A WORLD OF WONDERS
(Investigator 197, 2021 March)
Albany Poyntz edited A World of Wonders With Anecdotes And Opinions Concerning Popular Superstitions (1845).
"Albany Poyntz" may be a pseudonym used by English novelist Catherine
Gore (1798-1861) who, according to Wikipedia, authored 68 other books.
The article "Antiquarians and Skeptics" in Investigator 195 says:
The book's 52 chapters consistently demonstrate an investigative and
sceptical attitude while covering a wide range of claims in the
paranormal and supernatural including Alchemy; Apparitions; Astrology;
Comets; Divining Rods; Dreams; Fables; Fortune Tellers; Ghosts; Giants
and Dwarfs; Longevity of Animals; Lunar Influence; Minor Superstitions;
Monstrous Births; Nostradamus; Popular Errors; Quack cures; Sorcerers
and Magicians; Talismans; Vampires; Werewolves; and much more.
Antiquarians were English writers who investigated folklore, customs,
oral traditions, common beliefs and superstitions, often skeptically,
and may therefore be considered forerunners of the 20th century
skeptics.
A World Of Wonders is less formal than sceptical and investigative
writings today. It is scant, for example, in referencing the scientific
research available at the time, and in suggestions for further reading.
The
book nevertheless demonstrates an investigative approach to dubious
claims and strange phenomena (many of which people still argue about),
and presents conclusions consistent with 19th century science but still
largely accurate from a 21st century skeptical perspective.
The book has some out-of-date word-spellings and a few words no longer
in use, but is historically instructive, and chapters from it will
therefore be published in Investigator Magazine.
A WORLD OF WONDERS,
WITH ANECDOTES AND OPINIONS
CONCERNINGPOPULAR SUPERSTITIONS.
EDITED BY
ALBANY POYNTZ.
LONDON:
RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET,
Publisher in Ordinary to Her Majesty.
1845.
LONDON:
Printed by Schulze and Co., 13, Poland Street.
PREFACE.
It
is surprising, considering the gigantic strides effected by modern
science, how many of the errors and prejudices engendered by the
ignorance of the dark ages remain current in the world in its present
days of enlightenment. Like the winged seeds of certain weeds, their
light and impalpable nature renders them only the more difficult of
extirpation.
A
cursory review and refutation of these popular prejudices and vulgar
errors has been attempted in the following Manual. A more scientific
analysis of so spreading a field would have expanded into a
Cyclopædia. But the ancient traditions and modern instances
collected in its pages may afford the reader amusement and instruction
for the passing hour, as well as an incentive to more profound
investigations in hours to come.
LONDON,
NOVEMBER, 1845.
I. LONGEVITY OF ANIMALS
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II. INCOMBUSTIBLE MEN
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III. VENTRILOQUISTS
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IV. POPE JOAN AND THE WANDERING JEW
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V. THE FABLES OF HISTORY
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VI. MELONS AND MONSTERS
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VII. THE JEWS
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VIII. VERBAL DELICACY
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IX. AEROLITES AND MIRACULOUS SHOWERS
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X. NOSTRUMS AND SPECIFICS
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XI. PHYSIOGNOMISTS
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XII. LAST WORDS OF DYING PERSONS
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XIII. THE ANTIPODES—MORNING AND EVENING DEW
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XIV. PERPETUAL LAMPS AND ARCHIMEDES
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XV. THE LYNX AND THE CAMELEON
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XVI. WILD WOMEN
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XVII. SYBILS
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XVIII. FORTUNE-TELLERS AND CHIROMACY
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XIX. ALBERTUS MAGNUS AND NOSTRADAMUS
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XX. LEECHES, SERPENTS, AND THE SONG OF THE DYING SWAN
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XXI. NEGROES
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XXII. FASCINATION; OR, THE ART OF PLEASING
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XXIII. THE PHILOSOPHER’S STONE
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XXIV. GIANTS AND DWARFS
