Culture art. Primitive culture.CHAPTER III SURVIVAL IN CULTURE
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Culture art. Primitive culture.CHAPTER III SURVIVAL IN CULTURE
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Tylor, Edward Burnett, Sir, 1832-1917

"Primitive culture : researches into the development of mythology, philosophy, religion, language, art, and custom"

CHAPTER III.

SURVIVAL IN CULTURE.

Survival and Superstition Children's games Games of chance Tra-
ditional sayings Nursery poems Proverbs Riddles Signifi-
cance and survival in Customs : sneezing-formula, rite of foun-
dation-sacrifice, prejudice against saving a drowning man . . 70В 

CHAPTER III.

SURVIVAL IN. CULTURE.


Survival and Superstition Children's games Games of chance Tradi-
tional sayings Nursery poems Proverbs Riddles Significance and
survival in Customs : sneezing-formula, rite of foundation-sacrifice,
prejudice against saving a drowning man.

WHEN a custom, an art, or an opinion is fairly started
in the world, disturbing influences may long affect it so
slightly that it may keep its course from generation to
generation, as a stream once settled in its bed will flow on
for ages. This is mere permanence of culture ; and the
special wonder about it is that the change and revolution
of human affairs should have left so many of its feeblest
rivulets to run so long. On the Tatar steppes, six hun-
dred years ago, it was an offence to tread on the threshold
or touch the ropes in entering a tent, and so it appears to
be still. 1 Eighteen centuries ago Ovid mentions the vulgar i
Roman objection to marriages in May, .which he not un-|
reasonably explains by the occurrence in that month of the
funeral rites of the Lemuralia :

' Nee viduae taedis eadem nee virginis apta

Tempora. Quae nupsit, non diuturna fuit.
Hac quoque de causa, si te proverbia tangunt,
Mense malas Maio nubere volgus ait.' 2

The saying that marriages in May are unlucky survives

1 Will, de Rubruquis in Pinkerton, vol. vii. pp. 46, 67, 132 ; Michie.
4 Siberian Overland Route,' p. 96.

8 Ovid. Fast. v. 487. For modern Italy and France, see Edelestane dv
Meril, Etudes d'Archeol.' p. 121.

70

CUSTOMS. 71

I this day in England, a striking example how an idea,
meaning of which has perished for ages, may continue
sxist simply because it has existed.
_sfow there are .thousands of cases of this kind which
have become, so to speak, landmarks in the course of
culture. When in the process of time there has come
general change in the condition of a people, it is usual,
notwithstanding, to find much that manifestly had not its
origin in the new state of things, but has simply lasted on
into it. On the strength of these survivals, it becomes
possible to declare that the civilization of the pepple they
are observed among must have been derived from an earlier
state, in which the proper home and meaning of these
things are to be found ; and thus collections of such facts
are to be worked as mines of historic knowledge. In deal-
ing with such materials, experience of what actually
happens is the main guide, and direct history has to teach
us, first and foremost, how old habits hold their ground in
the midst of a new culture which certainly would never
have brought them in, but on the contrary presses hard to
thrust them out. What this direct information is like, a
single example may show. The Dayaks of Borneo were
not accustomed to chop wood, as we do, by notching out
V-shaped cuts. Accordingly, when the white man intruded
among them with this among other novelties, they marked
their disgust at the innovation by levying a fine on any of
their own people who should be caught chopping in the
European fashion ; yet so well aware were the native wood-
cutters that the white man's plan was an improvement on
their own, that they would use it surreptitiously when
they could trust one another not to tell. 1 The account is
twenty years old, and very likely the foreign chop may have
ceased to be an offence against Dayak conservatism, but its
prohibition was a striking instance of survival by ancestral
authority in the very teeth of common sense. Such a
proceeding as this would be usually, and not improperly,

1 ' Journ. Ind. Archip.' (ed. by J. R. Logan), vol. ii. p. liv.

72 SURVIVAL IN CULTURE.

described as a superstition ; and, indeed, this name would
be given to a large proportion of survivals, such for instance
as may be collected by the hundred from books of folk-lore
and occult science. But the term superstition now implies
a reproach, and though this reproach may be often cast
deservedly on fragments of a dead lower culture em-
bedded in a living higher one, yet in many cases it would
be harsh, and even untrue. For the ethnographer's pur-
pose, at any rate, it is desirable to introduce such a term
as ' survival/ simply to denote the historical fact which
the word ' superstition ' is now spoiled for expressing.
Moreover, there have to be included as partial survivals
the mass of cases where enough of the old habit is kept up
for its origin to be recognizable, though in taking a new
form it has been so adapted to new circumstances as still to
hold its place on its own merits.

