<h2 class="nobreak chap0"><SPAN name="IX" id="IX">IX</SPAN><br/> <span class="subhead">OF EVIL OMENS</span></h2>
<p class="center b1">“A woman’s story at a winter’s fire.”—<cite>Macbeth.</cite></p>
<p class="drop-cap3"><span class="smcap1">We</span> come now to those things considered
as distinctly unlucky, and to be avoided
accordingly. How common is the peevish exclamation
of “That’s just my luck!” Spilling
the salt, picking up a pin with the point
toward you, crossing a knife and fork, or giving
any one a knife or other sharp instrument,
are all deemed of sinister import now,
as of old.</p>
<p>One must not kill a toad, which, though</p>
<div class="center-container"><div class="poem">
<span class="i14">“ugly and venomous,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Wears yet a precious jewel in its head,”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">145</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="in0">or a grasshopper, possibly by reason of the
veneration in which this voracious little insect
was held by the Athenians, whose favorite
symbol it was, although it is now outlawed,
and a price set upon its head as a pest, to
be ruthlessly exterminated, by some of the
Western states. So, too, with the warning
not to kill a spider, against which, nevertheless,
the housemaid’s broom wages relentless
war. If, on the contrary, you do not kill
the first snake seen in the spring, bad luck
will follow you all the year round. Be it
ever so badly bruised, however, the belief
holds fast in the country that the reptile will
not die until sunset, or with the expiring day,</p>
<div class="center-container"><div class="poem">
<span class="i0">“That like a wounded snake drags its slow length along.”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>The peacock’s feathers were supposed to be
unlucky, from an old tradition associating its
gaudy colors with certain capital sins, which
these colors were held to symbolize. Nevertheless,
this tall and haughty feather has been
much the fashion of late years as an effective<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">146</SPAN></span>
mantel ornament, showing how reckless some
people can be regarding the prophecy of evil.</p>
<p>Getting married before breakfast is considered
unlucky. It would be quite as logical
to say this of any other time of the day; hence
unlucky to get married at all, though it is not
believed all married people will cordially subscribe
to this heresy.</p>
<p>May is an unlucky month to be married in.
So, also</p>
<div class="center-container"><div class="poem">
<span class="iq">“If you marry in Lent<br/></span>
<span class="i0">You will live to repent.”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>Old Burton says, “Marriage and hanging go
by destiny; matches are made in heaven.”</p>
<p>Getting out of bed on the wrong side bodes
ill luck for the rest of the day. A common
remark to a person showing ill-humor is, “I
guess you got out of the wrong side of the bed
this morning.” It has in fact become a
proverb.</p>
<p>To begin dressing yourself by putting the
stocking on the left foot first would be trifling
with fortune. I know a man who would not do<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">147</SPAN></span>
so on any account. It is also unlucky to put
a right foot into a left-hand shoe, or <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">vice versa</i>.
These are necessary corollaries of the “right-foot-foremost”
superstition.</p>
<p>According to that merry gentleman, Samuel
<span class="locked">Butler:—</span></p>
<div class="center-container"><div class="poem">
<span class="iq">“Augustus having b’oversight<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Put on his left shoe for his right,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Had like to have been slain that day,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">By soldiers mutining for their pay.”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>Cutting the finger nails on the Sabbath is a
bad omen. There is a set of rhymed rules for
the doing of even this trifling act. Apparently,
the Chinese know the omen, as they do not
cut the nails at all.</p>
<p>Of the harmless dragon-fly or devil’s darning-needle,
country girls say that if one flies in your
face it will sew up your eyes.</p>
<p>In some localities I have heard it said that if
two persons walking together should be parted
by a post, a tree, or a person, in their path,
something unlucky will surely <span class="locked">result—</span></p>
<div class="center-container"><div class="poem">
<span class="iq">“Unless they straightway mutter,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">‘Bread and butter, bread and butter.’”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">148</SPAN></span>
Low, the pirate, would not let his crew work
on the Sabbath, not so much, we suppose, from
conscientious scruples, as for fear it would bring
him bad luck. The rest of the Decalogue did
not seem to bother him in the least.</p>
<p>After having once started on an errand or a
journey, it is unlucky to go back, even if you
have forgotten something of importance. All
persons afflicted with frequent lapses of memory
should govern themselves accordingly.