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XXV. ASTROLOGY
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CONTENTS
I. LONGEVITY OF ANIMALS
II. INCOMBUSTIBLE MEN
III. VENTRILOQUISTS
IV. POPE JOAN AND THE WANDERING JEW
V. THE FABLES OF HISTORY
VI. MELONS AND MONSTERS
VII. THE JEWS
VIII. VERBAL DELICACY
IX. AEROLITES AND MIRACULOUS SHOWERS
X. NOSTRUMS AND SPECIFICS
XI. PHYSIOGNOMISTS
XII. LAST WORDS OF DYING PERSONS
XIII. THE ANTIPODES—MORNING AND EVENING DEW
XIV. PERPETUAL LAMPS AND ARCHIMEDES
XV. THE LYNX AND THE CAMELEON
XVI. WILD WOMEN
XVII. SYBILS
XVIII. FORTUNE-TELLERS AND CHIROMACY
XIX. ALBERTUS MAGNUS AND NOSTRADAMUS
XX. LEECHES, SERPENTS, AND THE SONG OF THE DYING SWAN
XXI. NEGROES
XXII. FASCINATION; OR, THE ART OF PLEASING
XXIII. THE PHILOSOPHER’S STONE
XXIV. GIANTS AND DWARFS
XXV. ASTROLOGY
XXVI. THE MOON AND LUNAR INFLUENCE
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XXVII. APPARITIONS
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XXVIII. NOBILITY AND TRADE
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XXIX. MERIT AND POPULARITY
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XXX. COMETS
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XXXI. POPULAR ERRORS
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XXXI. DREAMS
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XXXIII. PREJUDICES ATTACHED TO CERTAIN ANIMALS
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XXXIV. CONTENT AND COURTESY
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XXXV. THE DIVINING ROD
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XXXVI. BEES AND ANTS
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XXXVII. PREPOSSESSIONS AND ANTIPATHIES
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XXXVIII. THE INFLUENCE OF BELLS UPON THUNDER STORMS
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XXXIX. SMALL POX AND VACCINATION
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XL. PRECOCIOUS AND CLEVER CHILDREN
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XLI. EDUCATION OF CHILDREN
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XLII. PREJUDICES OF THE FRENCH
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XLIII. MONSTROUS BIRTHS
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XLIV. THE ICHNEUMON AND THE HALCYON
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XLV. SORCERERS AND MAGICIANS
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XLVI. MALE AND FEMALE
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XLVII. MINOR SUPERSTITIONS
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XLVIII. SOMNAMBULISM
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XLIX. A FEW MORE WORDS ABOUT GHOSTS AND VAMPIRES,
AND LOUP-GAROUX
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L. APOCRYPHAL ANIMALS
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LI. PROFESSIONS ESTEEMED INFAMOUS
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LII. SUPERNATURAL HUMAN BEINGS
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XXVI. THE MOON AND LUNAR INFLUENCE
XXVII. APPARITIONS
XXVIII. NOBILITY AND TRADE
XXIX. MERIT AND POPULARITY
XXX. COMETS
XXXI. POPULAR ERRORS
XXXI. DREAMS
XXXIII. PREJUDICES ATTACHED TO CERTAIN ANIMALS
XXXIV. CONTENT AND COURTESY
XXXV. THE DIVINING ROD
XXXVI. BEES AND ANTS
XXXVII. PREPOSSESSIONS AND ANTIPATHIES
XXXVIII. THE INFLUENCE OF BELLS UPON THUNDER STORMS
XXXIX. SMALL POX AND VACCINATION
XL. PRECOCIOUS AND CLEVER CHILDREN
XLI. EDUCATION OF CHILDREN
XLII. PREJUDICES OF THE FRENCH
XLIII. MONSTROUS BIRTHS
XLIV. THE ICHNEUMON AND THE HALCYON
XLV. SORCERERS AND MAGICIANS
XLVI. MALE AND FEMALE
XLVII. MINOR SUPERSTITIONS
XLVIII. SOMNAMBULISM
XLIX. A FEW MORE WORDS ABOUT GHOSTS AND VAMPIRES,
AND LOUP-GAROUX
L. APOCRYPHAL ANIMALS
LI. PROFESSIONS ESTEEMED INFAMOUS
LII. SUPERNATURAL HUMAN BEINGS
CHAPTER XXXIX
SMALL POX AND VACCINATION
If any thing could excuse the exercise of arbitrary power on the part
of a Government, it would surely be in the act of compelling parents to
vaccinate their children; but the aversion to vaccination being still
only too common among certain classes of the people. Yet surely the law
which punishes parents for ill-usage of their children, might be
extended to punish their leaving these helpless creatures exposed to
the infection of pain and disfigurement? Jenner is decidedly one of the
greatest benefactors of the human race; for the vast increase of
population in the different countries of Europe is ascribed, by many
political economists, to the safeguard of vaccination, which has
preserved more lives since its introduction, than the terrible wars of
the present century have destroyed.
