In Lady Wilde’s ‘Ancient Legends of Ireland’ there’s a story
about a young man, a poet, who attempts to seduce a farmer’s daughter. He’s
used to having his wicked way with girls, for we're told that Irish
poets were known for possessing ‘the power of fascination by the glance … so
that they could make themselves loved and followed by any girl they liked.’
With this particular girl, however, the power doesn’t seem
to work very well at first. The poet arrives at her farm and begs for a
drink of milk, but the young woman happens to be on her own in the house – the
maids are busy churning in the dairy – so she refuses to let him in. Annoyed by
this, the poet takes action. Lady Wilde continues:
The young poet fixed his eyes
earnestly on her face for some time in silence, then slowly turning round left
the house and walked towards a small grove of trees just opposite. There he
stood for a few moments resting against a tree, and facing the house as if to
take one more vengeful or admiring glance, then went his way without once
turning round.
The young girl had been watching
him from the window, and the moment he moved she passed out of the door like
one in a dream, and followed him slowly, step by step, down the avenue.
As the girl passes through the farmyard, the dairymaids
notice her entranced state. They raise the alarm and her father comes running
from his work, shouting for her to stop, but his daughter doesn’t seem able to hear. The poet does, though,
…and seeing the whole family in
pursuit, quickened his pace, first glancing fixedly at the girl for a moment.
Immediately she sprang towards him, and they were both almost out of sight,
when one of the maids espied a piece of paper tied to a branch of the tree
where the poet had rested. From
curiosity she took it down, and the moment the knot was untied, the farmer’s
daughter suddenly stopped, became quite still, and when her father came up she
allowed him to lead her back to the house.
Recovering, the girl tells her family how she’d felt impelled to
follow the young man ‘wherever he might lead’, only coming to her senses when
the spell was broken. But what was the spell?
The paper, on being opened, was
found to contain five mysterious words written in blood, and in this order:
Sator
Arepo
Tenet
Opera
Rotas
These letters are so arranged
that read in any way, right to left, left to right, up or down, the same words
are produced; and when written in blood with a pen made of an eagle’s feather,
they form a charm which no woman (it is said) can resist…
(In a sceptical aside, Lady Gregory adds, ‘but the
incredulous reader can easily test the truth of this assertion for himself.’)
The Sator, Rotas, or Rotas Sator Square as this acrostic is called, is both very
old and tantalisingly obscure; at any rate, no one has yet succeeded in
explaining to everyone else’s satisfaction exactly what it means. Carved in
stone or painted on walls, it crops up all over the place, at sites in Italy,
Britain, Sweden and even Syria, ranging in date from Roman to medieval to near-modern. The
words are obscure in themselves and have given rise to various tortuous
interpretations (explored in this interesting article by Duncan Fishwick
MA, "An Early Christian Cryptogram?"), which range from the reassuringly rural though still opaque, ‘The sower Arepo
works the wheels with care’ – to Satanic invocations. AREPO is a nonsense word, and it seems that the rest, though they may resemble Latin words, are so ungrammatical as to
be pretty much nonsense too.
However, back in the 1920s two German scholars discovered
(or re-discovered) that the Square hides an anagram: it can be arranged as the word PATERNOSTER
written twice in a cruciform order which uses the N only once, and leaves
four letters over: two As and two Os – Alpha and Omega.
There’s really no chance that this is not deliberate, but to
assume a Christian solution is problematic. The earliest known examples of the
SATOR square are two graffiti from Pompeii which predate the Vesuvian eruption
of AD 79. Duncan Fishwick summarises the
difficulties thus: there's no convincing evidence of any Christians in Pompeii
before it was destroyed; the Cross is not found as a Christian symbol before
about AD 130; Christians of the First Century used Greek not Latin for
teaching and liturgy; the Christian use of Alpha and Omega as symbols for God
was inspired by verses of the Apocalypse, which by AD 79 had not yet been
written; finally, ‘cryptic’ Christian symbols first appear only ‘during the
persecutions of the third century’ when overt Christianity had become
politically unsafe.
