The Gipsies in Scotland are
all married at a very early age. I do not recollect ever having seen or
heard of them, male or female, being unmarried, after they were twenty years
old. There are few instances of bastard children among them ; indeed, they
declare that their children are all born in wedlock. [ There is one word in
the Gipsy language to which is attached more importance than to any other
thing whatever—Locha—the corporeal chastity of woman; the loss of which she
is, from childhood, taught to dread. To ensure its preservation, the mother
will have occasion to the Dicle—a kind of drapery which she ties around the
daughter; and which is never removed, but continually inspected, till the
day of marriage; but not for fear of the "stranger" or the "white blood." A
girl is generally betrothed at fourteen, and never married till two years
afterward. Betrothal is invariable. But the parties are never permitted,
previous to marriage, to have any intimate associations together.—Sorrow on
tlie Spanish Gipsies.— Ed.]
I know, however, of one
instance to the contrary; and of the Gipsy being dreadfully punished for
seducing a young girl of his own tribe.
The brother of the female,
who was pregnant, took upon himself the task of chastising the offender.
With a knife in his hand, and at the dead hour of night, he went to the
house of the seducer. The first thing he did was deliberately to sharpen his
knife upon the stone posts of the door of the man's house ; and then, in a
gentle manner, tap at the door, to bring out his victim. The unsuspecting
man came to the door, in his shirt, to see what was wanted; but the
salutation he received was the knife thrust into his body, and the stabs
repeated several times. The avenger of his sister's wrongs fled for a short
while; the wounded Tinkler recovered, and, to repair the injury he had done,
made the girl his wife. The occurrence took place in Mid-Lothian, about
twenty years ago. The name of the woman was Baillie, and her husband, Tait
I have not been able to
discover any peculiarity in the manner of Gipsy courtships, except that a
man, above sixty years of age, affirmed to me that it was the universal
custom, among the tribe, not to give away in marriage the younger daughter
before the elder. In order to have this information confirmed, I enquired of
a female, herself one of eleven sisters,* if this custom really existed
among her people. She was; at first, averse, evidently from fear, to answer
my question directly, and even wished to conceal her descent. But, at last,
seeing nothing to apprehend from speaking more freely, she said such was
once the custom ; and that it had been the cause of many unhappy marriages.
She said she had often heard the old people speaking about the law of not
allowing the younger sister to be married before the elder. She, however,
would not admit of the existence of the custom at the present day, but
appeared quite well as-
The above table will give a
general idea of the natural increase of the Gipsies. The reader can male
what allowances he pleases, for ages at time of marriage, intervals between
births, twins, deaths, or numbers of children born. By this table, the
Gipsy, by marrying at twenty years of age, would, when 54 years old, have a
"following" of no less than 78 souls. "There is one of the divine laws,"
said I to a Gipsy, "which the Gipsies obey more than any other people."
"What is that!" replied he, with great gravity. "The command to ' Be
fruitful, and multiply, and replenish (but not subdue) the earth.' "Even
five generations can be obtained from the male, and six from the female
Gipsy, in a century, counting from first-quainted with it, and could have
informed me fully of it, had she been disposed to speak on the subject.
The exact parallel to this custom is to be found in the
Gentoo code of laws, translated by Halhed; wherein it is made criminal for
"a man to marry while his elder brother remains unmarried; or when a man
marries his daughter to such a person ; or where a man gives the younger
sister in marriage while the elder sister remains unmarried." The learned
translator of the code considers this custom of the Gentoosof the remotest
antiquity, and compares it with that passage in the Book of Genesis, where
Laban excuses himself to Jacob for having substituted Leah for Rachel, in
these words, "It must not be so done in our country, to give the younger
before the first-born."
The nuptial ceremony of the Gipsies is undoubtedly of the
highest antiquity, and would, probably, be one of the first marriage
ceremonies observed by mankind, in the very first stages of human society.
When we consider the extraordinary length of time the Gipsies have preserved
their speech, as a secret among themselves, in the midst of civilized
society, all over Europe, while their persons were proscribed and hunted
down in every country, like beasts of the chase, we are not at all surprised
at their retaining some of their ancient customs ; for these, as
distinguished from their language, are of easy preservation, under any
circumstances in which they may have been placed. That may much more be said
of this ceremony, as there would be an occasion for its almost daily
observance. It was wrapped up with their very existence—the choice of their
wives, and the love of their offspring—the most important and interesting
transactions of their lives; and would, on that account, be one of the
longest observed, the least easily forgotten, of their ancient usages.
The nuptial rites of the Scottish Gipsies are, perhaps,
unequalled in the history of marriages. At least, I have neither seen nor
heard of any marriage ceremony that has the slightest resemblance to it,
except the extraordinary benediction which our countryman, Mungo Park,
received from the bride at the Moorish wedding in Ali's camp, at Benown ;
and that of a certain custom practised by the Mandingoes, born to
first-born. The reader will notice how large are the Gipsy families
incidentally mentioned by our author.—En.
This custom with the
Mandingoes and the Gipsies is nearly the same as that observed by the
ancient Hebrews, in the days of Moses, mentioned in the Book of Deuteronomy.
When we have the manners and customs of every savage tribe hitherto
discovered, including even the Hottentots and Abyssinians, described, in
grave publications, by adventurous travellers, I can see no reason why there
should not be preserved, and exhibited for the inspection of the public, the
manners and customs of a barbarous race that have lived so long at our own
doors—one more interesting, in some respects, than any yet discovered; and
more particularly as marriage is a very important, indeed the most
important, institution among the inhabitants of any country, whether
civilized or in a state of barbarism. How much would not our antiquarians
now value authenticated, specimens of the language, manners, and customs of
the ancient Pictish nation that once inhabited Scotland!
In describing the marriage
ceremony of the Scottish Gipsies, it is scarcely possible to clothe the
curious facts in language fit to be perused by every reader. But I must
adopt the sentiment of Sir Walter Scott, as given in the Introduction, and
"not be squeamish about delicacies, where knowledge is to be sifted out and
acquired."
