登陆注册
5362800000306

第306章

Again, the flesh and blood of dead men are commonly eaten and drunk to inspire bravery, wisdom, or other qualities for which the men themselves were remarkable, or which are supposed to have their special seat in the particular part eaten. Thus among the mountain tribes of South-Eastern Africa there are ceremonies by which the youths are formed into guilds or lodges, and among the rites of initiation there is one which is intended to infuse courage, intelligence, and other qualities into the novices. Whenever an enemy who has behaved with conspicuous bravery is killed, his liver, which is considered the seat of valour; his ears, which are supposed to be the seat of intelligence; the skin of his forehead, which is regarded as the seat of perseverance; his testicles, which are held to be the seat of strength; and other members, which are viewed as the seat of other virtues, are cut from his body and baked to cinders. The ashes are carefully kept in the horn of a bull, and, during the ceremonies observed at circumcision, are mixed with other ingredients into a kind of paste, which is administered by the tribal priest to the youths. By this means the strength, valour, intelligence, and other virtues of the slain are believed to be imparted to the eaters. When Basutos of the mountains have killed a very brave foe, they immediately cut out his heart and eat it, because this is supposed to give them his courage and strength in battle. When Sir Charles M'Carthy was killed by the Ashantees in 1824, it is said that his heart was devoured by the chiefs of the Ashantee army, who hoped by this means to imbibe his courage. His flesh was dried and parcelled out among the lower officers for the same purpose, and his bones were long kept at Coomassie as national fetishes. The Nauras Indians of New Granada ate the hearts of Spaniards when they had the opportunity, hoping thereby to make themselves as dauntless as the dreaded Castilian chivalry. The Sioux Indians used to reduce to powder the heart of a valiant enemy and swallow the powder, hoping thus to appropriate the dead man's valour.

But while the human heart is thus commonly eaten for the sake of imbuing the eater with the qualities of its original owner, it is not, as we have already seen, the only part of the body which is consumed for this purpose.

Thus warriors of the Theddora and Ngarigo tribes of South-Eastern Australia used to eat the hands and feet of their slain enemies, believing that in this way they acquired some of the qualities and courage of the dead. The Kamilaroi of New South Wales ate the liver as well as the heart of a brave man to get his courage. In Tonquin also there is a popular superstition that the liver of a brave man makes brave any who partake of it. With a like intent the Chinese swallow the bile of notorious bandits who have been executed. The Dyaks of Sarawak used to eat the palms of the hands and the flesh of the knees of the slain in order to steady their own hands and strengthen their own knees. The Tolalaki, notorious head-hunters of Central Celebes, drink the blood and eat the brains of their victims that they may become brave. The Italones of the Philippine Islands drink the blood of their slain enemies, and eat part of the back of their heads and of their entrails raw to acquire their courage. For the same reason the Efugaos, another tribe of the Philippines, suck the brains of their foes. In like manner the Kai of German New Guinea eat the brains of the enemies they kill in order to acquire their strength. Among the Kimbunda of Western Africa, when a new king succeeds to the throne, a brave prisoner of war is killed in order that the king and nobles may eat his flesh, and so acquire his strength and courage. The notorious Zulu chief Matuana drank the gall of thirty chiefs, whose people he had destroyed, in the belief that it would make him strong. It is a Zulu fancy that by eating the centre of the forehead and the eyebrow of an enemy they acquire the power of looking steadfastly at a foe. Before every warlike expedition the people of Minahassa in Celebes used to take the locks of hair of a slain foe and dabble them in boiling water to extract the courage; this infusion of bravery was then drunk by the warriors. In New Zealand the chief was an atua [god], but there were powerful and powerless gods; each naturally sought to make himself one of the former; the plan therefore adopted was to incorporate the spirits of others with their own; thus, when a warrior slew a chief, he immediately gouged out his eyes and swallowed them, the atua tonga, or divinity, being supposed to reside in that organ; thus he not only killed the body, but also possessed himself of the soul of his enemy, and consequently the more chiefs he slew the greater did his divinity become.

It is now easy to understand why a savage should desire to partake of the flesh of an animal or man whom he regards as divine. By eating the body of the god he shares in the god's attributes and powers. And when the god is a corn-god, the corn is his proper body; when he is a vine-god, the juice of the grape is his blood; and so by eating the bread and drinking the wine the worshipper partakes of the real body and blood of his god. Thus the drinking of wine in the rites of a vine-god like Dionysus is not an act of revelry, it is a solemn sacrament. Yet a time comes when reasonable men find it hard to understand how any one in his senses can suppose that by eating bread or drinking wine he consumes the body or blood of a deity. When we call corn Ceres and wine Bacchus, says Cicero, we use a common figure of speech; but do you imagine that anybody is so insane as to believe that the thing he feeds upon is a god?