This belief seems clearly grounded upon the
dreadful fate of Lot’s wife.</p>
<p>It was always held unlucky to break a piece
of crockery, as a second and a third piece
shortly will be broken also. This is closely
associated with the belief respecting the number
three, elsewhere referred to. In New England
it is commonly said that if you should
break something on Monday, bad luck will follow
you all the rest of the week.</p>
<p>To stumble in going upstairs is also unlucky;
perhaps to stumble at any other time. Friar
Lawrence says, in “Romeo and Juliet,”—</p>
<div class="center-container"><div class="poem">
<span class="i0">“They stumble that run fast.”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</SPAN></span>
Two persons washing their hands in the same
basin or in the same water will quarrel unless
the sign of the cross be made in the water.</p>
<p>It is considered unlucky to take off a ring
that was the gift of a deceased person, an engagement,
or a marriage ring.</p>
<p>The term “hoodoo,” almost unknown in the
Northern United States a few years ago, has
gradually worked its way into the vernacular,
until it is in almost everybody’s mouth. It is,
perhaps, most lavishly employed during the
base-ball season, as everyone knows who reads
the newspapers, to describe something that has
cast a spell upon the players, so bringing about
defeat. The term is then “hoodooing.” The
hoodoo may be anything particularly ugly or
repulsive seen on the way to the game—a
deformed old woman, a one-legged man, a lame
horse, or a blind beggar, for instance. Most
players are said to give full credit to the power
of the hoodoo to bewitch them. Indeed, the
term has been quite widely taken up as the
synonym for bad luck, or, rather, the cause of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</SPAN></span>
it, even by the business world. If this is not,
to all intents, a belief in witchcraft, it certainly
comes very close to what passed for witchcraft
two hundred years ago.</p>
<p>This vagrant and ill-favored word “hoodoo”
is, again, a corruption of the voudoo of the ignorant
blacks of the South, with whom, in fact, it
stands, as some say, for witchcraft, pure and
simple, or, perhaps, the Black Art, as practised
in Africa; while others pronounce it to be a
religious rite only. More than this, the voudoo
also is a mystic order, into whose unholy mysteries
the neophyte is inducted with much barbaric
ceremony. In the case of a white woman
so initiated in Louisiana, this consisted in the
elect chanting a weird incantation, while the
novitiate, clad only in her shift, danced within a
charmed circle formed of beef bones and skeletons,
toads’ feet and spiders, with camphor and
kerosene oil sprinkled about it. All those present
join in the dance to the accompaniment of
tom-toms and other rude instruments, until physical
exhaustion compels the dancers to stop.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</SPAN></span>
In its main features we find a certain resemblance
between the voudoo dance of the ignorant
blacks and the ghost dance practised by
some of the wild Indians of the West, and by
means of which they are wrought up to the
highest pitch of frenzy, so preparing the way
for an outbreak, such as occurred a few years
ago with most lamentable results.</p>
<p>While the sporting fraternity is notoriously
addicted to the hoodoo superstition, yet it is by
no means confined to them alone. Not long
ago a statement went the rounds of the newspapers
to the effect that the superstitious wife
of a certain well-known millionnaire had refused
to go on board of their palatial yacht because
one of the crew had been fatally injured by falling
down a hatchway. In plain English, the
accident had hoodooed the ship.</p>
<p>But the power of the hoodoo would seem not
to be limited to human beings, according to this
statement, taken from the columns of a reputable
newspaper: “A meadow at Biddeford,
Maine, is known as the hoodoo lawn, for the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</SPAN></span>
reason that rain follows every time it is mowed,
before the grass can be cured. It is said that
this has occurred for twenty-five consecutive
years.”</p>
<p>To break the spell of the hoodoo, it is as
essential to have a mascot, over which the
malign influence can have no power, as to
have an antidote against poisons. Therefore
most ball-players carry a mascot with them.