A marriage cup, or bowl, made
out of solid wood, and of a capacity to contain about two Scotch pints, or
about one gallon, is made use of at the ceremony. After the wedding-party is
assembled, and everything prepared for the occasion, the priest takes the
bowl and gives it to the bride, who passes urine into it; it is then handed,
for a similar purpose, to the bridegroom. After this, the priest takes a
quantity of earth from the ground, and throws it into the bowl, adding
sometimes a quantity of brandy to the mixture. He then stirs the whole
together, with a spoon made of a ram's horn, and sometimes with a large
ram's horn itself, which he wears suspended from his neck by a string. He
then presents the bowl, with its contents, first to the bride, and then to
the bridegroom ; calling at the same time upon each to separate the mixture
in the bowl, if they can. The young couple are then ordered to join hands
over the bowl containing the earth, urine, and spirits ; when the priest, in
an audible voice, and in the Gipsy language, pronounces the parties to be
husband and wife ; and as none can separate the mixture in the bowl, so
they, in their persons, cannot be separated till death dissolves their
union.
As soon as that part of the
ceremony is performed, the couple undress, and repair to their nuptial
couch. After remaining there for a considerable time, some of the most
confidential relatives of the married couple are admitted to the apartment,
as witnesses to the virginity of the bride ; certain tokens being produced
to the examining friends, at this stage of the ceremony. If all the parties
concerned are satisfied, the bride receives a handsome present from the
friends, as a mark of their respect for her remaining chaste till the hour
of her marriage. This present is, in some instances, a box of a particular
construction.
[On their return from church,
the bride ia seated at one extremity of a room, with the unmarried girls by
her ; the bridegroom on the right, and the father and mother, or those who
perform their office, on the left. The male part of the company stand in the
corners, singing, and playing on the guitar. About one o'clock, the oldest
matron, accompanied by others advanced in years, conducts the bride into the
bed-room, which, according to the custom of Spain, is usually a small
chamber, without a window, opening into tbe general apartment. Tunc vetula,
meant imd sponsce naturalibus ad-motd membranam, vulvae ori oppositam
unguibus scindit el cruorem d plagd fusum linteolo excipit. The Gitanos
without make a load noise with their whistles, and the girls, striking the
door, aing the following couplets, or dome other like them:
"Abra vifid la puerta Snr.
Joaqnin Que le voy a vifid a poner un pafiaelito Eu laB manos que tienen que
Uorar Toditas laB callis."
The bride then returns from
the chamber, accompanied by the matrons, and the new-married couple are
placed upon a table, where the hride dances, el coram astantibus
linteolum, intemerati pudoris indicium explicat; whilst the company,
throwing down their presents of sweetmeats, <fcc, dance and cry, " Viva la
honra."—Bright, on t/ie Spanish Gipsy marriage.]
These matters being settled on the spot, the wedded pair
rise from the marriage-bed, again dress themselves in their finest apparel,
and again join the wedding-party. The joy and happiness on all sides is now
excessive. There is nothing to be heard or seen but fiddling and piping,
dancing, feasting and drinking, which are kept up, with the utmost spirit
and hilarity imaginable, for many hours together.
[]
Before the marriage festival begins, four
matrons—relations of the contracting parties—are appointed to scrutinize the
bride; in which a handkerchief, of the finest French cambric, takes a
leading part. Should she prove frail, she will likely be made away with, in
a way that will leave no trace behind. In carrying out some marriage
festivals, a procession will take place, led by some vile-looking fellow,
hearing, on the end of a long pole, the dicle and unspotted
handkerchief; followed by the betrothed and their nearest friends, and a
rabble of Gipsies, shouting and firing, and barking of dogs. On arriving at
the church, the pole, with its triumphant colours, is stuck into the ground,
with a loud huzza; while the train defile, on either aide, into the church.
On returning home, the same takes place. Then follows the most ludicrous and
wasteful kind of revelling, which often leaves the bridegroom a beggar for
life.—Borrow, on the Spanish Gipsy marriage.—Ed.
The nuptial mixture is
carefully bottled up, aud the bottle marked with the Roman character, M. In
this state, it is buried in the earth, or kept in their houses or tents, and
is carefully preserved, as evidence of the marriage of the parties. When it
is buried in the fields, the husband and wife to whom it belongs frequently
repair to the spot, and look at it, for the purpose of keeping them in
remembrance of their nuptial vows. Small quantities of the compound are also
given to individuals of the tribe, to be used for certain rare purposes,
such, perhaps, as pieces of the bride's cake are used for dreaming-bread,
among the natives of Scotland, at the present day.
What is meant by employing
earth, water, spirits, and, of course, air, in this ceremony, cannot be
conjectured ; unless these ingredients may have some reference to the four
elements of nature—fire, air, earth, and water. That of using a ram's horn,
in performing the nuptial rites, has also its meaning, could information be
obtained concerning that part of the ceremony.
This marriage ceremony is
observed by the Gipsies in Scotland at the present day. A man, of the name
of James Robertson, and a girl, of the name of Margaret Graham, were
married, at Lochgellie, exactly in the manner described. Besides the
testimony of the Gipsies themselves, it is a popular tradition, wherever
these people have resided in Scotland, that they were all married by mixing
of earth and urine together in a wooden bowl. I know of a girl, of about
sixteen years of age, having been married in the Gipsy fashion, in a kiln,
at AppinduII, in Perthshire. A Gipsy informed me that he was at a wedding of
a couple on a moor near Lochgellie, and that they were married in the
ancient Gipsy manner described. Shortly after this, a pair were married near
Stirling, after the custom of their ancestors. In this instance, a screen,
made of an old blanket, was put up in the open field, to prevent the parties
seeing each other, while furnishing the bowl with what was necessary to
lawfully constitute their marriage. [On reading the above ceremony to an
intelligent native of Fife, he said he had himself heard a Gipsy, of the
name of Thomas Ogilvic, say that the Tinklers were married in the way
mentioned. On one occasion, when a couple of respectable individuals were
married, in the usual Scottish Presbyterian manner, at Elie, in Fife,
Ogilvie, Gipsy-like, langhed at such a. wedding ceremony, as being, in his
estimation, no way binding on the parties. He at the same time observed
that, if they would come to him, he would marry them in the Tinkler manner,
which would make it a difficult matter to separate them again.] The
last-named Gipsy further stated to me, that when two young folks of the
tribe agree to be married, the father of the bridegroom sleeps with the
bride's mother, for three or four nights immediately previous to the
celebration of the marriage.
