登陆注册
26491800000406

第406章

Thus the Aino agree with the Druids in regarding mistletoe as a cure for almost every disease, and they agree with the ancient Italians that applied to women it helps them to bear children. Again, the Druidical notion that the mistletoe was an all-healer or panacea may be compared with a notion entertained by the Walos of Senegambia. These people have much veneration for a sort of mistletoe, which they call tob; they carry leaves of it on their persons when they go to war as a preservative against wounds, just as if the leaves were real talismans (gris-gris). The French writer who records this practice adds: Is it not very curious that the mistletoe should be in this part of Africa what it was in the superstitions of the Gauls? This prejudice, common to the two countries, may have the same origin; blacks and whites will doubtless have seen, each of them for themselves, something supernatural in a plant which grows and flourishes without having roots in the earth. May they not have believed, in fact, that it was a plant fallen from the sky, a gift of the divinity?

This suggestion as to the origin of the superstition is strongly confirmed by the Druidical belief, reported by Pliny, that whatever grew on an oak was sent from heaven and was a sign that the tree had been chosen by the god himself. Such a belief explains why the Druids cut the mistletoe, not with a common knife, but with a golden sickle, and why, when cut, it was not suffered to touch the earth; probably they thought that the celestial plant would have been profaned and its marvellous virtue lost by contact with the ground. With the ritual observed by the Druids in cutting the mistletoe we may compare the ritual which in Cambodia is prescribed in a similar case. They say that when you see an orchid growing as a parasite on a tamarind tree, you should dress in white, take a new earthenware pot, then climb the tree at noon, break off the plant, put it in the pot and let the pot fall to the ground. After that you make in the pot a decoction which confers the gift of invulnerability.

Thus just as in Africa the leaves of one parasitic plant are supposed to render the wearer invulnerable, so in Cambodia a decoction made from another parasitic plant is considered to render the same service to such as make use of it, whether by drinking or washing. We may conjecture that in both places the notion of invulnerability is suggested by the position of the plant, which, occupying a place of comparative security above the ground, appears to promise to its fortunate possessor a similar security from some of the ills that beset the life of man on earth. We have already met with examples of the store which the primitive mind sets on such vantage grounds.

Whatever may be the origin of these beliefs and practices concerning the mistletoe, certain it is that some of them have their analogies in the folk-lore of modern European peasants. For example, it is laid down as a rule in various parts of Europe that mistletoe may not be cut in the ordinary way but must be shot or knocked down with stones from the tree on which it is growing. Thus, in the Swiss canton of Aargau all parasitic plants are esteemed in a certain sense holy by the country folk, but most particularly so the mistletoe growing on an oak. They ascribe great powers to it, but shrink from cutting it off in the usual manner. Instead of that they procure it in the following manner. When the sun is in Sagittarius and the moon is on the wane, on the first, third, or fourth day before the new moon, one ought to shoot down with an arrow the mistletoe of an oak and to catch it with the left hand as it falls. Such mistletoe is a remedy for every ailment of children.

Here among the Swiss peasants, as among the Druids of old, special virtue is ascribed to mistletoe which grows on an oak: it may not be cut in the usual way: it must be caught as it falls to the ground; and it is esteemed a panacea for all diseases, at least of children. In Sweden, also, it is a popular superstition that if mistletoe is to possess its peculiar virtue, it must either be shot down out of the oak or knocked down with stones. Similarly, so late as the early part of the nineteenth century, people in Wales believed that for the mistletoe to have any power, it must be shot or struck down with stones off the tree where it grew.

同类推荐
  • 佛说佛地经

    佛说佛地经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 辽东行部志

    辽东行部志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 释迦如来应化录

    释迦如来应化录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 解除篇

    解除篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 郡楼夜宴留客

    郡楼夜宴留客

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 酒窝与面瘫

    酒窝与面瘫

    林雅致:空姐大学的大学生,今年20岁,家里很有钱,有实力,但是家里出现了变故,必须与更有实力的公司联姻才能挽救公司;表情丰富,爱好舞蹈和空手道泰宇:韩国人,名字是音译过来的,在中国是商界大亨,爱好蹦极,攀岩,一系列“作死”项目,今年25岁;面瘫【基本没有表情,对于冷漠的表情就是表里如一】,林雅致的联姻对象高糕:小胖纸,林雅致好朋友,讲义气,法医,比雅致大2岁,吃货程飘雨:程氏化妆品执行总裁,是林雅致和高糕的蓝颜
  • 方向

    方向

    本书收录了张殿权近年来发表的各种小说,包括生活、情感、感悟等等。
  • 心之灵

    心之灵

    但心有念,力能自生。
  • 骆小喵与李易阳的最美时光

    骆小喵与李易阳的最美时光

    男神我们来一场暖暖的夏恋。仿佛整个世界变得很小很小,成了一个圈,小小的圈里只有骆晓喵和李易阳。不管在追逐打闹的走廊,在吉他悠扬的校园林荫路,在青春飞扬的篮球场,在静默无声的图书馆……我们都能快速地找到彼此,这似乎是一种只属于我们之间的独有感应,就像奇妙的心有灵犀。
  • 亲爱的我想你

    亲爱的我想你

    想了很久,觉得还是要有个交代。虽然我不知道这个交代是对谁而言。也许是图个安心。看过许多作品,心中难免有些失望。毕竟我心中的一颗炙热对于这样的现实难免有些可惜。反复思量,重新拿起键盘。你好,粟素。
  • 杀戮大道

    杀戮大道

    剑乃杀器,兵器之皇者;剑之极道,莫非剑皇!少年本是天帝之子,流着鸿蒙祖血而生;身拥至强法诀武技,集天界万千宠爱于一身!可一朝被打落凡尘,只能孤单成长于一个下界小大陆!年至十六,被书院判定为天道的弃儿,遭天弃不能修炼,小小少年又该何去何从?孤身卷入阴谋,至亲无端被杀,天下满目皆敌!少年仗剑怒起,一个人,一把剑,斩天道、碎命运,剑动九天,走出一条杀戮大道,却留下一个无尽传说!
  • 唐吉诃德很不高兴

    唐吉诃德很不高兴

    描述的是家里蹲阿丘和自称是外星人的唐吉诃德眼中的社会
  • 轮回之破空

    轮回之破空

    一圈圈轮回,像一个个结,在你以为自己已经跳出这个结的时候,其实你只是绕了一个圆。
  • 醉丹青:杀手相公不好惹

    醉丹青:杀手相公不好惹

    因她母亲,他被生母抛弃、弟弟杀害,逃出生天后成了一名杀手。无端遇到她,以为是一场幸福,却是可笑的错误。他该恨她,但当有人要杀她母亲,他却为了她与人交易:“我为你杀人,直到一百次为止!”这些人中,甚至包括他的父母、包括她……他杀了血脉至亲,堕落成魔鬼,她却说不认识他……
  • 成为英雄吧

    成为英雄吧

    公元二零四三年,英雄联盟终於变成了全息游戏。我是英雄开发部的一名准英雄开发员,为了从无数份提案中筛选出真正的英雄,我们被送入虚拟的瓦罗然大陆作为一名孩子。无论是已有的提案还是个人创造的新提案,我们的目标是︰成为一名真正的英雄,在英雄联盟之中留下足迹。