<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107" href="#Page_107"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<h3>IN BRITTANY AND FRANCE</h3>
<p>The Celts had been taught by their priests
that the soul is immortal. When the body
died the spirit passed instantly into another
existence in a country close at hand. We remember
that the Otherworld of the British
Isles, peopled by the banished Tuatha and all
superhuman beings, was either in caves in the
earth, as in Ireland, or in an island like the
English Avalon. By giving a mortal one of
their magic apples to eat, fairies could entice
him whither they would, and at last away
into their country.</p>
<p>In the Irish story of Nera (q. v.), the corpse
of the criminal is the cause of Nera's being
lured into the cave. So the dead have the
same power as fairies, and live in the same
place. On May Eve and November Eve the
dead and the fairies hold their revels together
and make excursions together. If a young
person died, he was said to be called away by<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108" href="#Page_108"></SPAN></span>
the fairies. The Tuatha may not have been
a race of gods, but merely the early Celts, who
grew to godlike proportions as the years raised
a mound of lore and legends for their pedestal.
So they might really be only the dead,
and not of superhuman nature.</p>
<p>In the fourth century <span class="smcap">a. d.</span>, the men of
England were hard pressed by the Picts and
Scots from the northern border, and were
helped in their need by the Teutons. When
this tribe saw the fair country of the Britons
they decided to hold it for themselves. After
they had driven out the northern tribes, in
the fifth century, when King Arthur was
reigning in Cornwall, they drove out those
whose cause they had fought. So the Britons
were scattered to the mountains of Wales, to
Cornwall, and across the Channel to Armorica,
a part of France, which they named
Brittany after their home-land. In lower
Brittany, out of the zone of French influence,
a language something like Welsh or old
British is still spoken, and many of the Celtic
beliefs were retained more untouched than in<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109" href="#Page_109"></SPAN></span>
Britain, not clear of paganism till the seventeenth
century. Here especially did Christianity
have to adapt the old belief to her own
ends.</p>
<p>Gaul, as we have seen from Cæsar's account,
had been one of the chief seats of Druidical
belief. The religious center was Carnutes,
now Chartrain. The rites of sacrifice survived
in the same forms as in the British
Isles. In the fields of Deux-Sèvres fires were
built of stubble, ferns, leaves, and thorns, and
the people danced about them and burned
nuts in them. On St. John's Day animals
were burned in the fires to secure the cattle
from disease. This was continued down into
the seventeenth century.</p>
<p>The pagan belief that lasted the longest in
Brittany, and is by no means dead yet, was
the cult of the dead. Cæsar said that the
Celts of Gaul traced their ancestry from the
god of death, whom he called Dispater. Now
figures of l'Ankou, a skeleton armed with a
spear, can be seen in most villages of Brittany.
This mindfulness of death was strengthened<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110" href="#Page_110"></SPAN></span>
by the sight of the prehistoric cairns of stones
on hilltops, the ancient altars of the Druids,
and dolmens, formed of one flat rock resting
like a roof on two others set up on end with
a space between them, ancient tombs; and by
the Bretons being cut off from the rest of
France by the nature of the country, and shut
in among the uplands, black and misty in
November, and blown over by chill Atlantic
winds. Under a seeming dull indifference
and melancholy the Bretons conceal a lively
imagination, and no place has a greater
wealth of legendary literature.</p>
<p>What fairies, dwarfs, pixies, and the like
are to the Celts of other places, the spirits of
the dead are to the Celts of Brittany. They
possess the earth on Christmas, St. John's
Day, and All Saints'. In Finistère, that
western point of France, there is a saying that
on the Eve of All Souls' "there are more
dead in every house than sands on the shore."
The dead have the power to charm mortals
and take them away, and to foretell the future.
They must not be spoken of directly,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111" href="#Page_111"></SPAN></span>
any more than the fairies of the Scottish
border, or met with, for fear of evil results.</p>
<p>By the Bretons of the sixth century the
near-by island of Britain, which they could
just see on clear days, was called the Otherworld.
An historian, Procopius, tells how the
people nearest Britain were exempted from
paying tribute to the Franks, because they
were subject to nightly summons to ferry the
souls of the dead across in their boats, and deliver
them into the hands of the keeper of
souls. Farther inland a black bog seemed to
be the entrance to an otherworld underground.
One location which combined the
ideas of an island and a cave was a city buried
in the sea. The people imagined they could
hear the bells of Ker-Is ringing, and joyous
music sounding, for though this was a city
of the dead, it resembled the fairy palaces of
Ireland, and was ruled by King Grallon and
his fair daughter Dahut, who could lure
mortals away by her beauty and enchantments.</p>
<p>The approach of winter is believed to drive<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112" href="#Page_112"></SPAN></span>
like the flocks, the souls of the dead from
their cold cheerless graves to the food and
warmth of home. This is why November
Eve, the night before the first day of winter,
was made sacred to them.</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"When comes the harvest of the year<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Before the scythe the wheat will fall."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p class="cite2"><span class="smcap">Botrel</span>: <i>Songs of Brittany.</i><br/></p>
<p>The harvest-time reminded the Bretons of the
garnering by that reaper, Death. On November
Eve milk is poured on graves, feasts and
candles set out on the tables, and fires lighted
on the hearths to welcome the spirits of departed
kinsfolk and friends.</p>
<p>In France from the twelfth to the fourteenth
century stone buildings like lighthouses were
erected in cemeteries. They were twenty or
thirty feet high, with lanterns on top. On
Hallowe'en they were kept burning to safeguard
the people from the fear of night-wandering
spirits and the dead, so they were
called "lanternes des morts."</p>
<p>The cemetery is the social center of the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113" href="#Page_113"></SPAN></span>
Breton village. It is at once meeting-place,
playground, park, and church. The tombs
that outline the hills make the place seem
one vast cemetery. On All Souls' Eve in the
mid-nineteenth century the "procession of
tombs" was held. All formed a line and
walked about the cemetery, calling the names
of those who were dead, as they approached
their resting-places. The record was carefully
remembered, so that not one should seem to
be forgotten.</p>
<p>"We live with our dead," say the Bretons.