Sometimes it is a goat, or a dog, or again a
black sheep, that is gravely led thrice around
the field before the play begins.</p>
<p>It is not learned whether or not the different
kinds of mascot have ever been pitted
against each other. Perhaps the effect would
be not unlike that described by Cicero in his
treatise on divination. He says there that
Cato one day met a friend who seemed in a
very troubled frame of mind. On being asked
what was the matter, the friend replied: “Oh!
my friend, I fear everything. This morning
when I awoke, I saw, shall I say it? a mouse
gnawing my shoe.” “Well,” said Cato, reassuringly,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</SPAN></span>
“calm yourself. The prodigy
really would become frightful if the shoe had
been gnawing the mouse.”</p>
<p>Naval ships often carry a goat, or some
other animal, as a mascot, in deference to
Jack’s well-known belief in its peculiar efficacy;
and in naval parades the goat usually gravely
marches in the procession, and comes in for
his share of the applause. Simple-minded
Jack christens his favorite gun after some
favorite prize-fighter. And why not? since
the great Nelson, himself, carried a horseshoe
nailed to his mast-head, and since even some
of our college foot-ball teams bring their mascots
upon the field just like other folk.</p>
<p>The war with Spain could hardly fail of
bringing to light some notable examples of
the superstitions of sailors concerning mascots.
The destruction of Admiral Cervera’s fleet,
off Santiago de Cuba, by the American fleet,
under command of Admiral Sampson, is freshly
remembered. One of the destroyed Spanish
ships was named the <i class="ship">Colon</i>. Twenty-six days<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</SPAN></span>
after the battle, the tug-boat <i class="ship">Right Arm</i> of the
Merritt-Chapman Wrecking Company visited
the <i class="ship">Colon</i>, for the purpose of raising the Spanish
cruiser. The only living thing aboard was
a black and white cat. For nearly a month it
had been the sole crew and commander of the
wrecked battle-ship.</p>
<p>The crew of the <i class="ship">Right Arm</i> took possession
of the cat, adopted it as a mascot and
named it Tomas Cervera. But Cervera brought
ill luck. When Lieutenant Hobson raised the
<i class="ship">Maria Teresa</i> the rescued cat was placed
aboard her, to be brought to America.</p>
<p>The <i class="ship">Maria Teresa</i> never reached these shores,
and when the vessel grounded off the Bahamas
the cat fell into the hands of the natives. He
was rescued the second time, and at last
reached America, a passenger on the United
States repair ship <i class="ship">Vulcan</i>.</p>
<p>It will be admitted that this cat did not
belie that article of the popular belief, which
ascribes nine lives to his tribe. But poor
Tomas Cervera did not long survive the various<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</SPAN></span>
hardships and perils to which he had been
subjected. He gave up the ghost shortly
after all these were happily ended.</p>
<p>Speaking of ships and sailors, it is well
known to all seafaring folk that the reputation
of a ship for being lucky, or unlucky, is
all important. And this reputation may begin
at the very moment when she leaves the stocks.
Should she, unfortunately, stick on the ways,
in launching, a bad name is pretty sure to
follow her during the remainder of her career,
and to be an important factor in her ability
to ship a crew. Even the practice of christening
a ship with a bottle of wine is neither more
nor less than a survival of pagan superstition
by which the favor of the gods was invoked.</p>
<p>The superstition regarding thirteen persons
at the table also boasts a remarkable vitality.
Just when or how it originated is uncertain.
It has been surmised, however, that the Paschal
Supper was the beginning of this notion,
for there were thirteen persons present then,
and what followed is not likely to be forgotten.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">156</SPAN></span>
It has, perhaps, been the subject of greater
ridicule than any other popular delusion, probably
from the fact of its touching convivial
man in his most tender part,—to wit, the
stomach. In London some of the literary and
other lights even went to the trouble of forming
a Thirteen Club for the avowed purpose
of breaking down the senseless notion that if
thirteen persons were to sit down to dinner
together, one of them would die within a twelvemonth.
The motto of this club should have
been, “All men must die, therefore all men
should dine.” If the club’s proceedings showed
no lack of invention and mother wit, we still
should very much doubt their efficacy toward
achieving the avowed end and aim of the
club’s existence, for surely such extravagances
could have no other effect than to raise a
laugh. We reproduce an account of the affair
for the reader’s <span class="locked">amusement:—</span></p>
<p>“At the dinner of the club, above mentioned,
there were thirteen tables, a similar number of
guests being seated at each table. The serving<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">157</SPAN></span>
of the meal was announced by the “shivering”
of a mirror placed on an easel, a ceremony performed
by two cross-eyed waiters! Having put
on green neckties and placed a miniature skeleton
in their button-holes, the guests passed
under a ladder into the dining room. The
tables were lighted with small lamps placed on
plaster skulls; skeletons were suspended from
the candles, which were thirteen in number on
each table; the knives were crossed; the salt-stands
were in the shape of coffins, with headstones
bearing the inscription, ‘In memory of
many senseless superstitions, killed by the
London Thirteen Club, 1894.’ The salt-spoons
were shaped like a grave-digger’s spade.</p>
<p>“After the dinner was fairly started, the
chairman asked the company to spill salt with
him, and later on he invited them to break looking-glasses
with him, all of which having been
done, he presented the chairmen of the different
tables with a knife each, on condition that
nothing was given for them in return. An
undertaker, clothed in a variety costume, which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">158</SPAN></span>
would have done credit to a first-class music
hall, was then introduced ‘to take orders,’ but
he was quickly shuffled out of the room.”</p>
<p>These unbelieving jesters, who so audaciously
defied the fatal omen, did not seem to realize
that a popular superstition is not to be laughed
out of existence in so summary a manner.
