登陆注册
20273200000035

第35章 THE MENTAL CONDITION OF SAVAGES--CONFUSION WITH NA

"Ils s'arretent aux premieres notions qu'ils en ont," says Pere Hierome Lalemant. "Nothing," says Schoolcraft, "is too capacious (sic) for Indian belief." The replies to his questions he receives from tradition or (when a new problem arises)evolves an answer for himself in the shape of STORIES. Just as Socrates, in the Platonic dialogues, recalls or invents a myth in the despair of reason, so the savage has a story for answer to almost every question that he can ask himself. These stories are in a sense scientific, because they attempt a solution of the riddles of the world. They are in a sense religious, because there is usually a supernatural power, a deus ex machina, of some sort to cut the knot of the problem. Such stories, then, are the science, and to a certain extent the religious tradition, of savages.

Relations de la Nouvelle France, 1648, p. 70.

Algic Researches, i. 41.

"The Indians (Algonkins) conveyed instruction--moral, mechanical and religious--through traditionary fictions and tales."--Schoolcraft, Algic Researches, i. 12.

Now these tales are necessarily cast in the mould of the savage ideas of which a sketch has been given. The changes of the heavenly bodies, the processes of day and night, the existence of the stars, the invention of the arts, the origin of the world (as far as known to the savage), of the tribe, of the various animals and plants, the origin of death itself, the origin of the perplexing traditional tribal customs, are all accounted for in stories. At the same time, an actual divine Maker is sometimes postulated. The stories, again, are fashioned in accordance with the beliefs already named: the belief in human connection with and kinship with beasts and plants; the belief in magic; the belief in the perpetual possibility of metamorphosis or "shape shifting"; the belief in the permanence and power of the ghosts of the dead; the belief in the personal and animated character of all the things in the world, and so forth.

No more need be said to explain the wild and (as it seems to us moderns) the irrational character of savage myth. It is a jungle of foolish fancies, a walpurgis nacht of gods and beasts and men and stars and ghosts, all moving madly on a level of common personality and animation, and all changing shapes at random, as partners are changed in some fantastic witches' revel. Such is savage mythology, and how could it be otherwise when we consider the elements of thought and belief out of which it is mainly composed? We shall see that part of the mythology of the Greeks or the Aryans of India is but a similar walpurgis nacht, in which an incestuous or amorous god may become a beast, and the object of his pursuit, once a woman, may also become a beast, and then shift shapes to a tree or a bird or a star. But in the civilised races the genius of the people tends to suppress, exclude and refine away the wild element, which, however, is never wholly eliminated. The Erinyes soon stop the mouth of the horse of Achilles when he begins, like the horse in Grimm's Goose Girl, to hold a sustained conversation. But the ancient, cruel, and grotesque savage element, nearly overcome by Homer and greatly reduced by the Vedic poets, breaks out again in Hesiod, in temple legends and Brahmanic glosses, and finally proves so strong that it can only be subdued by Christianity, or rather by that break between the educated classes and the traditional past of religion which has resulted from Christianity. Even so, myth lingers in the folk-lore of the non-progressive classes of Europe, and, as in Roumania, invades religion.

Iliad, xix. 418.

We have now to demonstrate the existence in the savage intellect of the various ideas and habits which we have described, and out of which mythology springs. First, we have to show that "a nebulous and confused state of mind, to which all things, animate or inanimate, human, animal, vegetable or inorganic, seem on the same level of life, passion and reason," does really exist. The existence of this condition of the intellect will be demonstrated first on the evidence of the statements of civilised observers, next on the evidence of the savage institutions in which it is embodied.

Creuzer and Guigniaut, vol. i. p. 111.

The opinion of Mr. Tylor is naturally of great value, as it is formed on as wide an acquaintance with the views of the lower races as any inquirers can hope to possess. Mr. Tylor observes: "We have to inform ourselves of the savage man's idea, which is very different from the civilised man's, of the nature of the lower animals. . . .

The sense of an absolute psychical distinction between man and beast, so prevalent in the civilised world, is hardly to be found among the lower races." The universal attribution of "souls" to all things--the theory known as "Animism"--is another proof that the savage draws no hard and fast line between man and the other things in the world. The notion of the Italian country-people, that cruelty to an animal does not matter because it is not a "Christian,"has no parallel in the philosophy of the savage, to whom all objects seem to have souls, just as men have. Mr. Im Thurn found the absence of any sense of a difference between man and nature a characteristic of his native companions in Guiana. "The very phrase, 'Men and other animals,' or even, as it is often expressed, 'Men and animals,' based as it is on the superiority which civilised man feels over other animals, expresses a dichotomy which is in no way recognised by the Indian. . . . It is therefore most important to realise how comparatively small really is the difference between men in a state of savagery and other animals, and how completely even such difference as exists escapes the notice of savage men. . .

