Quantcast

Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems

Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems Page of 485 Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
ON METEORITES, OR CELESTIAL STONES 107
being struck by lightning, but their protective power was believed to extend to seven houses in the immediate neigh­borhood. An interesting example is a neolithic silex arrow­head figured by Bellucci. This has been elegantly set in silver in modern times, and comes from Pesca Costanzo, in the province of Aquila, Italy.
The Italians are convinced that if the arrow-head, or similar object, come in contact with a piece of iron, the "essence of the lightning" departs from it, revealing itself in a spark ; hence they wrap it up, carefully, in skin, cloth, or paper so as to guard it from harm. Sometimes these objects are anointed with oil, a survival of the custom of making pro­pitiatory offerings of oil. This usage in the case of sacred stones is very general, and is met with in places as remote from each other as Sweden, India and the Society Islands.61
In an Iroquois myth and legend, He-no, the god of thunder, is an object of great veneration because of the powerful aid he renders to those whom he favors. He is believed to direct the rain which shall fertilize the seed in the earth, and also to give aid to the harvesters when the fruits of the earth have ripened. While traversing the celestial vault, in his journeyings hither and thither above the surface of the globe, he bears with him an enormous basket filled with huge boulders of chert rock. These he casts at any evil spirit he may encounter, and when on oc­casion a spirit succeeds in avoiding such a boulder, it will fall down to the earth surrounded by fire. We have here another version of the almost universal myth of thunder-stones.88
In treating of the flint arrow-heads of the American Indians, Adair notes that in form and material they closely
" Bellucci, " Il feticismo in Italia," Perugia, 1907, pp. 17 sqq.
"Harriet Maxwell Converse, "Myths and Legends of the N. Y. State Iroquois," edited and annotated by Arthur Caswell Parker (Ga-wa-so-wa-neh), New York State Museum Bulletin, No. 125, Albany, 1908, p. 40.
Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems Page of 485 Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page