Having endeavoured to
describe the ancient nuptial ceremony of the Scottish Gipsies, I have
considered it proper to give some account of an individual who acted as
priest on such occasions. The name of a famous celebrator of Gipsy
marriages, in Fifeshire, was Peter Robertson, well known, towards the latter
end of his days, by the name of Blind Pate. Peter was a tall, lean, dark
man, and wore a large cocked hat, of the olden fashion, with a long staff in
his hand. By all accounts, he must have been a hundred years of age when he
died. He was frequently seen at the head of from twenty to forty Gipsies,
and often travelled in the midst of a crowd of women. Whenever a marriage
was determined on, among the Lochgellie horde, or their immediate
connexions, Peter was immediately sent for, however far distant he happened
to be at the time from the parties requiring his assistance, to join them in
wedlock: for he was, the oldest member of the tribe at the time, and head of
the Tinklers in the district, and, as the oldest member, it was his
prerogative to officiate, as priest, on such occasions. A friend, who
obligingly sent me some anecdotes of this Gipsy priest, communicated to me
the following facts regarding him:
"At the wedding of a
favourite Brae-laird, in the shire of Kinross, Peter Robertson appeared at
the head of a numerous band of Tinklers, attended by twenty-four asses. He
was always chief and spokesman for the band. At the wedding of a William
Low, a multerer, at Kinross, Peter, for the last time, was seen, with
upwards of twenty-three asses in his retinue. He had certain immunities and
privileges allowed him by his tribe. For one thing, he had the sole profits
arising from the sale of keel, used in marking sheep, in the neighbouring
upland districts ; and one of the asses belonging to the band was always
laden with this article alone. Peter was also notorious as a physician, and
administered to his favourites medicines of his own .preparation, and
numbers of extraordinary cures were ascribed to his superior skill. He was
possessed of a number of wise sayings, a great many of which are still
current in the country. Peter Robertson was, altogether, a very shrewd and
sensible man, and no acts of theft were ever laid to his charge, that I know
of. He had, however, in his band, several females who told fortunes. The
ceremony of marriage which he performed was the same you mentioned to me.
The whole contents of the bowl were stirred about with a large ram's horn,
which was suspended from a string round his neck, as a badge, I suppose, of
his priestly office.
[Two ram's horns and two
spoons, crossed, are sculptured on the tombstone of William Marshall, a
Gipsy chief, who, according to a writer in Blackwood's Magazine, died at the
age of 120 years, and whose remains are deposited in the church-yard of
Kirkcudbright
A horn is the hieroglyphic of
authority, power, and dignity, and is a metaphor often made use of in the
Scriptures. The Jews held ram's horns in great veneration, on account, it is
thought, of that animal having been caught in a bush by the horns, and used
as a substitute, when Isaac was about to be sacrificed by his father; or,
perhaps, on account of this animal being first used in sacrifice. So much
were ram's horns esteemed by the Israelites, that their Priests and Levites
used them as trumpets, particularly at the taking of Jericho. The modern
Jews, when they confess their sins, in our month of September, announce the
ceremony by blowing a ram's horn, the sound of which, they say, drives away
the Devil.. In ancient Egypt, and other parts of Africa, Jupiter Ammon was
worshipped under the figure of a ram, and to this deity one of these animals
was sacrificed annually. A ram seems to have been an emblem of power in the
East, from the remotest ages. It would, therefore, appear that the practice
of the Gipsy priest " wearing a ram's horn, suspended from a string, around
his neck," must be derived from the highest antiquity.]
He attended all the fairs and
weddings for many miles round. The Braes of Kinross were his favourite
haunt; so much so that, in making his settlement, and portioning his
children, he allowed them all districts, in the country round about, to
travel in; but he reserved the Braes of Kinross as his own pendicle, and
hence our favourite toast in the shire of Kinross, 'The lasses of Blind
Pate's Pendicle.' Besides the Braes of Kinross, this Gipsy, in his sweeping
verbal testament, reserved the town of Dunfermline, also, to himself,
'because,' said he, 'Dunfermline was in cash, what Loch-leven was in
water—it never ran dry.'" A great deal of booty was obtained by the Tinklers,
at the large and long-continued fairs which were frequently held in this
populous manufacturing town, in the olden times.
This Gipsy priest was uncommonly fond of a bottle of good
ale. Like many other celebrators of marriages, he derived considerable
emoluments from his office. A Gipsy informed me that Robertson, on these
occasions, always received presents, such as a pair of candlesticks, or
basins and platters, made of pewter, and such like articles. The disobedient
and refractory members of his clan were chastised by him at all times, on
the spot, by the blows of his cudgel, without regard to age or sex, or
manner of striking. When any serious scuffle arose among his people, in
which he was like to meet with resistance, he would, with vehemence, call to
his particular friends, " Set my back to the wa';" and, being thus defended
in the rear, he, with his cudgel, made his assailants in front smart for
their rebellion. Although he could not see, his daughter would give him the
word of command. She would call to him, "Strike down"—"Strike laigh" (low)—"
Strike amawn" (athwart,)—"Strike haunch-ways,"—"Strike shoulder-ways," &c.
