Legendenzauber
Some healing incantations begin in narrative mode, stating the mythical basis
for the operation and so establishing its validity. This combination of myth
and spell has been termed ‘Legendenzauber’.^64 Here is an example from a
Vedic charm against leprosy:
The eagle was born first: | you were its bile.
Then the Asura-woman, beaten in fight, | took form as the forest.
The Asura-woman first made | this leprosy-remedy,
this leprosy-destroyer. (AV 1. 24. 1 f.).
And another from one against arrow poison:
The Brahman was born first, | ten-headed, ten-mouthed:
he it was first drank the Soma, | he it was made the poison sapless. (4. 6. 1)
Cf. also 1. 35. 1; 2. 27; 4. 4. 1, 37. 1; 6. 30. 1, 68, 95, 113, 128. 1, 137. 1, etc.
Grimm cites a number of examples from German sources, mostly Chris-
tianized. They include a spell used by old women in Brandenburg to
cure eye ailments and recorded by an eighteenth-century writer; in his Latin
version it runs:
Ibant aliquando tres puellae in via virente:
prima noverat remedium aliquod contra suffusionem oculorum,
altera noverat remedium aliquod contra albuginem,
et tertia profecto contra inflammationem;
eaeque sanabant una ratione omnia.
–– In nomine Patris, Filii, et Spiritus Sancti, Amen.
This was repeated in a raucous murmur again and again, with various
gesticulations in front of the afflicted eyes.
The two Merseburg spells both belong under this heading. I have already
cited the first, in which certain ‘women’, apparently battle-goddesses, were
fastening or loosening fetters. The second refers more explicitly to pagan gods:
Phol and Wodan were riding to the woods,
when Balder’s foal sprained his foot.
Bechanted it Sinhtgunt, (and) the Sun her sister;
bechanted it Friya, (and) Volla her sister;
bechanted it Wodan as best he could.
Like bone-sprain, like blood-sprain, like joint-sprain:
bone to bone, blood to blood, joint to joint:
so be they glued.
(^64) Cf. Grimm (1883–8), 1247 f., 1698 f.; P. Thieme, ZDMG 113 (1963), 69–79=Kleine Schriften
(Wiesbaden 1971), i. 202–12; L. Alsdorf, Journal of the Oriental Institute of Baroda 13 (1974),
206 f.
336 8. Hymns and Spells