead, is a curious
instance of what
p. x
may be termed perverted religious instincts. As for the fear of the
evil eye, it is affirmed that most of the foreign thieves of London dread
more being brought before a particular magistrate who has the reputation
of being endowed with that fatal gift than of being summarily sentenced by
any other whose judicial glare is less severe."
This is all true, but it tells only a small part of the truth. Not only
is Fetish or Shamanism the real religion of criminals, but of vast numbers
who are not suspected of it. There is not a town in England or in Europe
in which witchcraft (its beginning) is not extensively practised, although
this is done with a secrecy the success of which is of itself almost a
miracle. We may erect churches and print books, but wherever the
prehistoric man exists--and he is still to be found everywhere by
millions--he will cling to the old witchcraft of his remote ancestors.
Until you change his very nature, the only form in which he can realize
supernaturalism will be by means of superstition, and the grossest
superstion at that. Research and reflection have taught me that this
sorcery is far more widely and deeply extended than any cultivated person
dreams--instead of yielding to the progress of culture it seems to
actually advance with it. Count ANGELO DE GUBERNATIS once remarked to one
of the most distinguished English statesmen that there was in the country
in Tuscany ten times as much heathenism as Christianity. The same remark
was made to me by a fortune-teller in Florence. She explained what she
meant. It was the vecchia religione--"the old religion"--not
Christianity, but the dark and strange sorceries of the stregha, or
witch, the compounding of magical medicine over which spells are muttered,
the making love-philters, the cursing enemies, the removing the influence
of other witches, and the manufacture of amulets in a manner prohibited by
the Church.
It would seem as if, by some strange process, while advanced scientists
are occupied in eliminating magic from religion, the coarser mind is
actually busy in reducing it to religion alone. It has been educated
sufficiently to perceive an analogy between dead man's hands and "relics"
as working miracles, and as sorcery is more entertaining than religion,
and has, moreover, the charm of secrecy, the prehistoric man, who is still
p. xi
with us, prefers the former. Because certain forms of this
sorcery are no longer found among the educated classes we think that
superstition no longer exists; but though we no longer burn witches or
believe in fairies, it is a fact that of a kind and fashion proportionate
to our advanced culture, it is, with a very few exceptions, as prevalent
as ever. Very few persons indeed have ever given this subject the
attention which it merits, for it is simply idle to speculate on the
possibility of cultivating or sympathizing with the lowest orders without
really understanding it in all its higher forms. And I
venture to say that, as regards a literal and truthful knowledge of its
forms and practices, this work will prove to be a contribution to the
subject not without value.
I have, in fact, done my best to set forth in it a very singular truth
which is of great importance to every one who takes any real interest in
social science, or the advance of intelligence. It is that while almost
everybody who contributes to general literature, be it books of travel or
articles in journals, has ever and anon something clever to say about
superstition among the lower orders at home or abroad, be it in remote
country places or in the mountains of Italy, with the usual cry of "Would
it be believed--in the nineteenth century?" &c.; it still remains true
that the amount of belief in magic--call it by what name we
will--in the world is just as great as ever it was. And here I would quote
with approbation a passage from "The Conditions for the Survival of
Archaic Customs," by G. L. Gomme, in The Archćological Review of
January, 1890:--
"If Folk-lore has done nothing else up to this date it has demonstrated
that civilization, under many of its phases, while elevating the governing
class of a nation, and thereby no doubt elevating the nation, does not
always reach the lowest or even the lower strata of the population. As Sir
Arthur Mitchell puts it, 'There is always a going up of some and a going
down of others,' and it is more than probable that just as the going up of
the few is in one certain direction, along certain well-ascertained lines
of improvement or development, so the going down of the many is in an
equally well-ascertained line of degradation or backwardness The upward
march is always towards political improvement, carrying with it social
development; the downward march is always towards social degradation,
carrying with it political backwardness. It seems difficult indeed to
believe that monarchs like Alfred, Eadward, William, and Edward, could
have had within their Christianized kingdom
p. xii
groups of people whose status was still that of savagery; it seems
difficult to believe that Raleigh and Spenser actually beheld specimens of
the Irish savage; it seems impossible to read Kemble and Green and Freeman
and yet to understand that they are speaking only of the advanced guard of
the English nation, not of the backward races within the boundary of its
island home. The student of archaic custom has, however, to meet these
difficulties, and it seems necessary, therefore, to try and arrive at some
idea as to what the period of savagery in these islands really means."
Which is a question that very few can answer. There
is to be found in almost every cheap book, or "penny dreadful" and
newspaper shop in Great Britain and America, for sale at a very low price
a Book of Fate--or something equivalent to it, for the name of these works
is legion--and one publisher advertises that he has nearly thirty of them,
or at least such books with different titles. In my copy there are
twenty-five pages of incantations, charms, and spells, every one of them
every whit as "superstitious" as any of the gypsy ceremonies set forth in
this volume. I am convinced, from much inquiry, that next to the Bible and
the Almanac there is no one book which is so much disseminated among the
million as the fortune-teller, in some form or other. 1
That is to say, there are, numerically, many millions more of believers in
such small sorcery now in Great Britain than there were centuries ago,
for, be it remembered, the superstitions of the masses were always petty
ones, like those of the fate-books; it was only the aristocracy who
consulted Cornelius Agrippa, and could afford la haute magic. We
may call it by other names, but fry, boil, roast, powder or perfume it as
we will, the old faith in the supernatural and in occult means of getting
at it still exists in one form or another--the parable or moral of most
frequent occurrence in it being that of the Mote and the Beam, of the real
and full meaning of which I can only reply in the ever-recurring refrain
of the Edda: Understand ye this--or what?
Footnotes
xii:1 I was once myself made to contribute,
involuntarily, to this kind of literature. Forty years ago I published a
Folk-lore book entitled "The Poetry and Mystery of Dreams," in which the
explanations of dreams, as given by ASTRAMPSYCHIUS, ARTEMIDORUS, and other
ancient oneirologists, were illustrated by passages from many poets and
popular ballads, showing how widely the ancient symbolism had extended. A
few years ago I found that some ingenious literary hack had taken my work
(without credit), and, omitting what would not be understood by servant
girls, had made of it a common sixpenny dream-book.
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p. xiii

p. 1
CHAPTER I
THE ORIGIN OF WITCHCRAFT, SHAMANISM, AND
SORCERY--VINDICTIVE AND MISCHIEVOUS MAGIC
AS their peculiar perfume is the
chief association with spices, so sorcery is allied in every memory to
gypsies. And as it has not escaped many poets that there is something more
strangely sweet and mysterious in the scent of cloves than in that of
flowers, so the attribute of inherited magic power adds to the romance of
these picturesque wanderers. Both the spices and the Romany come from the
far East--the fatherland of divination and enchantment. The latter have
been traced with tolerable accuracy, If we admit their affinity with the
Indian Dom and Domar, back to the
p. 2
threshold of history, or well-nigh into prehistoric times, and in all
ages they, or their women, have been engaged, as if by elvish instinct, in
selling enchant. merits, peddling prophecies and palmistry, and dealing
with the devil generally ill a small retail way. As it was of old so it is
to-day--
Ki shan i Romani--
Adoi san' i chov'hani.
Wherever gypsies go,
There the witches are, we know.
It is no great problem ill ethnology or anthropology as to how gypsies
became fortune-tellers. We may find a very curious illustration of it in
the wren. This is apparently as humble, modest, prosaic little fowl as
exists, and as far from mystery and wickedness as an old hen. But the
ornithologists of the olden time, and the myth-makers, and the gypsies who
lurked and lived in the forest, knew better. They saw how this
bright-eyed, strange little creature in her elvish way slipped in and out
of hollow trees and wood shade into sunlight, and anon was gone, no man
knew whither, and so they knew that it was an uncanny creature, and told
wonderful tales of its deeds in human form, and to-day it is called by
gypsies in Germany, as in England, the witch-bird, or more briefly,
chorihani, "the witch." Just so the gypsies themselves, with their
glittering Indian eyes, slipping like the wren in and out of the shadow of
the Unknown, and anon away and invisible, won for themselves the name
which now they wear. Wherever Shamanism, or the sorcery which is based on
exorcising or commanding spirits, exists, its professors from leading
strange lives, or from solitude or wandering, become strange and
wild-looking. When men have this appearance people associate with it
mysterious power. This is the case in Tartary, Africa, among the Eskimo,
Lapps, or Red Indians, with all of whom the sorcerer, voodoo or
medaolin, has the eye of the "fascinator," glittering and cold as that
of a serpent. So the gypsies, from the mere fact of being wanderers and
out-of-doors livers in wild places, became wild-looking, and when asked if
they did not associate with the devils who dwell in the desert places,
admitted
p. 3
the soft impeachment, and being further questioned as to whether their
friends the devils, fairies, elves, and goblins had not taught them how to
tell the future, they pleaded guilty, and finding that it paid well, went
to work in their small way to improve their "science," and particularly
their pecuniary resources. It was an easy calling; it required no property
or properties, neither capital nor capitol, shiners nor shrines, wherein
to work the oracle. And as I believe that a company of children left
entirely to themselves would form and grow up with a language which in a
very few years would be spoken fluently, 1
so I am certain that the shades of night, and fear, pain, and lightning
and mystery would produce in the same time conceptions of dreaded beings,
resulting first in demonology and then in the fancied art of driving
devils away. For out of my own childish experiences and memories I retain
with absolute accuracy material enough to declare that without any aid
from other people the youthful mind forms for itself strange and seemingly
supernatural phenomena. A tree or bush waving in the night breeze by
moonlight is perhaps mistaken for a great man, the mere repetition of the
sight or of its memory make it a personal reality. Once when I was a child
powerful doses of quinine caused a peculiar throb in my ear which I for
some time believed was the sound of somebody continually walking upstairs.
