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XIII. THE
HORSE-SHOE AS A FAVORITE ANTI-WITCH CHARM
The
universality of the use of the horse-shoe as a safeguard against evil
spirits is indeed noteworthy.
It is the
anti-witch charm par excellence, as well as the approved symbol of good
luck, and, used for these purposes, it is to be seen throughout a large
portion of the world. The horse-shoe is most commonly placed over the
entrance-doors of dwellings; but stables likewise are thought to be
effectually protected by it, for "witches were dreadful harriers of
horse-flesh." In William Henderson's "Folk-Lore of the Northern Countries
of England" we read of a Durham farmer who was convinced that one of his
horses had been ridden by hags, as he had found it bathed in sweat of a
morning. But after he took the precaution to nail a horse-shoe over the
stable-door, and also to hang some broom above the manger, the witches had
not been able to indulge in clandestine rides on his horses. While many an
honest fellow in England and elsewhere is a firm believer in witches and
magical horse-shoes, very few of them can give plausible reasons therefor.
The Lancashire
farmer thinks that mischievous fairies not only ride horses by night, but
drive cows out of the barn, steal the butter, and eat up the children's
porridge; so he, too, affixes horse-shoes to his buildings.
Any one
visiting the hamlets of Oxfordshire can hardly fail to notice the numerous
horse-shoes affixed to the picturesque thatched-roofed cottages; and the
countryfolk in this neighborhood are not always content with one of these
popular safeguards, for two or three of them are often to be seen on the
walls of a dwelling, invariably placed with the prongs downward.
In Brand's
"Popular Antiquities" (vol. iii. p. 19, 1888) may be found a clipping from
the Cambridge (Eng.) "Advertiser," which relates that one Bartingale, a
carpenter and resident of Ely, suspected a woman named Gotobed of having
bewitched him, and of being the cause of an illness which he had recently
had. Thereupon, at a consultation of matrons of the neighborhood held in
his chamber, it was decided that the most efficient means of protecting
him from the evil influence of the suspected sorceress was to have three
horse-shoes fastened to the door. A blacksmith was accordingly summoned,
and
"an operation
to this effect was performed, much to the anger of the supposed witch, who
at first complained to the Dean, but was laughed at by his reverence. She
then rushed in wrath to the sick man's room, and, miraculous to tell,
passed the Rubicon in spite of the horse-sboes. But this wonder ceased
when it was discovered that Vulcan had substituted donkeys' shoes."
Miss Georgiana
F. Jackson says, in "Shropshire Folk-Lore," that, in the home of her
childhood at Edgmond, the stable-door was decorated with three rows of
horseshoes arranged in the form of a triangle; and the grooms used to say
that they were placed there to exclude witches.
In this region,
too, an old horse-shoe placed above the door of a bedroom is a preventive
of the nightmare.
In Shrewsbury,
the ancient county town of Shropshire, horse-shoe talismans are to be seen
not only above the house-doors, but also on the barges which navigate the
river Severn.
In quite recent
times a case has been reported of a poor girl of Whatfield, in Suffolk,
who had experienced a long illness, during which she was visited daily by
an old woman who appeared to be very solicitous as to her welfare. At
length the girl's family began to suspect that this old woman was none
other than a witch; they therefore caused a horse-shoe to be fastened to
the sill of the outer door. The precaution was successful, so runs the
tale, for the reputed witch could never thereafter cross the threshold,
and the girl speedily recovered her health.
Aubrey, in his
"Remains of Gentilisme," describes the horse-shoe as a preservative
against the mischief or power of witches, attributing its magical
properties to the astrological principle that Mars, the God of War and the
War Horse, was an enemy of Saturn, who according to a mediaeval idea was
the liege lord of witches.
During the
witchcraft excitement in Scotland, one Elizabeth Bathcat was indicted for
having a horse-shoe attached to the door of her house "as a devilish means
of instruction from the Devil to make her goods and all her other affairs
to prosper and succeed well."
According to an
old legend St. Dunstan, the versatile English ecclesiastic of the tenth
century, who was a skilled farrier and the owner of a forge, was requested
by the Devil to shoe his "single hoof." Dunstan, who recognized his
customer, acceded, but during the operation he caused the Devil so much
pain that the latter begged him to desist. The request was heeded on
condition that the Devil should never enter a place where a horse-shoe was
displayed. The popular belief is that his Satanic Majesty has always
faithfully kept the contract, and quite naturally all lesser evil spirits
have followed his example.
In Scotland,
even as late as the beginning of the nineteenth century, the peasantry
believed that witches were able to draw milk from all the cattle in their
neighborhood, by tugging at a hair-rope in imitation of the act of
milking. Such a rope was made of hairs from the tails of several cows,
whose exact number was indicated by knots in the rope. While tugging at
the rope the witches repeated either the following or a similar charm:--
Cow's milk and mare's milk,
And every beast that bears milk,
Between St. Johnstone's and Dundee,
Come a' to me, come a' to me.
The only
adequate protection from such mischievous pranks as these was afforded by
nailing a horse-shoe to the byre-door and tying sprigs of rowan with a red
thread to the cow's tail. If, however, these precautions were neglected,
the guilty witch might yet be discovered by placing the "gudeman's breeks"
upon the cow's horns, a leg upon either horn; and thereupon the animal,
being let loose, was sure to run directly to the witch's house.
In many places,
certain houses continue even at the present time to have an evil
reputation as harborers of witches and goblins. In these cases it seems
probable that the owners or occupants of such dwellings neglected to avail
themselves of the immunity afforded by horse-shoes and other safeguards.
For no one, we believe, has ever seriously maintained that evil spirits,
who are once firmly domiciled, can be easily expelled. Familiarity with
their surroundings may breed a contempt for amulets. Certain it is,
however, that an ounce or two of iron by way of prevention is worth a
pound or more of cure. When a dwelling is demoniacally possessed, the
devils must be driven out somehow, and for this purpose recourse is had to
exorcisms, and to religious or magical ceremonies. In the words of the
poet Dryden ("Wife of Bath's Tale," i. 28):--
And friars that through the wealthy regions
run
Resort to farmers rich, and bless their halls,
And exorcise the beds and cross the walls.
In "Antiquitates
Vulgares," by Henry Browne (1725), the writer gives elaborate directions
as to the proper mode of exorcising a haunted dwelling, and says that the
house which is reported to be vexed with spirits shall be visited by a
priest daily for a week, appropriate prayers and scriptural selections
being read. Sometimes magical procedures supplanted religious exercises,
and experts in sorcery were employed to rid a mansion of its undesirable
tenants. The following advertisement from a London newspaper of 1777 may
be appropriately given here:--
HAUNTED
HOUSES.--Whereas there are mansions and castles in England and Wales which
for many years have been uninhabited, and are now falling into decay, by
their being visited and haunted by evil spirits or the spirits of those
who for unknown reasons are rendered miserable, even in the grave, a
gentleman who has made the tour of Europe, of a particular turn of mind,
and deeply skilled in the abstruse and sacred science of exorcism, hereby
offers his assistance to any owner or proprietor of such premises, and
undertakes to render the same free from the visitation of such spirits, be
their cause what it may, and render them tenantable and useful for the
proprietors. Letters addressed to Rev. John Jones, No. 30 St. Martin's
Lane, duly answered, and interview given if required.