同类推荐
  • 大方便佛报恩经

    大方便佛报恩经

    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。
  • 苦吟

    苦吟

    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。
  • 春秋公羊传注疏

    春秋公羊传注疏

    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。
  • 太上灵宝净明入道品

    太上灵宝净明入道品

    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。
  • 石屋清洪禅师语录

    石屋清洪禅师语录

    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
  • 宝贝狐仙:玩死腹黑冷总

    宝贝狐仙:玩死腹黑冷总

    怎样收拾花心多金男?看高级黑怎么干!“搽清凉油可以清洁包\皮的顽固污垢?你确定?”她垂眸冷笑,继续看报:“你不试试看怎么知道?”几分钟后,他痛苦的走过来,一把夺过她手里的报纸,抱头抓狂:“女人,是皮包,不是包\皮好不好!!!”。
  • 凄凉夜曲:假面公主

    凄凉夜曲:假面公主

    在暮色的夜晚中,有着许许多多凄惨的故事,忧伤的旋律,摇摆的窗帘,凄惨的夜曲,他们诉说着这些故事,谱写着新的生活,新的开始......她的结局和开始注定是悲惨的,她的人生注定只能活在仇恨中,她的未来注定只有她自己一人的身影,她常常在想,若是世界上没有她自己这个人,那这些事情会不会不会发生,可是已经晚了,事情已经发生,没有一点点的余地,或许,她自己就不该出生,不该,出生......几年前,她在这里遭到了欺骗,遭到了背叛,时光荏苒,物是人非,几年后,她重新回到这个地方,回到这个城市,这次,她“换上了伪装的面具”开始了她的复仇之旅。
  • 梦幻理想

    梦幻理想

    模板显示主角:龙宫穿越权限:二次元穿越方式:意识(知识)穿越点数:5点这是什么情况?不是系统,有不是无限,更不是黑洞。穿越是份工作,开什么玩笑啊。龙宫抓狂地看自己的手背上烙下的数据。“龙宫,穿越资质在评分中的天才、优秀、中等、差等、劣等中,属于劣等。在获得穿越器材,即获得穿越权限的仪式中,创下了在仪式结束前两秒才成功的记录,判断资质属于劣等中的劣等,无培养价值。”什么,这么大声说我没有培养价值,真的不在乎我的心情了么。哼哼,都以为我是资劣者,其实我是从别的地球穿越到这个地球的,还有另一个我还没获得穿越权限呢!迟早我是要走上人生巅峰,哼!
  • 恋恋小狐仙

    恋恋小狐仙

    醒来发现自己已经穿越,穿就穿了,可是头上毛茸茸的耳朵,屁股后面大尾巴是怎么回事?不过也没关系,至少有美男可以养眼啊。“相公,你教我写毛笔字可好?”“为何突然要学习毛笔字?”“这样我就可以给我的情哥哥写信了!”某人脸色大变,拂了拂衣袖,“不教也罢!”……花痴狐女VS面瘫冷男的故事
  • 虹之绽

    虹之绽

    明晓溪小说“旋风少女”系列,已被改编成周播剧,即将登陆2015湖南卫视每周一周二22点档“青春进行时”!《旋风少女3:虹之绽》:故事以一场紧张刺激的对战精彩开篇。百草战胜韩国金敏珠,并且以双飞踢的第三踢,把金敏珠踢落到台下,一举成名。与此同时,关于爱情的三条线索也在悄然拉开,俊朗的廷浩从美国归来,温润如玉的初原在韩国突如其来地向百草表白,冷峻的若白身体虚弱、似患上了未知的疾病,把对百草的爱一直埋在心底……百草最终会选择和谁在一起?
  • 明末突围

    明末突围

    刚刚成名的体制外的网球明星周康石,穿越到了崇祯十年的广西。刚刚尝到金钱滋味的他到了偏远广西,想到的是先发财。要发财,先从痛扁越南佬开始。要救国,从给“驴友”祖宗------徐霞客当保镖开始。
  • 绝巅天途

    绝巅天途

    这个简介实在是太难写了,过一段时间在写好不好?
  • 女人要懂得选择 学会放弃

    女人要懂得选择 学会放弃

    本书从女人的角度出发,阐述了在复杂纷繁的社会中如何以豁达、乐观的心态,面对各种抉择,做出正确的选择,放弃不必要的烦扰,轻装上阵,活出真我,获取生活、事业的成功。
  • 断背少爷的哑妻

    断背少爷的哑妻

    “钱小姐,实际上我不喜欢女人。”钱佳佳不禁睁大双眼,不喜欢女人?这什么意思?不喜欢女人,难道喜欢男人?“没错,你猜得很对,我喜欢男人。”身为哑女的钱佳佳,通过相亲认识了温文尔雅的贾瑞。两人因为各取所需,达成了一份婚姻协议,成为了一对有名无实的假夫妻。
  • 樱花盛开,你我相恋

    樱花盛开,你我相恋

    一次特殊的天气一件特别的事情一次偶然的相遇一场轰烈的爱情