Thus it would be seldom reasonable to call the children's
games of modern Europe superstitions, though many of
them are survivals, and indeed remarkable ones. If the
games of children and of grown-up people be examined
with an eye to ethnological lessons to be gained from them,
one of the first things that strikes us is how many of them
are only sportive imitations of the serious business of life.
As children in modern civilized times play at dining and
driving horses and going to church, so a main amusement
of savage children is to imitate the occupations which they
will carry on in earnest a few years later, and thus their
panics are in fact their lessons. The Esquimaux children's
sports are shooting with a tiny bow and arrow at a mark,
and building little snow-huts, which they light up with
scraps of lamp-wick begged from their mothers. 1 Miniature
boomerangs and spears are among the toys of Australian
children ; and even as the fathers keep up as a recognized j
means of getting themselves wives the practice of carrying
them off by violence, so playing at such Sabine marriage
has been noticed as one of the regular games of the little -

1 Klcmm, ' Cultur-Geschichte,' vol. ii. p. 209.

SPORTIVE IMITATION. 73

itive boys and girls. 1 Now it is quite a usual thing in
the world for a game to outlive the serious practice of which
it is an imitation. The bow and arrow is a conspicuous
instance. Ancient and widespread in savage culture, we
trace this instrument through barbaric and classic life and
onward to a high mediaeval level. But now, when we look
on at an archery meeting, or go by country lanes at the
season when toy bows and arrows are ' in ' among the
children, we see, reduced to a mere sportive survival, the
ancient weapon which among a few savage tribes still keeps
its deadly place in the hunt and the battle. The cross-bow,
a comparatively late and local improvement on the long-
bow, has disappeared yet more utterly from practical use ;
but as a toy it is in full European service, and likely to
remain so. For antiquity and wide diffusion in the world,
through savage up to classic and mediaeval times, the sling
ranks with the bow and arrow. But in the middle ages it
fell out of use as a practical weapon, and it was all in vain
that the I5th century poet commended the art of slinging
among the exercises of a good soldier :

* Use eek the cast of stone, with slynge or honde :
It falleth ofte, yf other shot there none is,

Men harneysed in steel may not withstonde,
The multitude and mighty cast of stonys ;

And stonys in effecte, are every where,

And slynges are not noyous for to beare.' 2

Perhaps as serious a use of the sling as can now be pointed
out without the limits of civilization is among the herdsmen
of Spanish America, who sling so cleverly that the saying is
they can hit a beast on either horn and turn him which
way they will. But the use of the rude old weapon is
especially kept up by boys at play, who are here again the
representatives of remotely ancient culture.
As games thus keep up the record of primitive warlike

1 Oldfield in ' Tr. Eth. Soc.' vol. iii. p. 266 ; Dumont d'Urville, ' Voy. de
1' Astrolabe,' vol. i. p. 411.

2 Strutt, ' Sports and Pastimes,' book ii. chap. ii.

74 SURVIVAL IN CULTURE.

arts, so they reproduce, in what are at once sports and
little children's lessons, early stages in the history of child-
like tribes of mankind. English children delighting in the
imitations of cries of animals and so forth, and New Zea-
landers playing their favourite game of imitating in chorus
the saw hissing, the adze chipping, the musket roaring, and
the other instruments making their proper noises, are
alike showing at its source the imitative element so import-
ant in the formation of language. 1 When we look into the
early development of the art of counting, and see the
evidence of tribe after tribe having obtained numerals
through the primitive stage of counting on their fingers, we
find a certain ethnographic interest in the games which
teach this earliest numeration. The New Zealand game of
' ti ' is described as played by counting on the fingers, a
number being called by one player, and he having instantly
to touch the proper finger ; while in the Samoan game one
player holds out so many fingers, and his opponent must
do the same instantly or lose a point. 2 These may be native
Polynesian games, or they may be our own children's
games borrowed. In the English nursery the child learns
to say how many fingers the nurse shows, and the appointed
formula of the game is ' Buck, Buck, how many horns do I
hold up ? ' The game of one holding up fingers and the
others holding up fingers to match is mentioned in Strutt.
We may see small schoolboys in the lanes playing at the
guessing-game, where one gets on another's back and holds
up fingers, the other must guess how many. It is interest-
ing to notice the wide distribution and long permanence of !
these trifles in history when we read the following passage
from Petronius Arbiter, written in the time of Nero : j
' Trimalchio, not to seem moved by the loss, kissed the
boy and bade him get up on his back. Without delay the

1 Polack, 'New Zealanders,' vol. ii. p. 171.

2 Polack, ibid. ; Wilkes, 'U.S. Exp.' vol. i. p. 194. See the account of
the game of liagi in Mariner, ' Tonga Is.' vol. ii. p. 339 ; and Yate, ' New
Zealand,' p. 113.