XIV. THE POSITION OF THE HORSE-SHOE AS A
PROTECTOR OF BUILDINGS
It has been
supposed that the horse-shoe is placed at the outer entrance to a building
because of an ancient Saxon superstition that witches were unable
successfully to practice their wiles upon persons in the open air. The
horse-shoe effectively bars the ingress of witches and evil spirits, but
an entrance once obtained by these creatures, it is powerless to expel
them. Therefore the horse-shoe within doors loses much of its efficacy,
but is still an emblem of good luck.
Placed on the
outside of the door, or above the entrance of a dwelling, or upon the
threshold, the horseshoe is easily first among the inveterate foes of
witches and devils generally.
Laugh if you will, who imps nor devils fear,
Whom death appals not, phantoms come not near;
Along whose nerves no quick vibrations dart,
As teeming twilight's shadowy offspring start;
Not yours to feel the joy with which I flew
To snatch the rusty, worn, but lucky shoe.
Oft have I heard them chattering at my door,
The hags whose dances beat the shrinking moor;
Oft have I sprung from nightmare-haunted rest,
And gasped an oro from my panting breast,
As forms that vanished ere the half-shut eye
With fright could open, from their revels fly.
Henceforth, good horse-shoe, vain shall be their ride
Their spells are baffled and their rage defied.
Edward Moor, in
his "Oriental Fragments" (p. 455, London, 1834), relates having once, in
company with a gang of urchins, nailed a donkey-shoe under the threshold
of a poor woman in Suffolk who was suspected of sorcery. He and his
youthful companions endeavored thus to keep her all night within doors, as
witches cannot cross iron.
An English
writer tells of having heard an animated discussion in the parlor of a
London beer-shop as to whether it were preferable to nail a horse-shoe
behind the door or upon the first doorstep; and instances of extraordinary
good luck were mentioned as the direct result of the potency of the amulet
in each position.
But there are
weighty reasons for the selection of the front door, or the parts
immediately connected with it, as the proper place for the display of
horse-shoes as household guardians.
In the earliest
historic times, and in primitive communities, the entrance of a dwelling
was considered a sacred place; and in the opinion of eminent scholars who
have made a study of the subject, the threshold was the first family
altar. A peculiar reverence for the doorway and threshold prevails to-day
in many parts of the world, as is evident from the numerous ceremonial
rites in vogue among widely separated savage tribes and uncivilized
peoples. Indeed, the custom of placing amulets and charms in and about the
entrance-doors of houses, stables, and other buildings is almost
universal. In Russia a cross is marked on the threshold to keep witches
away. In Lithuania, when a house is being built, a wooden cross, or some
article which has been handed down from past generations, is placed under
the threshold. There, also, when a newly baptized child is being brought
back from church, it is customary for its father to hold it for a while
over the threshold, "so as to place the new member of the family under the
protection of the domestic divinities." Sick children who are supposed to
have been afflicted by an evil eye are washed on the threshold of their
cottage, in order that with the help of the Penates who reside there, the
malady may be driven out of doors.
Under the
threshold of the Assyrian palaces at Nineveh were found certain images of
grotesque monsters, as, for example, a human form with the head of a lynx,
and a lion's body with a man's head, which were intended as tutelary
deities.
John Netten
Radcliffe, in his "Fiends, Ghosts, and Sprites" (p. 43, London, 1854),
says that the horse-shoe superstition is a remnant or relic of the worship
of household guardians or divinities,--a practice still in vogue among the
natives of Ashantee, and also among the Bhutas of Hindostan. In some
English counties, naturally perforated stones are hung behind the door;
and in Glamorganshire the walls of the houses are whitewashed in order to
terrify wandering spirits of evil. Whether successful or not for this
purpose, the custom is certainly effective as a destroyer of the demoniac
germs of certain diseases.
The French
Canadians are not the least superstitious of mankind, neither do they
wholly neglect to take due precautions against the admittance to their
homes of evil spirits.
They do not
answer "Entrez!" when a knock is heard at the door, but call out "Ouvrez!"
This custom is said to have originated from a current tradition regarding
a young woman who once answered "Entrez!" in response to a knock,
whereupon the Devil promptly came in and carried her away. Where such
legends find open-mouthed credence, it does not appear strange that
horse-shoes and other talismans should be at a premium.
In Tuscany
magical medicines are taken upon the threshold, which also plays an
important part in sorcery. One reason assigned for this fact is that the
threshold forms the line separating the outer world, where demons are
rampant, from the domestic precincts, where human beings dwell.
One writer
affirms it to be a fixed law in demonology that spirits cannot cross the
threshold and enter a house unless previously invited to do so, but adds
that there are many exceptions to this rule. The weight of evidence does
not support this view, for mischievous fairies and witches are known to
rudely disregard the laws of etiquette, and do not wait for an invitation
to enter dwellings. This fact is, indeed, a chief raison d'être for the
use of talismans at the entrance of habitations.
The residents
of the beautiful Thuringian Forest region, in whose neighborhood these
lines chanced to be penned, are wont to affix horse-shoes to the
thresholds of their chamber-doors, lest some rude goblin enter and disturb
their slumbers. But the fastidiousness of these sylvan folk is not content
with an ordinary shoe, even though found on the road and venerable with
rust; in order to serve its purpose as a talisman, a Thuringian horse-shoe
must have been forged by a bachelor of wholesome life and good character,
on Saint John's Eve.
In German
households, the horse-shoe over the door is believed to afford protection
against divers apparitions, as well as against the Devil, witchcraft,
lightning, sickness, and evils of every sort.
The cross,
symbol of the Christian faith, is the most potent of all talismans, but is
seldom seen at the entrance of dwellings. In some Roman Catholic countries
the crucifix is, indeed, everywhere conspicuous, not only in churches and
shrines, but by the roadside, in fields, and on the outer ways of houses,
but it is rarely placed at the front door. In Hungary, however, the
Magyars mark with black chalk the figure of a cross upon their
stable-doors, and also brand anew thereon the sacred emblem each year at
Christmas time.
The respect
paid by the inhabitants of Tibet to their household divinities somewhat
resembles the worship of their Lares by the Romans of old, and finds a
parallel in the honor accorded to the favorite amulet of Western
civiezation, the horse-shoe.
The Tibetans
set up above the entrances of their houses complex talismans, composed of
various mystical objects, such as a ram's skull with horns attached,
having displayed along the base of the skull pieces of carved wood
representing a man and woman, a house, and other symbols; the idea being
to deceive the demons, and to make them believe that these objects are the
real dwelling and its inmates. The Tibetans believe that the demons are
thus tricked, and that the wooden images are the victims of their
mischievous designs.
