登陆注册
38539200000435

第435章

A tree which has been struck by lightning is naturally regarded by the savage as charged with a double or triple portion of fire; for has he not seen the mighty flash enter into the trunk with his own eyes? Hence perhaps we may explain some of the many superstitious beliefs concerning trees that have been struck by lightning. When the Thompson Indians of British Columbia wished to set fire to the houses of their enemies, they shot at them arrows which were either made from a tree that had been struck by lightning or had splinters of such wood attached to them. Wendish peasants of Saxony refuse to burn in their stoves the wood of trees that have been struck by lightning; they say that with such fuel the house would be burnt down. In like manner the Thonga of South Africa will not use such wood as fuel nor warm themselves at a fire which has been kindled with it. On the contrary, when lightning sets fire to a tree, the Winamwanga of Northern Rhodesia put out all the fires in the village and plaster the fireplaces afresh, while the head men convey the lightning-kindled fire to the chief, who prays over it. The chief then sends out the new fire to all his villages, and the villagers reward his messengers for the boon. This shows that they look upon fire kindled by lightning with reverence, and the reverence is intelligible, for they speak of thunder and lightning as God himself coming down to earth. Similarly the Maidu Indians of California believe that a Great Man created the world and all its inhabitants, and that lightning is nothing but the Great Man himself descending swiftly out of heaven and rending the trees with his flaming arms.

It is a plausible theory that the reverence which the ancient peoples of Europe paid to the oak, and the connexion which they traced between the tree and their sky-god, were derived from the much greater frequency with which the oak appears to be struck by lightning than any other tree of our European forests. This peculiarity of the tree has seemingly been established by a series of observations instituted within recent years by scientific enquirers who have no mythological theory to maintain. However we may explain it, whether by the easier passage of electricity through oak-wood than through any other timber, or in some other way, the fact itself may well have attracted the notice of our rude forefathers, who dwelt in the vast forests which then covered a large part of Europe; and they might naturally account for it in their ****** religious way by supposing that the great sky-god, whom they worshipped and whose awful voice they heard in the roll of thunder, loved the oak above all the trees of the wood and often descended into it from the murky cloud in a flash of lightning, leaving a token of his presence or of his passage in the riven and blackened trunk and the blasted foliage. Such trees would thenceforth be encircled by a nimbus of glory as the visible seats of the thundering sky-god. Certain it is that, like some savages, both Greeks and Romans identified their great god of the sky and of the oak with the lightning flash which struck the ground; and they regularly enclosed such a stricken spot and treated it thereafter as sacred. It is not rash to suppose that the ancestors of the Celts and Germans in the forests of Central Europe paid a like respect for like reasons to a blasted oak.

This explanation of the Aryan reverence for the oak and of the association of the tree with the great god of the thunder and the sky, was suggested or implied long ago by Jacob Grimm, and has been in recent years powerfully reinforced by Mr. W. Warde Fowler. It appears to be ******r and more probable than the explanation which I formerly adopted, namely, that the oak was worshipped primarily for the many benefits which our rude forefathers derived from the tree, particularly for the fire which they drew by friction from its wood; and that the connexion of the oak with the sky was an after-thought based on the belief that the flash of lightning was nothing but the spark which the sky-god up aloft elicited by rubbing two pieces of oak-wood against each other, just as his savage worshipper kindled fire in the forest on earth.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 绝世狂尊

    绝世狂尊

    小蝴蝶翅膀一扇,扇出世界风暴;恶奴大脚一踹,踹出绝世狂尊!“别让我失望,否则本少爷让你们绝望…““别来算计我,否则本尊夺你法宝,破你山门,拆你睡觉的老窝…”方少白一刀在手,天下我有,挺拔身躯,岳峙渊渟,斜睨苍生,气势无量!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 我愿成为你的夏季

    我愿成为你的夏季

    我对你的喜欢缓慢而温柔地洇开一如既往。山野万里。你是我藏在微风里的喜欢。
  • 末世立仙途

    末世立仙途

    世界末日是怎么来的?当各路丧尸、变异兽和异能这种烂大街的套路碰到修仙者乱入会碰撞出怎样的火花?“作为一个武学宗师,你特么让我教一个修仙者?作者你脑子瓦特了么?”续伟每日抱怨依旧处于进行时…当主角带着末日中的杀神们到魔法世界搞风搞雨的时候…你们有没有考虑过土著魔法师的感受?“歪,妖妖灵么?我是精灵女王,我的女儿被一个叫陈成的小子拐跑了……”“抱歉,女士,我们已经管不了他了~”水蓝星人民~发来警告…魔法大陆~发来警告…召唤师峡谷~发来警告…修仙者们,请做好最高等级防御措施,陈成来了… 呃~来不及了么~ 默哀吧~这是一本严谨并且正经的小说,请注意自己的阅读姿势。
  • 千年异梦

    千年异梦

    这是一场三国的传奇,没有杀戮,没有死亡,只有环环相扣的剧情和步步紧逼的修炼。主角刘柯,一个生长在高科技时代下的鬼马精灵,却不知自己身边多少的迷题和未知,直到来到大学校园的那一天……一切都变了。这是一个追溯到千年的梦,但却异常真实,勾人心弦。翻开书页,请噤声——“嘘!”
  • 地产大亨

    地产大亨

    重生回到十年前,再也不做窝囊废!携美共创业,做个多金王,当事业处于悬崖边,随时坠落万丈深渊!他费尽心机,终做出正确的选择。
  • 神魔圣图

    神魔圣图

    苍昊莫名开启了四天四地之魂珠,是巧合还是另有原由?元魂之中那神秘莫测的太极图,到底预示着什么?等待自己的,又将是什么样的世界?
  • 极速侠

    极速侠

    这个世界上存在一种果实,普通人吃了它就会拥有特殊的超能力。这种能够带给人超能力的果实就是超能果实。而吃下超能果实的人就被称作超能人。
  • 吞噬星空之云飞扬

    吞噬星空之云飞扬

    喜欢番茄大大吞噬星空,一直都想写篇同人小说,新人新书,写的不好的地方请多包涵
  • 我的主角装逼之路

    我的主角装逼之路

    二师兄第一次见大师兄的时候八岁。’新入门的弟子——印飞星,对吧?‘那一年,大师兄十二岁。’我乃逍遥门麾下弟子——东方纤云。师尊叫我带你转转山脚下的这镇子,今天起你就是我的二师弟了,作为二师弟你一定要记住——这个世界上没有那么多英雄救美的意外能让你碰上;更没有那么多行侠仗义的机会能让你捡到;至于秘籍财宝那都是主角才有命享受的。修真是条漫漫长路,在这条长路上那一天转脸就挂了。所以你一定要安安分分老实做人,活着才是硬道理,明白了吗?‘”明白了......“