Very young children sometimes imagine invisible playmates or companions
talk with them, and actually believe that the unseen talk to them in
return. I myself knew a small boy who had, as he sincerely believed, such
a companion, whom he called Bill, and when he could not understand his
lessons he consulted the mysterious William, who explained them to him.
There are children who, by the voluntary or involuntary exercise of visual
perception or volitional eye-memory, 2
reproduce or create images which they imagine
p. 4
to be real, and this faculty is much commoner than is supposed. In fact
I believe that where it exists in most remarkable degrees the adults to
whom the children describe their visions dismiss them as "fancies" or
falsehoods. Even in the very extraordinary cases recorded by Professor
HALE, in which little children formed for themselves spontaneously a
language in which they conversed fluently, neither their parents nor
anybody else appears to have taken the least interest in the matter.
However, the fact being that babes can form for themselves supernatural
conceptions and embryo mythologies, and as they always do attribute to
strange or terrible-looking persons power which the latter do not possess,
it is easy, without going further, to understand why a wild Indian gypsy,
with eyes like a demon when excited, and unearthly-looking at his calmest,
should have been supposed to be a sorcerer by credulous child-like
villagers. All of this I believe might have taken place, or really did
take place, in the very dawn of man's existence as a rational
creature--that as soon as "the frontal convolution of the brain which
monkeys do not possess," had begun with the "genial tubercule," essential
to language, to develop itself, then also certain other convolutions and
tubercules, not as yet discovered, but which ad interim I will call "the
ghost-making," began to act. "Genial," they certainly were not--little
joy and much sorrow has man got out of his spectro-facient
apparatus--perhaps if it and talk are correlative he might as well, many a
time, have been better off if he were dumb.
So out of the earliest time, in the very two o'clock of a misty morning
in history, man came forth believing in non-existent terrors and evils as
soon as he could talk, and talking about them as fast as he formed them.
Long before the conception of anything good or beneficent, or of a
Heavenly Father or benevolent angels came to him, he was scared with
nightmares and spirits of death and darkness, hell, hunger, torture, and
terror. We all know how difficult it is for many people when some one dies
out of a household to get over the involuntary feeling that we shall
unexpectedly meet the departed in the usual haunts. In almost every family
there is a record how some one has "heard a voice they cannot hear," or
the dead speaking
p. 5
in the familiar tones. Hence the belief in ghosts, as soon as men began
to care for death at all, or to miss those who had gone. So first of all
came terrors and spectres, or revenants, and from setting out food
for the latter. which was the most obvious and childlike manner to please
them, grew sacrifices to evil spirits, and finally the whole system of
sacrifice in all its elaboration.
It may therefore be concluded that as soon as man began to think and
speak and fear the mysterious, he also began to appease ghosts and
bugbears by sacrifices. Then there sprung up at once--quite as early--the
magus, or the cleverer man, who had the wit to do the
sacrificing and eat the meats sacrificed, and explain that he had arranged
it all privately with the dead and the devils. He knew all about
them, and he could drive them away. This was the Shaman. He seems
to have had a Tartar-Mongol-mongrel-Turanian origin, somewhere in Central
Asia, and to have spread with his magic drum, and songs, and stinking
smoke, exorcising his fiends all over the face of the earth, even as his
descendant, General Booth, with his "devil-drivers" is doing at the
present day. But the earliest authentic records of Shamanism are to be
found in the Accadian, proto-Chaldćan and Babylon records. According to it
all diseases whatever, as well as all disasters, were directly the work of
evil spirits, which were to be driven away by songs of exorcism, burning
of perfumes or evil-smelling drugs, and performing ceremonies, many of
which, with scraps of the exorcisms are found in familiar use here and
there at the present day. Most important of all in it was the
extraordinary influence of the Shaman himself on his patient, for
he made the one acted on sleep or wake, freed him from many apparently
dire disorders in a minute, among others of epilepsies which were believed
to be caused by devils dwelling in man--the nearest and latest explanation
of which magic power is given in that very remarkable book,
"Psycho-Therapeutics, or Treatment by Sleep and Suggestion," by C. LLOYD
TUCKEY, M.D. (London: Bailliere and Co., 1889), which I commend to all
persons interested in ethnology as casting light on some of the most
interesting and perplexing problems of humanity, and especially of
"magic."
p. 6
It would seem, at least among the Laplanders, Finns, Eskimo, and Red
Indians, that the first stage of Shamanism was a very horrible
witchcraft, practised chiefly by women, in which attempts were made to
conciliate the evil spirits; the means employed embracing everything
which could revolt and startle barbarous men. Thus fragments of dead
bodies and poison, and unheard-of terrors and crimes formed its basis. I
think it very probable that this was the primitive religion among savages
everywhere. An immense amount of it in its vilest conceivable forms still
exists among negroes as Voodoo.
After a time this primitive witchcraft or voodooism had its
reformers--probably brave and shrewd men, who conjectured that the powers
of evil might be "exploited" to advantage. There is great confusion and
little knowledge as yet as regards primitive man, but till we know better
we may roughly assume that witch-voodooism was the religion of the people
of the paleolithic period, if they could talk at all, since language is
denied to the men of the Neanderthal, Canstadt, Egnisheim, and Podhava
type. All that we can declare with some certainty is that we find the
advanced Shamanism the religion of the early Turanian races, among whose
descendants, and other people allied to them, it exists to this day. The
grandest incident in the history of humanity is the appearance of the Man
of Cromagnon. He it was who founded what M. DE QUATREFAGES calls "a
magnificent race," probably one which speedily developed a high
civilization, and a refined religion. But the old Shamanism with its
amulets, exorcisms, and smoke, its noises, more or less musical, of drums
and enchanted bells, and its main belief that all the ills of life came
from the action of evil spirits, was deeply based among the inferior races
and the inferior scions of the Cromagnon stock clung to it in forms more
or less modified. just as the earlier witchcraft, or the worship and
conciliation of evil, overlapped in many places the newer Shamanism, so
the latter overlapped the beautiful Nature-worship of the early Aryans,
the stately monotheism of the Shemites, and the other more advanced or
ingenious developments of the idea of a creative cause. There are, in
fact, even
p. 7
among us now, minds to whom Shamanism or even witchcraft is deeply or
innately adapted by nature, and there are hundred of millions who, while
professing a higher and purer doctrine, cling to its forms or essentials,
believing that because the apparatus is called by a different name it is
in no respect whatever the same thing. Finally there are men who, with no
logical belief whatever in any kind of supernaturalism, study it, and love
it, and are moved by it, owing to its endless associations, with poetry,
art, and all the legends of infancy or youth. HEINE was not in his
reasoning moments anything more or less than a strict Deist or Monotheist,
but all the dreams and spectres, fairies and goblins, whether of the
Middle Ages or the Talmud, were inexpressibly dear to him, and they move
like myriad motes through the sunshine of his poetry and prose, often
causing long rays when there were bars at the window--like that on which
the saint hung his cloak. It is probable or certain that Shamanism (or
that into which it has very naturally developed) will influence all
mankind, until science, by absorbing man's love of the marvellous in
stupendous discoveries shall so put to shame the old thaumaturgy, or
wonder-working, that the latter will seem poor and childish. In all the
"Arabian Nights" there is nothing more marvellous than the new idea that
voices and sounds may be laid aside like real books, and made to speak and
sing again years afterwards. And in all of that vast repertory of occult
lore, "Isis Unveiled," there is nothing so wonderful as the simple truth
that every child may be educated to possess an infinitely developed memory
of words, sights, sounds, and ideas, allied to incredible quickness of
perception and practice of the constructive faculties. These, with the
vast fields of adjusting improved social relations and reforms--all of
which in a certain way opens dazzling vistas of a certain kind of
enchantment or brilliant hope--will go fast and far to change the old
romance to a radically different state of feeling and association.
It is coming--let it come! Doubtless there was an awful romance of
darkness about the old witchcraft which caused its worshippers to declare
that the new lights of Shamanism could never dissipate it. just so many
p. 8
millions of educated people at present cannot be brought to understand
that all things to which they are used are not based on immutable
laws of nature, and must needs be eternal. They will find it hard to
comprehend that there can ever be any kind of poetry, art, or sentiment,
utterly different from that to which they and their ancestors have
been accustomed. Yet it is clear and plain before them, this New Era,
looking them directly in the face, about to usher in a reformation
compared to which all the reformations and revolutions and new religions
which the world has ever seen were as nothing; and the children are born
who will see more than the beginning of it.