In these, we see nearly all the cuts or strokes of the Hungarian
sword-exercise. As I have frequently mentioned, all the Gipsies were
regularly trained to a peculiar method of their own in handling the cudgel,
in their battles. I am inclined to think that part of the Hungarian
sword-exercise, at present practised in our cavalry, is founded upon the
Gipsy manner of attack and defence, including even the direct thrust to the
front, which the Gipsies perform with the cudgel.
Notwithstanding all that has been said of the licentious
manners of the Scottish Gipsies, I am convinced that the slightest
infidelity, on the part of their wives, would be punished with the utmost
severity. I am assured that nothing can put a Gipsy into so complete a rage
as to impute incontinence to his wife. In India, the Gipsy men "are
extremely jealous of their wives, who are kept in strict subservance, and
are in danger of corporeal punishment, or absolute dismissal, if they happen
to displease them.' The Gipsies are complete Tartars in matters of this
kind.
But in the best-regulated
society—in the most virtuous of families—the sundering of the marriage-tie
is often unavoidable, even under the most heinous of circumstances. And it
is not to be expected that the Gipsies should be exempted from the lot
common to humanity, under whatever circumstances it may be placed. The
separation of husband and wife is, with them, a very serious and melancholy
affair—an event greatly to be lamented, while the ceremony is attended with
much grief and mourning, blood having to be shed, and life taken, on the
occasion.
It would be a conclusion
naturally to be drawn from the circumstance of the Gipsies having so
singular a marriage ceremony, that they should have its concomitant in as
singular a ceremony of divorce. The first recourse to which a savage would
naturally resort, in giving vent to his indignation, and obtaining
satisfaction for the infidelity of the female, (assuming that savages are
always susceptible of such a feeling,) would be to despatch her on the spot.
But the principle of expiation, in the person of a dumb creature, for
offences committed against the Deity, has, from the very creation of the
world, been so universal among mankind, that it would not be wondered at if
it should have been applied for the atonement of offences committed against
each other, and nowhere so much so as in the East—the land of figure and
allegory. The practice obtains with the Gipsies in the matter of divorce,
for they lay upon the head of that noble animal, the horse, the sins of
their offending sister, and generally let her go free. But, it may be asked,
how has this sacrifice of the horse never been mentioned in Scotland before?
The same question applies equally well to their language, and marriage
ceremony, yet we know "that both of these exist at the present day. The fact
is, the Gipsies have hitherto been so completely despised, and held in such
thorough contempt, that few ever thought of, or would venture to make
enquiries of them relative to, their ancient customs and manners ; and that,
when any of their ceremonies were actually observed by the people at large,
they were looked upon as the mere frolics, the unmeaning and extravagant
practices, of a race of beggarly thieves and vagabonds, unworthy of the
slightest attention or credit. [What our author says, relative to the
sacrifice of the horse, by the Gipsies, not being known to the people of
Scotland at large, is equally applicable to the entire subject of the tribe.
And we see here how admirably the passions—in this case, the prejudice and
incredulity—of mankind are calculated to blind them to facts, perhaps to
facts the most obvious and incontestible. What is stated of the Gipsies in
this work, generally, should be no matter of wonder; the real wonder, if
wonder there should be, is that it should not have been known to the world
before. —Ed.] In whatever country the Gipsies have appeared, they have
always been remarkable for an extraordinary attachment to the horse. The use
which they make of this animal, in sacrifice, will sufficiently account, in
one way at least, for this peculiar feature in their character. Many of the
horses which have been stolen by them, since their arrival in Europe, I am
convinced, have been used in parting with their wives, an important
religious ceremony—or at least a custom—which they would long remember and
practise. [Grellmann says, of the Hungarian Gipsies, "The greatest luxury to
them is when they can procure a feast of cattle that have died of any
distemper, whether it be sheep, pig, cow, or other beast, a horse only
excepted."—Ed]
It is the general opinion,
founded chiefly npon the affinity of language, that this singular people
migrated from Hindostan. None of the authors on the Gipsies, however, that I
am aware of, have, in their researches, been able to discover, among the
tribe, any customs of a religious nature, by which their religious notions
and ceremonies, at the time they entered Europe, could be ascertained.
Indeed, the learned and industrious Grellmann expressly states that the
Gipsies did not bring any particular religion with them, from their native
country, by which they could be distinguished from other people. The Gipsy
sacrifice of the horse, at parting with their wives, however, appears to be
a remnant of the great Hindoo religious sacrifice of the Aswamedha, or
Assummeed Jugg, observed by all the four principal castes in India,
enumerated in the Gentoo code of laws, translated from the Persian copy, by
Nathaniel Brassey Halhed, and is proof, besides the similarity of language,
that the Gipsies are from Hindostan. Before the Gentoo code of laws came
into my hands, I was inclined to believe that this ceremony of sacrificing
horses might be a Tartar custom, as the ancient Pagan tribes of Tartaryalso
sacrificed horses, on certain occasions ; and my conjectures were
countenanced by the Gipsy and Tartar ceremonies being somewhat similar in
their details. Indeed, in Sweden and Denmark, and in some parts of Germany,
the Gipsies, as I have already stated, obtained the name of Tartars. "They
were not allowed the privilege of remaining unmolested in Denmark, as the
code of Danish laws specifies: The Tartar Gipsies, who wander about
everywhere, doing great damage to the people, by their lies, thefts, and
witchcraft, shall be taken into custody by every magistrate." And it also
appears, according to Grellmann, that the Gipsies sometimes called
themselves Tartars. If it was observed, on the continent, that they
sacrificed horses, a custom very common at one time among the Tartars, their
supposed Tartar origin would appear to have had some foundation. The Tartar
princes seem to have ratified and confirmed their military leagues by
sacrificing horses and drinking of a running stream ; and we find our
Scottish Gipsies dissolving their matrimonial alliances by the solemn
sacrifice of the same animal, while some Gipsies state that horses were
also, at one time, sacrificed at their marriage ceremonies. At these
sacrifices of the- Scottish Gipsies, no Deity—no invisible agency—appears,
as far as I am informed, to have been invoked by the sacrificers.