COUNTING GAMES. 75

boy climbed on horseback on him, and slapped him on the
shoulders with his hand, laughing and calling out ' bucca,
bucca, quot sunt hie ? ' l The simple counting-games
played with the fingers must not be confounded with the
addition-game, where each player throws out a hand, and
the sum of all the fingers shown has to be called, the
successful caller scoring a point ; each should call the
total before he sees his adversary's hand, so that the skill
lies especially in shrewd guessing. This game affords end-
less amusement to Southern Europe, where it is known
in Italian as ' morra,' and in French as ' mourre,' and it is
popular in China under the name of ts'ai mei, or ' guess
how many ! ' So peculiar a game would hardly have been
invented twice over in Europe and Asia, and as the Chinese
term does not appear to be ancient, we may take it as
likely that the Portuguese merchants introduced the
game into China, as they certainly did into Japan. The
ancient Egyptians, as their sculptures show, used to play
at some kind of finger-game, and the Romans had their
finger-flashing, ' micare digitis,' at which butchers used
to gamble with their customers for bits of meat. It
is not clear whether these were morra or some other
games. 2

When Scotch lads, playing at the game of ' tappie-
tousie,' take one another by the forelock and say, ' Will ye
be my man ? ' 3 they know nothing of the old symbolic
manner of receiving a bondman which they are keeping up
in survival. The wooden drill for making fire by friction,
which so many rude or ancient races are known to have
used as their common household instrument, and which
lasts on among the modern Hindus as the time-honoured
sacred means of lighting the pure sacrificial flame, has been

1 Petron. Arbitri Satirae rec. Buchler, p. 64 (other readings are buccce
or bucco).

2 Compare Davis, 'Chinese,' vol. i. p. 317; Wilkinson, Ancient
Egyptians, vol. i. p. 188 ; Facciolati, Lexicon, s.v. ' micare ' ; &c.

3 Jamieson, ' Diet, of Scottish Lang.' s.v.

76 SURVIVAL IN CULTURE.

found surviving in Switzerland as a toy among the children,
who made fire with it in sport, much as Equimaux would
have done in earnest. 1 In Gothland it is on record that the
ancient sacrifice of the wild boar has actually been carried
on into modern time in sportive imitation, by lads in mas-
querading clothes with their faces blackened and painted,
while the victim was personated by a boy rolled up in furs
and placed upon a seat, with a tuft of pointed straws in his
mouth to imitate the bristles of the boar. 8 One innocent
little child's sport of our own time is strangely mixed up
with an ugly story of about a thousand years ago. The
game in question is thus played in France : The children
stand in a ring, one lights a spill of paper and passes it on
to the next, saying, ' petit bonhomme vit encore/ and so
on round the ring, each saying the words and passing on
the flame as quickly as may ~be, for the one in whose hands
the spill goes out has to pay a forfeit, and it is then pro-
claimed that ' petit bonhomme est mort.' Grimm men-
tions a similar game in Germany, played with a burning
stick, and Halliwell gives the nursery rhyme which is said
with it when it is played in England :

* Jade's alive and in very good health,
If he dies in your hand you must look to yourself/

Now, as all readers of Church history know, it used to be a
favourite engine of controversy for the adherents of an esta-
blished faith to accuse heretical sects of celebrating hideous
orgies as the mysteries of their religion. The Pagans told
these stories of the Jews, the Jews told them of the
Christians, and Christians themselves reached a bad emi-
nence in the art of slandering religious opponents whose
moral life often seems in fact to have been exceptionally
pure. The Manichaeans were an especial mark for such
aspersions, which were passed on to a sect considered as
their successors the Paulicians, whose name reappears in

1 * Early History of Mankind,' p. 244, &c. ; Grimm, * Deutsche Myth.,'
p. 573- * Grimm, ibid., p. 1200.

HISTORIC GAMES. 77

the middle ages, in connexion with the Cathari. To these
latter, apparently from an expression in one of their reli-
gious formulas, was given the name of Boni Homines, which
became a recognized term for the Albigenses. It is clear
that the early Paulicians excited the anger of the orthodox
by objecting to sacred images, and calling those who vene-
rated them idolaters ; and about A.D. 700, John of Osun,
Patriarch of Armenia, wrote a diatribe against the sect,
urging accusations of the regular anti-Manichaean type, but
with a peculiar feature which brings his statement into the
present singular connexion. He declares that they blas-
phemously call the orthodox ' image-worshippers ; ' that
they themselves worship the sun ; that, moreover, they mix
wheaten flour with the blood of infants and therewith cele-
brate their communion, and ' when they have slain by the
worst of deaths a boy, the first-born of his mother, thrown
from hand to hand among them by turns, they venerate
him in whose hand the child expires, as having attained to
the first dignity of the sect/ To explain the correspond-
ence of these atrocious details with the nursery sport, it is
perhaps the most likely supposition, not that the game of
' Petit Bonhomme ' keeps up a recollection of a legend of
the Boni Homines, but that the game was known to the
children of the eighth century much as it is now, and that
the Armenian Patriarch simply accused the Paulicians of
playing at it with live babes. 1