同类推荐
  • God The Invisible King

    God The Invisible King

    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。
  • 杨家府世代忠勇通俗演义

    杨家府世代忠勇通俗演义

    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。
  • 宗教律诸宗演派

    宗教律诸宗演派

    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。
  • 夷氛闻记

    夷氛闻记

    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。
  • 石霜楚圆禅师语录

    石霜楚圆禅师语录

    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
  • 陈家麦中篇小说集

    陈家麦中篇小说集

    本书收录了作家经典的两部短篇小说《凤凰桥》与《妈妈的发廊》。作者以家乡为写作蓝本,用文字为读者绘出一副浓郁的家乡美图,把当地的风土人情淋漓尽致的展现在读者面前。
  • 综漫之无限循环之旅

    综漫之无限循环之旅

    二次元的追梦,新世界的大门即将打开,那是存在于我们心中一份真实的幻想,或许,这道门,将会为你打开......
  • 空间神医:重生最强女王

    空间神医:重生最强女王

    【新文《我的仙家农庄征服全世界》求预收,么么哒~】前世,江凝历尽艰辛走上人生巅峰,却招来古武世家的灭杀,一尸两命!重生归来,她身怀仙医空间,得到仙医传承,从此踏上修仙之路,报仇虐渣,带着家人致富,成就无上霸业,再登人生巅峰。传闻,容大少爱妻如命,宠妻无度,甜到极致!【女强爽文,一路爽到底!】……PS:推荐作者的9本完结作品,欢迎亲们移驾阅读,么么哒~《重生六零我养活了五个大佬》《重生八零我成了全能大佬》《空间神医:重生最强女王》《宠婚燃烧:媳妇太彪悍》《弃妇重生豪门:千金崛起》《宠婚烈爱:超能天后来袭》《神医下堂妃》《惊世弃后:神医小萌宝》《火爆小医女:天下第一绝宠》。
  • 玩转于二次元

    玩转于二次元

    一本正常的综漫小说(大概吧),主角借助系统玩转二次元世界。《约会大作战》>>>《崩坏3》>>>???>>>???>>>……
  • 青春明媚半忧伤

    青春明媚半忧伤

    在她的青春中,遇到了很多极其重要的人,他们在她的人生中留下了或轻或重的足迹,陪她度过了青春中最美好的岁月。有借着男闺蜜的身份默默守候她的蓝颜知己,有以同事名义关心呵护她的亲密搭档,有让她神魂颠倒、遥不可及的男神,还有以她意想不到的方式闯进她生活的学弟。他们都是那么的与众不同,而又是那么不约而同地出现在她的青春里,暗恋、等待、追求,崇拜、呵护、依赖、离别、伤害,成为她回忆中不可或缺的一部分。在他们身上又都上演着不同的故事,故事可能与她有关,也可能没有;故事里的主角是她,是他,也是他们。新学期伊始,所有的故事也都将——拉开帷幕……
  • 幻尘乱世

    幻尘乱世

    一个本不该平凡的人终于走向了他的非凡之路!跨越时间与空间,在梦境的彼端,留存着属于我们的故事……
  • 解决问题的发动机:磨练孩子意志的99个故事

    解决问题的发动机:磨练孩子意志的99个故事

    意志是一个人成功的关键。本书用99个生动的小故事从如何培养孩子的意志出发,为家长和教师在培养孩子的意志过程中提出了很好的建议和实施对策,以便在孩子的培养过程中更有针对性。
  • 明治天皇:碧血怒涛卷(中册)

    明治天皇:碧血怒涛卷(中册)

    本书是由传奇武的日本历史小说高产作家山冈庄八创作的一部纪实体小说。它以文学的笔调、宏大的篇幅,描绘了日本幕末那场决定国家命运的倒幕运动的整个过程,塑造出一个个鲜活的日本近代史中的人物形象,展现了日本有志之士为推翻幕府统治,实现国家新生所付出的巨大牺牲和艰辛努力,揭示了日本在内忧外患的双重冲击下,幕府政治退出历史舞台、统治权重新回到天皇手中,并最终走向明治维新的必然规律。本书翔实生动地描写了诸如“黑船来航”、“安政大狱”、“樱田门外之变”、“和宫下嫁”、“寺田屋骚乱”等当时日本的重大历史事件。阅读此书,对中国读者了解日本近代史,尤其是从幕末政治走向明治维新的过程,具有一定的参考价值。
  • 骄宠

    骄宠

    秦王妃是朵奇葩,在男权盛行的大魏朝,愣是活成了女性中的最大赢家。庶女为妃,上无公婆,中无妯娌,相公宠溺无度,临了还站在了大魏朝权势的金字塔顶端。秦王妃用切身经历验证了一句话——穿越是门技术活!!
  • 一号追妻令

    一号追妻令

    三年前一场误会,让他们生死不见。三年后却因为一场命案,再次纠缠。改头换面的她只想躲闪,执着当年的他步步紧逼。她装晕、装醉、装可怜,全被他见招拆招。凌沐星忍无可忍,“我不是你前女友!”他凑不要脸,“是不是查过才知道!”--情节虚构,请勿模仿