Magic in Names
Magic in Names
MAGIC IN NAMES
AND IN OTHER THINGS
;
..-rorFn^ivJf)^
MAGIC IN NAkE*^^'^'^"'^
AND IN OTHER THINGS
BY
EDWARD 'CLODD
AUTHOR OF
THE CHILDHOOD OF THE WORLD,' " THE STORY OF CREATION," ETC.
NEW YORK
E. P. BUTTON & COMPANY
1921
Printed in Great Britain.
PREFATORY NOTE
The world-wide superstition, examples of which
form the staple of this book, has scarcely received
the attention warranted by the important part
which it has played, and still plays, in savage and
and ritual.
civilized belief
The book is an enlargement of a lecture on
" Magic in Names," delivered at the Royal
Institution in March 1917. There are incor-
porated into it some portions of an Essay
on Savage Philosophy in Folk-lore, which was
published in 1898. The book has been long out
of print, and I beg to thank Messrs. Duckworth
and Co. for permission to make extracts
therefrom.
I have also to thank my wife for her valued
help in the tedious work of revision of proof
sheets,
E.G.
Strafford House,
Aldeburgh, Suffolk.
CONTENTS
CHAP. TAOU
I. Magic and Religion 1
Vll
MAGIC IN NAMES
CHAPTER I
"
'
There is nothing so dangerous as the rehgious conscience.'
6 MAGIC IN NAMES
he enchains and subdues by his magic arts and
devices.
It is not so with the priest, who beheves himself
to be the channel of communications between
gods and men, and whose methods, therefore,
are not carnal, but spiritual. His functions
come into play only as man attains to concrete
conceptions of invisible powers (envisaging these
as made in his own image), so that more direct
appeal to them possible. But, in truth, no
is
i
Primitive Ritual and Belief, p. 13, Rev. E. O. James.
";
In the New
Hebrides hair and nail cuttings are
hidden, and any refuse of food is given to the pigs.
The peasants of Galway say that it is unlucky
to give or receive hair-cuttings, and if these are
stolen ill will befall the thief; « the Leitrim rustics
keep their hair-clippings because they may be
1 Principles of Sociology, p. 264, Herbert Spencer.
2 Te Ika a Maui, p. 203, R. Taylor.
3 Codrington, p. 203. * Brown, p. 233.
the man went his way thither and " came seeing."
By the same saliva-magic Jesus cured the deaf
and dumb man, " looking up to heaven he sighed
and unto him, Ephphatha, that is, be
saith '
the healing of a man " with a feeble a,nd lame leg " by
*'t'he print of a, C?esar's foot/'
MANA IN TANGIBLE THINGS 23
Mana in Shadows.
(a)
and E. Backhouse.
- Encyclop. Biblica, pp. 1558 and 2062. On " founda-
tion sacrifices " see article by Dr. E. S. Hartland, Hastings's
32 MAGIC IN NAMES
The evidence as to the universahty of the custom
fills a long and gruesome chapter in the history
^ Lawson, p. 10.
2 The Society for Psychical Research offers for sale crystal
balls at from three shillings to eight shillings each, and
expresses itself as " grateful for accounts of any experiments
which may be tried."
36 MAGIC IN NAMES
echoing of their voices in the Parana forest has
among the Abipones the same explanation. The
Indians of the Rockies would not venture near
Manitobah Island because in the sound of the
low wailing waves beating on the beach they
heard voices from the spirit land. In South
Pacific myth Echo is the parent fairy to whom
at Marquesas divine honours are paid as the
giver of food and as " she who speaks to the
worshipper out of the The Anglo-
rocks." ^
38 MAGIC IN NAMES
things, and ruled by the superficial likenesses
which many exhibit, the barbaric mind regards
them as vehicles of good and evil, chiefly evil,
because things are feared in the degree that
they are unknown, and because, where life is
mainly struggle, man is ever on the watch
against malice-working agencies, wizards, medi-
cine-men, and all their kin. That he should
envisage the intangible; that his name should
be an an integral part of himself; should
entity,
the less surprise us when it is remembered that
language, from the simple phrases of common
life to the highest abstract terms, rests on the
"
concrete. To apprehend a thing is to " seize
it or " lay hold of "
it to possess a thing is to
;
^
their names to the servant who admitted them."