Far away among
the nomadic tribes of Turkestan, horse-shoes are occasionally seen nailed
to the thresholds of dwellings in the vicinity of the ancient city of Merv;
and within doors, near the entrances of these peculiar habitations, which
resemble mammoth parrot cages, pieces of linen or calico, four or five
inches square, are seen upon the felt wall-lining, to serve as receptacles
for the free-will offerings of such wandering spirits as may pass the
magic barriers of the horse-shoes.
In some regions
there still prevails a time-honored custom of placing over the chief
entrances of dwellings inscriptions, embodying usually a religious thought
or exhortation. Sometimes, however, the sentence commends the house and
its occupants to the care of the goddess Fortune, thus having a
significance akin to that of the horse-shoe symbol. In the year 1892 the
writer copied many inscriptions found above the doors of houses in
northern Italy and Switzerland, some of them being written in Latin,
others in German, French, Italian, and the Romansch dialect, current in
the Engadine. Here, for example, is one from a house in the Swiss village
of Bergun, the original being in German: "This house is in God's hand; May
Good Luck come in, and Bad Luck stay out! 1673."
Many of these
inscriptions are Biblical verses, which are here used as talismans, just
as the pious Moslem employs sentences from the Koran.
Here, again, is
the translation of a German sentence over the door of a dwelling in the
village of Ober-Schönberg, near Innsbruck, Tyrol, copied in 1897:
All persons
entering this house are recommended to Divine protection. God and the
Virgin Mary guard all such, even though powerful enemies threaten, and
lightnings and thunder rage without!
Above the door
of a house in the village of Welschnofen, near Botzen, the wayfarer may
read the following sentence: "Pray for us, holy Florian, that fire may not
harm our dwelling." Above the inscription an eye is painted, while below
is a realistic picture of Saint Florian, the protector of buildings
against fire, engaged in pouring water on a burning roof.
The Bassamese,
inhabitants of the Gold Coast of Africa, west of Ashantee, use certain
fetich objects for the protection of their dwellings. These amulets, which
are often merely pieces of wood painted red, or fragments of pottery, are
placed upon the doors of their huts, and are believed to afford ample
protection against thieves. Such a fetich is probably intended to exclude
evil spirits as well, and is, therefore, a substitute for both the
horse-shoe and the watch-dog, those guardians of the household so popular
in civilized communities.
When a modern
Egyptian returns from a pilgrimage to Mecca, he fastens above the entrance
of his house a branch of the aloe, which is not only a proof of his
religious zeal in having accomplished the holy journey, but is also
reckoned a protection against objectionable spiritual intruders, and is,
therefore, seen in Cairo over the doors of the houses both of Christians
and Jews.
In northern
Scotland, formerly, a branch of the rowantree was placed over a farmhouse
door, after having been waved while the words "Avaunt, Satan!" were
solemnly pronounced.
About the year
1850 the Rev. Andrew A. Bonar, who was then assistant minister in Collace
Parish, Perthshire, Scotland, found the custom of displaying horseshoes on
the doors of farm buildings so prevalent that he thought it his duty to
remonstrate against a practice savoring of paganism. But his efforts in
this direction, though hardly crowned with success, were yet not wholly
without avail, for his superstitious parishioners removed the guardian
horse-shoes from the outsides of the doors, and nailed them up on the
insides.
The raison
d'être of the horse-shoe at the entrance of shops and other frequented
buildings has been attributed to a belief that, among the many people
continually passing through the doorway, some one might, unobserved, bring
in ill-luck or work mischief. But these safeguards not only form a
sufficient barrier against obnoxious hags and sorcerers, but are potent
against ghosts and all manner of evil creatures. When the Oxford
undergraduate "sports his oak" to prevent the untimely entrance of dunning
tradespeople, he shuts out friendly visitors as well; but the faithful
horseshoe, by a process of natural selection, debars only objectionable
spirits, and is a formidable obstacle to the demon of ill-luck.
XV. THE LUCKY HORSE-SHOE IN GENERAL
He laughs like a boor who has found a
horse-shoe.
--Dutch proverb.
Throughout
Germany the belief obtains that a horseshoe found on the road, and nailed
on the threshold of a house with the points directed outward, is a mighty
protection not only against hags and fiends, but also against fire and
lightning; but, reversed, it brings misfortune. In eastern Pennsylvania,
however, even in recent times, the horse-shoe is often placed with the
prongs pointing inward, so that the luck may be spilled into the house.
The horse-shoe retains its potency as a charm on the sea as well as on
land, and it has long been a practice among sailors to nail this favorite
amulet against the mast of a vessel, whether fishing-boat or large
sea-going craft, as a protection against the Evil One. The shoe of a
"wraith-horse," the mythical off spring of a water-stallion, is especially
esteemed by Scotch mariners for this purpose.
In Bohemia only
exists the superstition exactly opposite to that elsewhere prevalent,
namely, that whoever picks up a horse-shoe thereby ipso facto picks up
ill-luck for himself,--a notable example in folk-lore of the exception
which proves the rule. The Bohemians, however, believe a nailed-up
horse-shoe to be a cure for lunacy.
As a general
rule, the degree of luck pertaining to a horse-shoe found by chance has
been thought to depend on the number of nails remaining in it: the more
nails the more luck.
In
Northumberland the holes free of nails are carefully counted, as these
indicate, presumably in years, how soon the finder of the shoe may expect
to be married. The peasants of northern Portugal prefer mule-shoes having
an uneven number of nail-holes, as counteractives of the evil influences
of the dreaded, omnipresent witches known as the Bruxas.
In Derbyshire
it is customary to drive a horseshoe, prongs upward, between two
flagstones near the door of a dwelling. This position is sometimes
explained by saying that, so placed, the luck cannot spill out.
In a short poem
called "The Lucky Horse-Shoe," by James T. Fields, an amusing account is
given of a farmer who picked up an old horse-shoe from the road, and
nailed it upon the door of his barn with the prongs downward. But, far
from bringing him luck, Fortune thereafter frowned upon him; his hay crop
failed, a drought blighted his vegetables, and his hens refused to lay.
The good
farmer, discouraged and perplexed, confided his woes to the sympathetic
ear of an aged wayfarer who chanced to pass by, relating how misfortunes
had pursued him since he had fastened up the old horse-shoe.
The stranger asked to see the shoe;
The farmer brought it into view;
But when the old man raised his head,
He laughed outright and quickly said:
"No wonder skies upon you frown,
You've nailed the horse-shoe upside down;
Just turn it round, and soon you'll see
How you and Fortune will agree."
The farmer
profited by the friendly suggestion and reversed his luck-token, whereupon
the capricious goddess fairly beamed upon him. His barn was soon filled
with hay, his storehouses were packed with the kindly fruits of the earth,
while his wife presented him with twins.
Farmers may
well take heed how they nail up horseshoes over the doors of their barns.