1 Halliwell, ' Popular Rhymes,' p. 112 ; Grimm, ' D. M.' p. 812. Bastian,
4 Mensch,' vol. iii. p. 1 06. Johannis Philosophi Ozniensis Opera (Aucher),
Venice, 1834, pp. 78-89. * Infantium sanguini similam commiscentes ille-
gitimam communionem deglutiunt ; quo pacto porcorum suos foetus im-
maniter vescentium exsuperant edacitatem. Quique illorum cadavera
super tecti oilmen celantes, ac sursum oculis in. coelum defixis respicientes,
jurant alieno Verbo ac sensu : Ahissimus navit. Solem vero deprecari
volentes, ajunt : Solicule^ Luciculc ; atque aereos, vagosque dzemones clam
invocant, juxta Manichaeorum Simonisque incantatoris errorcs. Similitcr
et primum parientis fceminae puerum de manu in manum inter eos iiivicem
projectum, quum pessima morte occiderint, ilium, in cujus manu exspira-
verit puer, ad primam sectae dignitatem provectum venerantur ; atque per
utriusque nomen audent insane jurare ; Juro, dicunt, per unigenitum filittm :
et iterum : Testem babeo tibi gloriam ejus, in cujus manum unigenitus filius

78 SURVIVAL IN CULTURE.

It may be possible to trace another interesting group of
sports as survivals from a branch of savage philosophy, once
of high rank though now fallen into merited decay. Games
of chance correspond so closely with arts of divination
belonging already to savage culture, that there is force in
applying to several such games the rule that the serious
practice comes first, and in time may dwindle to the sportive
survival. To a modern educated man, drawing lots or
tossing up a coin is an appeal to chance, that is, to igno-
rance ; it is committing the decision of a question to a
mechanical process, itself in no way unnatural or even
extraordinary, but merely so difficult to follow that no one
can say beforehand what will come of it. But we also know
that this scientific doctrine of chance is not that of early
civilization, which has little in common with the mathema-
tician's theory of probabilities, but much in common with
such sacred divination as the choice of Matthias by lot as
a twelfth apostle, or, in a later age, the Moravian Brethren's
rite of choosing wives for their young men by casting lots
with prayer. It was to no blind chance that the Maoris
looked when they divined by throwing up lots to find a
thief among a suspected company ; l or the Guinea negroes
when they went to the fetish-priest, who shuffled his bundle
of little strips of leather and gave his sacred omen. 2 The
crowd with uplifted hands pray to the gods, when the heroes
cast lots in the cap of Atreides Agamemnon, to know who
shall go forth to do battle with Hektor and help the well-
greaved Greeks. 3 With prayer to the gods, and looking up
to heaven, the German priest or father, as Tacitus relates,
drew three lots from among the marked fruit-tree twigs
scattered on a pure white garment, and interpreted the

spiritum suum tradidit .... Contra hos [the orthodox] audacter evomerc
praesumunt impietatis suas bilem, atque insanientes, ex mali spiritus
blasphemia, Sculpticolas vocant.'

1 Polack, vol. i. p. 270.

2 Bosman, ' Guinese Kust,' letter x. ; Eng. Trans, in Pinkerton, vol. xvi. ,

P- 399-

3 Homer. Iliad, vii. 171 ; Pindar. Pyth. iv. 338.



DIVINATION AND GAMES. 79

mswer from their signs. 1 As in ancient Italy oracles gave
jponses by graven lots, 2 so the modern Hindus decide
jputes by casting lots in front of a temple, appealing
to the gods with cries of ' Let justice be shown ! Show
:he innocent ! ' 3

The uncivilized man thinks that lots or dice are adjusted
their fall with reference to the meaning he may choose to
ittach to it, and especially he is apt to suppose spiritual
jings standing over the diviner or the gambler, shuffling the
>ts or turning up the dice to make them give their answers,
view held its place firmly in the middle ages, and
iter in history we still find games of chance looked on as
mlts of supernatural operation. The general change from
lediaeval to modern notions in this respect is well shown
a remarkable work published in 1619, which seems to
iave done much toward bringing the change about. Thomas
rataker, a Puritan minister, in his treatise ' Of the Nature
id Use of Lots,' states, in order to combat them, the fol-
dng among the current objections made against games of
ice : ' Lots may not be used but with great reverence,
:ause the disposition of them commeth immediately from
. . . . ' the nature of a Lot, which is affirmed to
je a worke of Gods speciall and immediate providence, a
id oracle, a divine judgement or sentence : the light use
it therefore to be an abuse of Gods name ; and so a sinne
against the third Commandement.' Gataker, in opposition
to this, argues that ' to expect the issue and event of it, as
by ordinarie meanes from God, is common to all actions :
to expect it by an immediate and extraordinarie worke is no
more lawfull here than elsewhere, yea is indeed mere super-
stition.' 4 It took time, however, for this opinion to become
prevalent in the educated world. After a lapse of forty
years, Jeremy Taylor could still bring out a remnant of the

