Balder the Beautiful, Volume I. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 545 pages of information about Balder the Beautiful, Volume I..

Balder the Beautiful, Volume I. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 545 pages of information about Balder the Beautiful, Volume I..
it attempted to escape.  Thus the victim was burned alive to save the rest of the cattle.[745] “There can be no doubt but that a belief prevailed until a very recent period, amongst the small farmers in the districts remote from towns in Cornwall, that a living sacrifice appeased the wrath of God.  This sacrifice must be by fire; and I have heard it argued that the Bible gave them warranty for this belief....  While correcting these sheets I am informed of two recent instances of this superstition.  One of them was the sacrifice of a calf by a farmer near Portreath, for the purpose of removing a disease which had long followed his horses and his cows.  The other was the burning of a living lamb, to save, as the farmer said, ’his flocks from spells which had been cast on ’em.’"[746] In a recent account of the fire-festivals of Wales we read that “I have also heard my grandfather and father say that in times gone by the people would throw a calf in the fire when there was any disease among the herds.  The same would be done with a sheep if there was anything the matter with a flock.  I can remember myself seeing cattle being driven between two fires to ‘stop the disease spreading.’  When in later times it was not considered humane to drive the cattle between the fires, the herdsmen were accustomed to force the animals over the wood ashes to protect them against various ailments."[747] Writing about 1866, the antiquary W. Henderson says that a live ox was burned near Haltwhistle in Northumberland “only twenty years ago” to stop a murrain.[748] “About the year 1850 disease broke out among the cattle of a small farm in the parish of Resoliss, Black Isle, Ross-shire.  The farmer prevailed on his wife to undertake a journey to a wise woman of renown in Banffshire to ask a charm against the effects of the ‘ill eye.’  The long journey of upwards of fifty miles was performed by the good wife, and the charm was got.  One chief thing ordered was to burn to death a pig, and sprinkle the ashes over the byre and other farm buildings.  This order was carried out, except that the pig was killed before it was burned.  A more terrible sacrifice was made at times.  One of the diseased animals was rubbed over with tar, driven forth, set on fire, and allowed to run till it fell down and died."[749] “Living animals have been burnt alive in sacrifice within memory to avert the loss of other stock.  The burial of three puppies ‘brandise-wise’ in a field is supposed to rid it of weeds.  Throughout the rural districts of Devon witchcraft is an article of current faith, and the toad is thrown into the flames as an emissary of the evil one."[750]

[The calf is burnt in order to break a spell which has been cast on the herd.]

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Balder the Beautiful, Volume I. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.