To obtain the best results, it would seem advisable to place a pair of
these useful articles on each farm building, one with the points upward,
the other reversed; for in this way they may not only hope to win
Fortune's smiles, but also to keep all witches and unfriendly spirits at a
respectful distance.
In an
interesting story for children in "St. Nicholas," April, 1897, by Rudolph
F. Bunner, entitled "The Horse-Shoe of Luck," the writer introduces Luck
in the character and garb of a wandering clown or jester, mounted upon a
white horse. This jovial traveler seeks a night's lodging at a wayside
farmhouse, and when he has almost reached its hospitable door, his steed
casts a shoe, which the farmer hastens to pick up and carefully hangs on a
hook above the door. Luck proved to be a most amusing fellow, and after
supper he entertained the children of the household in a royal manner,
showing them, among other things, how to drop china and glass without
breaking them, and how to tumble down stairs without getting hurt. So the
evening passed merrily enough, and all retired for the night in a happy
frame of mind. Early in the morning the farmer was awakened by the splash
of raindrops upon his face, and, hastily arising, he discovered that the
roof had sprung a leak, and that his guest had unceremoniously departed.
Nettled by such conduct, the farmer and his family hastened in pursuit of
the fleeing stranger, guided by the hoof-prints of his white horse; and
when they had overtaken him, the farmer reproached his late guest for
having left his house so abruptly. Whereupon Luck repied: "I left you, not
because you could not even nail my horse-shoe over your door, but hung it
upside down, so the luck ran out at the ends, but because of your own
mistake. You trusted to me; you trusted to Luck. Ah ha! "
In the
northernmost districts of Scotland exists a belief that if the first shoe
put on the foot of a stallion be hung on the byre door, no harm will come
near the cows; and in the same region, if a horse-shoe be placed between
the houses of quarrelsome neighbors, neither incurs any risk of evil as a
result of the other's illwishes.
As a means of
warding off impending sickness from cattle, and in order that they may
thrive during the summer, the Transylvanian peasants place broken
horseshoes in the animals' drinking-troughs on St. John's Day, June 24.
In
Lincolnshire, not many years ago, there prevailed a custom of "charming"
ash-trees by burying horseshoes under them. Twigs from a tree thus
magically endowed were believed to be efficacious in curing cattle over
which a shrewmouse had run, or which had been exposed to the glance of an
evil eye. To effect a cure in such cases, it was only necessary to gently
stroke the affected animal with one of these twigs.
Some years ago,
a Golspie fisherman who owned a small boat was favored with an
extraordinary run of luck in his fishing, and as a result of his good
fortune was enabled to buy a larger vessel, selling the old one to a
neighbor. From that time, however, his lucky star seemed to wane, and good
"catches" were infrequent. Casting about in his mind for the reason of
this, he bethought him of a stallion's shoe which was fastened inside his
former boat, and which had been given him by a "wise person." But both
boat and horseshoe were now in the hands of his neighbor, who maintained
with reason that the lucky token was now his property, as he had purchased
"the boat and its gear." And ever thereafter the disconsolate fisherman
attributed his lack of success in that season to his own folly in having
parted with the stallion's shoe.
The horse-shoe
figures often in traditions of the sea as a protection to sailors. When
the ghostly ship of the Flying Dutchman meets another vessel, some of its
uncanny crew approach the latter in a boat and beg them to take charge of
a packet of letters.
These letters
must be nailed to the mast, else some misfortune will overtake the ship;
especially if there be no Bible on board, nor any horse-shoe fastened to
the foremast.
In the month of
September, 1825, lightning struck a brigantine which lay at anchor in the
Bay of Armiso, in the Adriatic. A sailor was killed by the bolt, and
tradition says that on one of his hips was seen the perfect representation
of a horse-shoe, a counterpart of one nailed to the vessel's foremast in
accordance with the custom in vogue on the Mediterranean.
The same custom
is common in German inland waters, as, for example, on the river craft
which ply on the Elbe below Hamburg, and on those which navigate the Trave,
at Lubec. On the latter vessels horse-shoes are usually fastened to the
stern-post, instead of to the mast.
In a German
work, entitled "Seespuk," by P. G. Heims, page 138, the writer remarks
that, among seafaring people, the old pagan emblem, the horse-shoe, whose
talismanic origin is so closely associated with horse-sacrifice and the
use of horse-flesh as food among the heathen nations of the North, is even
now the most powerful safeguard aboard ship against lightning and the
powers of evil.
There are
comparatively few small vessels laden with wood, fruit, vegetables, or
other merchandise, sailing between Baltic Sea ports, upon whose foremast,
or elsewhere upon deck, horse-shoes are not nailed.
Indeed,
continues the same writer, this symbol has a notable significance in
German art as well, a fact attributable less to its graceful curving shape
than to the deeply rooted superstitions, relics of barbaric times, which
yet cling to it.
Whether we
regard the horse-shoe as a symbol of Wodan, the chief deity of the
northern nations, as deriving magical power from its half-moon shape, as a
product of supernatural skill in dealing with iron and fire, or as
appertaining to the favorite sacrificial animal of antiquity, the pagan
source of its superstitious use is equally evident.
The horse-shoe,
whether as an amulet or as a sign of good luck, has nothing to do with the
Christian religion. In either case it is a wholly superstitious symbol,
and savors of paganism; it is in fact an inheritance from our heathen
ancestors, a barbaric token, unworthy even to be named in connection with
the sacred cross. Yet throughout many centuries it has captivated the
popular fancy, and its emblematic use appears to be as firmly established
to-day as ever in many parts of the world.
It is popularly
believed that the chance finding of a horse-shoe greatly enhances its
magical power; and it is claimed, moreover, by some writers, to be an
axiom in folk-lore that talismanic objects thrust upon one's notice, as it
were, are direct gifts from the goddess Fortune, and hence possessed of a
special value for the finder. Such a notion is as clearly of pagan origin
as the custom of bowing to the new moon, or of fixing representations of
horses' heads upon the gables of houses in order to terrify wandering
spirits of evil.
In "Curiosities
of Popular Customs," by William S. Walsh (p. 665, 1898), it is stated that
the Northern peoples were wont to offer sacrifices to Wodan after the
harvest, and that the little cakes still baked on St. Martin's Day,
November 11, throughout Germany, are shaped like a horn or horse-shoe,
which was a token of the pagan god. Although not susceptible of proof, it
seems highly probable that we have here another relic of idolatry. It is a
point worthy of note, moreover, that Wodan was not only an all-powerful
deity, corresponding to the Greek Zeus and Roman Jupiter, but that he was
also a great magician, and hence quite naturally the horse-shoe, as one of
his symbols, inherits magical attributes.
In Tuscany a
horse-shoe when found is placed in a small red bag with some hay, which
the Tuscans consider also a luck-bringing article, and the twofold charm
is kept in its owner's bed.