I have alluded to this custom of the Tartars, more
particularly, to show that the Gipsies are not the only people who have
sacrificed horses. The ancient Hindoos, as already stated, sacrificed
horses. The Greeks did the same to Neptune; the ancient Scandinavians to
their god, Assa-Thor, the representative of the sun ; and the Persians,
likewise, to the sun. [It appears that the Jews, when they lapsed into the
grossest idolatry, dedicated horses to the sun. " And he (Josiah) took away
the horses that the kings of Judah had given to the sun, at the entering in
of the house of the Lord, by thechamherof Nathan melech, the chamberlain,
which was in the suburbs, and burnt the chariots of the sun with fire."
II Kings, xxiii. 11.] But I am inclined to believe
that the Gipsy sacrifice of the horse is the remains of the great
Assummeed Jugg of the Hindoos, observed by tribes of greater antiquity
than the modern nations of India, as appears by the Gentoo
code of laws already referred to.
The sacrificing of horses is a curious as well as a
leading and important fact in the history of the Gipsies, and, as far as I
know, is new to the world. I shall, in establishing its existence among the
Scottish Gipsies, produce my authorities with my details.
In the first place, it was, and I believe it still is, a
general tradition, over almost all Scotland, that, when the Tinklers parted
from their wives, the act of separation took place over the carcass of a
dead horse. In respect to McDonald's ease, alluded to under the head of
Linlithgowshire Gipsies, my informant, Mr. Alexander Ramsay, late an officer
of the Excise, a very respectable man, who died in 1819, at the age of 74
years, stated to me that he saw McDonald and his wife separated over the
body of a dead horse, on a moor, at Shieldhill, near Falkirk, either in the
year 1758 or 1760, he was uncertain which. The horse was lying stretched out
on the heath. The parties took hold of each other by the haud, and,
commencing at the head of the dead animal, walked—the husband on one side,
and the wife on the other —till they came to the tail, when, without
speaking a word to each other, they parted, in opposite directions, as if
proceeding on a journey. Mr. Ramsay said he never could forget the violent
swing which McDonald gave his wife at parting. The time of the day was a
little after day-break. My informant, at the time, was going, with others,
to Shield-hill for coals, and happened to be passing over a piece of rising
ground, when they came close upon the Gipsies, in a hollow, quite
unexpectedly to both parties.
Another aged man of credibility, of the name of James
Wilson, at North Queensferry, also informed me that it was within his own
knowledge, that a Gipsy, of the name of John Lundie, divorced four wives
over dead horses, in the manner described. Wilson further mentioned that,
when Gipsies were once regularly separated over a dead horse, they could
never again be united in wedlock ; and that, unless they were divorced in
this manner, all the children which the female might have, subsequently to
any other mode of separation, the husband was obliged to support. In fact,
the transaction was not legal, according to the Gipsy usages, without the
horse. The facts of Lundie, and another Gipsy, of the name of Drummond,
having divorced many wives over dead horses, have been confirmed to me by
several aged individuals who knew them personally. One intelligent
gentleman, Mr. Richard Baird, informed me that, in his youth, he actually
saw John Lundie separated from one of his wives over a dead horse, in the
parish of Carriden, near Bo'ness. My father, who died in 1837, at the age of
nearly 83 years, also stated that it was quite current, in Tweed-dale, that
Mary Yorkston, wife of Matthew Baillie, the Gipsy chief, parted married
couples of her tribe over dead horses.
About ten years after receiving the above information,
Malcolm's Anecdotes of the Manners and Customs of London came into my hands;
wherein I found the following quotations, from a work published in 1674,
describing the different classes of impostors at that period in England: "Patricos,"
says this old author, "are strolling priests; every hedge is their parish,
and every wandering rogue their parishioner. The service, he saith, is the
marrying of couples, without the Gospels or Book of Common Prayer; the
solemnity whereof is this: The parties to be married find out a dead horse,
or other beast; standing, one on the one side, and the other on the other,
the Patrico bids them live together till death part them; so, shaking hands,
the wedding is ended." Now the parties here described seem to have been no
other than Gipsies. But it also appears that the ceremony alluded to is that
of dissolving a marriage, and not that of celebrating it. It is proper,
however, to mention, as I have already done, that horses, at one time, were
sacrificed at their marriages, as well as at their divorces.
Feeling now quite satisfied that Gipsies were, at one
time, actually separated over the bodies of dead horses, and horses only,
(for I could find no other animal named but horses,) I proceeded to have the
fact confirmed by the direct testimony of the people themselves. And whether
these horses were sacrificed expressly for such purposes, or whether the
rites were performed over horses accidentally found dead, I could not
discover till the year 1828. It occurred to me that the using of dead
horses, in separating man and wife, was a remnant of some ancient ceremony,
which induced me to persevere in my enquiries, for the purpose of
ascertaining, if not the origin, at least the particulars, of so extraordinary
a custom. In the year mentioned, and in the year following, I examined a
Gipsy on the subject; a man of about sixty years of age, who, a few years
before, had given me a specimen of his language. He said that he himself had
witnessed the sacrifices and ceremonies attending the separation of husband
and wife. From this man I received the following curious particulars
relative to the sacrifice of horses and ceremony of divorce ; which I think
may be depended on, as I was very careful in observing that his statements,
taken down at four different times, agreed with each other.
When the parties can no
longer live together as husband and wife, and a separation for ever is
finally determined on, a horse, without blemish, and in no manner of way
lame, is led forth to the spot for performing the ceremony of divorce. The
hour at which the rites must be performed is, if possible, twelve o'clock at
noon, "when the sun is at his height."
