Taboos On Leaving Food Over
From a like fear, no doubt, of sorcery, no one may touch the food which the king of Loango leaves upon his plate; it is buried in a hole in the ground. And no one may drink out of the king’s vessel. In antiquity the Romans used immediately to break the shells of eggs and of snails which they had eaten, in order to prevent enemies from making magic with them. The common practice, still observed among us, of breaking egg-shells after the eggs have been eaten may very well have originated in the same superstition. The superstitious fear of the magic that may be wrought on a man through the leavings of his food has had the beneficial effect of inducing many savages to destroy refuse which, if left to rot, might through its corruption have proved a real, not a merely imaginary, source of disease and death. Nor is it only the sanitary condition of a tribe which has benefited by this superstition; curiously enough the same baseless dread, the same false notion of causation, has indirectly strengthened the moral bonds of hospitality, honour, and good faith among men who entertain it. For it is obvious that no one who intends to harm a man by working magic on the refuse of his food will himself partake of that food, because if he did so he would, on the principles of sympathetic magic, suffer equally with his enemy from any injury done to the refuse. This is the idea which in primitive society lends sanctity to the bond produced by eating together; by participation in the same food two men give, as it were, hostages for their good behaviour; each guarantees the other that he will devise no mischief against him, since, being physically united with him by the common food in their stomachs, any harm he might do to his fellow would recoil on his own head with precisely the same force with which it fell on the head of his victim. In strict logic, however, the sympathetic bond lasts only so long as the food is in the stomach of each of the parties. Hence the covenant formed by eating together is less solemn and durable than the covenant formed by transfusing the blood of the covenanting parties into each other’s veins, for this transfusion seems to knit them together for life. |
Sponsored Ads:Related Articles:
ROMAN ANTIQUITIES / The Senate The Golden Bough / On The Animal Embodiments Of The Corn-Spirit The Golden Bough / Eating The God Among The Aztecs Myth, Ritual, and Religion / The Mental Condition Of Savages--Confusion With Nature--Totemism The Golden Bough / The Magician’S Progress The Golden Bough / The Occasional Expulsion Of Evils The Golden Bough / Incarnate Human Gods The Golden Bough / Dionysus, The Goat And The Bull The Golden Bough / The Transference To Men Myth, Ritual, and Religion / The Mental Condition Of Savages--Confusion With Nature--Totemism The Golden Bough / Killing The Sacred Bear The Golden Bough / The Egyptian And The Aino Types Of Sacrament Myth, Ritual, and Religion / New System Proposed The Golden Bough / Names Of The Dead Tabooed Myth, Ritual, and Religion / The Mental Condition Of Savages--Confusion With Nature--Totemism Also In This Category:
The Golden Bough - The Occasional Expulsion Of Evils - The Roman Saturnalia - Homoeopathic Or Imitative Magic - The Official Rites - The Magical Control Of Rain - Personal Names Tabooed - The Corn-Spirit As A Horse Or Mare - The Corn-Mother And The Corn-Maiden In Northern Europe - Processions With Sacred Animals - Names Of Gods Tabooed - The Periodic Expulsion Of Evils - Dionysus, The Goat And The Bull - The Corn-Spirit As A Cock - Eating The God Among The Aztecs - Artemis And Hippolytus Currently Online :0 member(s), 0 guest(s): , Crawler.de, Google, Cobion.com, Slurp, Speedy Spider Search : |
No comments yet
pygmalion ravens magistrates homer music gronw censors civilised support queen killing sestertium ahone diseases month whitsuntide similarity egyptian huntin blow writing knowledge means wood flame game faditra rajah contained diogenes europe laid pluto personal spirits hasten bark high stalks couples sacrifice fairy line june century respect character jews city winds sprinkle
© Copyright Mythology-Art.com {Contact Us}