Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The golden bough : a study in comparative religion / by J.G. Frazer. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh. The original may be consulted at the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
775/856 (page 331)
![with trees and plants that the life of an individual is occasionally believed to be united by a bond of physical sympathy. The same bond, it is supposed, may exist between a man and an animal or a thing, so that the death or destruction of the animal or thing is immediately followed by the death of the man. The Emperor Romanus Lecapenus was once informed by an astronomer that the life of Simeon prince of Bulgaria was bound up with a certain column in Constantinople, so that if the capital of the column were removed Simeon would immediately die. The Emperor took the hint and removed the capital, and at the same hour, as the emperor learned by inquiry, Simeon died of heart disease in Bulgaria.-^ Amongst the Karens of Burma the knife with which the navel- string is cut is carefully preserved for the child. The life of the child is supposed to be in some way con- nected with it, for if lost or destroyed it is said the child will not be long-lived. ^ The Malays believe that the soul of a person may pass into another person or into an animal, or rather that such a mysterious relation can arise between the two that the fate of the one is wholly dependent on that of the other. ^ In the Banks Islands some people connect themselves with an object, generally an animal, as a lizard or a snake, or with a stone, which they imagine to have a certain very close natural relation to themselves. This, at Mota, is called tamaniu—likeness. This word at Aurora is used for the ' atai ' \i.e. soul] of Mota. Some fancy dictates the choice of a tamaniu ; or it may be 1 Cedrenus, Compend. Histor. p. 3 Matthes, Makassarsch-Hollandsch 625 B, vol. 11. p. 308, ed. Bekker. Woordenboek, s.v. soemaflgd, p. 569 ; F. Mason, Physical Character of G. A. Wilken, Het animisme bij de the Karens, Joicrnal of (he Asiatic volken van den Indischen Archipel, Society 0/Bengal, 1866, pt. ii. p. 9. Be Indische Gids, June 1884, p. 933](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21904455_0777.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)