[This Gipsy mentioned one
particular instance of having seen a couple separated in this way, on a wild
moor, near Huntly, about the year 1805. He particularly stated that a horse
found dead would not do for a separation, but that one must be killed for
the express purpose; and that "the sun must be at his height" before the
horse could be properly sacrificed. From the fact of Ramsay stumbling upon
the Gipsies "a little after daybreak," it would seem that circumstances had
compelled them to change the time, or adjourn the completion, of the
sacrifice; or that the extreme wildneas of the victim had prevented its
being caught, and so led to the "violent awing which McDonald gave his wife
at parting." And it might be that Ramsay had come upon them when McDonald
and his wife were performing the last part of the ceremony, or had caused
them to finish it abruptly; as the old Gipsy stated that not only are none
hut Gipsies allowed to be present on such occasions, but that the greatest
secrecy is observed, to prevent discovery by those who are not of the
tribe.]
The Gipsies present cast lots
for the individual who is to sacrifice the animal, and whom they call the
priest, for the time. The priest, with a long pole or staff in his hand, [It
appears all the Gipsies, male as well as female, who perform ceremonies for
their tribe, carry long staffs. In the Institutes of Menu, page 23, it is
written: "The staff of a priest must he of such length as to reach his hair;
that of a soldier to reach his forehead; and that of a merchant to reach his
nose."] walks round and round the animal several times; repeating the names
of all the persons in whose possession it has been, and extolling and
expatiating on the rare qualities of so useful an animal. It is now let
loose, and driven from their presence, to do whatever it pleases. The horse,
perfect and free, is put in the room of the woman who is to be divorced; and
by its different movements is the degree of her guilt ascertained. Some of
the Gipsies now set off in pursuit of it, and endeavour to catch it. If it
is wild and intractable, kicks, leaps dykes and ditches, scampers about, and
will not allow itself to be easily taken hold of, the crimes and guilt of
the woman are looked upon as numerous and heinous. If the horse is tame and
docile, when it is pursued, and suffers itself to be taken without much
trouble, and without exhibiting many capers, the guilt of the woman is not
considered so deep and aggravated; and it is then sacrificed in her stead.
But if it is extremely wild and vicious, and cannot be taken without
infinite trouble, her crimes are considered exceedingly wicked and
atrocious; and my informant said instances occurred in which both horse and
woman were sacrificed at the same time ; the death of the horse, alone,
being then considered insufficient to atone for her excessive guilt. The
individuals who catch the horse bring it before the priest. They repeat to
him all the faults and tricks it had committed; laying the whole of the
crimes of which the woman is supposed to have been guilty to its charge ;
and upbraiding and scolding the dumb creature, in an angry manner, for its
conduct. They bring, as it were, an accusation against it, and plead for its
condemnation. When this part of the trial is finished, the priest takes a
large knife and thrusts it into the heart of the horse; and its blood is
allowed to flow upon the ground till life is extinct. The dead animal is now
stretched out upon the ground. The husband then takes his stand on one side
of it, and the wife on the other; and, holding each other by the hand,
repeat certain appropriate sentences in the Gipsy language. They then quit
hold of each other, and walk three times round the body of the horse,
contrariwise, passing and crossing each other, at certain points, as they
proceed in opposite directions. At certain parts of the animal, (the
corners of the horse, was the Gipsy's expression,) such as the hind and
fore feet, the shoulders and haunches, the head and tail, the parties halt,
and face each other; and again repeat sentences, in their own speech, at
each time they halt. The two last stops they make, in their circuit round
the sacrifice, are at the head and tail. At the head, they again face each
other, and speak; and lastly, at the tail, they again confront each other,
utter some more Gipsy expressions, shake hands, and finally part, the one
going north, the other south, never again to be united in this life. [That I
might distinctly understand the Gipsy, when he described the. manner of
crossing and wheeling round the corners of the horse, a common sitting-chair
was placed on its side between us, which represented the animal lying on the
ground.] Immediately after the separation takes place, the woman receives a
token, which is made of cast-iron, about an inch and a half square, with a
mark upon it resembling the Roman character, After the marriage hag been
dissolved, and the woman dismissed from the sacrifice, the heart of the
horse is taken out and roasted with fire, then sprinkled with vinegar, or
brandy, and eaten by the husband and his friends then present; the female
not being allowed to join in this part of the ceremony. The body of the
horse, skin and everything about it, except the heart, is buried on the
spot; and years after the ceremony has taken place, the husband and his
friends visit the grave of the animal, to see whether it has been disturbed.
At these visits, they walk round about the grave, with much grief and
mourning.
The husband may take another
wife whenever he pleases, but the female is never permitted to marry again.
[Bright, on the Spanish Gipsies, says: "Widows never marry again, dnd are
distinguished by mourning-veils, and black shoes made like those of a man;
no slight mortification, in a country where the females are so remarkahle
for the beauty of their feet." It is most likely that divorced female
Gipsies are confounded here with widows.—Ed.] The token, or rather bill of
divorce, which she receives, must never be from about her person. If she
loses it, or attempts to pass herself off as a woman never before married,
she becomes liable to the punishment of death. In the event of her breaking
this law, a council of the chiefs is held upon her conduct, and her fate is
decided by a majority of the members ; and, if she is to suffer death, her
sentence must be confirmed by the king, or principal leader. The culprit is
then tied to a stake, with an iron chain, and there cudgelled to death. The
executioners do not extinguish life at one beating, but leave the unhappy
woman for a little while, and return to her, and at last complete their work
by despatching her on the spot.
I have been informed of an
instance of a Gipsy falling out with his wife, and, in the heat of his
passion, shooting his own horse dead on the spot with his pistol, and
forthwith performing the ceremony of divorce over the animal, without
allowing himself a moment's time for reflection on the subject. Some of the
country-people observed the transaction, and were horrified at so
extraordinary a proceeding. It was considered by them as merely a mad frolic
of an enraged Tinkler. It took place many years ago, in a wild, sequestered
spot between Galloway and Ayrshire.