In the next chapter I will examine the Shamanic spells and charms still
used among certain gypsies. For, be it observed, all the gypsy magic and
sorcery here described is purely Shamanic--that is to say, of the
most primitive Tartar type--and it is the more interesting as having
preserved--from prehistoric times many of the most marked characteristics
of the world's first magic or religion. It treats every disease, disorder,
trouble, or affliction as the work of an evil spirit; it attempts to
banish these influences by the aid of ceremonies, many of which, by the
disgusting and singular nature of the ingredients employed, show the
lingering influences of the black witchcraft which preceded Shamanism; and
it invokes favourable supernatural agencies, such as the spirits of the
air and Mashmurdalo', the giant of the forests. In addition to this there
will be found to be clearly and unmistakably associated with all their
usages, symbols and things nearly connected with much which is to be found
in Greek, Roman, and Indian mythology or symbolism. Now whether this was
drawn from "classic" sources, or whether all came from some ancient and
obscure origin, cannot now be accurately determined. But it certainly
cannot be denied that Folk-lore of this kind casts a great deal of light
on the early history of mankind, and the gradual unfolding or evolution of
religion and of mind, and that, if intelligently studied, this of the
gypsies is as important as any chapter in the grand work.
The gypsies came, historically speaking, very recently from India.
p. 9
It has not been so carefully observed as it might that all Indians are
not of the religion of Brahma, much less of Buddha or of Mahommed, and
that among the lower castes, the primćval Altaic Shamanism, with even
earlier witchcraft, still holds its own. Witchcraft, or Voodoo, or Obi,
relies greatly on poisoning for its magic, and the first gypsies were said
to poison unscrupulously. Even to this day there is but one word with them
as with many Hindoos for both medicine and poison--id est drab. How
exactly this form of witchcraft and Shamanism exists today in India
appears from the following extract from The St. James's Gazette,
September 8, 1888:--
THE HINDOO PRIEST
In India, the jadoo-wallah, or exorcist, thrives apace; and no wonder,
for is not the lower-caste Hindoo community bhut, or demon-ridden? Every
village, graveyard, burning-ghat, has its special bhut or bhuts; and the
jadoo-wallah is the earthly mediator between their bhutships and the
common folk. The exorcist is usually the spiritual adviser to the
population of a low-caste village, and is known as a gooroo, or priest:
that is to say, he professes to hold commune with the spirits of defunct
Hindoos which have qualified for their unique position in the other
world--by their iniquity in this one, perhaps. Every Hindoo has a guardian
bhut that requires propitiating, and the gooroo is the medium.
Amongst the Jaiswars and other low-caste Hindoos, caste is regulated by
carnal pice, and a man is distinguished amongst them by a regulated
monetary scale. One person may be a 14-anna caste man while another may
only be a 12-anna caste man. Does the 12-anna caste man wish to supersede
the 14-anna caste man, then he consults the gooroo, who will, in
consideration of a certain contribution, promote him to a higher-caste
grade. A moneyed man having qualms about his future state should join the
Jaiswars, where at least he would have an opportunity of utilizing his
spare cash for the good of his soul. The average gooroo will be only too
glad to procure him everlasting glory for a matter of a few rupees.
The gooroo, then, serves as regulator of the lower-caste Hindoo,
system. But it is our intention to exhibit him in his peculiar position of
exorcist-general to the people. This will perhaps be best explained by an
account of the case of one Kaloo. Kaloo was a grass-cutter, and had been
offended by Kasi, a brother grass-cutter. Kasi, it appears, had stolen
Kaloo's quilt one night during his temporary absence at a neighbouring
liquor-shop. Kaloo, on his return, finding his quilt gone, raised the
hue-and-cry; and Mooloo, the village policeman, traced the robbery to
Kasi's hut. Yet, in spite of this damning proof, the village panchayet,
or bench of magistrates, decided that, as Kaloo
p. 10
could not swear to the exact colour of his lost quilt--Kaloo was
colour-blind--it could not possibly be his. Anyhow, Kaloo kept Kasi in
view and hit upon a plan to do him a grievous bodily injury. Scraping
together a few rupees, he went to the village gooroo and promised that
worthy a reward if he would only exorcise the bhuts and get them to "make
Kasi's liver bad." The gooroo, in consideration of five rupees cash,
promised compliance. So that night we find the gooroo busy with
sandal-wood and pig's blood propitiating the neighbouring bhuts. Needless
to say that Kasi had in a very short space of time all the symptoms of
liver complaint. Whether the bhuts gave Kasi a bad liver or the gooroo
gave him a few doses of poison is a question. Anyhow, Kasi soon died.
Another case in point is that of Akuti. Akuti was a retired courtesan who
had long plied a profitable trade in the city. We find her, however, at
her native village of Ramghur, the wife of one Balu. Balu soon got tired
of his Akuti, and longed for the contents of her strong box wherein she
kept her rupees, bracelets, nose-rings, and other valuables. This was a
rather awkward matter for Balu, for Akuti was still in the prime of life.
Balu accordingly the gooroo and wants Akuti's liver made bad. "Nothing
easier," says the gooroo: "five rupees." Balu has reckoned without his
host, however: for the gooroo, as general spiritual adviser to the Ramghur
community, visits Akuti and tells her of Balu's little scheme. Naturally
Balu's liver is soon in a decline, for Akuti's ten rupees were put in the
opposite side of the gooroo's scales.
Knaves of the gooroo genus flourish in India, and when their
disposition is vicious the damage they can do is appalling. That these
priests exist and do such things as I have illustrated is beyond question.
Ask any native of India his views on the bhut question, and he will tell
you that there are such things, and, further, that the gooroo is the only
one able to lay them, so to speak. According to the low-caste Hindoo, the
bhut is a spiteful creature which requires constant supplies of liquor and
pork; otherwise it will wreak its vengeance on the forgetful votary who
neglects the supply. A strange idea, too, is this of pork being pleasing
to the bhuts; but when it is remembered that the Jaiswars, Chamars, and
other low-caste Hindoos are inordinately fond of that meat themselves,
they are right in supposing pig to be the favourite dish of the bhuts,
who, after all, are but the departed spirits of their own people.
Naturally bhai (brother) Kaloo, or bahin (sister, English
gypsy pen) Muti, the quondam grass-cutter and courtesan of Ramghur
village, who in this life liked nothing better than a piece of bacon and a
dram of spirits, will, in their state of bhuthood hanker after those
things still. Acting on these notions of the people, the gooroo lives and
thrives exceedingly.
Yet of all this there is nothing "Hindoo," nothing of the Vedas. It is
all pre-Aryan, devil-worshipping, poisoning, and Turanian; and it is
exactly like voodooing in Philadelphia or any other city in America. It is
the old faith which came before all, which existed through and under
Brahminism, Buddhism, and Mahommedanism, and which, as is well
p. 11
known, has cropped out again and flourishes vigorously under British
toleration. And this is the faith which forms the basis of European gypsy
sorcery, as it did of yore that of the Chaldćan and Etrurian, which still
survive in the witchcraft of the Tuscan Romagna. Every gypsy who came to
Europe a few centuries ago set up as a gooroo, and did his sorceries after
the same antique fashion. Even to-day it is much the same, but with far
less crime. But the bhut or malignant spirit is, under other names,
still believed, in, still doctored by gypsies with herbs and smoke, and
"be rhymed like an Irish rat," and conjured into holes bored in trees, and
wafted away into running streams, and naively implored to "go where he is
wanted," to where he was nursed, and to no longer bother honest folk who
are tired of him. And for all this the confiding villager must pay the
gypsy wise-woman "so much monies"--as it was in the beginning and is now
in good faith among millions in Europe who are in a much better class of
society. And from this point of view I venture to say that there is not a
charm or spell set down in this work or extant which will not be deeply
interesting to every sincere student of the history of culture. Let me,
however, say in this beginning once for all that I have only given
specimens sufficient to illustrate my views, for my prescribed limits
quite forbid the introduction of all the gypsy cures, spells, &c., which I
have collected.
Footnotes
3:1 Vide an extremely
interesting paper on "The Origin of Languages and the Antiquity of
Speaking Man," by Horatio Hale. ["Proceedings of the American Association
for the Advancement of Science," vol. xxv.] As I had, owing to studies for
many years of baby-talk and jargons, long ago arrived at Mr. Hale's
conclusions, I was astonished to learn that they have been so recently
formed by anybody.
3:2 Vide "Practical Education,"
by C. G. Leland (London: Whittaker and Co., 1888), in which this faculty
is fully discussed, pp. 184-213. |
|
p. 12
CHAPTER II
CHARMS AND CONJURATIONS TO CURE THE DISORDERS OF
GROWN PEOPLE
HUNGARIAN GYPSY MAGIC
THOUGH not liable to many disorders,
the gypsies in Eastern Europe, from their wandering, out-of-doors life,
and camping by marshes and pools where there is malaria, suffer a great
deal from fevers, which in their simple system of medicine are divided
into the shilale--i.e., chills or cold--and the tate
shilalyi, "hot-cold," or fever and ague. For the former, the following
remedy is applied: Three lungs and three livers, of frogs are dried and
powdered and drunk in spirits, after which the sick man or woman says
p. 13
"Čuckerdya pal m're per
Čáven save miseçe!
Čuckerdya pal m're per
Den miseçeske drom odry prejiál!