But as various graffitti testify, there a Jewish population living in and around Pompeii, and Fishwick suggests that rather than
Christian,
the Sator Square may have been Jewish in origin. The Alpha and Omega may
derive
their significance from Old Testament passages such as Isaiah 44, 6 in
which
God declares, ‘I am the first and the last’, while as for the
Paternoster
anagram, Fishwick explains that, ‘Far from being a Christian innovation
this
form of address [eg: 'Our Father'] has its roots in Judaism’, citing
various Judaic prayers. He concludes that the Square may likely
have been a charm constructed by Latin-speaking Jews, the magic of which
resides in its satisfying symmetry and the concealed invocation which,
revolving around the single letter N, hints at the unspoken nomen or name of God. Another scholar, Rebecca Benefiel, points out in a fascinating article, "Magic Squares, Alphabet Jumbles, Riddles and more: The culture of word-games among the graffiti of Pompeii," that the Sator Square is only one of many different word-squares found at Pompeii.
Even if not Christian in origin, the Square was soon adopted as a
Christian charm and invested with more specifically Christian symbolism:
a belief arose that the five 'words' of the palindrome were the names
of the five nails which fastened Christ to the cross. And it went on
from there to enjoy a
long subsequent history as a potent magical spell. It was used in the
12th century, according to medieval scholar Monica Green (quoted by Sarah E. Bond in a post, 'Power of the Palindrome', in her blog History from Below),
as a charm which could be written on butter and eaten, to help women
who had miscarried. At some time in the 18th century the Sator Square
was brought from Germany to America: in the Pennsylvanian Dutch example
shown below, dated circa 1790, you can see that mistakes have been made
in the lettering,
so that it becomes simply a piece of magical gibberish. One wonders how
early any awareness of the Paternoster anagram had vanished.
In 1820 printer and chapbook seller, Pennsylvanian John or Johann Hohman
published German and English versions of a book of spells, charms and
remedies called 'The Long Lost Friend' or 'The Long Hidden Friend'. On
the page reproduced below, we find in charm number 121 the Sator Square,
used 'To Quench Fire Without Water':
It's clear that people tried it. The photo above, from the
Oberhausmuseum in Passau, Bavaria, shows 'a plate with magic
inscription, used as a fire fighting device to expel the evil spirits of
fire.' Perhaps people prepared them in advance? I suppose it might
even have worked to damp out a very small fire, but one hopes those who
tried this charm were busy stamping out the flames at the same time. (At
least it's fairly brief, unlike the elaborate spell Hohman provides for
'Preventing Conflagration' which involved throwing into the fire a
bundled-up sheet stained either with the menstrual blood of a chaste
virgin, or the blood from child-birth.)
A charm written on wood, intended to put out fires |
In fact 'The Long-Hidden Friend' itself had a long history as a popular folk-magic text: as late as 1904, Carlton F. Brown wrote in The Journal of American Folk-lore (Vol. 17, No. 65, Apr. - Jun., 1904, pp 89-152) that 'in eastern Pennsylvania whole communities, even whole counties, firmly believe in the realities of "hexing", and protect themselves from its influence by the charms and incantations of witch doctors.' Subsequent investigation by the Berks County Medical Society into the practices of the witch doctors showed that 'the principal source of the charms which they were using was this very book of Hohman's.' And they charged high prices for their services.
Who would have thought that a word puzzle dating from at least as early as first century Pompeii would still be in use as a popular charm in 19th century America, and appear in a 19th century Irish folk tale? Whether Judaic or Christian, Roman or medieval, European or American – whether religious symbol, magical aid for women in childbirth, a charm to put out fires or a spell to lure young Irishwomen away – the Sator Square will surely continue to puzzle and intrigue.
Picture credits
Fair Rosamund, by Arthur Hughes, 1854. (So no real connection with Lady Wilde's story, but a sweet young woman in a summer garden with something doomful looming.)
Rotas square from St Peter ad Orotarium, Capestrano, photo by Poecus, at Wikimedia Commons
Rotas square from Cirencester, photo by ThrowawayHack, at Wikimedia Commons
Pennsylvania Dutch talisman c. 1790, Wikimedia Commons
Plate from Passau, Bavaria, with Sator charm against fire, photo by Wolfgang Sauber at Wikimedia Commons
Sator square from Freistadt, Austria: Mühlviertler Schlossmuseum: Magic formula against fire, photo by Wolfgang Sauber, Wikimedia Commons
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