Dr. Robert
James, an English physician of the eighteenth century, and the inventor of
a well-known feverpowder, ascribed his success in acquiring a fortune to
his good luck in having once found a horse-shoe on Westminster Bridge. The
sincerity of his faith was attested by the adoption of the horse-shoe as
his family crest.
Brand quotes
from John Bell's MS. " Discourse on Witchcraft" (1705) as follows:--
Guard against
devilish charms for Men or Beasts. There are many sorceries practiced in
our day, against which I would on this occasion bear my testimony, and do
therefore seriously ask you, what is it you mean by your observation of
Times and Seasons as lucky or unlucky? What mean you by your many Spells,
Verses, Words, so often repeated, said fasting or going backward? How mean
you to have success by carrying about with you certain Herbs, Plants, and
branches of Trees? Why is it that, fearing certain events, you do use such
superstitious means to prevent them, by laying bits of Timber at Doors,
carrying a Bible merely for a Charm, without any farther use of it? What
intend ye by opposing Witchcraft to Witchcraft, in such sort that, when ye
suppose one to be bewitched, ye endeavour his Relief by Burnings, Bottles,
Horse-shoes, and such like magical ceremonies?
In some Roman
Catholic countries the priests are wont to brand cows and pigs on the
forehead with the mark of a horse-shoe, to insure them against disease. It
was, moreover, an old Scotch superstition, or freet, to pass a horse-shoe
thrice beneath the belly and over the back of a cow that was considered
elf-shot.
Among the
Wendish inhabitants of the Spreewald, in North Germany, the lucky finder
of a horse-shoe is careful not to tell any neighbor of his good fortune,
but proceeds at once to fasten the shoe over the door of his house, or on
the threshold, with three nails, and by three blows of a hammer, so that
evil spirits may not enter.
We have seen
that a horse-shoe picked up on the road is often prized as no mean
acquisition by the finder thereof. It may not be out of place to give here
a literal translation of a spell for the protection of a horse's hoof when
a shoe has been lost. The original appeared in Mone's "Anzeiger" in 1834,
and is written in the dialect known as "Middle High German," which was in
vogue from the twelfth to the sixteenth centuries:--
When a horse
has lost one of its iron shoes, take a breadknife and incise the hoof at
the edge from one heel to the other, and lay the knife crosswise on the
sole and say: "I command thee, hoof and horn, that thou breakest as little
as God the Lord broke his Word, when he created heaven and earth." And
thou shalt say these words three hours in succession, and five
Paternosters and five Ave Marias to the praise of the Virgin. Then the
horse will not walk lame until thou happenest to reach a smithy.
The Germans
have a saying in regard to a young girl who has been led astray,-- "She
has lost a horseshoe." This saying has been associated with the shoe as a
symbol of marriage, an idea found both in the northern and Indian
mythologies. But the phrase has been also thought to refer to the
horse-shoe shaped gloria which crowns the head of the Virgin, the
horse-shoe thus becoming the symbol of maidenly chastity. Again, it has
been suggested, in reference to the same phrase, that the horse-shoe is a
symbol of the V (or first letter of the word Virgo), which is used in
church records to designate the unmarried state, just as the word
"spinster" is used in legal documents.
The ancient
Irish were wont to hang up in their houses the feet and legs of their
deceased steeds, setting an especial value upon the hoofs; and with the
Chinese of to-day a horse's hoof hung up indoors is supposed to have the
same protective influence over a dwelling that a horse-shoe has elsewhere.
In southwestern Germany it is still a common practice to nail a hoof over
the stable-door; and in the Netherlands a horse's foot placed in a stable
is thought to keep the horses from being bewitched.
Burton, in his
"Anatomy of Melancholy," admits a belief in the virtues of a ring made
from the hoof of the right foot of an ass, when carried about as an
amulet.
Occasionally,
though rarely, the horse-shoe is thought to have been employed by the
witches themselves in furtherance of their mischievous designs.
In the "Revue
des traditions populaires," vol. ii. 1887, an anecdote is related of a
veteran Polish cavalryman who had served under Napoleon I. While
bivouacking with a detachment of lancers in a village of eastern Prussia,
he and several others lodged in the house of an old peasant woman, and
their horses were accommodated in her barn. It was shortly noticed that
the animals appeared depressed and refused the hay and grain provided for
them, whereupon the soldiers concluded that they were under some spell and
began a search for the cause. They soon found an old horseshoe with three
nails remaining in it, and one of these was quickly driven out with a
hammer. Instantly the horses began to snort and exhibited signs of
restlessness. On the removal of the second nail they held up their I-leads
proudly, and when the third nail was hammered out they fell upon their
provender and devoured it voraciously. The cavalrymen were now convinced
that their horses had been the victims of some deviltry at the hands of
their hostess, whom they believed to be a sorceress. Before their
departure, therefore, they gave her a good beating with their sabre
scabbards to teach her not to practice her nefarious arts upon the horses
of honest people.
XVI. THE HORSE-SHOE AS A PHALLIC SYMBOL
It will suffice
merely to allude to the theory of the phallic origin of the superstitious
use of the horse-shoe, a branch of our subject capable of much
elaboration. The horse-shoe is still the conventional figure for the yoni
(a phallic emblem) in modern Hindu temples. This theory is discussed in
"Ancient Faiths embodied in Ancient Names," by Thomas Inman, M. D.,
London, 1873; and in "A Discourse on the Worship of Priapus," by Richard
Payne Knight, Esq., London, 1865.
Phallic
ornaments are of great antiquity, and amulets of this character have been
found in the earliest Etruscan tombs. Specimens are also to be seen in the
various Italian museums.
The yoni symbol
guards the entrances of ancient temples in Mexico and Peru, as well as in
India.
Ornate Mexican
sacred stones of the horse-shoe form, relics of the ancient Maya tribes,
are classed in the National Museum at Washington, D. C., as representative
of fecundity and nature-worship; and horse-shoe symbols are found in Aztec
manuscripts relating to agriculture as signs of abundance.
Phallic charms
are seen above the entrances of houses and over tent-doors in north Africa
to avert the evil eye, and to bring health and good fortune. Much
information on this subject may be found in a chapter on serpent and
phallic worship in "Rivers of Life," by Major General J. G. R. Forlong,
London, 1883; and in an essay on "Phallism in Ancient Religions," by C.
Staniford Wake, 1888.
On a curious
tablet found near a prehistoric mound in the vicinity of the village of
Cahokia, Saint Clair County, Illinois, are portrayed human faces with
bird-like profiles, diamond-shaped eyes, and low foreheads surmounted by
ornamental crowns or head-dresses. The mouths are wide open, and in front
of them are represented symbols having a well-defined horse-shoe form.
These symbols, although probably of phallic origin, are thought to signify
the principle of life residing in the breath, just as in India the
horse-shoe is an emblem of the soul.