1 Tacit. Germania. 10.

2 Smith's ' Die. of Gr. and Rom. Ant.,' arts. ' oraculum,' ' sortes.'

3 Roberts, ' Oriental Illustrations,' p. 163.

4 Gataker, pp. 91, 141 ; see Lecky, '-History of Rationalism,' vol. i. p. 307.

80 SURVIVAL IN CULTURE.

older notion, in the course of a generally reasonable argu-
ment in favour of games of chance when played for refresh-
ment and not for money. ' I have heard,' he says, ' from
them that have skill in such things, there are such strange
chances, such promoting of a hand by fancy and little arts
of geomancy, such constant winning on one side, such
unreasonable losses on the other, and these strange con-
tingencies produce such horrible effects, that it is not
improbable that God hath permitted the conduct of such
games of chance to the devil, who will order them so where
he can do most mischief ; but, without the instrumentality
of money, he could do nothing at all/ 1 With what vitality
the notion of supernatural interference in games of chance
even now survives in Europe, is well shown by the still
flourishing arts of gambler's magic. The folk-lore of our
own day continues to teach that a Good Friday's egg is to
be carried for luck in gaming, and that a turn of one's chair
will turn one's fortune ; the Tyrolese knows the charm for
getting from the devil the gift of winning at cards and dice ;
there is still a great sale on the continent for books which
show how to discover, from dreams, good numbers for the
lottery ; and the Lusatian peasant will even hide his lottery-
tickets under the altar-cloth that they may receive the
blessing with the sacrament, and so stand a better chance
of winning.*

Arts of divination and games of chance are so similar in
principle, that the very same instrument passes from one
use to the other. This appears in the accounts, very
suggestive from this point of view, of the Polynesian art of
divination by spinning the ' niu ' or coco-nut. In the
Tongan Islands, in Mariner's time, the principal purpose
for which this was solemnly performed was to enquire if a
sick person would recover ; prayer was made aloud to the
patron god of the family to direct the nut, which was then
spun, and its direction at rest indicated tfce intention of the

1 Jeremy Taylor, ' Ductor Dubitantium,' in Works, vol. xiv. p. 337.

2 See Wuttke, ' Deutsche Volksaberglaube,' pp. 95, 115, 178.

DIVINATION AND GAMES. 8l

On other occasions, when the coco-nut was merely
>un for amusement, no prayer was made, and no credit
iven to the result. Here the serious and the sportive use
this rudimentary teetotum are found together^ In the
loan Islands, however, at a later date, the Rev. G.
Burner finds the practice passed into a different stage. A
irty sit in a circle, the coco-nut is spun in the middle,
and the oracular answer is according to the person towards
whom the monkey-face of the fruit is turned when it stops ;
but whereas formerly the Samoans used this as an art of
divination to discover thieves, now they only keep it up as a
way of casting lots, and as a game of forfeits. 1 It is in
favour of the view of serious divination being the earlier
use, to notice that the New Zealanders, though they have
no coco-nuts, keep up a trace of the time when their
ancestors in the tropical islands had them and divined with
them ; for it is the well-known Polynesian word ' niu,' i.e.
'coco-nut, which is still retained in use among the Maoris
for other kinds of divination, especially that performed with
sticks. Mr. Taylor, who points out this curiously neat
piece of ethnological evidence, records another case to the
present purpose. A method of divination was to clap the
hands together while a proper charm was repeated ; if the
fingers went clear in, it was favourable, but a check was an
ill omen ; on the question of a party crossing the country
in war-time, the locking of all the fingers, or the stoppage
of some or all, were naturally interpreted to mean clear
passage, meeting a travelling party, or being stopped alto-
gether. This quaint little symbolic art of divination seems
now only to survive as a game ; it is called ' puni-puni.' 1
A similar connexion between divination and gambling is
shown by more familiar instruments. The hucklebones or
astragali were used in divination in ancient Rome, being
converted into rude dice by numbering the four sides, and

1 Mariner, ' Tonga Islands,' vol. ii. p. 239 ; Turner, ' Polynesia,' p. 214 .
Williams, ' Fiji,' vol. i. p. 228. Compare Cranz, ' Gronland,' p. 231.

2 R. Taylor, ' New Zealand,' pp. 206, 348, 387.

82 SURVIVAL IN CULTURE.

even when the Roman gambler used the tali for gambling,
he would invoke a god or his mistress before he made his
throw. 1 Such implements are now mostly used for play,
but, nevertheless, their use for divination was by no means
confined to the ancient world, for hucklebones are men-
tioned in the I7th century among the fortune-telling instru-
ments which young girls divined for husbands with, 2 and
Negro sorcerers still throw dice as a means of detecting
thieves. 3 Lots serve the two purposes equally well. The
Chinese gamble by lots for cash and sweetmeats, whilst
they also seriously take omens by solemn appeals to the
lots kept ready for the purpose in the temples, and pro-
fessional diviners sit in the market-places, thus to open the
future to their customers. 4 Playing-cards are still in Euro-
pean use for divination. That early sort known as ' tarots '
which the French dealer's license to sell ' cartes et tarots '
still keeps in mind, is said to be preferred by fortune-tellers
to the common kind ; for the tarot-pack, with its more
numerous and complex figures, lends itself to a greater
variety of omens. In these cases, direct history fails to tell
us whether the use of the instrument for omen or play came
first. In this respect, the history of the Greek ' kottabos '
is instructive. This art of divination consisted in flinging
wine out of a cup into a metal basin some distance off with-
out spilling any, the thrower saying or thinking his mis-
tress's name, and judging from the clear or dull splash of
the wine on the metal what his fortune in love would be ;
but in time the magic passed out of the process, and it
became a mere game of dexterity played for a prize. 5 If
this be a typical case, and the rule be relied on that the
serious use precedes the playful, then games of chance
may be considered survivals in principle or detail from