"Frogs in my belly
Devour what is bad
Frogs in my belly
Show the evil the way out!"
By "the evil" is understood evil spirits. According to the old Shamanic
belief, which was the primćval religion of all mankind, every disease is
caused by an evil spirit which enters the body and can only be driven out
by magic. We have abundant traces of this left in our highest civilization
and religion among people who gravely attribute every evil to the devil
instead of the unavoidable antagonisms of nature. Nothing is more apparent
in the New Testament than that all diseases were anciently regarded as
coming from devils, or evil occult, spiritual influences, their negative
or cure being holiness in some form. This the Jews, if they did not learn
it from the Assyrians in the first place, had certainly studied deeply in
Babylon, where it formed the great national cult. "It was the devil put it
into my head," says the criminal; and there is not a point of this old
sorcery which is not earnestly and seriously advocated by the Roman
Catholic Church and the preachers of the Salvation Army. Among the
American Red Indians the idea of evil spirits is carried to logical
extremes. If a pen drops from our fingers, or a penny rolls from our
grasp, the former of course falls on our new white dress, while the latter
nine times out of ten goes directly to the nearest grating, or crack or
rat-hole. I aver that it is literally true, if I ever search for a letter
or paper it is almost always at the bottom of the rest, while ink-wipers
and pens seem to be endowed with more than mere instinct or reason--they
manifest genius in concealing themselves. The Indians having
observed this have come to the conclusion that it is all the work of
certain
p. 14
busy little mischievous goblins, in which I, to a certain extent, agree
with them, holding, however, that the dwelling-place of these devilkins,
is in our own brain. What are our dreams but the action of our other mind,
or a second Me in my brain? Certainly it is with no will or effort, or act
of mine, that I go through a diabolical torturing nightmare, or a dreadful
dream, whose elaborate and subtle construction betrays very often more
ingenuity than I in my waking hours possess. I have had philosophical and
literary dreams, the outlines of which I have often remembered waking,
which far transcended anything of the kind which I could ever hope
to write. The maker of all this is not I or my will, and he is never
about, or on hand, when I am self-conscious. But in the inadvertent
moments of oblivion, while writing, or while performing any act, this
other I, or I's, (for there may be a multitude of them for aught I know)
step in and tease--even as they do in dreams. Now the distinction between
this of subjective demons acting objectively, and objective or outside
spirits, is really too fine to be seen even by a Darwinian-Carpenterian-Häeckelite,
and therefore one need not be amazed that PIEL SABADIS or TOMAQUAH, of the
Passamaquoddy tribe, or OBEAH GUMBO of New Orleans, should, with these
experiences, jump at ghosts and "gobblers," is not to be wondered at;
still less that they should do something to conciliate or compel these
haunting terrors, or "buggs," as they were once called--whence bogeys. It
is a fact that if one's ink-wipers get into the habit of hiding all we
have to do is to deliberately destroy them and get others, or at least
watch them carefully, and they will soon be cured of wandering. On the
other hand, sacrifices to conciliate and please naturally occur, and the
more expensive these are the better are they supposed to be. And as human
beings were of old the most valuable property, they were as naturally
supposed to be most acceptable to the gods, or, by the monotheists, to
God. A West Indian voodoo on being reproached for human sacrifices to the
serpent, and for eating the bodies slain, replied, "Do you believe that
the Son of God was sacrificed to save man, and do you not
p. 15
eat what your priests say is His very body?" So difficult is it to draw
distinctions between that which is spiritual and the mockeries which
appear to be such!
The scape-goat, or sufferer, who is martyred that many may escape--or
in other words, the unfortunate minority--is a natural result of
sacrifice. There is a curious trace of it in Hungarian Gypsy Shamanism. On
Easter Monday they make a wooden box or receptacle which is called the
běcáben, pronounced like the English gypsy word bitchapen and
meaning the same, that is--a sending, a thing sent or gift. In this, at
the bottom, are two sticks across, "as in a cradle," and on these are laid
herbs and other fetish stuff which every one touches with the finger; then
the whole is enveloped in a winding of white and red wool, and carried by
the oldest person of the tribe from tent to tent; after which it is borne
to the next running stream and left there, after every one has spat upon
it. By doing this they think that all the diseases and disorders which
would have befallen them during the coming year are conjured into the box.
But woe to him who shall find the box and open it, instead of throwing it
at once into the stream! All the diseases exorcised by the gypsy band will
fall upon him and his in full measure.
It would be an interesting question to know how many good people there
are, let us say in London, who, if they had all opportunity to work
off all their colds, gouts, scarlet-fevers, tooth- head- and
stomach-aches, with the consequent doctors' bills, or all suffering and
expenses, on some other family by means of secret sorcery, would or would
not "try it on"? It is curious to observe the resemblance of the gypsy
ceremony., with its box full of mischief, and the Jewish goat; not
forgetting the red wool handed down from heathen sacrifice and sorcery of
old. In the Bible white wool is the symbol of purification (Isaiah i. 18).
The feet of the statues of the gods were enveloped in wool--Dü laneos
habent pedes--to signify that they are slow to avenge, if sure. It is
altogether an interesting object, this gypsy casket, and one would like to
know
p. 16
what all the channels were through which the magic ran ere it carne to
them.
Another cure against the fever is to go to a running stream and cast
pieces of wood nine times backwards into the running water, repeating the
rhymes:--
"Shilályi prejiá,
Páńori me tut 'dáv!
Náńi me tut kámáv
Andakode prejiá,
Odoy tut čučiden,
Odoy tut ferinen,
Odoy tut may kámen
Mashurdalo sastyár!"
Fever go away from me,
I give it, water, unto thee
Unto me thou art not dear,
Therefore go away from here
To where they nursed thee,
Where they shelter thee,
Where they love thee,
Mashurdalo--help!"
This is a very remarkable invocation which takes us into true
heathenism. Mâshurdálo, or, correctly speaking, Mâshmurdálo (it would be
Mâsmérdo in English gypsy), means meat-killer. He is a sylvan giant--he
has his hold by wode and wolde as outlawes wont to do, in faraway forests
and lonely rocky places, where he lurks to catch beast and men in order to
devour them. It is needless to say to those who are aware that the taste
of white people's flesh is like that of very superior chicken, and a
negro's something much better than grouse, that Mâshmurdálo prefers, like
a simple, unsophisticated savage as he is, men to animals. Like the German
peasant who remarked, "It's all meat, anyhow," when he found a mouse in
his soup, Mâshmurdálo is not particular. He is the guardian of great
treasures; like most men in the "advance
p. 17
business" he knows where the "money" is to be found--unlike them he is
remarkably stupid, and can be easily cheated of his valuables. But if
anybody does this Morgante a service he is very grateful, and aids his
benefactor either with a loan or with his enormous strength. In many
respects he bears a remarkable resemblance to two giants in the American
Algonkin mythology, especially to At-was-kenni ges--the Spirit of
the Forest--who is equally powerful, good-natured, and stupid, and to the
Chenoo, who is a cannibal giant and yet grateful to friends, and also to
several Hindoo gods. The gypsies have here evidently fused several
Oriental beings into one., This is a process which occurs in the decline
of mythologies as in languages. In the infancy of a speech, as in its old
age, many words expressing different ideas, but which sound somewhat
alike, become a single term. In English gypsy I have found as many as
eight or ten Hindi words thus concentrated into one.
Another cure for a fever. The sufferer goes in the forest and finds a
young tree. When the first rays of the rising sun fall on it the patient
shakes it with all his might and exclaims:--
"Shilályi, shilályi prejia
Káthe tu beshá, káthe tu beshá!
"Fever, fever, go away!
Here shalt thou stay. Here shalt thou stay!"
It is here plain that the shaking the sapling is intended to transfer
the shakes, as the chill and shuddering of the fever is called in America,
to the tree.
"Then the fever passes into the tree." Perhaps it was in this way that
the aspen learned to tremble. But among the gypsies in the south of
Hungary, among whom the vaccination or inoculation of trees is greatly the
fashion, a hole is bored into the wood, into which the patient spits
thrice, repeats the spell, and then stops the hole with a plug. The boring
of holes in trees or transferring illness to them is also practised
without formulas of speech. Thus, if while a man is lying down or sitting
p. 18
in the spring he hears the song of the cuckoo he believes that he will
be ill all the time for a year to come, especially with fevers, unless he
goes. nine times to a tree, bores a hole in it, and spits into it three
times. Then he is safe. In German mythology "the cuckoo is a bird which
brings bad luck" (FRIEDRICH), and the inhabitants of Haiterbach were so
persuaded of this that they introduced a prayer against it into their
church service, whence they got the name of cuckoos (WOLF, "Zeitschrift
für Deutsche Myth," Vol. i. p. 440). It announces to men the infidelity of
wives, and tells listeners how many years they have to live.
It is possible that this is a relic of an old form of sacrifice, or
proof that the idea occurs to all men of thus making a casket of a tree.
The occasional discovery of stone axe-heads in very old trees in America
renders this probable. And where the wood grows up and encloses the object
it would very rarely happen that it would ever be discovered. It should be
added to the previous instance that when they have closed the hole, the
Transylvanian gypsies eat some of the bark of the next tree.