First on the Eve of All Souls' comes the religious
service, "black vespers." The blessedness
of death is praised, the sorrows and
shortness of life dwelt upon. After a common
prayer all go out to the cemetery to pray
separately, each by the graves of his kin, or to
the "place of bones," where the remains of
those long dead are thrown all together in
one tomb. They can be seen behind gratings,
by the people as they pass, and rows of skulls
at the sides of the entrance can be touched.
In these tombs are Latin inscriptions meaning:<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114" href="#Page_114"></SPAN></span>
"Remember thou must die," "To-day to
me, and to-morrow to thee," and others reminding
the reader of his coming death.</p>
<p>From the cemetery the people go to a house
or an inn which is the gathering-place for the
night, singing or talking loudly on the road
to warn the dead who are hastening home,
lest they may meet. Reunions of families
take place on this night, in the spirit of the
Roman feast of the dead, the Feralia, of which
Ovid wrote:</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"After the visit to the tombs and to the ancestors
who are no longer with us, it is pleasant
to turn towards the living; after the loss of so
many, it is pleasant to behold those who remain
of our blood, and to reckon up the generations
of our descendants."</p>
<p class="cite">
<i>Fasti.</i></p>
</div>
<p>A toast is drunk to the memory of the departed.
The men sit about the fireplace smoking
or weaving baskets; the women apart,
knitting or spinning by the light of the fire
and one candle. The children play with
their gifts of apples and nuts. As the hour<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115" href="#Page_115"></SPAN></span>
grows later, and mysterious noises begin to
be heard about the house, and a curtain sways
in a draught, the thoughts of the company
already centred upon the dead find expression
in words, and each has a tale to tell of
an adventure with some friend or enemy who
has died.</p>
<p>The dead are thought to take up existence
where they left it off, working at the same
trades, remembering their old debts, likes and
dislikes, even wearing the same clothes they
wore in life. Most of them stay not in
some distant, definite Otherworld, but frequent
the scenes of their former life. They never
trespass upon daylight, and it is dangerous to
meet them at night, because they are very
ready to punish any slight to their memory,
such as selling their possessions or forgetting
the hospitality due them. L'Ankou will
come to get a supply of shavings if the coffins
are not lined with them to make a softer
resting-place for the dead bodies.</p>
<p>The lively Celtic imagination turns the
merest coincidence into an encounter with a<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116" href="#Page_116"></SPAN></span>
spirit, and the poetic temperament of the
narrators clothes the stories with vividness
and mystery. They tell how the presence of
a ghost made the midsummer air so cold that
even wood did not burn, and of groans and
footsteps underground as long as the ghost is
displeased with what his relatives are doing.</p>
<p>Just before midnight a bell-man goes about
the streets to give warning of the hour when
the spirits will arrive.</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"They will sit where we sat, and will talk of
us as we talked of them: in the gray of the
morning only will they go away."</p>
<p class="cite">
<span class="smcap">Le Braz</span>: <i>Night of the Dead.</i></p>
</div>
<p>The supper for the souls is then set out.
The poor who live in the mountains have
only black corn, milk, and smoked bacon to
offer, but it is given freely. Those who can
afford it spread on a white cloth dishes of
clotted milk, hot pancakes, and mugs of
cider.</p>
<p>After all have retired to lie with both eyes
shut tight lest they see one of the guests,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117" href="#Page_117"></SPAN></span>
death-singers make their rounds, chanting
under the windows:</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"You are comfortably lying in your bed,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">But with the poor dead it is otherwise;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">You are stretched softly in your bed<br/></span>
<span class="i0">While the poor souls are wandering abroad.<br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"A white sheet and five planks,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">A bundle of straw beneath the head,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Five feet of earth above<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Are all the worldly goods we own."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p class="cite2"><span class="smcap">Le Braz</span>: <i>Night of the Dead.</i><br/></p>
<p>The tears of their deserted friends disturb the
comfort of the dead, and sometimes they appear
to tell those in sorrow that their shrouds
are always wet from the tears shed on their
graves.</p>
<p>Wakened by the dirge of the death-singers
the people rise and pray for the souls of the
departed.</p>
<p>Divination has little part in the annals of
the evening, but one in Finistère is recorded.
Twenty-five new needles are laid in a dish,
and named, and water is poured upon them.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118" href="#Page_118"></SPAN></span>
Those who cross are enemies.</p>
<p>In France is held a typical Continental
celebration of All Saints' and All Souls'. On
October 31st the children go asking for flowers
to decorate the graves, and to adorn the
church. At night bells ring to usher in All
Saints'. On the day itself the churches are
decorated gaily with flowers, candles, and
banners, and a special service is held. On
the second day of November the light and
color give way to black drapings, funeral
songs, and prayers.</p>
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