Equally futile was the attempt to put it to a
scientific test, as, if tried by that means, it appears
that, of any group of thirteen persons, the
chances are about equal that one will die within
the year. Therefore, the attempt to break the
spell by inviting a greater number of persons
could have the effect only of increasing, rather
than diminishing, the probability of the event so
much <span class="locked">dreaded.<SPAN name="FNanchor_18" id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">18</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It has been stated in the newspapers, from
which I take it, that there are many hotels in
New York which contain no room numbered thirteen.
There are other hotels and office buildings
wherein the rooms that are so numbered cannot
be leased except once in a great while. In<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">159</SPAN></span>
large hotels one custom is to letter the first
thirteen rooms and call them parlors. Another
custom is simply to skip the unpopular number,
and call the thirteenth room “No. 14.” A man
who had just rented an office which bears the
objectionable number, in a down-town building,
asserts that though he has no superstitious
dread of the number, he finds that others will
not transact business with him in that office. I
also find it stated as a fact that the new monster
passenger steamship <i class="ship">Oceanic</i> has no cabin or
seat at the table numbered thirteen.</p>
<p>It was again instanced as a deathblow to a
certain candidate’s hopes of a reëlection to the
United States Senate, that repeated ballotings
showed him to be just thirteen votes short of the
required number. From the same state, Pennsylvania,
comes this highly significant announcement
in regard to a base-ball team:
“Because the team left here on a very rainy day,
and on a train that pulled out from track No. 13,
the superstitious local fans (<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">sic</i>) are in a sad
state of mind to-night, regarding the coincidence<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">160</SPAN></span>
as an evil omen.” Again the small number of
six, in the graduating class of a certain high
school, was gravely referred to as owing to there
having originally been thirteen in that class.</p>
<p>At the same time there are exceptions which,
however, the superstitious may claim only go to
prove the rule. For instance the Thirteen Colonies
did not prove so very unlucky a venture.</p>
<p>As regards the superstitions of actors and
actresses, the following anecdote, though not
new, probably as truly reflects the state of
mind existing among the profession to-day as
it did when the incident happened to which it
refers. When the celebrated Madame Rachel
returned from Egypt in 1857, she asked
Arsène Houssaye, within a year thereafter,
the question: “Do you recollect the dinner
we had at the house of Victor Hugo? There
were thirteen of us,—Hugo and his wife, you
and your wife, Rebecca and I, Girardin and
his wife, Gerard de Nerval, Pradier, Alfred de
Musset, Perrèe, of the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Siècle</i>, and the Count
d’Orsay, thirteen in all. Well, where are they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">161</SPAN></span>
to-day? Victor Hugo and his wife are in
Jersey, your wife is dead, Madame de Girardin
is dead, my sister Rebecca is dead, De
Nerval, Pradier, Alfred de Musset, and
d’Orsay are dead. I say no more. There
remain but Girardin and you. Adieu, my
friends. Never laugh at thirteen at a table.”</p>
<p>The world, however, especially that part of
it represented by diners out, goes on believing
in the evil augury just the same. A dinner
party is recalled at which two of the invited
guests were given seats at a side table on
account of that terrible bugbear “thirteen at
table.” When mentioning the circumstance
to a friend, he was reminded of an occasion
where an additional guest had been summoned
in haste to break the direful spell.</p>
<p>Unquestionably, the newspapers might do
much toward suppressing the spread of superstition
by refusing to print such accounts as
this, taken from a Boston daily paper, as probably
nothing is read by a certain class with
greater avidity. It says “that engine No. 13<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">162</SPAN></span>
of the Boston, Hoosac Tunnel & Western
Railroad has, within three weeks, killed no
less than three men. The railway hands fear
the locomotive, and say that its number is
unlucky.” It is true, we understand, that the
standard number of a wrecked locomotive,
that has been in a fatal accident, is not unfrequently
changed in deference to this feeling
on the part of the engine-men.</p>
<p>It is held to be unlucky to pass underneath
a ladder, an act which indeed might be dangerous
to life or limb should the ladder fall.