I am indebted to Mr. W.
B. Yeats for a letter
from an Irish correspondent, who tells of a fairy-
haunted old woman Uving in King's County.
Her tormentors, whom she calls the " Fairy
Band of Shinrone," come from Tipperary. They
pelt her with invisible missiles, hurl abuse at her,
and rail against her family, both the dead and
the hving, until she is driven well-nigh mad.
And all this manifested because they
spite is
52 MAGIC IN NAMES
Australia the mother-in-law does not allow the
son-in-law to see her, but hides herself at his
approach or covers herself with her clothes if
name it does
; not matter if it be any article or
54 MAGIC IN NAMES
is allowed to lapse if sterility of the married
couple persists for three years.
In the Bougainville Straits the men would
utter the names of their wives only in a low tone,
as it was not the proper thing to speak of women
by name to others. ^ Sir E. B. Tylor says
their
that *' among the Barea of East Africa the wife
never utters the name of her husband, or eats
in his presence, and even among the Beni Amer,
where the women have extensive privileges and
great social power, the wife is not allowed to
eat in her husband's presence and only mentions
his name before strangers." Hausa wives must
^
p. 195.
MANA IN INTANGIBLE THINGS 55
1 Codrington, p. 44.
2 " Notes on tlie Ethnography of the Ba-Hiiana," Torday
and Joyce, J.A.I., Vol. XXXVI. p. 274,
"
56 MAGIC IN NAMES
there has woman's language which
arisen a
^
differs considerably from that of the men."
place
In the fairy tales of Christian P^urope the period
of danger terminated at baptism, until which
time certain precautions, such as burning a light
in the chamber, must be observed. In ancient
Italy the danger ended when the child received
its name. The eagerness of the parents to have
their children christened gave unlimited power
to ministers; but this parental anxiety has
proceeded less from piety than from superstition.
72 MAGIC IN NAMES
Boudas. Among the many characters in which
the devil appears is that of Wayland the Smith,
the northern but perhaps the repute
Vulcan,
attaching to the Boudas has no connection with
that conception, and may be an example of the
barbaric belief in the power of iron which, among
many peoples, was a charm against black magic.
They are credited with the faculty of being able
to turn themselves into hyenas and other wild
beasts, so that few people will venture to molest
or offend a blacksmith. " In all church services
in Abyssinia, particularly in prayers for the dead,
the baptismal name must be used. How they
manage to hide it I did not learn; possibly by
confiding it only to the priest." ^ Mr. Theodore
Bent says that it is a custom in the Cyclades to
call a child Iron or Dragon or some other such
name before christening takes place, the object
being to frighten away the evil spirits. Travel-
ling eastwards, we find the Hindu belief that when
a child is born an invisible spirit is born with it,
and unless the mother keeps one breast tied up
for forty days, while she feeds the child with the
other (in which case the spirit dies of hunger)
^ Roba di Roma,
p. 454, W. W. Story. And see Palio
and Ponte an account of the Sports of Central Italy from
:
82 MAGIC IN NAMES
together with the sick waiting their turn on the
margin of Bethesda, have their correspondences
in the children dipped in wells to be cured of
rickets, in the dragging of lunatics through deep
water to restore their reason, and in the cripples
who travel in thousands to bathe their limbs in
the well of St. Winifred in Fhntshire and in the
spring that bubbles in the grotto at Lourdes.
The influence which pagan symbolism had on
Christian art and doctrine has interesting illus-
tration mosaic of the sixth century at
in a
Ravenna, representing the baptism of Jesus.
