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Evil eye in the western Highlands cover

Evil eye in the western Highlands

Chapter 40: NICKING THE EAR
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About This Book

A folkloric and anthropological study examines belief in the evil eye among Gaelic-speaking Highland communities, attributing it to natural jealousy and covetousness while noting how Christian teaching has shaped its expression. The author collects oral testimony and Gaelic examples that describe symptoms, social repercussions, and effects attributed to the glance, and provides extensive documentation of charms, preventive measures, diagnostic rites, cures, and theories of transmission alongside discussion of local variants and practice.

NICKING THE EAR

The ears, we now see, played a prominent part in the treatment of cronachadh, and we learn on the authority of a minister how that in the case of a quey supposed to be affected by the Evil Eye, the owner loosed it from its stall, cut a slit in its ear, repeating some incantation the while.

From a man of about fifty-five, a joiner, we have confirmation of this. He remembers of a beast dying where he lived when he was a boy, and of seeing the woman to whom the animal belonged and another cailleach sitting over the dead beast cutting a piece out of its ear. They kept the piece they cut. On asking why the women were handling the dead animal, he was told that the piece cut from its ear would prevent an Evil Eye affecting the rest of the cattle.

Weak or unhealthy eyes are in popular belief cured by piercing the ear (and wearing earrings).