This sacrifice of the horse is also observed by the
Gipsies of the Russian Empire. In the year 1830, a Russian gentleman of
observation and intelligence, proprietor of estates on the banks of the Don,
stated to me that the Gipsies in the neighbourhood of Moscow, and on the
Don, several hundred versts from the sea of Asoph, sacrificed horses, and
ate part of their flesh, in the performance of some very ancient ceremony of
idolatry. They sacrifice them under night, in the woods, as the practice is
prohibited by the Russian Government. The police are often detecting the
Gipsies in these sacrifices, and the ceremony is kept as secret as possible.
My informant could not go into the particulars of the Gipsy sacrifice in
Russia ; but there is little doubt that it is the same which the tribe
performed in Scotland. In Russia, the Gipsies, like those in this country,
have a language peculiar to themselves, which they retain as a secret among
their own fraternity.
As regards the sacrificing of horses by the Gipsies of
Scotland, at the present day, all that I can say is that I do not know of
its taking place ; nor has it been denied to me. The only conclusion to
which I can come, in regard to the question, is that it is in the highest
degree probable that, like their language and ceremony of marriage, it is
still practised when it can be done. In carrying out this ceremony, there is
an obstacle to be overcome which does not lie in the way of that of
marriage, and it is this : Where are many of the Tinklers to find a horse,
over which they can obtain a divorce? The difficulty with them is as great
as it is with the people of England, who must, at a frightful expense, go to
no less than the House of Lords to obtain an act to separate legally from
their unfaithful partners. [This difficulty has been removed by recent
legislation.—Ed.] The Gipsies, besides being generally unable or unwilling
to bear the expense of what will procure them a release in their own way,
find it a difficult matter, in these days, to steal, carry off, and dispose
of such a bulky article as a horse, in the sacrifice of which they will find
a new wife. I am not aware how they get rid of this solemn and serious
difficulty, beyond this, that a Gipsy, a native of Yetholm, informed me that
some of his brethren in that colony knock down their asses, for the purpose
of parting with their wives, at the present day.
As the code of the ancient
laws of Hindostan is not in the hands of every one, I shall here transcribe
from the work the account of the Gentoo Institution of the Aswamedha or the
Assummeed Jugg,\ that the reader may compare it with the Gipsy sacrifice of
horses; for which, owing to its length, I must crave his indulgence. It is
under the chapter of evidence, and is as follows:
"An Assummeed Jugg is when a
person, having commenced a Jugg, writes various articles upon a scroll of
paper on a horse's neck, and dismisses the horse, sending, along with the
horse, a stout and valiant person, equipped with the best necessaries and
accoutrements, to accompany the horse day and night, whithersoever he shall
choose to go ; and if any creature, either man, genius or dragon, should
seize the horse, that man opposes such attempt, and, having gained the
victory, upon a battle, again gives the horse his freedom. If any one in
this world, or in heaven, or beneath the earth, would seize this horse, and
the horse of himself comes to the house of the celebrator of the Jugg, upon
killing that horse, he must throw the flesh of him upon the fire of the Juh,
and utter the prayers of his Deity; such a Jugg is called a Jugg Assummeed,
and the merit of it, as a religious work, is infinite." Page 127.
In another part of the same
chapter of the Hindoo code of laws, are the following particulars relative
to horses, which show the great respect in which these animals were held
among the ancient natives of Hindostan. "In an affair concerning a horse: if
any person gives false evidence, his guilt is as great as the guilt of
murdering one hundred persons." Page 128. In the Asiatic Researches, the
sacrifice of the horse is frequently noticed; and in Sir "William Jones'
Institutes of Menu, chapter viii. page 202, it is said: "A false witness, in
the case of a horse, kills, or incurs the guilt of killing, one hundred
kinsmen." "The Aswamedlia, or sacrifice of the horse : Considerable
difficulties usually attend that ceremony ; for the consecrated horse was to
be set at liberty for a certain time, and followed at a distance by the
owner, or his champion, who was usually one of his near kinsmen ; and if any
person should attempt to stop it in its rambles, a battle must inevitably
ensue; besides, as the performer of a hundred Aswamedhas became equal to the
god of the firmaments." {Asiatic Researches, vol. iii., page 216.) "The
inauguration of Indra, (the Indian God of the firmaments,) it appears, was
performed by sacrificing a hundred horses. It is imagined that this
celebration becomes a cause of obtaining great power and universal monarchy;
and many of the kings in ancient India performed this sacrifice at their
inauguration, similar to that of In-Jra's." "These monarchs were consecrated
by these great sacrifices, with a view to become universal conquerors."
{Asiatic Researches.) It appears, by the Hindoo mythology, that Indra was at
one time a mere mortal, but by sacrificing a hundred horses, he became
sovereign of the firmament; and that should any Indian monarch succeed in
immolating a hundred horses, he would displace Indra.
The above are literal and
simple facts, which took place in performing the sacrifice ; but the
following is the explanation of the mystic signification contained in the
ceremony.
"The Assummeed Jugg does not
merely consist in the performance of that ceremony which is open to the
inspection of the world, namely, in bringing a horse, and sacrificing him ;
but Assummeed is to be taken in a mystic signification, as implying that the
sacrificer must look upon himself to be typified in that horse, such as he
shall be described; because the religious duty of the Assummeed Jugg
comprehends all those other religious duties, to the performance of which
all the wise and holy direct all their actions; and by which all the sincere
professors of every different faith aim at perfection. The mystic
signification thereof is as follows: The head of that unblemished horse is
the symbol of the morning; his eyes are the sun; his breath the wind ; his
wide-opening mouth is the Bisliwdiier, or that innate warmth which
invigorates all the world; his body typifies one entire year; his back,
paradise; his belly, the plains; his hoof, this earth; his sides, the four
quarters of the heavens; the bones thereof, the intermediate spaces between
the four quarters; the rest of his limbs represent all distinct matter ; the
places where those limbs meet, or his joints, imply the months, and halves
of the months, which are ealled Peche (or fortnights); his feet
signify night and day; and night and day are of four kinds ; first, the
night and day of Brihma; second, the night and day of angels; third, the
night and day of the world of the spirits of deceased ancestors ; fourth,
the night and day of mortals. These four kinds are typified in his four
feet. The rest of his bones are the constellations of the fixed stars, which
are the twenty-eight stages of the moon's eourse, ealled the lunar year; his
flesh is the elouds; his food the sand; his tendons the rivers; his spleen
and liver the mountains; the hair of his body the vegetables, and his long
hair the trees. The fore part of his body typifies the first half of the
day, and the hinder part the latter half; his yawning is the flash of the
lightning, and his turning himself is the thunder of the eloud ; his urine
represents the rain; and his mental reflection is his only speech.