The water flows from an inverted urn, held by a
venerable figure, typifying the river-god of the
Jordan, growing beside his head,
with reeds
and snakes coiling round it. Christ means
" anointed," and in the use of oil in baptismal
rites there is belief in its magical virtue, as
exampled in a prayer in the Acts of Thomas —
" O Jesus, may thy victorious power come
and may it enter into this oil, even as it came
1 " Baptism in primitive Christianity was at first symbol-
92 MAGIC IN NAMES
Jews the taboo had great force, for they were
forbidden to have leaven in their houses during
the Passover, and they abstained from even using
the word. Being forbidden swine's flesh, they
avoid the word pig altogether, and call that
animal dabchar acheer, 'the other thing.' In
Canton the porpoise or river-pig is looked upon
as a creature of ill-omen, and on that account
its name is tabooed." ^
The Swedes fear to tread on a toad, because it
alive and can of its own free will move from place
to place and reproduce itself hence it is called by ;
96 MAGIC IN NAMES
In the Hebrides the fire of a kiln is called
aingeal, not teine, because the latter is dangerous
and ill will comes if it is mentioned .^
The desire not to offend, to " let sleeping dogs
lie," as we say, explains why the Hindus call
98 MAGIC IN NAMES
take the meat," said the consul, and the devil
took it.^
'
Ask a blessing.' He was inspired to say
" Jesus, the Name high over all,
In hell or earth or sky
Angels and men before Him fall,
And devils fear and fly."
Rodd.
100 MAGIC IN NAMES
names of children are avoided to avert the
attention of the evil Yaku " spirits of the dead,"
who would bring illness or death on the named .^
In India, especially when several male children
have died in the family, boys are dressed as girls
to avert further misfortune; sometimes a nose-
ring is added as further device. Pausanias tells
the story of the young Achilles wearing female
attire and living among maidens,^ and to this day
the peasants of Achill Island (on the north-west
coast of Ireland) dress their boys as girls till they
are about fourteen years old to deceive the boy-
seeking devil. In the west of Irelandsome
phrase invocative of blessing should be used on
entering a cottage, meeting a peasant, or
or
saluting a child, because this shows that one
has no connection with the fairies, and will not
bring bad luck. " Anyone who did not give
the usual expressions, as Mamdeud, '
God save
you ' ; Slaunter, '
your good health,' and Boluary,
'
God bless the work,' was looked on with sus-
picion." ^ A well-mannered Turk will not pay a
compliment without uttering "Mashallah"; an
Italian will not receive one without saying the
protective " Grazia a Deo"; and the English
peasant woman has her " Lord be wi' us " ready
when flattering words are said about her babe.
1 The Veddas, p. 103, C. G. Seligman. ^ gk. I. 22. 6,
3 Folk-lore Record, Vol. IV. p. 112.
MANA IN INTANGIBLE THINGS 101
*'
old Adam " has been cast out. A striking
illustration of the belief in the power over the
god which mortals may secure by knowledge of
his name is supplied by the concealment of the
name of the tutelary deity of Rome. Plutarch
asks, " How commeth it to passe, that it is
expressly forbidden at Rome, either to name or
to demaund ought as touching the Tutelar god,
who hath in particular recommendation and
patronage the safetie and preservation of the
citie not so much as to enquire whether the said
;
Strong.
MANA IN INTANGIBLE THINGS 135
'
The Wealthy One.' The power of the divine
name was transcended in ancient religions." ^
Behind the sun-worship of the ancient Peruvians
was that of Pachacamac, whose name was too
sacred to be taken into their mouths. Among
the Penitential Psalms of the Babylonian scrip-
tures, which, in the opinion of Professor Sayce,
date from Accadian times, and which, in their
depth of feeling and dignity, bear comparison
with the Psalms of the Hebrews, we find the
worshipper pleading
" How long, O whom I know, and know not, shall the
god,
thy heart continue ?
fierceness of
How long, O goddess, whom I know, and know not, shall
thy heart in his hostility be (not) appeased ?