1 Smith's Die., art. ' talus.'

2 Brand, ' Popular Antiquities/ vol. ii. p. 412.

3 D. & C. Livingstone, ' Exp. to Zambesi,' p. 51.

4 Doolittle, ' Chinese,' vol. ii. pp. 108, 285-7; see 384 ; Bastian, ' Oestl. -,
Asien,' vol. iii. pp. 76, 125.

5 Smith's Die., art. * cottabos.'

POPULAR SAYINGS. 83

ponding processes of magic as divination in sport
gambling in earnest.

Seeking more examples of the lasting on of fixed habits
among mankind, let us glance at a group of time-honoured
traditional sayings, old saws which have a special interest
as cases of survival. Even when the real signification of
these phrases has faded out of men's minds, and they have
sunk into sheer nonsense, or have been overlaid with some
modern superficial meaning, still the old formulas are
handed on, often gaining more in mystery than they lose in
sense. We may hear people talk of ' buying a pig in a
poke,' whose acquaintance with English does not extend to
knowing what a poke is. And certainly those who wish to say
that they have a great mind to something, and who express
themselves by declaring that they have ' a month's mind '
to it, can have no conception of the hopeless nonsense they
are making of the old term of the ' month's mind,' which
was really the monthly service for a dead man's soul,
whereby he was kept in mind or remembrance. The proper
sense of the phrase ' sowing his wild oats ' seems generally
lost in our modern use of it. No (Joubt it once implied that
these ill weeds would spring up in later years, and how hard
it would then be to root them out. Like the enemy in the
parable, the Scandinavian Loki, the mischief-maker, is pro-
verbially said in Jutland to sow his oats (' nu saaer Lokken
sin havre '), and the name of ' Loki's oats ' (Lokeshavre) is
given in Danish to the wild oats (avena fatua). 1 Sayings
which have their source in some obsolete custom or tale, of
course lie especially open to such ill-usage. It has become
mere English to talk of an ' unlicked cub ' who ' wants
licking into shape/ while few remember the explanation of
these phrases from Pliny's story that bears are born as
eyeless, hairless, shapeless lumps of white flesh, and have
afterwards to be licked into form. 2

Again, in relics of old magic and religion, we have some-

1 Grimm, ' Deutsche Myth.' p. 222.

2 Plin. viii. 54.

84 SURVIVAL IN CULTURE.

times to look for a deeper sense in conventional phrases
than they now carry on their face, or for a real meaning in
what now seems nonsense. How an ethnographical record
may become embodied in a popular saying, a Tamil proverb
now current in South India will show prefectly. On occa-
sions when A hits B, and C cries out at the blow, the
bystanders will say, ' Tis like a Koravan eating asafcetida
when his wife lies in ! ' Now a Koravan belongs to a low
race in Madras, and is defined as ' gipsy, wanderer, ass-
driver, thief, eater of rats, dweller in mat tents, fortune-
teller, and suspected character ; ' and the explanation of
the proverb is, that whereas native women generally eat
asafcetida as strengthening medicine after childbirth, among
the Koravans it is the husband who eats it to fortify himself
on the occasion. This, in fact, is a variety of the world-
wide custom of the ' couvade/ where at childbirth the
husband undergoes medical treatment, in many cases being
put to bed for days. It appears that the Koravans are
among the races practising this quaint custom, and that
their more civilized Tamil neighbours, struck by its oddity,
but unconscious of its now-forgotten meaning, have taken it
up into a proverb. 1 Let us now apply the same sort of
ethnographical key to dark sayings in our own modern
language. The maxim, a 'hair of the dog that bit you*
was originally neither a metaphor nor a joke, but a matter-
of-fact recipe for curing the bite of a dog, one of the many
instances of the ancient homoeopathic doctrine, that what
hurts will also cure : it is mentioned in the Scandinavian
Edda, ' Dog's hair heals dog's bite.' 2 The phrase ' raising
the wind ' now passes as humorous slang, but it once, in
all seriousness, described one of the most dreaded of the
sorcerer's arts, practised especially by the Finland wizards,
of whose uncanny power over the weather our sailors have
not to this day forgotten their old terror. The ancient

1 From a letter of Mr. H. J. Stokes, Negapatam, to Mr. F. M. Jennings.
General details of the Couvade in ' Early History of Mankind,' p. 293.
* Havamal, 138.