But it is even harder to understand the philosophy
of the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">dictum</i> that to meet a squinting
woman denotes ill luck.</p>
<p>The bird was formerly accounted an unlucky
symbol, perhaps from the fact that
good fortune, like riches, is apt to take to
itself wings. The hooting of an owl, the
croaking of a raven, the cry of a whip-poor-will,
and even the sight of a solitary magpie
were always associated with malignant influences
or evil presages. Poe’s raven furnishes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">163</SPAN></span>
the theme for one of his best-known poems.
And the swan was long believed to sing her
own death-song. Be that as it may, the fact
is well remembered that a ring, bearing the
device of a bird upon it, or any other object
having the image of the feathered kind, was
not considered a suitable gift to a woman.
That article of superstition, like some others
that could be mentioned, has vanished before
the resistless command of fashion, so completely
indeed, that birds of every known
clime and plumage have since been considered
the really proper adornment for woman’s headgear.</p>
<p>There is, however, an odd superstition connected
with the magpie, an instance of which
is found related by Lord Roberts, in “Forty-one
Years in India.” We could not do better
than give it in his own words: “On the 15th
July Major Cavagnari, who had been selected
as the envoy and plenipotentiary to the Amir
of Kabul, arrived in Kuram. I, with some
fifty officers who were anxious to do honor<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">164</SPAN></span>
to the envoy and see the country beyond
Kuram, marched with Cavagnari to within
five miles of the crest of Shutargardan pass,
where we encamped, and my staff and I dined
that evening with the mission. After dinner
I was asked to propose the health of
Cavagnari and those with him, but somehow
I did not feel equal to the task: I was so
thoroughly depressed, and my mind filled with
such gloomy forebodings as to the fate of
these fine fellows, that I could not utter a
word.</p>
<p>“Early next morning the Sirdar, who had
been deputed by the Amir to receive the mission,
came into camp, and soon we all started
for the top of the pass.... As we ascended,
curiously enough, we came across a solitary
magpie, which I should not have noticed had
not Cavagnari pointed it out and begged me
not to mention the fact of his having seen
it to his wife, as she would be sure to consider
it an unlucky omen.</p>
<p>“On descending to the (Afghan) camp, we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">165</SPAN></span>
were invited to partake of dinner, served in
the Oriental fashion on a carpet spread on
the ground. Everything was done most lavishly
and gracefully. Nevertheless, I could
not feel happy as to the prospects of the mission,
and my heart sank as I wished Cavagnari
good-by. When we had proceeded a
few yards in our different directions, we both
turned round, retraced our steps, shook hands
once more, and parted forever.”</p>
<p>The sequel is told in the succeeding chapter.
“Between one and two o’clock on the morning
of the 5th of September, I was awakened by
my wife telling me that a telegraph man had
been wandering around the house and calling
for some time, but that no one had answered
him. The telegram told me that my worst fears
had been only too fully realized.” Cavagnari
and his party had been massacred by the
Afghans.</p>
<p>Again, there are certain things which may
not be given to a male friend (young, unmarried
ministers excepted), such, for example, as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">166</SPAN></span>
a pair of slippers, because the recipient will be
sure, metaphorically speaking, to walk away
from the giver in them.</p>
<p>There is also current in some parts of New
England a belief that it is unlucky to get one’s
life insured, or to make one’s will, under the
delusion that doing either of these things will
tend to shorten one’s life. This feeling comes
of nothing less than a ridiculous fear of facing
even the remote probability involved in the act;
and is of a piece with the studied avoidance of
the subject of death, or willing allusion in any
way, shape, or form to the dead, even of one’s
own kith and kin, quite like that singular belief
held by the Indians which forbade any allusion
to the dead whatsoever.</p>
<p>Spilling the salt, as an omen of coming misfortune,
is one of the most widespread, as well
as one of the most deeply rooted, of popular
delusions. It is said to be universal all over
Asia, is found in some parts of Africa, and is
quite prevalent in Europe and America to-day.
