The Transference To Men
“In one part of New Zealand an expiation for sin was felt to be necessary; a service was performed over an individual, by which all the sins of the tribe were supposed to be transferred to him, a fern stalk was previously tied to his person, with which he jumped into the river, and there unbinding, allowed it to float away to the sea, bearing their sins with it.” In great emergencies the sins of the Rajah of Manipur used to be transferred to somebody else, usually to a criminal, who earned his pardon by his vicarious sufferings. To effect the transference the Rajah and his wife, clad in fine robes, bathed on a scaffold erected in the bazaar, while the criminal crouched beneath it. With the water which dripped from them on him their sins also were washed away and fell on the human scapegoat. To complete the transference the Rajah and his wife made over their fine robes to their substitute, while they themselves, clad in new raiment, mixed with the people till evening. In Travancore, when a Rajah is near his end, they seek out a holy Brahman, who consents to take upon himself the sins of the dying man in consideration of the sum of ten thousand rupees. Thus prepared to immolate himself on the altar of duty, the saint is introduced into the chamber of death, and closely embraces the dying Rajah, saying to him, “O King, I undertake to bear all your sins and diseases. May your Highness live long and reign happily.” Having thus taken to himself the sins of the sufferer, he is sent away from the country and never more allowed to return. At Utch Kurgan in Turkestan Mr. Schuyler saw an old man who was said to get his living by taking on himself the sins of the dead, and thenceforth devoting his life to prayer for their souls. In Uganda, when an army had returned from war, and the gods warned the king by their oracles that some evil had attached itself to the soldiers, it was customary to pick out a woman slave from the captives, together with a cow, a goat, a fowl, and a dog from the booty, and to send them back under a strong guard to the borders of the country from which they had come. There their limbs were broken and they were left to die; for they were too crippled to crawl back to Uganda. In order to ensure the transference of the evil to these substitutes, bunches of grass were rubbed over the people and cattle and then tied to the victims. After that the army was pronounced clean and was allowed to return to the capital. So on his accession a new king of Uganda used to wound a man and send him away as a scapegoat to Bunyoro to carry away any uncleanliness that might attach to the king or queen. |
Sponsored Ads:Related Articles:
The Golden Bough / Adonis In Cyprus The Golden Bough / Iron Tabooed The Golden Bough / Numa And Egeria The Golden Bough / Eating The God Among The Aztecs ROMAN ANTIQUITIES / The Condemned In Hell The Golden Bough / Departmental Kings Of Nature ROMAN ANTIQUITIES / Private Rights Of Roman Citizens 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 Myth And Ritual Of Attis The Golden Bough / The Marriage Of The Gods The Golden Bough / Divorce Of The Spiritual From The Temporal Power The Golden Bough / Kings Killed At The End Of A Fixed Term The Golden Bough / Names Of Gods Tabooed Also In This Category:
The Golden Bough - The Ritual Of Death And Resurrection - Sharp Weapons Tabooed - The External Soul In Plants - Blood Tabooed - Manslayers Tabooed - The External Soul In Folk-Tales - Foods Tabooed - The Official Rites - Dianus And Diana - The Influence Of The Sexes On Vegetation - The Public Magician - The Corn-Spirit As A Bull, Cow, Or Ox - The Head Tabooed - Attis, Adonis, And The Pig - The Egyptian And The Aino Types Of Sacrament Currently Online :8 member(s), 23 guest(s): Bluerose, CarpetShark, Cow, Guineapig, PuppyLove, RomanticRose, SplitDog, Stumped, Google, Cobion.com, Slurp, Yandex Search : |
No comments yet
late janus diana door wedding grove science revered feathers cosmogonic shine knotted cow burning tortoise practice contact peruvians fingers kindle boys ashes design lord iron pot leaves community fables samoa pausanias surrounded patricians spirit fatal daughter gwydion mythical feronia foot c gladiators records olympic wife all punishment gold warts stream apollo
© Copyright Mythology-Art.com {Contact Us}