Another cure for fever is effected by going in the morning before
sunrise to the bank of a stream, and digging a hole with some object--for
instance, a knife--which has never been used. Into this hole the patient
makes water, then fills up the hole, saying:--
"Shilályi áč kathe
Ná ává kiyá mánge!
Sutyárá andré čik!
Avá kiyá mánge
Káná káthe ná hin páńi!"
"Fever stay here!
Do not come to me!
Dry up in dust,
Come unto me
When no water is here."
Dr. WLISLOCKI translates this last line, "When there is no more water
in the river," which is certainly what is meant. "While water
p. 19
runs or grass grows," &c. is a formula common to ail countries. Another
cure for fever is this: the patient must take a kreutzer, an egg, and a
handful of salt, and before sunrise go with them to a cross-road, throw
them away backwards, and repeat:--
"Káná ádálá kiyá mánge áven
Âvâ tu kiyâ mánge shilályi."
"When these things again I see,
Fever then return to me."
Or literally, "When these things to me come." For the next three days
the invalid must not touch money, eggs, or salt. There is an old MS.
collection of English charms and ceremonies, professedly of "black
witchcraft," in which we are told that if a girl will walk stark-naked by
the light of the full moon round a field or a house, and cast behind her
at every step a handful of salt, she will get the lover whom she desires.
Salt, says MORESINUS, was sacred to the infernal deities, and it was a
symbol of the soul, or of life, because it preserved the body while in it
(PITISCUS, "Leg. Ant. Rom." ii. p. 675). The devil never eats salt. Once
there was in Germany a peasant who had a witch for a wife, and the devil
invited them to supper. But all the dishes were without any seasoning, and
the peasant, despite all nudges and hints to hold his tongue kept crying
for salt. And when it was brought and he said, "Thank God, here is salt at
last!" the whole Spuck, or ghastly scene, vanished (HORST, "Dćmonomagie,"
Frankfurt, 1818, vol. ii. p. 213). For a great deal of further information
and symbolism on and of salt, including all the views of the ancient
Rabbis and modern rationalists on the subject of Lot's wife, the reader
may consult "Symbolik und Mythologie der Natur," by J. B. FRIEDRICH,
Wurzburg, 1859: "Salt is put into love-philtres and charms to ensure the
duration of an attachment; in some Eastern countries it is carried in a
little bag as an amulet to preserve health."
Another cure for fever. The patient must drink, from a new jug, water
from three brooks, and after every drink throw into the running
p. 20
stream a handful of salt. Then he must make water into the first and
say--
"Káthe hin t'ro sherro!"
"Here is thy head!"
At the second he repeats the sacred ceremony and murmurs
"Káthe hin t'ro perá!"
"Here is thy belly!"
And again at the third he exclaims:--
"Te kathehin t're punrá.
Já átunci ándre páńi!"
"And here are thy feet.
Go now into the water!"
But while passing from one stream to another he must not look back
once, for then he might behold the dread demon of the fever which follows
him, neither must he open his mouth, except while uttering the charm, for
then the fever would at once enter his body again through the portal thus
left unclosed. This walking on in apprehension of beholding the ugly
spectre will recall to the reader a passage in the "Ancient Mariner," of
the man who walks in fear and dread,
"Nor turns around his head,
For well he knows a frightful fiend
Doth close behind him tread."
The wise wives among the gypsies in Hungary have many kinds of
miraculous salves for sale to cure different disorders. These they declare
are made from the fat of dogs, bears, wolves, frogs, and the like. As in
all fetish remedies they are said to be of strange or revolting materials,
like those used by Canidia of yore, the witches of Shakespeare and Ben
Jonson, and of Burns in Tam O'Shanter.
When a man has been "struck by a spirit" there results a sore
p. 27
swelling or boil, which is cured by a sorceress as follows: The patient
is put into a tent by himself, and is given divers drinks by his attendant
then she rubs the sufferer with a salve, the secret of which is known only
to her, while she chants:--
"Prejiá, prejiá, prejiá,
Kiyá miseçeske, ác odoy;
Trianda sapa the çaven tut,
Trianda jiuklá tut čingeren,
Trianda káçná tut čunáven!"
"Begone, begone, begone
To the Evil One; stay there.
May thirty snakes devour thee,
Thirty dogs tear thee,
Thirty cocks swallow thee!"
After this she slaughters a black hen, splits it open, and lays it on
the boil. Then the sufferer must drink water from three springs or
rivulets, and throw wood nine times into the fire daily until he is well.
But black hens cost money, according to WLISLOCKI; albeit the gypsies,
like the children of the Mist in "Waverley," are believed to be acquainted
with a far more economical and direct method of obtaining such
commodities. Therefore this expensive and high-class cure is not often
resorted to, and when it is the sorceress generally substitutes something
cheaper than poultry. It may be here observed that the black hen
occurs frequently in medićval witch-lore and legend as a demon-symbol
(WOLF, "Niederländische Sagen," pp. 647, 650). Thus the bones of sorcerors
turn into black hens and chickens, and it is well if your black hen dies,
for if she had not you would have perished in her place. Black hens were
walled up in castles as sacrifices to the devil, that the walls might long
endure; hence the same fowl occurs in the arms of the family of Henneberg
(NORK, "Mythologie der Volksagen," p. 381). The lore on this subject is
very extensive.
The following remedy against headache is in general use among
Transylvanian gypsies. The patient's head is rubbed, and then washed, with
vinegar or hot water while the following charm is repeated:
p. 22
"Oh duk ándro m'ro shero
The o dád miseçesero,
Adá dikhel ákáná,
Man tu máy dostá, márdyás,
Miro shero tu márdyás!
Tu ná ač tu ándre me.
Já tu, já tu, já kere.
Káy tu miseç čučides,
Odoy, odoy sikoves!
Ko jál pro m'ro ushályin,
Adáleske e duk hin!"
Oh, pain in my head,
The father of all evil,
Look upon thee now!
Thou hast greatly pained me,
Thou tormentest my head,
Remain not in me!
Go thou, go thou, go home,
Whence thou, Evil One, didst suck,
Thither, thither hasten!
Who treads upon my shadow,
To him be the pain!"
It will be seen that the principle of treading on the tail of the coat
practised in Ireland is much outdone by the gypsies who give a headache to
any one who so much as treads on their shadows. And it is not difficult to
understand that, as with children, the rubbing the head, the bathing it
with warm water or vinegar, and, finally, the singing a soothing song, may
all conduce to a cure. The readers of "Helen's Babies" will remember the
cures habitually wrought on Budge by singing to him, "Charley boy one
day." Gypsies are in many respects mere children, or little Budges. There
can be no doubt that where faith is very strong, and imagination is
lively, cures which seem to border on the miraculous are often
effected--and this is, indeed, the basis of all miracle as applied to
relieving bodily afflictions. All of this may be, if not as yet fully
explained by physiology, at least shown to probably
p. 23
rest on a material basis. But no sound system of cure can be founded on
it, because there is never any certainty, especially for difficult and
serious disorders, that they can ever be healed twice in succession. The
"faith" exacted is sometimes a purely hereditary gift, at other times
merely a form of blind ignorance and credulity. It may vividly influence
all the body, and it may fail to act altogether. But the "Faith Healer"
and "Christian Scientist," or "Metaphysical Doctor," push boldly on, and
when they here and there heal a patient once, it is published to the four
winds as a proof of invariable infallibility. And as everybody believes
that he has "faith," so he hopes to be cured. In popular custom for a man
to say he believes in anything, and to be sure that he
really has nothing against it, constitutes as much "faith" as most men
understand. A man may be utterly destitute of any moral principle and yet
live in a constant state of "faith" and pious conviction. Here the
capacity for cure by means of charms is complete.
In connection with these charms for the head we may find not less
interesting those in reference to the hair, as given by the same
authority, Dr. von WLISLOCKI. The greatest pains are taken to ensure even
for the new-born child what is called a full head, because every one who
dies bald is turned into a fish, and must remain in this form till he has
collected as many hairs as would make an ordinary wig. But this lasts a
long time, since he can find but a single hair every month or moon. The
moon is in many ways connected in gypsy faith with the hair. He who sleeps
bare-headed in its light will lose his hair, or else it will become white.
To have a heavy growth a man must scoop up with his left hand water from a
running brook, against the current, and pour it on his head.
Immediately after the first bathing of a newly-born child, and its
anointing, its forehead and neck are marked with a semicircle--perhaps
meant to indicate the moon--made with a salve called barcali,
intended to promote the growth of the hair. A brew, or mess, is made from
beans and the blood of a cow. Hairs are taken from the heads of the
p. 24
father and mother, which hairs are burnt to a powder and mixed with the
brew. It is remarkable that the beans are only used for a boy, their
object being to insure for him great virile or sexual power. "The bean,"
says FRIEDRICH ("Sym. d. N."), "is an erotic symbol, or one signifying
sexual pleasure." Hence it was forbidden to the Egyptian priests, the
Pythagoreans, the priests of Jupiter in Rome, and to the Jewish high
priests on certain festivals. But if the child is a girl, the seeds of the
pumpkin or sunflower are substituted for beans, because the latter would
make her barren.