Vain to deny it, the unhappy delinquent who<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">167</SPAN></span>
is so awkward as to spill salt at the table
instantly finds all eyes turned upon him. Worse
still, the antidote once practised of flinging
three pinches of salt over the left shoulder is
no longer admissible in good society. Instantly
every one present mentally recalls the omen.
His host may politely try to laugh it off, but all
the same, a visible impression of something
unpleasant remains.</p>
<p>Something was said in another place about
the potency of the number “three” to effect
a charm either for good or for evil. Firemen
and railroad men are more or less given to the
belief that if one fire or one accident occurs, it
will inevitably be followed by two more fires or
accidents. A headline in a Boston newspaper,
now before me, reads, “The same old three
fires in succession,” and then hypocritically
exclaims, “How the superstitious point to the
recurrence!”</p>
<p>The superstition about railroad accidents is
by no means confined to the trainmen, or other
employees, but to some extent, at least, is shared<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">168</SPAN></span>
even by the higher officials, who point to their
past experiences in the management of these
iron highways as fully establishing, to their
minds, certain conditions. One of these gentlemen
once said to me, after a bad accident
on his road, “It is not so much this one particular
accident that we dread, as what is coming
after it.” I also knew of a conductor who
asked for a leave of absence immediately after
the occurrence of a shocking wreck on the
line.</p>
<p>Although periodically confronted with a long
series of most momentous events in the world’s
history that have happened on that day of
the week, the superstition in regard to Friday,
as being an unlucky day, has so far withstood
every assault. It will not down. Whether it
exists to so great an extent as formerly may
be questioned, but that it does exist in full
force, more especially among sailors, is certain.
We have it on good authority that this self-tormenting
delusion grew out of the fact that
the Saviour was crucified on Friday, ever after<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">169</SPAN></span>
stigmatized as “hangman’s day,” and, therefore,
set apart for the execution of criminals,
now as before time.</p>
<p>It is not wholly improbable that some share
of the odium resting upon Friday may arise
from the fact of its being so regularly observed
as a day of fasting, or at least <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">maigre</i>,
by some religionists.</p>
<p>In some old diaries are found entries like the
following: “A vessel lost going out of Portland
against the advice of all; all on board,
twenty-seven, drowned.” It is easy to understand
how such an event would leave an indelible
impression upon the minds of a whole
generation.</p>
<p>Notwithstanding the belief is openly scouted
from the pulpit, and is even boldly defied by
a few unbelieving sea-captains, the fact remains
that there are very many sober-minded persons
who could not be induced on any account to
begin a journey on Friday. There are others
who will not embark in any new enterprise, or
begin a new piece of work on that day; and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">170</SPAN></span>
still others who even go so far as to say that
you must not cut your nails on Friday. A man
could be named who could not be tempted to
close a bargain on any other day of the week
than Thursday. It is a further fact, which all
connected with operating railroads will readily
confirm, that Friday is always the day of least
travel on their lines. This circumstance alone
seems conclusive as to the state of popular
feeling. Apparently a brand has been set
upon the sixth day of the week for all time.</p>
<p>Numerous instances might be given to show
that men of the strongest intellect are as fallible
in this respect as men of the lowest; but
one such will suffice. Lord Byron once refused
to be introduced to a lady because it was Friday;
and on this same ill-starred day he would
never pay a visit.</p>
<div class="center-container"><div class="poem">
<span class="iq">“See the moon through the glass,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">You’ll have trouble while it lasts.”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>This warning couplet is still a household
word in many parts of New England. It has
been observed that even those sceptical persons<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">171</SPAN></span>
who profess to put no faith in it whatever, generally
take good care to keep on the right side
of the window-glass. As bearing upon this
branch of the general subject an incident is
related by a reputable authority, as having
occurred at a party given, not many years ago,