"The golden vessels, which are prepared before the horse
is let loose, are the light of the day ; and the place where these vessels
are kept is a type of the ocean of the East; the silver vessels, which are
prepared after the horse is let loose, are the light of the night; and the
place where those vessels are kept is a type of the ocean of the West. These
two sorts of vessels are always before and after the horse. The Arabian
horse, which, on account of his swiftness, is called Ey, is the
performer of the journeys of angels; the Tdjee, which is of the race
of Persian horses, is the performer of the journeys of the Kundherps
(or the good spirits); the Wazbd, whieh is of the race of the
deformed Tajee horses, is the performer of the journeys of Jins
(or demons); and the Ashoo, which is of the race of Turkish
horses, is the performer of the journeys of mankind. This one horse which
performs these several services, on account of his four different sorts of
riders, obtains the four different appellations. The place where this horse
remains is the great ocean, which signifies the great spirit of Perm-atma,
or the universal soul, which proceeds also from that Perm-atma and is
comprehended in the same Perm-atma.
" The intent of this
sacrifice is, that a man should consider himself to be in the place of that
horse, and look upon all these articles as typified in himself; and
conceiving the Atma (or divine soul) to be an ocean, should let all thought
of self be absorbed in that Atma." Page 19.
Mr. Halhed, the translator,
justly observes: "This is the very acme and enthusiasm of allegory, and
wonderfully displays the picturesque powers of fancy in an Asiatic genius ;
yet, unnatural as the account there stands, it is seriously credited by the
Hindoos of all denominations." On the other hand, he thinks there is a great
resemblance between this very ancient Hindoo ceremony and the sacrifice of
the scape-goat, in the Bible, described in the 21st and 22d verses of the
16th chapter of Leviticus, viz.: "And Aaron shall lay both his hands upon
the head of the live goat, and confess over him all the iniquities of the
children of Israel, and all their transgressions, in all their sins, putting
them upon the head of the goat; and shall send him away, by the hand of a
fit man, into the wilderness : and the goat shall bear upon him all their
iniquities into a land not inhabited; and he shall let go the goat into the
wilderness." Page 17. In the same manner, all the iniquities of the
sacrificer, in the Gentoo ceremony, are laid upon the horse, which is let
loose, and attended by a stout and valiant person. The same is done in the
Gipsy sacrifice, as typifying the woman to be divorced.
The resemblance between the
Gipsy and the Hindoo sacrifice is cloge and striking in their general
bearings. The Hindoo sacrificer is typified in the horse, and his sins are
ascertained and described by the motions or movements of the animal ; for if
the horse is very docile and tame, and of its own accord comes to the Hindoo
celebrator of the sacrifice, his merits are then infinite, and extremely
acceptable to the Deity worshipped. In the Gipsy sacrifice, if the horse is
in like manner quiet, and easily caught, the woman, whom it represents, is
then comparatively innocent. In India, part of the flesh of the horse was
eaten: among the Gipsies, the heart is eaten. The Hindoos sacrificed their
enemies, by substituting for them a buffalo, &c.: the Gipsies sacrifice
their unfaithful wives, by the substitute of a horse. In the Hindoo
sacrifice, particular parts of the horse allegorically represent certain
parts of the earth: at certain parts of the horse, (the corners, as
the Gipsies call them,) the Gipsies, in their circuit round the animal,
halt, and utter particular sentences in their own language, as if these
parts were of more importance, and had more influence, than the other parts.
And it is probable that, in these sentences, some invisible agency was
addressed and invoked by the Gipsies.
As the Aswamedha, or sacrifice of the horse, was
the most important of all the religious ceremonies of every caste of Hindoos,
in ancient India, so it would be the last to be forgotten by the wandering
Gipsies. And as both sacrificed at twelve o'clock, noon, I am inclined to
believe that both offered their sacrifice to the sun, the animating soul of
universal nature. As already stated, the Gipsies, while travelling, assume
new names every morning before setting out; but when noon-tide arrives, they
resume their permanent English ones. This custom is practised daily, and has
undoubtedly also some reference to the sun. By the account of the Gipsy
already mentioned, the horse must, if possible, be killed at noon. According
to Southey, in his curse of Kehamah, the sacrifice of the horse in India was
performed at the same time. Colonel Tod, in his history of India, says: "The
sacrifice of the horse is the most imposing, and the earliest, heathenish
rite on record, and was dedicated to the sun, anciently, in India."
According to the same author, the horse in India must be milk-white, with
particular marks upon it. The Gipsy's horse to be sacrificed must be sound,
and without blemish; but no particular colour is mentioned. According to
Halhed, the horse sacrificed in India was also without blemish.
I have, perhaps, been too minute and tedious in
describing these rites and ceremonies of the Gentoos; but the singular fact
that our Scottish Tinklers yet—at least till very lately— retained the
important fragments of the ancient mythology of the Pagan tribes of
Hindostan, is offered as an apology to the curious reader for the trouble of
perusing the details. I shall only add, that there appears to be nearly as
great a resemblance between the sacrifices of the Gipsies and the ancient
Hindoos, as there is affinity between modern Hindostanee and the language of
the Gipsies in Scotland, at the present day, as will be seen in the
following chapter.