登陆注册
4707200000275

第275章

Magic is nowadays condemned alike by science and by religion; it is both useless and impious. It is obsolete, and only practised by malign sorcerers in obscure holes and corners. Undoubtedly magic is neither religion nor science, but in all probability it is the spiritual protoplasm from which religion and science ultimately differentiated. As such the doctrine of evolution bids us scan it closely. Magic may be malign and private; nowadays it is apt to be both. But in early days magic was as much for good as for evil; it was publicly practised for the common weal.

The gist of magic comes out most clearly in magical dances. We think of dancing as a light form of recreation, practised by the young from sheer joie de vivre and unsuitable for the mature. But among the Tarahumares (Carl Lumholtz, "Unknown Mexico", page 330, London, 1903.) in Mexico the word for dancing, nolavoa, means "to work." Old men will reproach young men saying "Why do you not go to work?" meaning why do you not dance instead of only looking on. The chief religious sin of which the Tarahumare is conscious is that he has not danced enough and not made enough tesvino, his cereal intoxicant.

Dancing then is to the savage WORKING, DOING, and the dance is in its origin an imitation or perhaps rather an intensification of processes of work. (Karl Bucher, "Arbeit und Rhythmus", Leipzig (3rd edition), 1902, passim.) Repetition, regular and frequent, constitutes rhythm and rhythm heightens the sense of will power in action. Rhythmical action may even, as seen in the dances of Dervishes, produce a condition of ecstasy.

Ecstasy among primitive peoples is a condition much valued; it is often, though not always, enhanced by the use of intoxicants. Psychologically the savage starts from the sense of his own will power, he stimulates it by every means at his command. Feeling his will strongly and knowing nothing of natural law he recognises no limits to his own power; he feels himself a magician, a god; he does not pray, he WILLS. Moreover he wills collectively (The subject of collective hallucination as an element in magic has been fully worked out by MM. Hubert and Mauss. "Theorie generale de la Magie", In "L'Annee Sociologique", 1902--3, page 140.), reinforced by the will and action of his whole tribe. Truly of him it may be said "La vie deborde l'intelligence, l'intelligence c'est un retrecissement."(Henri Bergson, "L'Evolution Creatrice", page 50.)The magical extension and heightening of personality come out very clearly in what are rather unfortunately known as MIMETIC dances. Animal dances occur very frequently among primitive peoples. The dancers dress up as birds, beasts, or fishes, and reproduce the characteristic movements and habits of the animals impersonated. So characteristic is this impersonation in magical dancing that among the Mexicans the word for magic, navali, means "disguise." K. Th. Preuss, "Archiv f.

Religionswissenschaft", 1906, page 97.) A very common animal dance is the frog-dance. When it rains the frogs croak. If you desire rain you dress up like a frog and croak and jump. We think of such a performance as a conscious imitation. The man, we think, is more or less LIKE a frog. That is not how primitive man thinks; indeed, he scarcely thinks at all; what HEwants done the frog can do by croaking and jumping, so he croaks and jumps and, for all he can, BECOMES a frog. "L'intelligence animale JOUE sans doute les representations plutot qu'elle ne les pense." (Bergson, "L'Evolution Creatrice", page 205.)We shall best understand this primitive state of mind if we study the child "born in sin." If a child is "playing at lions" he does not IMITATE a lion, i.e. he does not consciously try to be a thing more or less like a lion, he BECOMES one. His reaction, his terror, is the same as if the real lion were there. It is this childlike power of utter impersonation, of BEING the thing we act or even see acted, this extension and intensification of our own personality that lives deep down in all of us and is the very seat and secret of our joy in the drama.

A child's mind is indeed throughout the best clue to the understanding of savage magic. A young and vital child knows no limit to his own will, and it is the only reality to him. It is not that he wants at the outset to fight other wills, but that they simply do not exist for him. Like the artist he goes forth to the work of creation, gloriously alone. His attitude towards other recalcitrant wills is "they simply must." Let even a grown man be intoxicated, be in love, or subject to an intense excitement, the limitations of personality again fall away. Like the omnipotent child he is again a god, and to him all things are possible.

Only when he is old and weary does he cease to command fate.

The Iroquois (Hewitt, "American Anthropologist", IV. I. page 32, 1902, N.S.) of North America have a word, orenda, the meaning of which is easier to describe than to define, but it seems to express the very soul of magic.

This orenda is your power to do things, your force, sometimes almost your personality. A man who hunts well has much and good orenda; the shy bird who escapes his snares has a fine orenda. The orenda of the rabbit controls the snow and fixes the depth to which it will fall. When a storm is brewing the magician is said to be making its orenda. When you yourself are in a rage, great is your orenda. The notes of birds are utterances of their orenda. When the maize is ripening, the Iroquois know it is the sun's heat that ripens it, but they know more; it is the cigala makes the sun to shine and he does it by chirping, by uttering his orenda. This orenda is sometimes very like the Greek thumos, your bodily life, your vigour, your passion, your power, the virtue that is in you to feel and do.