In England, this admirable discovery was far more readily adopted than
in France; where, however versatile in fashions and governments, any
improvement tending to benefit the human race is slowly and cautiously
accepted. In the reign of Louis XIV, the introduction of yeast in the
making of bread met with general opposition; and it required the
interference of the legislature to secure its adoption. The
introduction of bark and emetics was also attended with violent
opposition; and inoculation introduced from Turkey into Western Europe
by Lady Mary Wortley Montague, found great difficulty in establishing
itself in France.
It was not, however, surprising that parents should hesitate about
giving their children a loathsome disease; before it became certified
by long experience that the virulence of the disorder was considerably
lessened by preparation; so as to secure a mother against the terrible
self-reproaches arising from the loss of a child under the inoculated
malady.
In England, more particularly in the county of Gloucester, from time
immemorial cows were subject to a contagious disease, which infected
the hands of the milkmaids, who were observed never to suffer from the
small-pox. This surmise being confirmed by experiment, Dr. Jenner established himself in the county of Gloucester;
where, by inoculating people with vaccine matter, he secured them
against the small-pox.
So far from turning his discovery to pecuniary account, as most others
would have done, Jenner nobly proclaimed it to mankind, calling upon
all philantrophists to share his triumph.
The Duke de Rochefauld-Liancourt having witnessed the effects of
vaccination in England, introduced it into France, and did more for its
propagation than the slow deliberations of the Parisian Schools of
Medicine. Dr. Pinel, however, tried experiments at the Hospital of the
Salpétrière, with perfect success; while Dr. Aubert was
despatched by Government to England to report upon the subject. The
result was favourable. Matter was imported from England in the month of
May, 1800, when thirty-eight children were vaccinated at the Hospital
of La Pitié; and commissions were instantly instituted
throughout France. Jenner had, however, his opponents. In London, it
was denounced from the pulpit, as an infringement on the dispensation
of Providence; and in France, Doctors Vaume, Chapon and others
pronounced vaccination to be injurious to the human constitution, and
capable of reducing man to the condition of a brute, by the
introduction of animal virus into the blood. As if we resembled a calf
or sheep the more for having swallowed a mutton chop or veal cutlet.
With a few rare exceptions, vaccination has proved a security against
the small-pox, and the practice ought consequently to become universal.
But old women are still to be found with instances of children who have
died of convulsions after vaccination; as if that were the origin of
their illness and death.
Among the lower orders, a prejudice prevails that an inferior kind of
vaccine matter is provided for them; and whenever their children
exhibit symptoms of disease or deformity, they comfort their self-love
by attributing it to the influence of vaccination. “Such maladies were
unknown in their families, till the madness of introducing matter from
the body of a stranger into that of their child conveyed also the germs
of disease.”