XVII. THE HORSE-SHOE AS A SYMBOL ON TAVERN
SIGN-BOARDS
The horse-shoe,
associated usually with some other symbol, is not infrequently seen
displayed on the signs of British taverns. There is a well-known hostelry
bearing this sign and name on Tottenham Court Road in London. To quote
from "The History of Signboards," by Jacob Larwood and John Camden Hot
ten:--
The Three
Horse-shoes are not uncommon, and the single shoe may be met with in many
combinations, arising from the old belief in its lucky influences. Thus
the Horse and Horse-Shoe was the sign of William Warden at Dover, as
appears from his token. The Sun and Horse-Shoe is still a public-house
sign in Great Tichfield Street, and the Magpie and Horse-Shoe may be seen
carved in Fetter Lane; the magpie is perched within the horse-shoe, a
bunch of grapes being suspended from it. The Horns and Horse-shoe is
represented on the token of William Grainge, in Gutter Lane, 1666, a
horse-shoe within a pair of antlers. The Hoop and Horseshoe on Tower Hill
was formerly called the Horse-shoe.
Miller Christy,
in his book "The Trade Signs of Essex," says that horse-shoe signs
probably owe their origin partly to the fact that this symbol appears on
the arms of the Farriers' Company, and partly to the old practice of
fastening a horse-shoe upon the stable-door or elsewhere as a witch-scarer.
In the county of Essex the horse-shoe may be seen upon the signs of
beerhouses at Great Parndon, Braintree, Waltham Abbey, and High Ongar.
There was
formerly more than one noted inn in London known as the Half-Moon, and a
street of that name, leading from Piccadilly, is well known. The name and
symbol of the full moon, however, seldom appear on sign-boards. Butler
asks in "Hudibras:"--
Tell me, but what's the nat'ral cause,
Why on a sign no painter draws
The full moon, but the half?
The reason is
doubtless because of the favorable auspices associated from time
immemorial with the crescent moon.
One need hardly
accept as plausible the explanation sometimes offered, namely, that the
half-moon tavern symbol is a silent invitation to eat and drink to one's
full capacity; a hint, as it were, to follow the crescent moon's example
and "get full."
XVIII. HORSE-SHOES ON CHURCH-DOORS
The origin of
the horse-shoe as a charm has been ascribed to its resemblance to the
metallic aureole or meniscus formerly placed over the heads of images of
patron saints in churches, and which is also represented in ancient
pictures of the Virgin.
This aureole,
or more properly nimbus, was probably of pagan origin, for in early times
circles of stars frequently ornamented the heads of statues of the gods,
as emblematic of divinity. In speaking of certain ancient relics found in
Ireland, Mr. W. G. WoodMartin ("Pagan Ireland," p. 492) says:--
Thin crescentic
plates, with the extremities terminating in flat circular disks, are the
ornaments most frequently discovered. In form they are identical with the
half-moon-shaped ornaments in use among the Greeks and Romans, and with
the nimbi on carvings of the Byzantine school; and they differ but little
from the ring which now is conventionally placed around the head of a
saint. Thus this glory can be traced back to pagandom. The crescentic
plate appears to have been primarily the badge of some distinguished
person, a chief or king; then it became the emblem of one considered to be
a very holy person, for in Ireland, in the early days of Christianity, the
saints were derived principally from the aristocracy.
In the
collection of the Royal Irish Academy is a golden tiara or diadem, said to
have been found in County Clare. This relic, which measures about a foot
in height and the same in breadth, is thought to have been a head-dress of
some pagan or early Christian chieftain.
In the earlier
years of the church these crescent symbols were avoided as savoring of
heathenism; but without any thought of its significance, it became
customary in the Middle Ages to place a circular brass plate upon the
heads of statues as a protection from snow or rain. Hence arose the
practice of similarly adorning images and paintings in churches.
In later times
these crescent-shaped pieces of metal were sometimes nailed up at the
entrance of churches, and so came to be regarded as protective emblems.
The horse-shoe was an easily available substitute for the halo or glory,
and so was often placed upon the doors of churches, especially in the
southwest of England, as it was generally believed in olden times that
evil spirits could enter even consecrated edifices. Aubrey, in his
"Miscellanies," mentions having seen under the porch of Staninfield
Church, in Suffolk, an inscription with the device of a horse-shoe,
intended to exclude witches, and he naively remarks that one would imagine
holy water amply sufficient for the purpose.
On the south
door of the parish church of Ashby-Foville, in Leicestershire, were
formerly two ancient horse-shoes of great size, one of them measuring 16
by 11-1/2 inches, or more than twice as large as an average modern shoe.
As it does not
seem likely that such shoes were made to fit horses' feet, in the absence
of traditional information regarding them, it appears probable that they
were intended solely to bar the ingress of witches.
In St. Martin's
Church, Canterbury, the oldest in England, the sacristan shows visitors
the site of an early English door on the south side, and a Norman doorway
in the middle of the northern wall, both long since blocked up. Infants to
be baptized were formerly brought into the church by the south entrance,
and after the ceremony the north door was thrown open to permit the egress
of evil spirits expelled by baptism. For in early times demons were
believed to come from the north, where the habitations of the Norse gods
were also thought to be. The pagans, when worshiping their deities, looked
towards the north; but Christians engaged in prayer turned their faces
eastward and lifted up their hands; they regarded the north as "the
unblessed heathen quarter." The unexplored Arctic regions, where night
reigned much of the time, were thought to belong especially to the Devil,
or spirit of darkness; and the same idea is conveyed in several passages
of Holy Scripture, as, for example, in Jeremiah iv. 6: "I will bring evil
from the north, and a great destruction."
In the Middle
Ages the rose-windows in the north and south transepts of Lincoln Minster
were called the two eyes of the cathedral, the former being known as the
Dean's Eye, ever on the watch against the attacks of Lucifer, who had his
abode "in the sides of the north" (Isaiah xiv. 13); while the window in
the south transept was called the Bishop's Eye, "courting the influence of
the Holy Spirit, of which the south wind was a type." Apropos of evil
spirits entering consecrated places, there is a quaint legend about a
little stone figure yclept the Lincoln Imp, which is to be seen perched
upon a corbel of a column on the north side of the Angel Choir of the same
cathedral. According to one version of the legend, when Bishop Remigius
came to Lincoln, in the year after the Norway Conquest, the Devil was
sorely tried; for until that time he had had undisturbed control of
affairs in the town and neighborhood. In vain the Evil One sought to
hinder the completion of the church, and finally he waylaid the bishop
outside the building and attempted to kill him. But the good bishop at
this critical time called upon the Blessed Virgin Mary for assistance, and
she sent a tempest of wind which so buffeted and distracted the Devil that
he sought refuge inside the church, not daring to venture out because of
the fierce wind, which prevails a good part of the time even nowadays, and
which is still awaiting the Devil's reappearance!
The Bishop, we know, died long ago;
The wind still waits, nor will he go
Till he has a chance of beating his foe;
But the Devil hopp'd up without a limp,
And at once took shape as the Lincoln Imp.
And there he sits atop the column,
And grins at the people who gaze so solemn.
Moreover, he mocks at the wind below,
And says, "You may wait till doomsday, O!"