Mankind is made to wander, and there is none that
knowcth
Mankind, as many as pronounce a name, what do they
know?"
Upon which Professor Sayce remarks :
" The
belief in the mysterious power of names is still
plainly.If he mankind, it is to
alludes to
'
mankind as many as pronounce a name,' as
many, that is, as have names which may be
pronounced." ^
name " the passage in Isa. xxx. 27, " Behold the
;
Deus nomen est " (Nor need you seek a name for God
—
God is his Name). Minucius Felix, Octavius.
L
146 MAGIC IN NAMES
port themselves (as on Solomon's magic carpet,
spun for him by the from place to place at
jinn)
will can kill the living, raise the dead, and work
;
CHAPTER IV
MAN A IN WORDS
There no essential difference between Names
is
1 Vol. X. p. 125.
Satapatha Brdhmana, Vol. III. p. 8; Muir's Sanskrit
2
says :
" I brought (i. e. fashioned) my mouth and
I uttered my own name as a word of power
and I developed myself out of the primaeval
matter which I made." Here, then, is proof
that the Egyptians believed that by uttering his
own name Neb-u-tcher, he brought the world
into existence.
In a Quiche Indian myth the maker of the
world calls forth " Uleu," " earth," and the solid
land appears. A myth of Mangaian Islanders
of the South Pacific tells how the Creator of all
committed."
That tlie mantrams do not now work the
starthng effects of which tradition tells, is ex-
plained by the Brahmins as due to mankind now
living in the Kali-Yuga, or Fourth Age of the
^Vorld, a veritable age of Iron ; but they maintain
that it is still not uncommon for miracles to be
wrought akin to that just narrated, and to this
which follows. Siva had taught a little bastard
boy the mysteries of the bija-akshara or mantram
of the five letters. The boy was the son of a
Brahmin widow, and the stain on his birth had
caused his exclusion from a wedding-feast to
which others of his caste had been invited. He
took revenge by pronouncing two or three of the
mystic letters through a crack in the door of the
room where the guests were assembled. Immedi-
ately all the dishes that were prepared for the
feast were turned into frogs. Consternation
spread among the guests, all being sure that the
mischief was due to the little bastard, so fearing
that worse might happen, they rushed with one
accord to invite him to come in. As he entered,
they asked pardon for the slight, w^hereupon
his
he pronounced the same words backwards,^ and
1 An illustration of Withershins (German Wider Schein)
or against the sun, as when the witches went thriee round
170 MAGIC IN NAMES
the cakes and other refreshments appeared, while
the frogs vanished. " I will leave it," remarks
the Abbe Dubois, " to someone else to find, if
—
god Osiris as to be called by his name. Wiedemann, p. 244.
—
To secure unhindered
to the Fields of the Blessed.
passage thither, the deceased must know the
secret and mystical names of the Gods of the
Northern and Southern Heaven, of the Horizons,
and of the Empyreal Gate. As the Egyptian
made his future world a counterpart of the Egypt
which he knew and loved, and gave to it heavenly
counterparts of all the sacred cities thereof, he
must have conceived the existence of a waterway
like the Nile, whereon he might sail and perform
his desired voyage. Strongest evidence of the
Egyptian extension of belief in Words of Power
is furnished in the requirement made of the
N
—
p. 148, J. S. Polack.
MANA IN WORDS 179
*'
impietie of inchanters " and the " knavcrie
of conjurers " is accompanied by examples of a
number of spells for raising the various grades
of spirits, from the ghost of a suicide to the
innumerable company of demons. In each case
the effectiveness of the spell depends on the
utterance of names which are a jumble of strange
or manufactured tongues. For example, the
spiritsof the " Airy Region " are conjured by
" his strong and mighty Name, Jehovah," and
by his " holy Name, Tetragrammaton," and by
all his " wonderful Names and Attributes, Sadat,
Ollon, Emillat, Athanatos, Paraclctus." Then
the exorcist, turning to the four quarters, calls
the names, " Gerson, Anek, Nephrion, Basannah,
Cabon," whereupon the summoned spirits, casting
off their phantasms, will stand before him in
cgegaqqestptikabglk2acctbam
g 242 iq; pxcgkqqaqqpoqqr. Oh onehe
Father >h oh onhe lord >h and Jesus ^ passin
through the middest of them >h went >b In the
Name of the Father >h and of the Sonne >h and
of the Hoh'e-ghost ^."
