Grimm's TM - Superstitions
Superst. M
SUPERSTITIONS - M.
M. ESTHONIAN
(1)
- Marriages take place
at the time of new moon.
- If the suitor rides to
the house where he goes a-wooing, he is careful not to take a mare,
else there would be only daughters born of the marriage.
- When the bride is betrothed,
a red string is tied round her body; and when the wedding is completed,
she must so inflate herself as to break the string. A sure preventive
of difficult confinements.
- In many places the young
couple run out of church, hand in hand, at the top of their speed, to
secure rapid progress in their business.
- When the bride is fetched,
if she falls on the way, it betokens the early death of her first three
or four children.
- If they see the suitor
arrive on horseback, they hasten to undo his saddle-girth. This also
tends to facilitate childbirth in the future wife.
- The bride must not come
out by a gate through which a corpse has lately been carried out.
- When the bride is fetched
in, she must wear no chains or bells, but be led in in solemn silence;
else she will have restless noisy children.
- Directly the wedding
is over, the strongest of the relations or guests lifts the bride and
bridegroom aloft, thereby to heighten their married bliss.
(2)
- As soon as the wedded
pair have stept into their house, a watchman must stay a good while
by the household fire, that no stranger may come near it, and contrive
to secret sorcery to their hurt.
- The moment the bride
enters, she is led through every part of the house, parlours, bedrooms,
bathrooms, stables and gardens; and is bound, as she holds her husband's
happiness dear, to drop ribbons or money into each part, even into the
well and the fire.
- When she sits down, they
set a male child in her lap, that she may have the power to bear men-children.
- In some parts they used,
during the wedding feast, to stick two swords into the wall over where
the bride and bridegroom sat; the one whose sword kept up the longest
vibration, would live longest.
- At the meal they are
wilfully wasteful of the beer, and spill it about, so that superfluity
may house with the happy pair.
- Whichever of the pair
first goes to sleep, dies first.
- Rain on the wedding-day
means frequent weeping for the wife.
- At the marriage-feast
they set two candles before bride and bridegroom; the one whose light
goes out first of itself, is sure to die first.
- The bridegroom's attendant
cuts a small piece off a whole loaf, butters it, and puts it in the
bride's mouth. Her children will then have a small smooth mouth.
- In bringing the young
wife into the husband's house, they pull down the fence on both sides
of the entrance, that she may drive in swiftly without hindrance. Then
her confinement will come off quickly and easily.
- Women with child are
careful, in lighting a fire, not to throw the wood in against the branches,
else they would have a difficult labour.
- A difficult labour is
lightened by the husband striding over the wife.
- No pregnant woman will
sit on a water-vessel, lest she have too many daughters, or the fruit
be lost in the water.
- If two pregnant women
sneeze together, they will have daughters; if their husbands sneeze,
sons.
- In beginning a loaf,
a pregnant woman cuts a very small slice first, that her children may
have pretty little mouths.
- To change the bastels
(bast-shoes) once a week in the middle of pregnancy, and to throw salt
three times behind oneself shortly before confinement, will ease the
labour.
- None shall step over
the feet of a pregnant woman, lest her children get crooked misshapen
feet.
- A newborn babe is not
placed at once in the mother's arms, but first laid at her feet, that
her left foot may touch its mouth; then it will not be rebellious.
- A newborn baby's bath-water
is emptied on the most out-of-the-way spot, lest, if many tramples on
it, the child be down-trodden and despised.
- The midwife with the
baby shall, soon after the birth, take the uppermost seat at table;
it will then be more highly esteemed.
- Never pass anything over
the baby's head, or it won't grow; if such a thing happens, pull the
hair on the top of its head upwards.
- What a baby first clutches
at, shows what will be its favourite occupation.
- The first time a babe
is laid in the cradle, they put a knife, a crosskey, and some red yarn
beside it; these defend it from sorcery.
- One born on one of the
last days of a week, will marry late or never.
- If a married woman has
boys only, it is a sign of war; if girls only, of peace.