POPULAR SAYINGS. 85

remony or ordeal of passing through a fire or leaping over
burning brands has been kept up so vigorously in the
British Isles, that Jamieson's derivation of the phrase ' to
haul over the coals ' from this rite appears in no way far-
fetched. It is not long since an Irishwoman in New York
was tried for killing her child ; she had made it stand on
burning coals to find out whether it was really her own or a
changeling. 1 The English nurse who says to a fretful child,
' You got out of bed wrong foot foremost this morning,'
seldom or never knows the meaning of her saying; but this
is still plain in the German f. oik-lore rule, that to get out of
bed left foot first will bring a bad day, 8 one of the many
examples of that simple association of ideas which connects
right and left with good and bad respectively. To conclude,
the phrase ' cheating the devil ' seems to belong to that
familiar series of legends where a man makes a compact
with the fiend, but at the last moment gets off scot-free by
the interposition of a saint, or by some absurd evasion
such as whistling the gospel he has bound himself not to
say, or refusing to complete his bargain at the fall of the
leaf, on the plea that the sculptured leaves in the church
are still on their boughs. One form of the mediaeval
compact was for the demon, when he had taught his black
art to a class of scholars, to seize one of them for his pro-
fessional fee, by letting them all run for their lives and
catching the last a story obviously connected with another
popular saying : ' devil take the hindmost.' But even at
this game the stupid fiend may be cheated, as is told in the
folk-lore of Spain and Scotland, in the legends of the
Marques de Villano and the Earl of Southesk, who attended
the Devil's magic schools at Salamanca and Padua. The
apt scholar only leaves the master his shadow to clutch as
following hindmost in the race, and with this unsubstantial
payment the demon must needs be satisfied, while the

1 Jamieson, ' Scottish Dictionary,' s.v. ' coals ' ; R. Hunt, ' Popular Ro-
mances,' ist ser. p. 83.

2 Wuttke, ' Volksaberglaube,' p. 131.

i. G

86 ' SURVIVAL IN CULTURE.

new-made magician goes forth free, but ever after shadow-
less. 1

It seems a fair inference to think folk-lore nearest to its
source where it has its highest place and meaning. Thus,
if some old rhyme or saying has in one place a solemn
import in philosophy or religion, while elsewhere it lies at
the level of the nursery, there is some ground for treating
the serious version as the more original, and the playful one
as its mere lingering survival. The argument is not safe,
but yet is not to be quite overlooked. For instance,
there are two poems kept in remembrance among the
modern Jews, and printed at the end of their book of Pass-
over services in Hebrew and English. One is that known
as XHJ in (Chad gadya) : it begins, ' A kid, a kid, my
father bought for two pieces of money ; ' and it goes on to
tell how a cat came and ate the kid, and a dog came and bit
the cat, and so on to the end. ' Then came the Holy One,
blessed be He ! and slew the angel of death, who slew the
butcher, who killed the ox, that drank the water, that
quenched the fire, that burnt the stick, that beat the dog,
that bit the cat, that ate the kid, that my father bought for
two pieces of money, a kid, a kid.' This composition is in
the ' Sepher Haggadah,' and is looked on by some Jews as
a parable concerning the past and future of the Holy Land.
According to one interpretation, Palestine, the kid, is de-
voured by Babylon the cat ; Babylon is overthrown by
Persia, Persia by Greece, Greece by Rome, till at last the
Turks prevail in the land ; but the Edomites (i.e. the
nations of Europe) shall drive out the Turks, the angel of
death shall destroy the enemies of Israel, and his children
shall be restored under the rule of Messiah. Irrespectively
of any such particular interpretation, the solemnity of the
ending may incline us to think that we really have the
composition here in something like its first form, and that it

1 Rochholz, ' Deutscher Glaube und Branch,' vol. i. p. 120 ; R. Chambers,
' Popular Rhymes of Scotland,' Miscellaneous ; Grimm, pp. 969, 976 ;
Wuttke, p. 115.

VERSES. 87

was written to convey a mystic meaning. If so, then it
follows that our familiar nursery tale of the old woman who
couldn't get her kid (or pig) over the stile, and wouldn't
get home till midnight, must be considered a broken-down
adaptation of this old Jewish poem. The other composition
is a counting-poem, and begins thus :

' Who knoweth one ? I (saith Israel) know One :

One is God, who is over heaven and earth.
Who knoweth two ? I (saith Israel) know two :

Two tables of the covenant ; but One is our God who is over
the heavens and the earth.'

(And so forth, accumulating up to the last verse, which

1 Who knoweth thirteen ? I (saith Israel) know thirteen :
Thirteen divine attributes, twelve tribes, eleven stars, ten com-
mandments, nine months preceding childbirth, eight days pre-
ceding circumcision, seven days of the week, six books of the
Mishnah, five books of the Law, four matrons, three patriarchs,
two tables of the covenant; but One is our God who is over the
heavens and the earth.'

is is one of a family of counting-poems, apparently
Ld in much favour in mediaeval Christian times, for they
not yet quite forgotten in country places. An old Latin
version runs : 'Unus est Deus,' &c., and one of the still-
irviving English forms begins, ' One's One all alone, and
ivermore shall be so/ thence reckoning on as far as
' Twelve the twelve apostles.' Here both the Jewish and
ristian forms are or have been serious, so it is possible
lat the Jew may have imitated the Christian, but the
lobler form of the Hebrew poem here again gives it a
laim to be thought the earlier. 1

The old proverbs brought down by long inheritance into
>ur modern talk are far from being insignificant in them-
Ives, for their wit is often as fresh, and their wisdom as

1 Mendes, ' Service for the First Nights of Passover,' London, 1862 (in
Jewish interpretation the word shunra, ' cat,' is compared with
ar). Halliwell, ' Nursery Rhymes,' p. 288 ; ' Popular Rhymes,' p. 6.