by a gentleman holding a considerable station
in life. It is therefore repeated here word for
word.</p>
<p>“In the midst of a social chat, at the close of
the day, a footman rather briskly entered the
drawing-room, and walked up to the back of
the chair of the hostess and whispered something
in her ear; she immediately closed her
eyes and gave her hand to the man, and was
forthwith led by him from the room. The
guests were rather astonished, but after the
lapse of a few moments the lady returned and
resumed her seat.</p>
<p>“Her sudden departure having occasioned a
rather uneasy pause in the conversation, she
felt it necessary to state the cause of her singular
conduct. She then told us that the New<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">172</SPAN></span>
Harvest Moon had just made its appearance,
and it was her custom to give a crown to any
of her servants that first brought the information
to her when that event occurred; and that
the reason why she closed her eyes, and was
led by the footman out of the room to the open
air, was that she might avoid the evil consequences
that were sure to happen to her if she
obtained her first glimpse of the Harvest Moon
through a pane of glass. This lady was highly
accomplished, and possessed remarkable sagacity
upon most subjects, but was nevertheless
a slave to a groundless fear of evil befalling her
if she saw this particular New Moon in any
other way than in the open air.”</p>
<p>It is passing strange, however, that the
gentle and beautiful Queen of the Night
should have been mostly associated with a
malignant influence. Juliet pleads with Romeo
not to swear by the “inconstant moon.” The
traditional witch gathers her simples only by
the light of the moon, as at no other time do
they possess the same virtues to work miraculous<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">173</SPAN></span>
cures or potent spells. It is also an old
belief that if a person goes to sleep with the
moonbeams shining full upon his uncovered
face, he will be moonstruck, or become an
idiot. I well remember to have seen the officer
of the watch awaken a number of sleepers, who
had taken refuge on the deck of a vessel from
the stifling heat below. Milton speaks of</p>
<div class="center-container"><div class="poem">
<span class="i6">“Moping melancholy<br/></span>
<span class="i0">And moonstruck madness,”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p class="in0">which has become incorporated with the language
under the significant nickname of
“luny.”</p>
<p>When we consider the already long list of
material or immaterial objects threatening us
with dire misfortune, the wonder is how poor
humanity should have survived so many dangers
ever impending over it like the sword of
Damocles. Really, we seem “walking between
life and death.” The catalogue is, however, by
no means exhausted. A picture, particularly if
it be a family portrait, falling down from the
wall, bodes a death in the family, or at least<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">174</SPAN></span>
some great misfortune. This incident, somewhat
startling, it must be confessed, to weak
nerves, has been quite effectively used in
fiction.</p>
<p>Notwithstanding it is the national color of
Ireland, green has the name of being unlucky.
More strange still is the statement made by
Mr. Parnell’s biographer that the famous Irish
leader could not bear the sight of green.
Queer notion this, in a son of the Emerald
Isle! Mr. Barry O’Brien goes on to say that
Parnell “would not pass another person on the
stairs; was horror-stricken to find himself sitting
with three lighted candles; that the fall of
a picture in a room made him dejected for the
entire afternoon; and that he would have nothing
to say to an important bill, drawn up by a
colleague, because it happened to contain thirteen
clauses.” It is added that the sight of
green banners, at the political meetings he
addressed, often unnerved him.</p>
<p>The singular actions of a pet cat have
recently gained wide currency and wider comment<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">175</SPAN></span>
in connection with the ill-fated steamer
Portland, which went down with all on board,
during the great gale of November 27, 1898.
Not a soul was left to tell the tale. It was
remarked that puss came off the boat before
the regular hour for sailing had arrived, and
though she had never before been known to
miss a trip, she could not be called or coaxed
back on board, and the doomed craft therefore
sailed without her. As a matter of fact, it has
been noticed that in times of great disasters,
like that just related, superstition that has lain
dormant for a time, always shows a new vigor,
and finds a new reason for being.</p>
<p>In the course of my rambles along the New
England coast, I found many people holding to
beliefs of one sort or another, who hotly resented
the mere suggestion that they were superstitious.