With this, those who care to pursue a subject
which is the quintessence of the tedious, may
compare in an old papyrus an adjuration to be
pronounced for the same purpose. " I adjure
thee by the holy names, render upon the thief
who has carried away (such and such a thing)
Khaltchak, Khiam, Khar, Beni (etc.) and by
the terrible names a e e yyy u u ooooo vvvvv
wwwwww.''^
The word Amulet (Arabic, hamalah-at, " a
thing carried ") covers all objects used as charms,
either worn on the person or attached to things,
both living and dead, for luck and protection.
Belief in amulets as possessing mana, is universal
they are further links in the long chain of magic
which connects the lower and higher races their :
Book."
MANA IN WORDS 199
1
p. 181.
^ Lancashire Folk-lore, p. 77, Harland and Wilkinson.
200 MAGIC IN NAMES
driving of a nail into the wall, the formula, " Adar
Gar Vedar Gar " being uttered, and then followed
by these words, " Even as this nail is firm in the
wall and is not felt, so let the teeth of So-and-so,
a son of So-and-so, be firm in his mouth, and
give him no pain." Cure-charms for toothache
are widespread. One from Devonshire runs thus :
these views have long been outgrown and some have been
shown false by history. Jesus, we have learned, was not
—
efficacy :
'"''
Si quis epistolat secum habuerit securus
ambulet in pace. ^^ According to the legend the king
asked Christ to come and heal him, and Christ,
in reply, promised that after his ascension he
would send a disciple to him as healer. Obvi-
ously writings held sacred would be credited
with healing mana. In the Wisdom of Solomon
(ch. xvi. 12) it says " For of a truth it was
:
applied.
In every department of human thought there is
present evidence of the persistence of primitive
ideas. Scratch the epiderm of the civilized man,
and the barbarian is found in the derm. Man is
the same everywhere at bottom; if there are
many varieties, there is but one species. His
civilization is the rare topmost shoot of the tree
whose roots are in the earth, and whose trunk and
larger branches are in savagery. Hence, although
the study of anatomy and physiology in other —
—
words, of structure and function paved the way,
^ Prehistoric Problems, pp. 191 foil., R. Munro.
2 Prehistoric America, p. 510, M. Nadaillac.
MANA IN WORDS 221
1 Gen. ii. 7.
2 The N.W. Amazons, p. 180, Captain T. Whiffen.
3 Lancashire Folk-lore, Harland and Wilkinson.
228 MAGIC IN NAMES
medical institution, but a loose opinion that
the soul passed out that way, and a fondness of
affection, from some Pythagorical foundation
that the spirit of one body passed into another
which they wished might be their own." ^ Hence,
the unsubstantial " name " falls into line with
the general nebulous conception of " spirit," and,
were barbaric languages less mutable, it might
be possible to find some help to an equation
between " name " and " soul " in them. But
as even seemingly stable things like numerals
and personal pronouns undergo rapid change
among the lower races, " two or three genera-
tions sufficing to alter the whole aspect of their
dialects among the wild and unintelligent tribes
of Siberia, Africa, and Siam," the search is hope-
less. Some light, however, is thrown upon the
matter by languages in which favourable cir-
'
"
soul.'
This similarity between the Irish words so
pervades the declension of them, that a beginner
frequently falls into the error of confounding
them as mediaeval texts. Take, for instance,
the genitive singular anma, wliich may mean
either " animse " or " nominis " the nominative ;