88 SURVIVAL IN CULTURE.

pertinent, as it ever was. Beyond these practical qualities,
proverbs are instructive for the place in ethnography which
they occupy. Their range in civilization is limited ; they
seem scarcely to belong to the lowest tribes, but appear
first in a settled form among some of the higher savages.
The Fijians, who were found a few years since living in what
archaeologists might call the upper Stone Age, have some
well-marked proverbs. They laugh at want of forethought
by the saying that ' The Nakondo people cut the mast
first ' (i.e. before they had built the canoe) ; and when a
poor man looks wistfully at what he .cannot buy, they say,
' Becalmed, and looking at the fish.' 1 Among the list of
the New Zealanders' ' whakatauki/ or proverbs, one de-
scribes a lazy glutton : ' Deep throat, but shallow sinews ; '
another says that the lazy often profit by the work of the in-
dustrious : ' The large chips made by Hardwood fall to the
share of Sit-still ; ' a third moralizes that 'A crooked part
of a stem of toetoe can be seen ; but a crooked part in the
heart cannot be seen/ 8 Among the Basutos of South
Africa, ' Water never gets tired of running ' is a reproach
to chatterers; 'Lions growl while they are eating/ means
that there are people who never will enjoy anything ; ' The
sowing-month is the headache-month/ describes those
lazy folks who make excuses when work is to be done ;
' The thief eats thunderbolts/ means that he will bring
down vengeance from heaven on himself. 8 West African
nations are especially strong in proverbial philosophy ; so
much so that Captain Burton amused himself through the
rainy season at Fernando Po in compiling a volume of
native proverbs, 4 among which there are hundreds at about
as high an intellectual level as those of Europe. ' He fled
irom the sword and hid in the scabbard/ is as good as our

1 Williams, ' Fiji,' vol. i. p. no.

2 Shortland,, ' Traditions of N. Z.' p 196.

3 Casalis, ' Etudes sur la langue Sechuana.'

4 R. F. Burton, ' Wit and Wisdom from West Africa.' See also Waitz,
vol. ii. p. 245.

PROVERBS. 89

' Out of the frying-pan into the fire ; ' and ' He who has
only his eyebrow for a cross-bow can never kill an animal/
is more picturesque, if less terse than our ' Hard words
break no bones.' The old Buddhist aphorism, that 'He
who indulges in enmity is like one who throws ashes to
windward, which come back to the same place and cover
lim all over/ is put with less prose and as much point in
negro saying, ' Ashes fly back in the face of him who
throws them/ When someone tries to settle an affair in
the absence of the people concerned, the negroes will object
it ' You can't shave a man's head when he is not there/
while, to explain that the master is not to be judged by the
folly of his servant, they say, ' The rider is not a fool
;ause the horse is/ Ingratitude is alluded to in ' The
>word knows not the head of the smith ' (who made it),
id yet more forcibly elsewhere, ' When the calabash had
ived them (in the famine), they said, let us cut it for a
ing-cup/ The popular contempt for poor men's
ym is put very neatly in the maxim, ' When a poor
lan makes a proverb it does not spread/ while the very
lentipn of making a proverb as something likely to happen,
a land where proverb-making is still a living art.
Yansplanted to the West Indies, the African keeps up this
as witness these sayings : ' Behind dog it is dog, but
jfore dog it is Mr. Dog ; ' and ' Toute cabinette tini
laringouin ' ' Every cabin has its mosquito/
The proverb has not changed its character in the course
>f history ; but has retained from first to last a precisely
lefinite type. The proverbial sayings recorded among the
igher nations of the world are to be reckoned by tens of
lousands, and have a large and well-known literature of
iir own. But though the range of existence of proverbs
extends into the highest levels of civilization, this is scarcely
of their development. At the level of European culture
the middle ages, they have indeed a vast importance in
>pular education, but their period of actual growth seems
Iready at an end. Cervantes raised the proverb-monger's

go SURVIVAL IN CULTURE.

craft to a pitch it never surpassed ; but it must not be for-
gotten that the incomparable Sancho's wares were mostly
heirlooms ; for proverbs were even then sinking to remnants
of an earlier condition of society. As such, they survive
among ourselves, who go on using much the same relics of
ancestral wisdom as came out of the squire's inexhaustible
budget, old saws not to be lightly altered or made anew in
our changed modern times. We can collect and use the
old proverbs, but making new ones has become a feeble,
spiritless imitation, like our attempts to invent new myths
or new nursery rhymes.


 
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