This notion of orenda, a sort of pan-vitalism, is more fluid than animism, and probably precedes it. It is the projection of man's inner experience, vague and unanalysed, into the outer world.

同类推荐
  • 赞阿弥陀佛偈

    赞阿弥陀佛偈

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大明玄教立成斋醮仪范

    大明玄教立成斋醮仪范

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 道德经

    道德经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 普济方·针灸

    普济方·针灸

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 庭闻录

    庭闻录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 娇妻驾到:总裁已躺好

    娇妻驾到:总裁已躺好

    生死攸关时,她被路过的男人救下为了家人,她毅然决然嫁给了这个霸道的男人本以为只是一场无爱的契约婚姻他却给了她无边盛宠……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 娇宠为患

    娇宠为患

    郡王府荣宠无限的三小姐纪愉死在大婚当夜。意外重生后,她却不晓得那个残忍凶手是谁。是爱而不得的前未婚夫?还是温文清和的新夫君?纪愉一片迷惘。然而,更教她迷惘的,却是她家那个画风陡变的他?
  • 学校永远不教的30堂感恩课

    学校永远不教的30堂感恩课

    感恩的心,感谢有你,伴我一生,让我有勇气做我自己。感恩的心,感谢命运,花开花落,我一样会珍惜。谨以此书献给所有孩子及其关心下一代成才的人,让孩子从感恩的心对待人生。
  • 幸福会降临

    幸福会降临

    新人作者,文笔不好,请亲们多多包含!
  • 人类群星闪耀时

    人类群星闪耀时

    《人类群星闪耀时》是享有“世界上最好的传记作家”美誉的斯蒂芬·茨威格所著的一部传记合集,里面呈现了12个从不同的时代、不同的地域搜寻到的人类历史中曾经星光灿烂的时刻:巴尔沃亚到不朽的事业里寻求庇护、亨德尔的精神复活、鲁日有如神助般在一夜之间创作出了《马赛曲》、古稀之年的歌德如情窦初开的少年疯狂热恋十几岁的少女未果的哀歌、决定滑铁卢一役战果的一分钟……看命运之手是如何巧妙地选中了这12个人,又是如何将这改变人类历史的使命投诸其身。这些历史时刻像耀眼的星光在夜空闪现,将漆黑的夜空瞬间照亮,驱散了人类幽暗的长夜。
  • 阅胥

    阅胥

    齐武宗康宁二十七年,安远侯褚阅逝,同年七月,死而复生。这是一个由小小的褚家、由人心的贪念、由数不清的恩仇与隐匿于童谣话本中的真实神话所堆砌起来的故事。庙堂高远,人心叵测,唯有缓步慎行,才可胥于高位。
  • 石棉瓦

    石棉瓦

    咚的一声,门被撞开了。两个蒙面人进门后看不到田财,愣了一下,匆忙往窗台前跑。田坡扭身提起椅子,欲向他们砸,高个子拦腰把他抱住了。高个子说,田坡,田坡呀,你爸怎么会掉下去,怎么会掉下去呢。高个子声泪俱下。田坡还没有回过神来,矮个子把套在头上的丝袜一把揪下来,扑到窗台上喊,财哥,财哥——田坡举着椅子不知所措,他认出来,呼喊财哥的男人正是送他苹果的那位表叔。
  • TFBOYS之不止十年

    TFBOYS之不止十年

    有很多梗可能是真实存在,也可能是我看其他大大的书借鉴的,如有侵权,私聊解决。(ps:没有啥时间顺序,想到啥写啥,就酱。)
  • 云朵上的歌

    云朵上的歌

    钢琴少女唐云朵和哥哥夏时,妈妈唐欣在生活在一个叫长乐的城市。可是她的记忆,有十年空白。在寻找记忆的途中,一切开始转变——夏时的真实身份,唐欣的欲盖弥彰,好友的躲躲藏藏。十年的记忆背后到底暗藏了一个怎样的秘密?她与夏时、曲方歌又将陷入了怎样复杂的感情漩涡中……
  • 张勋(北洋风云人物)

    张勋(北洋风云人物)

    本书以真实、丰富的史料为基础,用较为生动的语言描述了张勋波澜壮阔的一生。既写他的困厄与成功,也写他的待人处世与生活态度;既写他的愚忠,也写他的心狠手辣,既写他的政治权术,也写他的人格品位……同时本书也真实再现了近代中国的政治风云。