- When a priest visits
a sick man, they watch the gait of his horse as he draws near. If the
horse hangs its head, they despair of the patient's recovery.
(3)
- A funeral must on no
account cross a cornfield, even when it lies fallow.
- By a corpse they lay
a brush, money, needles, and thread. Some brush the dead man's head,
and lay the brush beside him, to bring him peace.
- Some drive a nail into
the threshold every time a person dies in the house.
- The vehicle that has
carried a corpse is not admitted within the gate at once, but left outside
for a time; else more of the family would follow.
- The straw on which the
sick man died, is all carried out and burnt: by footprints in the ashes
they can tell if the next loss will be of man or beast.
- If one dies at new moon,
he takes all the luck with him; if in Shrovetide, he is buried as plainly
as possible.
- On All Souls day every
family makes a feast for its departed members, and visits the churchyards.
In some parts they set food for the deceased on the floor of a particular
room. Late in the evening the master of the house went in with a pergel
(a lighted brand split down its length), and invited the deceased by
name to eat. After a time, when he thought the souls had made a hearty
meal, he, while beating his pergel to pieces on the threshold, bade
them go back to their places, and not trample the rye on their way.
If there was a bad crop, it was ascribed to the souls having been entertained
too scantily. (4)
- About the Judgment day
the Esthonian has the notion that all the churches will then topple
over towards the North. He cannot bear the thought of being buried in
that part of the churchyard.
- Till the baby is baptized,
it has a hymnbook laid under its head, and a fire kept up beside it,
to ban the devil, and keep him from changing the child.
- During baptism they fix
their eyes on the baby, to see if it holds its head up or lets it sink
down. If up, it will have a long life; if down, a short.
- Sometimes, during the
service, the father runs rapidly round the church, that the child may
be gifted with fleetness of foot.
- If by bribing the sexton
they can get the baptismal water, they dash it as high as they can up
the wall. The child will then attain high honours.
- During baptism you must
not talk, or the child will talk in its sleep.
- Don't have a baptism
directly after a burial, or the child will follow the dead.
- Leave the chrisom baby's
hands free; it will then be quick and industrious.
- During baptism a sponsor
shall not look about him, or the child will see ghosts.
- Many tie rings to the
swathings of a chrisom boy, to make him marry early.
- They do not like a child
to be baptized on another child's birthday.
- In the chrisom child's
clothes some insert, unobserved, money, bread, and garlic; then the
first two will never fail him, and the last protects from sorcery.
- A chrisom child's sleeping
shows it will not live long.
- When none but girls are
brought to the font, they will go unmarried long, perhaps always.
- No sponsor eats flesh
just before the christening, else the baby will have toothache.
- Parents who lose their
first children call the next ones Adam and Eve, and they live (see Germ.
26).
- They will have no christening
on a Friday; on Thursday it has more power.
- A child christened on
a Friday grows up a rogue, and comes under the hangman's hands.
- Thunder comes of God
chasing the devil, overtaking him, and dashing him down. During the
storm they make doors and windows fast, lest the hunted devil take refuge
in their house, and, as God is sure to catch him up, the house be thunderstruck.
- Some during a storm fasten
two knives outside a window, to prevent being struck.
- Many, the first time
they hear thunder in the year, take a stone, tap their forehead with
it three times, and are free from headache for a year.
- Anything struck by lightning
they muse over gravely, especially certain riven rocks; they think the
devil, having taken refuge in or under them, was there surprised and
slain.
- Many take the rainbow
to be Thunder's sickle, with which he punishes malignant under-gods
who try to injure men.
- Many believe in the power
of man to raise wind, and to change its direction. For this purpose
they would hang up a snake, or set up an axe, in the direction whence
they wished for a wind, and try to allure it by whistling.
- A sudden noise on New
year's night foretells the death of an inmate.
- They give wild beasts
periphrastic names, and avoid their real ones, when they have to speak
of them. The fox they call Hallkuhb (grey-coat), the bear Layfalgk (broad-foot).
- The first time they drive
their cattle out in the year, they bury eggs under the threshold over
which they must pass, whereby all discomfort is banned away from them.