It is an old belief, and one widely spread, that if the witches or the
devil can get a lock of anybody's hair, they can work him evil. The
gypsies have the following articles of faith as regards hairs:--
Should birds find any, and build them into their nests, the man who
lost them will suffer from headaches until, during the wane of the moon,
he rubs his head with the yolk of eggs and washes it clean in running
water. It would be very curious if this method of cleaning the hair and
giving it a soft gloss, so much in vogue among English ladies, should have
originated in sorcery. Beyond this, the sufferer must mix some of his
hairs with food and give them to a white dog to eat.
If hairs which have fallen or been cut away are found by a snake and
carried into its hole, the man from whom they came will continue to lose
more until those in the snake's nest are quite decayed.
If you see human hairs in the road do not tread on them, since, in that
case, if they came from a lunatic, you, too, will go mad. According to
MARCELLUS BURDIGALENSIS, if you pick up some hairs in the road just before
entering a city gate, tie one to your own head, and, throwing the rest
away, walk on without looking behind you, you can cure a headache. I have
found nearly the same charm for the same purpose in Florence, but
accompanied by the incantation which is wanting in MARCELLUS. Also his
cure for headache with ivy from the head of a statue, which is still used
in Tuscany with the incantation which the Roman omits.
p. 25
Finding a hair hanging to your coat, carefully burn it, since you may
by so doing escape injury by witchcraft. And we may remark in confirmation
of this, that when you see a long hair on a man's coat it is an almost
certain sign that he has been among the witches, or is bewitched; as the
Countess thought when she found one clinging to the button of her lover,
Von Adelstein, as set forth in "Meister Karl's Sketch-book."
But to bewitch your enemy get some of his combed-out hair, steep it in
your own water, and then throw it on his garments. Then he will have no
rest by night or day. I have observed that in all the Tuscan charms
intended to torment a foe, the objects employed are like this of a
disgusting nature.
If a wife will hold her husband to her in love, she must take of her
own hair and bind it to his. This must be done three times by full
moonlight.
Or if a maid will win the love of a young man, she must take of her own
hair, mix it with earth from his footsteps--"und mischt diese mit dem
Speichel einer läufigen Hundinn auf"--burn the whole to powder, and so
manage that the victim shall eat it--which, it is needless to say, it is
not likely that he will do, knowing what it is. Earth from the footsteps
of any one is regarded as a very powerful means of bewitching him in
Italian and ancient sorcery.
If a man bind the combings of his hair to the mane of a strange horse
it will be wild and shy till the hairs are removed.
For easy childbirth red hair is sewed in a small bag and carried on the
belly next the skin during pregnancy. Red hair indicates good luck, and is
called bálá kámeskro, or sun-hairs, which indicates its Indian
origin.
If any one dreams much of the dead, let him sew some of his hair into
an old shoe, and give it to any beggar. Thereby he will prevent evil
spirits from annoying him.
If a child suffers from sleeplessness, some of its mother's hair should
be sewed into its wrappings, and others pulverized, mixed with a decoction
p. 26
of elderberries, be given it to drink. In German Folk-lore, as I shall
show more fully anon, the elder often occurs as a plant specially
identified with sorcery. In gypsy it is called yakori bengeskro, or
the devil's eye, from its berries.
Nails cut on Friday should be burned, and the ashes mingled with the
fodder of cattle, who are thus ensured against being stolen or attacked by
wild beasts. If children are dwarfish, the same ashes in their food will
make them grow. If a child suffers from pains in the stomach, a bit of
nail must be clipped from its every finger; this is mixed with the dried
dung of a foal, and the patient exposed to the smoke while it is burned.
A child's first tooth must, when it falls out, be thrown into a hollow
tree. Those which come out in the seventh year are carefully kept, and
whenever the child suffers from toothache, one is thrown into a stream.
Teeth which have been buried for many years, serve to make a singular
fetish. They are mingled with the bones of a tree-frog, and the whole then
sewed up in a little bag. If a man has anything for sale, and will draw or
rub this bag over it, he will have many offers or customers for the
articles thus enchanted. The bones are prepared by putting the frog into a
glass or earthen receptacle full of small holes. This is buried in an
ant-hill. The ants enter the holes and eat away all the flesh, leaving the
bones which after a few weeks are removed. 1
To bear healthy and strong children women wear a string of bears' claws
and children's teeth. Dr. von WLISLOCKI cites, apropos of this, a
passage from JACOBUS RUEFF, "Von Empfengnussen": "Etlich schwanger wyber
pflägend einen bären klauen von einem bären tapen yngefaszet am hals zuo
tragen" (Some women when with child are accustomed to
p. 27-
wear mounted bears' claws on their necks). In like manner boars' teeth,
which much resemble them, are still very commonly worn in Austria and
Italy and almost over all Europe and the East. It is but a few days since
I here, in Florence, met with a young English lady who had bought a very
large one mounted in silver as a brooch, but who was utterly unaware that
there was any meaning attached to it. 1
I have a very ancient bear's tooth and whistle in silver, meant for a
teething child. It came from Munich.
Pain in the eyes is cured with a wash made of spring or well water and
saffron. During the application the following is recited
"Oh dukh ándrál yákhá
Já ándré páńi
Já andrál páńi
Andre safráne
André pçuv.
Já andrál pçuv
Kiyá Pçuvusheske--
Odoy hin cerçá,
Odoy ja te ça."
Oh, pain from the eyes
Go into the water,
Go out of the water
Into the saffron,
Go out of the saffron
Into the earth.
To the Earth-Spirit.
There's thy home.
There go and eat."
This incantation casts light upon the earliest Shamanic remedies. When
it was discovered that certain herbs really possessed curative qualities,
this was attributed to inherent magic virtues. The increase of
their power by combining them with water, or mingling them, was due to
p. 28
mystic affinities by which a spirit passed from one to another. The
Spirit of Earth went into saffron, that of saffron into water. The
magician thus, by a song sent the pain into its medical affinity, and so
on back to the source whence it came. From early times saffron, as one of
the earliest flowers of spring, owing to its colour, was consecrated to
magic and love. Eos, the goddess of the Aurora, was called κροκοτιεπλος
{Greek krokotieplos}, the one with the saffron garment.
Therefore the public women wore a yellow robe. Even in Christian symbolism
it meant love, as PORTALIS declares: "In the Christian religion the
colours saffron and orange were the symbols of God embracing the heart and
illuminating the souls of the faithful" ("Des Couleurs Symboliques,"
Paris, 1837, p. 240). So we can trace the chain from the prehistoric
barbarous Shamanism, preserved by the gypsies, to the Greek, and from the
Greek to the medićval form still existent.
The same sympathetic process of transmission may be traced in the
remedy for the erysipelas. The blood of a bullfinch is put into a new
vessel with scraped elder-bark, and then laid on a cloth with which the
eyes are bound up overnight. Meanwhile the patient repeats:--
"Duy yákhá hin mánge
Duy punrá hin mánge
Dukh ándrál yákhá
Já ándre punrá
Já ándrál punrá,
Já ándre pçuv,
Já ándrál pçuv
Andro meriben!"
"I have two eyes,
I have two feet,
Pain from my eyes
Go into my feet!
Go from my feet,
Go into the earth
Go from the earth
Into death!"
We have here in the elder-bark associations of magic which are
p. 29
ancient and widely spread, and which still exist; for at the present
day country people in New England attribute to it curative virtues which
it really does not possess. From the earliest times among the Northern
races the Lady Elder, as we may learn from the Edda, or FIN MAGNUSEN ("Priscć
veterum Borealium Mythologić Lexicon," pp. 21, 239), and NYERUP ("Worterbuch
der Scandinavischen Mythologie"), had an unearthly, ghostly reputation.
Growing in lonely, gloomy places its form and the smell of its flowers
seemed repulsive, so that it was associated with death, and some derived
its name from Frau Holle, the sorceress and goddess of death. But SCHWENKI
("Mythologie der Slaven") with more probability traces it from hohl,
i.e., hollow, and as spirits were believed to dwell in all hollow
trees, they were always in its joints. The ancient Lithuanians, he informs
us, worshipped their god Puschkeit, who was a form of Pluto, in fear and
trembling at dusk, and left their offerings under the elder-tree.
Everybody has seen the little puppets made of a piece of elder-pith with
half a bullet under them, so that they always stand upright, and jump up
when thrown down. Among the Slovaks these seem to have had some magical
application. Perhaps their priests persuaded them that these jumping Jacks
were miraculous, for they called them Pikuljk, a name derived from Peklo,
the under-world. They still believe in a Pikuljk, who is a servant of the
Evil One. He does all kinds of favours for men, but ends by getting their
souls. The ancestors of the Poles were accustomed to bury all their sins
and sorrows under elder-trees, thinking that they thereby gave to the
lower world what properly belonged to it. This corresponds accurately to
the gypsy incantation which passes the disease on from the elder bark into
the earth, and from earth unto death. Frau Ellhorn, or Ellen, was the old
German name for this plant. "Frau, perhaps, as appropriate to the female
elf who dwelt in it" (FRIEDRICH, "Symbolik," p. 293). When it was
necessary to cut one down, the peasant always knelt first before it and
prayed: "Lady Ellhorn, give me of thy wood, and I will give thee of mine
when it shall grow in the forest." GRIMM ("Deutsche Mythologie,"
p. 30
cxvi.) cites from a MS. Of 1727 the following: "Paga nismo ortum
debet superstitio, sambucam non esse exscindendum nisi prius rogata
permissione his verbis: Mater Sambuci permitte mihi tuć cćdere sylvam!"