In southern
Germany, Bavaria, and Tyrol, the horseshoe symbol is to be seen on
church-doors, as an emblem of St. Leonard, the guardian and protector of
horses and travelers; and it is usually associated with some romantic
legend, having oftentimes a historic basis. Traditions relating to
horse-shoes on churchdoors are, indeed, plentiful in the popular
literature of Germany, and a few examples are given later. St. Leonard's
Day, November 6, had its special observances. The peasants were wont to
bring their horses to some church dedicated to that worthy, and ride them
thrice around the sacred building, a procedure which was believed to be
highly auspicious. It was, moreover, customary for noblemen, before
starting on an equestrian journey, to fasten a horse-shoe on the
church-door as a votive offering to St. Leonard.
Especial honor
is accorded to this saint on the day of his festival, at Fischhausen, a
seaport village in northeastern Prussia. On that occasion the parish
church is surrounded by farm wagons and other vehicles drawn by gayly
decorated horses, for here the country people have a grand rendezvous;
young women in holiday attire drive hither the cows, who have been brought
from their summer quarters in the upland pastures, that they, too, may
participate in the festivities. A religious service, largely attended by
the peasants, is first held in the church, and then follow the outdoor
exercises, of which a chief feature consists in driving the horses three
times around the building at a rapid pace.
During the
prevalence of a severe epizoötic in Würtemberg many years ago, the people
removed the shoes from their horses' feet, and hung them on the walls of
churches as propitiatory offerings. Various other iron implements, such as
chain traces, were thus similarly displayed.
An ancient St.
Leonard's Chapel, in the town of Laupheim, is encircled by an iron chain,
which is said to have been forged from horse-shoes thus piously
contributed. The largest church dedicated to this saint is at Tölz, in
upper Bavaria, and its altar is likewise surrounded by an iron chain.
Pictures of St.
Leonard are sometimes placed upon stable-doors to bring luck; he is
usually represented as holding a pastoral staff, while on one side is seen
a colt or filly, on the other a sick ox, and at his feet is a ewe lamb.
In northern
Germany, St. George, as a successor of Wodan, is one of the special
guardians and protectors of horses. On the festal day of this saint, April
23, the peasants gather in large numbers around some church dedicated to
him, and their horses and vehicles, numbering sometimes many hundreds, are
drawn up in a circle around the sanctuary. After the parish priest has
delivered a sermon in the church, he comes to the door and blesses each
horse separately as the animal is led past, meanwhile sprinkling him with
holy water.
Then the young
men mount their best horses and ride them three times at full speed around
the church, shouting lustily meanwhile.
JŠhns remarks
that this ceremony is doubtless a relic of some pagan rite, and that in
many places a venerable tree, instead of a Christian church, is chosen as
the place of rendezvous on St. George's Day. During the ride around the
tree, an aged peasant standing in its shade throws upon each horse, as it
passes, a little moist earth taken from about the roots of the sacred
tree, and this insures the animal against sickness until the following
spring, especially if some of the earth be placed in a bag and hung up in
the stable.
As the hammer
was Thor's emblem, so the horse-shoe has been thought to possess a certain
mystic significance as a symbol of the heathen god Wodan; and it has been
assumed that the ancient churches, upon whose doors horse-shoes are still
to be seen, were built upon the sites of pagan temples dedicated to that
deity. It has been argued, moreover, that the modern use of a horse-shoe
as a talisman, and the placing of horses' heads on peasants' houses, are
relics of heathendom, and have a mysterious affinity with the hoof-print
legends of Teutonic mythology. Such a theory appears plausible enough in
view of the fact that many of the superstitious customs and beliefs of
modern times are known to have existed before the Christian era.
XIX. HORSE-SHOE LEGENDARY LORE
1. Within
recent years two horse-shoes were to be seen on the door of the parish
church of Haccombe in Derbyshire. A romantic legend associated with these
horse-shoes is the theme of a ballad supposed to have been written by a
master of Exeter Grammar School in the early part of the nineteenth
century. The ballad graphically describes a race for a wager between a
certain Earl of Totnes, mounted on a Derbyshire roan, and one Sir Arthur
Champernowne, on a fleet Barbary courser. The race was won by the earl,
who thereupon rode straight to the door of Haccombe Church,
And there he fell on his knees and prayed,
And many an Ave Maria said;
Bread and money he gave to the poor,
And he nailed the roan's shoes to the chapel door.
2. In the
traditionary lore of the Harz Mountains there is a weird tale of four
horse-shoes, which for ages were to be seen on the door of a church in the
suburbs of Klettenburg.
Once upon a
time, so runs the story, a great drinking match was held on a Sunday
morning at Elrich. The prize was a golden chain, and many knights
assembled from near and far. The carousal lasted for some hours, until
Count Ernest of Klettenburg, the only one who could still keep on his
feet, exultantly claimed the golden chain, which he hung about his neck.
Then, mounting his horse, he rode homeward, and while nearing Klettenburg
he heard the strains of even-song in a church dedicated to St. Nicholas.
Urging on his steed, he rode madly through the open door straight to the
altar. Then, so runs the legend, the horse's four shoes fell off, and
horse and rider sank down together out of sight. In memory of this
wonderful event, the four horse-shoes were placed on the door of the
church, and for many years were regarded with awe by the simple
countryfolk.
3. In the
construction of the Church of St. Stephen, at Tangermünde, in Prussian
Saxony, a brick edifice of the fourteenth century, the members of two
guilds, those of the blacksmiths and shoemakers, were of especial
assistance; and in remembrance of this, a horse-shoe and an iron shoe-sole
were built into the outer wall of the church. The former indicates that up
to its level the blacksmiths had built the walls, and the latter shows
that all the work above the horse-shoe was done by the shoemakers; such,
at least, is the popular explanation, which may well be received cum grano
salis.
4. In the
parish church of Schwarzenstein, in east Prussia, hang two horse-shoes as
reminders of the following tradition: In the village of Eichmedien, one
mile from Rastenburg, lived formerly as tavern-keeper a woman, who had
earned an unenviable notoriety by her practice of charging double the
proper fees for board and lodging. Late one night, when several of her
guests accused her of being a cheat, she asseverated her honesty by
holding up her hand, and saying in the form of an oath: "If my score is
not correct, may the Devil now jump on my back." The Evil One took the
woman promptly at her word, transformed her into a mare, and rode her out
of the village, laughing scornfully. At headlong speed he rode to a
blacksmith's shop in Schwarzenstein, and demanded that his mare be shod at
once. The blacksmith, routed out of his sleep, excused himself, pleading
the lateness of the hour and the fact that there was no fire in his forge.
The Devil insisted, however, and promised liberal payment if the work were
done quickly. The blacksmith yielded at length, but had not proceeded far
in shaping the shoes when the mare began to speak. "My cousin, don't you
know me?" she said; "I am the tavern-keeper." Upon this the blacksmith was
so horrified that neither threats nor entreaties could prevail to make him
proceed with the shoeing, and before he had finished the third shoe a cock
crowed, and immediately the spell was broken and the woman reassumed her
own form. And to point the moral of this legend, and as a warning to
cheats, the two horse-shoes which the smith had completed were nailed up
in the village church at Schwarzenstein.