Once, when a cattle plague broke out, it was found that they buried
one head of the herd under the stable door, as a sacrifice to Death,
and to stay the murrain.
- If the cattle return
from pasture, still chewing grass, there will be a hay-famine.
- They send the wolf to
the rightabout by sprinkling salt on his track.
- A great howling of wolves
at early morning foretells plague or famine.
- Formerly the Ehsts believed,
when they heard a great howling of wolves, that they were crying to
God for food, and he then threw them dumplings down from the clouds.
- If the wolf carries off
a sheep or pig, they let something fall, of their clothes or of what
they have in their pockets, believing that the wolf will then find his
load too heavy, and drop his prey.
- Some wear the tip of
a hen's wing about them, and think it promotes early rising.
- They do not like to name
the hare often, they think it tempts him to come and damage their rye-grass.
- If a cock or hen walking
in the yard trails a straw after it, there will soon be a corpse in
the house, its sex depending on that of the fowl.
- You can enable a hen
to lay eggs by beating her with an old broom.
- Some, the first time
of driving out cattle, put an egg before the stable-door; the beast
that treads on it is ripe for death, and they try to sell it.
- They gladly sell the
first calves of young cows, where the mistress is her own mother's first
child; such a calf cannot thrive.
- The yoke just taken off
or about to be put on must not be laid on the bare ground, or it will
chafe and wound the ox.
- A fire may be checked
by throwing in a live black hen as a sacrifice.
- In clearing out the corn
and flour bins, leave a little behind, or it will bring misfortune.
- No farmer is willing
to give earth off his cornfields, he thinks it is parting with a good
piece of his prosperity.
- Let no one step over
your girdle; it brings on the itch.
- One is careful not to
be beaten with dry twigs, it brings on consumption or leanness.
- In cutting a new loaf
they throw some aside; from a full cup they let some drops fall on the
ground. It is a sacrifice to the Invisible Spirit.
- Many a man looks glum
if you try to find out the depth of his well, it would dry up if you
did.
- One does not like giving
all the money in his purse at once; if it can't be helped, let your
spittle fall in the purse.
- They are anxious not
to have clothes-props stolen: their loss runs them short of ash.
- The first time the cowherds
drive home in the year, they are on arriving sprinkled with water; it
is thought to be wholesome for the cattle.
- No shearing of sheep
at seed-time, for then the wool does not grow again properly.
- Dung fallen off the cart
is not to be picked up again: it breeds vermin.
- At flax-picking there
is no talking, no question answered, no greeting returned; otherwise
the flax does not answer well.
- If the first that dies
in a farmer's new abode be a beast with hairy legs, a blessing rests
on the house; if a bird with bare legs, the farmer mopes, dreading losses
and poverty.
- At night when candles
are lighted, the people sigh and cross themselves.
- Every time they kill
anything, if only a fowl, they put a piece of it behind the cattle-shed
as a sacrifice.
- On the accursed spot
where a house was burnt down, they never build a new one; if, in laying
the ground-beam, a single spark is kindled by a by-blow, it foretells
a new fire, and they look out another place to build on.
- On the site where a cowhouse
is to be built, they first lay rags and herbs; if black ants creep on
to them, it is a good sign; if red ants, the place is pronounced unfit
to build on.
- A whirlwind is the work
of evil spirits: where you see dust gathering, you should throw stones
or a knife into the heart of the whirl, and pursue it with cries.
- At a wedding the bride
treads on the bridegroom's foot, that she may never be oppressed by
him.
- Red streaks in the sky
shew that the dragon is setting out; a dark hue in the clouds, that
he comes home with booty. Shooting stars are little dragons.
- Etwas über die Ehsten
(Leipz. 1788, pp. 55-89). Nos. 93-99 from Hupel's Topogr. nachr. von
Lief- und Ehst-land (Riga 1777. 2, 134-145). [Back]
- RA. 433. [Back]
- Conf. Hupel's Topogr.
Nachr. 2, 146. [Back]
- More fully in Thom. Hiärn
1, 49. [Back]
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