Page:Frazer (1890) The Golden Bough (IA goldenboughstudy01fraz).djvu/164

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
142
THE SOUL
CHAP.

events as a vital part of himself, and as such it is necessarily a source of danger to him. For if it is trampled upon, struck, or stabbed, he will feel the injury as if it were done to his person; and if it is detached from him entirely (as he believes that it may be) he will die. In the island of Wetar there are magicians who can make a man ill by stabbing his shadow with a pike or hacking it with a sword.[1] After Sankara had destroyed the Buddhists in India, it is said that he journeyed to Nepaul, where he had some difference of opinion with the Grand Lama. To prove his supernatural powers, he soared into the air. But as he mounted up, the Grand Lama, perceiving his shadow swaying and wavering on the ground, struck his knife into it and down fell Sankara and broke his neck.[2] In the Babar Islands the demons get power over a man’s soul by holding fast his shadow, or by striking and wounding it.[3] There are stones in Melanesia on which, if a man’s shadow falls, the demon of the stone can draw out his soul.[4] In Amboina and Uliase, two islands near the equator, and where, therefore, there is little or no shadow cast at noon, it is a rule not to go out of the house at mid-day, because it is supposed that by doing so a man may lose the shadow of his soul.[5] The Mangaians tell of a mighty warrior, Tukaitawa, whose strength waxed and waned with the length of his shadow. In the morning, when his shadow fell longest, his strength was greatest; but as the shadow shortened towards noon his strength ebbed with it, till exactly at noon it reached its lowest


  1. Riedel, De sluik-en kroesharige rassen tusschen Selebes en Papua, p. 440.
  2. Bastian, Die Völker des östlichen Asien, v. 455.
  3. ^ Riedel, op. cit. p. 340.
  4. Codrington, “Religious Beliefs and Practices in Melanesia,” in Journ. Anthrop. Instit. x. 281.
  5. Riedel, op. cit. p. 61.