5. According to
an old tradition, the Lapp king, Olaf Skötkonung (995-1030), wishing to
become a Christian, asked his royal contemporary, Ethelred II. of England,
to send him a teacher. In response to this request Bishop Siegfried and
three missionaries came to Sweden, and, landing on the southwestern coast,
encamped the first night at Wexio, on Lake Sodre. Here the bishop saw in a
vision a great company of angels, and thereupon determined to build a
church at that place. The pagan inhabitants, however, were hostile to the
undertaking, and seized the three missionaries, Winaman, Unaman, and
Sunaman, whom they beheaded, and caused their heads to be thrown into the
water.
One night soon
after this sad event Siegfried was walking along the shore of the lake,
sighing and praying, when he espied three luminous objects approaching on
the water, borne onward by the waves, and soon he recognized them as the
heads of his friends. And, behold, the first head said, "The dead shall be
avenged." And a voice from the second head exclaimed, "When?" Then replied
the third head in solemn tones, "On their children and children's
children." This prophecy was not, however, fulfilled to the letter, for
through Siegfried's intercession Olaf consented to spare the lives of the
murderers, on condition that they should build a Christian church in Wexio;
and this church, which still exists, has on its coat-of-arms, or seal, the
representation of three severed heads, in memory of the occurrence and its
legend. In this church hung formerly a shoe of Wodan's famous steed
Sleipnir, as a souvenir of the following tradition: When the church bells
rang for the first time to summon the people to mass, Wodan came riding
over the mountains, and, when nearing Wexio, Sleipnir, in a sudden fright,
struck a rock with one of his feet, and the impress of the powerful blow
remains in the rock to this day. But the shoe fell off and was placed in
the church.
6. Many years
ago, so runs an old legend, a man obtained employment at a farm in Norway,
where, unknown to him, the mistress was a witch. Although the man had
plenty of good wholesome food, he did not thrive upon it, but became
thinner each day. Being troubled at this, he sought the counsel of a wise
man, from whom he learned the true character of his mistress. He learned,
moreover, that she had been in the habit of transforming him into a horse
at night while he slept, and riding him to Troms Church, a fact which
fully accounted for his leanness.
The wise man
also gave him a magical ointment, with which to rub his head at bedtime,
and by virtue of which, on awaking the next morning, he found himself
standing by Troms Church with a bridle in his hand, while behind him were
a number of horses bound together by their tails. Soon he perceived his
mistress coming out of the church, and when she was near enough to him he
threw the bridle over her head, and instantly she was transformed into a
handsome mare, which he mounted and rode homeward. On his way, however, he
stopped at a farrier's and had the animal shod with four new shoes, and on
reaching home he told his master that he had bought a fine mare, that
would be an excellent mate for one which he already had. His master bought
the mare at a good price, but when he took the bridle off she disappeared,
and in her place stood the mistress witch with new horse-shoes on her
hands and feet. Thereupon the man related the wonderful tale of his
experiences, and in consequence thereof the wife was turned out of doors,
and never got rid of the horse-shoes.
7. Once upon a
time a gentleman of rank was driving with four horses along the highway
which runs between the towns of Tübingen and Hirschau, in Würtemberg, and
when opposite a roadside chapel he scoffed at a picture of the Madonna
which adorned it. Immediately his horses came to a standstill, nor could
he make them proceed, in spite of vigorous urging. At length, in this
dilemma, a priest was called, who imposed as a penance the removal of a
shoe from the right fore-foot of each horse, and after this had been done
the gentleman was enabled to continue his journey. And in commemoration of
this miracle one of the horseshoes was nailed upon the chapel-door, where
it was still to be seen in recent years.
8. One Sunday
morning a swarthy rider on a black horse rode at full speed through the
village of Nabburg, in Bavaria, directly to the blacksmith's shop, to have
his horse shod. "Will you not rest on a Sunday?" demanded the smith. "My
steed and I journey to and fro, and care nothing for the Christian
Sunday," replied the horseman; "therefore shoe my horse in the Devil's
name, and I counsel thee speak no pious word meanwhile, for no devout
person has yet obtained the mastery over this spirited animal." With these
words he sprang to the ground and stroked his horse's flowing mane. The
smith, though ill at ease, began the work, and the horse was as quiet as
if under a spell, much to the astonishment of his master, who could scarce
believe his eyes. Three shoes were quickly set, and the smith called to
his assistant, "Now, then, in God's name, hand me the last shoe!"
Instantly the fiery steed reared and struck out wildly, casting a shoe
with such force against the wall that it remains to this day embedded
there. But the horse and his rider were seen no more.
9. In a wall on
an estate called Ludwigstein, in Schleswig-Holstein, is to be seen a large
stone bearing the imprint of a horse-shoe, wherewith is associated the
following tale: One morning many years ago a horseman was riding along the
road when the church prayerbell rang, whereupon he swore an oath and said,
"May the Devil take me if I am not again on this very spot this evening
when the bell again sounds." And indeed he kept his word, but at the
stroke of the evening bell his horse slipped upon the stone and broke a
leg, and the mark of a shoe is still to be seen there.
10. The
Horse-Shoe imprint in the cemetery of the Church of Our Lady at Münster.
During the building of this beautiful Gothic church in the fourteenth
century, the Devil observed its shapely proportions with increasing
displeasure, and bethought himself of various schemes to hinder the work's
progress. Finally he decided on trying to bewitch the architect's senses.
Accordingly he braided his hair, arrayed himself in gay female attire,
bedecked with costly jewels, and appeared before the architect, whom he
sought to ensnare with soft words and gifts. But the latter was not thus
to be deceived. Leaning upon his measuring-rod, he listened unmoved to the
beguiling conversation of the pretended belle, and rejected with scorn the
gold and precious stones which she brought him. Thereupon the Devil became
enraged, stamped upon the ground with vehemence, and disappeared, leaving
behind him an evil smell; and the mark of one of the iron horse-shoes,
wherewith he was shod, was deeply imprinted on a stone in the cemetery,
and, according to popular report, is still to be found there.
The impressions
on stone of figures of horse-shoes, of which there are numerous examples
in northern Europe, are regarded by some archaeologsts as sacred symbols
of the pagans or relics of the cult of Wodan, and as showing the sites of
ancient altars and burial places; while others maintain that these figures
were originally intended as boundary marks. Numerous traditions associate
them with battles fought in these localities, and in the popular fancy
they are imagined to indicate the favorite haunts of witches, the
meeting-places where they held their revels, the horse-shoe mark being an
imprint of the Devil's foot. These weird rendezvous were usually on the
tops of mountains or hills, and are still known as Witches' Dance-Places
in different parts of Europe, especially in Germany. |