The quaint and curious delusions which
have become ingrained in their lives from generation
to generation, they do not regard in
that light. For one thing they believe that if a
dead body should remain in the house over<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">176</SPAN></span>
Sunday, there will be another death in the
family before the year is out.</p>
<p>The ticking of the death-watch, once believed
to forebode the approaching dissolution of some
member of the family, so terrifying to our fathers
and mothers, is now, fortunately, seldom
heard or little regarded. While the superstition
did prevail, there was nothing so calculated
to strike terror to the very marrow of the
appalled listeners as the noise of this harmless
little beetle, only a quarter of an inch long,
tapping away in the decaying woodwork of an
ancient wainscot.</p>
<p>There is no end of legendary matter concerning
clocks. Sometimes nervous people have
been frightened half out of their wits at hearing
a clock that had stopped, suddenly strike the
hour. Clocks have been known to stop, too,
at the exact hour when a death took place in
the house. But even more startling was an
instance, lately vouched for by reputable witnesses,
of a clock, of the coffin pattern, of
course, from which the works had been removed,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">177</SPAN></span>
playing this same grewsome trick. The first
case might be accounted for, rationally, by some
fault in the mechanism, or some rusty spring
suddenly set in motion; but all theories necessarily
fail with clocks without works. Admonitions
or warnings are often associated with
clocks, as has been noticed in connection with
marriage customs. And the mystical relation
between time and eternity is often brought to
mind by the stopping of the watch in a drowned
person’s pocket, or the relation of some curious
legend like the following, without comment or
qualification, in a reputable <span class="locked">newspaper:—</span></p>
<p>“There is a curious legend about the old
clock, which is to be superseded by a new one,
at Washington, Pennsylvania. It is stated that
about twenty years ago a person was hung in
the courtyard. The clock, which had always
tolled out the hour regularly, stopped at the
hour of two o’clock, being the hour at which
the drop fell that sent the unfortunate into
eternity. Since that time, many aver, the clock
has never struck again.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">178</SPAN></span>
So, also, the howling of a dog, either by day
or by night, under a sick person’s window, is to
this day held by the weak-minded to portend
the death of that person. Some writers think
they have traced this belief to the symbolism
of ancient mythology, where the dog stands for
the howling night-wind, on which the souls of
the dead rode to the banks of the Styx, but this
hypothesis seems quite far-fetched.</p>
<p>The winding-sheet in the candle is another
self-tormenting belief of evil portent, now happily
gone out with the candle.</p>
<p>Then again, to pass from this subject, a
single case of nosebleed often excites the liveliest
fears on the part of nervous people, on
account of a very old belief that it was a sure
omen of a death taking place in the family.
Not long ago the following choice morsel met
my eye while reading in a book: “Our steward
has this moment lost a drop of blood, which
involuntarily fell from his pug nose. ‘There,’
said he, ‘I have lost my mother—a good
friend.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">179</SPAN></span>’”</p>
<p>Breaking a looking-glass denotes that a death
will take place in the family within the year.
This mode of self-torture is supposed to derive
its origin from the great use formerly made of
mirrors by magicians and other obsolete impostors
in carrying on their mystical trade.
Astrologers also made use of the looking-glass
in practising the art of divination or foretelling
events, probably by means of some such cunning
contrivances as are now employed with
startling effects by our own “wizards” and
“necromancers.” Quite naturally the innocent
glass itself came to be looked upon by the
ignorant with superstitious awe, and the breaking
of one as the sure forerunner of calamity.
We do not think, however, that this old superstition
is by any means as widely prevalent as it
once was.</p>
<p>It is pleasing to chronicle the total disappearance
of that terrible bugaboo, the Evil Eye,
which so long kept our ancestors in a state of
nervous apprehension fearful to contemplate.
It is now only perpetuated by a saying. So<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">180</SPAN></span>
with that other equally repulsive belief in the
efficacy of touching a dead body, as a means of
convicting a suspected murderer by the fresh
bleeding from the wound. Both of these superstitions
were fully accepted by the first settlers
of New England, and perhaps also in other of
the colonies. John Winthrop relates a very
harrowing case of infanticide, in which this
monstrous test was put in practice to convict
the erring <span class="locked">mother.<SPAN name="FNanchor_19" id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">19</SPAN></span> The superstition is said to
be of German origin.</p>
<p>The following very curious piece of superstition
is found in Colonel May’s Journal of his
trip to the Ohio, early in the century. It
seems that a man had fallen into the river
and was drowned before help could reach him.
The following method was employed to recover
the body. First they took the shirt which the
drowned man had last worn, put a whole loaf
of good, new bread, weighing four pounds, into<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">181</SPAN></span>
it, and tied it up carefully into a bundle. The
bundle was then taken in a boat to the place
where the man had fallen in, a line and tackle
attached to it, and then set afloat on the water.
The rescuers said that the bread would float
until it should come directly over the body,
when it would sink and thus discover the location
of the dead man. Unfortunately, the line
was not long enough, so that when the loaf
filled with water and sank, the tackle disappeared
with it.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182">182</SPAN></span></p>
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