CHAPTER XXVI
THE MOON AND LUNAR INFLUENCE
From the stars in general to the moon in particular, there is but a
step; nor will we separate the midnight luminary from the company in
which we usually find her. Lovers and poets have from time immemorial
found solace in her beams; while the early philosophers pretended that
she swallowed stones in the manner of the mountebanks, in order to cast
them down upon us in the form of aërolites. This conclusion is as
absurd as a thousand others, of which the moon has been the object. The
ingenuousness of the old lady, who on hearing continually of new moons,
inquired anxiously what became of the old ones, is scarcely more
surprising than the complex mass of commentaries and hypotheses which
regard the influence of the orb of night.
In former centuries, it was the custom to attribute the decay of public
monuments to the influence of the moon upon the surface of granite and
stone. Naturalists, however, having watched the work of
animalculæ among oysters, madrepores and corals, attributed this
to the true cause. In the year 1666, a physician of Caen remarked upon
a stone wall of southern aspect forming part of the Abbey of the
Benedictines, a number of cavities, into the deep sinuosities of which
the hand could be inserted. Instead of attributing this to the moon, he
ascertained that they were worked by insects whom he found concealed in
the cavities. Experiment opens the safest road to truth; while absurd
theories transmitted from generation to generation, obstruct the steps
of a temple already sufficiently difficult of ascent.
Thomas Moult, the author of an almanack superior to the general run of
those popular publications, devoted himself to conjectures on the
variations of the weather as influenced by the moon; and consulted the
observations previously made by the Abbé Toaldo, who had noted
down the effect of eleven hundred and six moons upon the weather. He
found that nine hundred and fifty were accompanied by changes of
weather; while the other one hundred and fifty six, pro-duced no
effect. The proportion being as one to six, the chances are that a new
moon will produce a change of weather; the influence being susceptible
of increase from various circumstances, in the proportion of
thirty-three to one, when the new moon is at its perigæum.
Physicians formerly believed the phases of the moon to influence
certain diseases. Hippocrates and Galen assigned them as the cause of
periodical returns of epilepsy; while people of deranged intellect are
vulgarly styled lunatics. Bertholon observed the paroxysms of a maniac
during one year, and declared them to be aggravated by the full moon.
It has been asserted that among maritime populations, a greater number
of deaths occurred at the ebb than at the flow of the tide. At Brest,
Rochefort and St. Malo, a register was kept for thirty months of the
number of deaths, and the hours at which they took place; when the
number was found to be less at the hours supposed most fatal. The
doctrine of Aristotle, which had still many adherents, was overthrown
by experience.
Dr. Mead, an English physician, wrote a treatise on the influence of
the moon upon the human constitution, which has also fallen into
oblivion.
I. LONGEVITY OF ANIMALS
|
II. INCOMBUSTIBLE MEN
|
III. VENTRILOQUISTS
|
IV. POPE JOAN AND THE WANDERING JEW
|
V. THE FABLES OF HISTORY
|
VI. MELONS AND MONSTERS
|
VII. THE JEWS
|
VIII. VERBAL DELICACY
|
IX. AEROLITES AND MIRACULOUS SHOWERS
|
X. NOSTRUMS AND SPECIFICS
|
XI. PHYSIOGNOMISTS
|
XII. LAST WORDS OF DYING PERSONS
|
XIII. THE ANTIPODES—MORNING AND EVENING DEW
|
XIV. PERPETUAL LAMPS AND ARCHIMEDES
|
XV. THE LYNX AND THE CAMELEON
|
XVI. WILD WOMEN
|
XVII. SYBILS
|
XVIII. FORTUNE-TELLERS AND CHIROMACY
|
XIX. ALBERTUS MAGNUS AND NOSTRADAMUS
|
XX. LEECHES, SERPENTS, AND THE SONG OF THE DYING SWAN
|
XXI. NEGROES
|
XXII. FASCINATION; OR, THE ART OF PLEASING
|
XXIII. THE PHILOSOPHER’S STONE
|
XXIV. GIANTS AND DWARFS
|
XXV. ASTROLOGY
|