On the other hand, Elder had certain protective and healing virtues. Hung
before a stable door it warded off witchcraft, and he who planted it
conciliated evil spirits. And if a twig of it were planted on a grave and
it grew, that was a sign that the soul of the deceased was happy, which is
the probable reason why the very old Jewish cemetery in Prague was planted
full of elders. In a very curious and rare work, entitled "Blockesberge
Berichtung (Leipzig, 1669), by JOHN PRĆTORIUS, devoted to "the Witch-ride
and Sorcery-Sabbath," the author tells us that witches make great use of
nine special herbs--"nam in herbis, verbis et lapidibus magna vis est."
Among these is Elder, of which the peasants make wreaths, which, if they
wear on Walpurgis night, they can see the sorceresses as they sweep
through the air on their brooms, dragons, goats, and other strange steeds
to the Infernal Dance. Or when they anderswo herumvagiren--"go
vagabonding anywhere else." "Yea, and I know one fellow who sware unto
men, that by means of this herb he once saw certain witches churning
butter busily, and that on a roof, but I mistrust that this was a sell (Schnake),
and that the true name of this knave was Butyrolambius" ("Blocksberg,"
p. 475). The same author informs us that Hollunder (or Elder) is so
called from hohl, or hollow, or else is an anagram of Unholden,
unholy spirits, and some people call it Alhuren, from its
connection with witches and debauchery, even as CORDUS writes:--
"When elder blossoms bloom upon the bush,
Then women's hearts to sensual pleasure rush."
He closes his comments on this subject with the dry remark that if the
people of Leipzig wear, as is their wont, garlands of elder with the
object of preventing breaches of the seventh commandment among them, it
has in this instance, at least, utterly failed to produce the expected
effect. "Quasi! creadt Judćus Apella!"
p. 31
It should be mentioned that in the gypsy spell the next morning the
cloth with the elder-bark must be thrown into the next running water. To
cure toothache the Transylvanian gypsies wind a barley-straw round a
stone, which is thrown into a running stream, while saying:--
"Oh dukh ándre m're dándá,
Tu ná báres cingerá!
Ná ává kiyá mánge,
Mire muy ná hin kere!
Tut ńikáná me kámáv,
Ač tu mánge pál páčá;
Káná e pçus yárpakri
Avel tele páńori!"
"Oh, pain in my teeth,
Trouble me not so greatly!
Do not come to me,
My mouth is not thy house.
I love thee not all,
Stay thou away from me;
When this straw is in the brook
Go away into the water!"
Straw was anciently a symbol of emptiness, unfruitfulness, and death,
and it is evidently used in this sense by the gypsies, or derived by them
from some tradition connected with it. A feigned or fruitless marriage is
indicated in Germany by the terms Strohwittwer and Strohwittwe.
From the earliest times in France the breaking a straw signified that a
compact was broken with a man because there was nothing in him. Thus in
922 the barons of Charles the Simple, in dethroning him, broke the straws
which they held (CHARLOTTE DE LA TOUR, "Symbols of Flowers").
Still, straws have something in them. She who will lay straws on the
table in the full moonlight by an open window, especially on Saturday
night, and will repeat:--
"Straw, draw, crow craw,
By my life I give thee law"
then the straws will become fairies and dance to the cawing of a crow
p. 32
who will come and sit on the ]edge of the window. And so witches were
wont to make a man of straw, as did Mother Gookin, in Hawthorne's tale,
and unto these they gave life, whence the saying of a man of straw and
straw bail, albeit this latter is deemed by some to be related to the
breaking of straws and of dependence, as told in the tale of Charles the
Simple. Straw-lore is extensive and curious. As in elder-stalks, small
fairies make their homes in its tubes. To strew chopped straw before the
house of a bride was such an insult to her character, in Germany, and so
common that laws were passed against it. I possess a work printed about
1650, entitled "De Injuriis quć haud raro Novis Nuptis inferri solent. I.
Per sparsionem dissectorum culmorum frugum. Germ. Dusch das Werckerling
Streuen," &c. An immense amount of learned quotation and reference by its
author indicates that this custom which was influenced by superstition,
was very extensively written on in its time. It was allied to the binding
of knots and other magic ceremonies to prevent the consummation of
marriages.
There is a very curious principle involved in curing certain disorders
or afflictions by means of spells or verses. A certain word is repeated
many times in a mysterious manner, so that it strikes the imagination of
the sufferer. There is found in the Slavonian countries a woolly
caterpillar called Wolos, whose bite, or rather touch, is much
dreaded. I have myself, when a boy, been stung by such a creature in the
United States. As I remember, it was like the sting of a bee. The
following (Malo Russian) spell against it was given me by Prof.
DRAGOMANOFF in Geneva. It is supposed that a certain kind of disorder, or
cutaneous eruption, is caused by the Wolos:--
"Wolosni--Wolosnicéh!
Holy Wolos.
Once a man drove over empty roads
With empty oxen,
To an empty field,
To harvest empty corn,
And gather it in empty ricks.
p. 33
He gathered the empty sheaves,
Laid them in empty Wagons,
Drove over empty roads,
Unto an empty threshing-floor.
The empty labourers threshed it,
And bore it to the empty Mill.
The empty baker (woman)
Mixed it in an empty trough,
And baked it in an empty oven.
The empty people ate the empty bread.
So may the Wolos swallow this disorder
From the empty ----- (here the name of the patient.)
What is here understood by "empty" is that the swelling is taken away,
subtracted, or emptied, by virtue of the repetition of the word, as if one
should say, "Be thou void. Depart! depart! depart! Avoid me!"
There is a very curious incantation also apparently of Indian-gypsy
origin, since it refers to the spirits of the water who cause diseases. In
this instance they are supposed to be exorcised by Saint Paphnutius, who
is a later Slavonian-Christian addition to the old Shamanic spell. In the
Accadian-Chaldćan formulas these spirits are seven; here they are seventy.
The formula in question is against the fever:--
"In the name of God and his Son and the Holy Ghost. Amen!
"Seventy fair maids went up out of the ocean.
"They met the Saint Paphnutius, who asked:
"'Whence come ye, oh Maidens?'
"They answered, 'From the ocean-sea.
"'We go into the world to break the bones of men.
"'To give them the fever. (To make hot and cold).'"
Then the holy Paphnutius began to beat them, and gave them every one
seventy-seven days:--
"They began to pray, 'O holy Paphnutius!
"'Forgive us, (and) whoever shall bear with him (thy) name, or write
it, him we will leave in peace.
"'We will depart from him
"'Over the streams, over the seas.
p. 34
"'Over the reeds (canes) and marshes.
"'O holy Paphnutius, sua misericordia, of thy mercy,
"'Have pity on thy slave, even on the sick man ------ (the name is here
uttered).
"'Free him from fever!'"
It is remarkable that, as a certain mysterious worm, caterpillar, or
small lizard (accounts differ) among the Algonkin Indians is supposed to
become at will a dragon, or sorcerer, or spirit, to be invoked or called
on so the Wolos worm is also invoked, sometimes as a saint or sorcerer,
and sometimes as a spirit who scatters disease. The following gypsy-Slavonian
incantation over an invalid has much in common with the old Chaldćan
spells
"Wolosni, Wolosnicéh!
Thou holy Wolos!
God calls thee unto his dwelling,
Unto his seat.
Thou shalt not remain here,
To break the yellow bones.
To drink the red blood,
To dry up the white body.
Go forth as the bright sun
Goes forth over the mountains,
Out from the seventy-seven veins,
Out from the seventy limbs (parts of the body).
Before I shall recognize thee,
Before I did not name thee (call on thee).
But now I know who thou art;
I began to pray to the mother of God,
And the mother of God began to aid me.
Go as the wind goes over the meadows or the shore (or banks),
As the waves roll over the waters,
So may the Wolos go from ------
The man who is born,
Who is consecrated with prayer."
The Shamanic worship of water as a spirit is extremely ancient, and is
distinctly recognized as such by the formulas of the Church in which water
is called "this creature." The water spirits play a leading part in the
gypsy mythology. The following gypsy-Slav
p. 35
charm, to consecrate a swarm of bees, was also given to me by Prof.
DRAGOMANOFF, who had learned it from a peasant:--
"One goes to the water and makes his prayer and greets the water
thus:--
"Hail to thee, Water!
Thou Water, Oliana!
Created by God,
And thou, oh Earth, Titiana!
And ye the near springs, brooks and rivulets,
Thou Water, Oliana,
Thou goest over the earth,
Over the neighbouring fountains and streams,
Down unto the sea,
Thou dost purify the sea,
The sand, the rocks, and the roots--
I pray thee grant me
Of the water of this lake,
To aid me,
To sprinkle my bees.
I will speak a word,
And God will give me help,
The all-holy Mother of God,
The mother of Christ,
Will aid me,
And the holy Father
The holy Zosimos, Sabbateus and the holy Friday Parascabeah!
"When this is said take the water and bear it home without looking
back. Then the bees are to be sprinkled therewith."
The following Malo-Russian formula from the same authority, though
repointed and gilt with Greek Christianity, is old heathen, and especially
interesting since Prof. DRAGOMANOFF traces it to a Finnic Shaman source:--
"CHARM AGAINST THE BITE OF A SERPENT.
"The holy Virgin sent a man
Unto Mount Sion,
Upon this mountain
Is the city of Babylon,
And in the city of Babylon
Lives Queen Volga.p. 36
Oh Queen Volga,
Why dost thou not teach
This servant of God
(Here the name of the one bitten by a serpent is mentioned)
So that he may not be bitten
By serpents?"
(The reply of Queen Volga)
"Not only will I teach my descendants
But I also will prostrate myself
Before the Lord God."
"Volga is the name of a legendary heathen princess of Kief, who was
baptized and sainted by the Russian Church. The feminine form, Olga, or
Volga, corresponds to the masculine name Oleg, or Olg, the earliest
legendary character of Kief. His surname was Viechtchig--the sage or
sorcerer" (i.e., wizard, and from a cognate root). "In popular
songs he is called Volga, or Volkh, which is related to Volkv, a sorcerer.
The Russian annals speak of the Volkv of Finland, who are represented as
Shamans." Niya Predania i Raikazi ("Traditions and Popular Tales of
Lesser Russia," by M. DRAGOMANOFF, Kief, 1876) in Russian.
I have in the chapter on curing the disorders of children spoken of
Lilith, or Herodias, who steals the new-born infants. She and her twelve
daughters are also types of the different kinds of fever for which the
gypsies have so many cures of the same character, precisely as those which
were used by the old Bogomiles. The characteristic point is that this
female spirit is everywhere regarded as the cause of catalepsy or fits.
Hence the invocation to St. Sisinie is used in driving them away. This
invocation written, is carried as an amulet or fetish. I give the
translation of one of these from the Roumanian, in which the Holy Virgin
is taken as the healer. It is against cramp in the night:--
"SPELL AGAINST NIGHT-CRAMP.
"There is a mighty hill, and on this hill is a golden apple-tree,
"Under the golden apple-tree is a golden stool.
"On the stool--who sits there?
"There sits the Mother of God with Saint Maria; with the boxes in her
right hand, with the cup in her left.
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"She looks up and sees naught, she looks down and sees my Lord and Lady
Disease.
"Lords and Ladies Cramp, Lord and Lady Vampire--Lord Wehrwolf and his
wives.
"They are going to ------ (the sufferer), to drink his blood and put in
him a foul heart.
"The Mother of God, when she saw them, went down to them, spoke to
them, and asked them, 'Whither go ye, Lord and Lady Disease,--Lords and
Ladies Cramp, &c.?'
"'We go to ------ to drink his blood, to change his heart to a foul
one.'
"'No, ye shall return; give him his blood back, restore him his own
heart, and leave him immediately.'
"Cramps of the night, cramps of the midnight, cramps of the day, cramps
wherever they are. From water, from the wind, go out from the brain, from
the light of he face, from the hearing of the ears, from his heart, from
his hands and feet, from the soles of his feet.
"Go and hide where black cocks never crow, 1
where men never go, where no beast roars.
"Hide yourself there, stop there, and never show yourself more!
"May ------ remain pure and glad, as he was made by God, and was fated
by the Mother of God!
"The spell is mine--the cure is God's."
In reference to the name Herodias (here identified with Lilith, the
Hebrew mother of all devils and goblins); it was a great puzzle to the
writers on witchcraft why the Italian witches always said they had two
queens whom they worshipped--Diana and Herodias. The latter seems to have
specially presided at the witch-dance. In this we can see an evident
connection with the Herodias of the New Testament.
I add to this a few more very curious old Slavonian spells from Dr.
Gaster's work, as they admirably illustrate one of the principal and most
interesting subjects connected with the gypsy witchcraft; that is to say,
its relation to early Shamanism and the forms in which its incantations
were expressed. In all of these it may be taken for granted, from a great
number of closely-allied examples, that the Christianity in them is recent
and that they all go back to the earliest heathen times. The
p. 38
following formula, dating from 1423, against snake-bites bears the
title:--
"PRAYER OF ST. PAUL AGAINST SNAKES.
"In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. I once was a
persecutor, but am now a true follower; and I went from my dwelling-place
in Sicily, and they set light to a trunk, and a snake came therefrom and
bit my right hand and hung from it. But I had in me the power of God, and
I shook it off into the burning fire and it was destroyed, and I suffered
no ill from the bite. I laid myself down to sleep; then the mighty angel
said: 'Saul, Paul, stand up and receive this writing'; and I found in it
the following words:
"'I exorcise you, sixty and a half kinds of beasts that creep on the
earth, in the name of God, the Creator of Heaven and Earth, and in the
name of the immovable throne.
"'Serpent of Evil, I exorcise thee in the name of the burning river
which rises under the footstool of the Saviour, and in the name of His
incorporeal angels!
"'Thou snake of the tribe of basilisks, thou foul-headed snake,
twelve-headed snake, variegated snake, dragon-like snake, that art on the
right side of hell, whomsoever thou bitest thou shalt have no power to
harm, and thou must go away with all the twenty-four kinds. If a man has
this prayer and this curse of the true, holy apostle, and a snake bites
him, then it will die on the spot, and the man that is bitten shall remain
unharmed, to the honour of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, now
and for all time. Amen.'"
It is not improbable that we have in PAUL and the Serpent and the
formula for curing its bite (which is a common symbol for all disease) a
souvenir of Esculapius, the all-healer, and his serpent. The following is
"a prayer against the toothache, to be carried about with one," i.e.,
as an amulet prayer:--
"SPELL FOR THE TOOTHACHE
"Saint Peter sat on a stone and wept. Christ came to him and said,
'Peter, why weepest thou?' Peter answered, 'Lord, my teeth pain me.' The
Lord thereupon ordered the worm in Peter's tooth to come out of it and
never more go in again. Scarcely had the worm come out when the pain
ceased. Then spoke Peter, 'I pray you, O Lord, that when these words be
written out and a man carries them he shall have no toothache.' And the
Lord answered, '"Tis well, Peter; so may it be!'"
It will hardly be urged that this Slavonian charm of Eastern origin
p. 39
could have been originated independently in England. The following,
which is there found in the north, is, as Gaster remarks, "in the same:
wording":--
"Peter was sitting on a marble stone,
And Jesus passed by.
Peter said, 'My Lord, my God,
How my tooth doth ache!'
Jesus said, Peter art whole
And whosoever keeps these words for My sake
Shall never have the toothache.'
The next specimen is a--
"CHARM AGAINST NOSE-BLEEDING.
"Zachariah was slain in the Lord's temple, and his blood turned into
stone. Then stop, O blood, for the Lord's servant, ------. I exorcise
thee, blood, that thou stoppest in the name of the Saviour, and by fear of
the priests when they perform the liturgy at the altar."
Those who sell these charms are almost universally supposed to be mere
quacks and humbugs. If this were the case, why do they so very carefully
learn and preserve these incantations, transmitting them
"as a rich legacy
Unto their issue."
But they really do believe in them, and will give great prices for
them. Prof. DRAGOMANOFF told me that once in Malo-Russia it became
generally known that he had made a MS. collection of such spells. A
peasant who was desirous of becoming a sorcerer, but who had very few
incantations of his own, went whenever he could by stealth into the
Professor's library and surreptitiously copied his incantations. And when
Prof. DRAGOMANOFF returned the next year to that neighbourhood, he found
the peasant doing a very good business as a conjuring doctor, or
faith-healer. I have a lady correspondent in the United States who has
been initiated into Voodoo and studied Indian-negro witchcraft under two
eminent teachers,
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one a woman, the other a man. The latter, who was at the very head of
the profession, sought the lady's acquaintance because he had heard that
she possessed some very valuable spells. In the fourth or highest degree,
as in Slavonian or Hungarian gypsy-magic, this Indian-Voodoo deals
exclusively with the spirits of the forest and stream.
M. Kounavine, as set forth by Dr. A. Elysseeff (Gypsy-Lore Journal,
July, 1890), gives a Russian gypsy incantation by which the fire is
invoked to cure illness. It is as follows:--
"Great Fire, my defender and protector, son of the celestial fire,
equal of the sun who cleanses the earth of foulness, deliver this man from
the evil sickness that torments him night and day!"
The fire is also invoked to punish, or as an ordeal, e.g.:--
"Fire, who punishest the evil-doer, who hatest falsehood, who scorchest
the impure, thou destroyest offenders; thy flame devoureth the earth.
Devour ------ if he says what is not true, if he thinks a lie, and if he
acts deceitfully."
These are pronounced by the gypsy sorcerer facing the burning hearth.
There is another in which fire is addressed as Jandra, and also invoked to
punish an offender:--
"Jandra, bearer of thunderbolts, great Periani (compare Parjana,
an epithet of Indra, Slavonic Perun), bearer of lightning, slay
with thy thunderbolt and burn with thy celestial fire him who dares to
violate his oath."
Footnotes
26:1 It is said that if the bones of
a green frog which has been eaten by ants are taken, those on the left
side will provoke hatred, and those on the right side excite love" ("Div.
Cur.," c. 23). . . . "One species of frog called rubeta, because it
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