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Mystic Meter: Ghosts, Deaths and Little People by John Roth
Mystic Meter: Ghosts, Deaths and Little People by John Roth

Native little people in the Americas are less humanized and domesticated than their counterparts in Europe and Africa. Consequently, they are not as often associated with ghosts, especially human ones. But many bonds still exist. Links between ghosts and small humanoids in the Americas result from common origins, abodes, energies, and fears.



Since most little people and ghosts come from the earth, it is not surprising that Euro-Americans and their dualistic sky religions would regard them as evil. Tommyknockers are two dwarf-like pranksters who live in mines. Some Utah and Montana miners felt they were sinister forces or ghosts of dead miners. Nain Rouge ("red dwarf"), a demon of Detroit, was the ghost of a red-faced being. His cold eyes glittered and his teeth protruded. He did nothing but evil.

Some native traditions probably were influenced by Euro-Americans. Sombrero is a dwarf and ghost who tempts Tzetzal Maya onto lonely spots in Guatemala. Truk ghosts could appear as small Micronesian who sicken people by biting them. Many Paiute in the great Basin view all or most of their small humanoids as evil spirits. The word for ghost and "evil spirit" is the same. Waiting were cannibalistic ghosts of the Tatuyo in northwestern Brazil. Curupira ("Forest Ghost") of the Jivaro in Ecuador had an ugly and frightening face. He is passivity that causes men to whisper in daylight and drives them mad. Tupinamba's Aya, an evil spirit, is also a name for Tenetehara ghosts in Brazil.

Photo by Artem Kovalev
Photo by Artem Kovalev

Fear of ghosts often derives from a fear of an invasion of the living world or bodies by the dead or their agents, disease."Pains", also called Ya (pau) paytu or Yapaitu (kokes, dokos), cause disease by lodging in a Wintun's body. Trinity Co. Wintun in California call similar beings "ghosts", "spirits", or "dead ones", but the term was also used for Euro-Americans, as in yapitu wintun, glossed as "poison people".

Fear of the intrusion of the dead into the realm of the living can be combined with the guilt of losing a young child. The malevolent and cannibal goosile are bush spirits from dead fetuses of Melanesians who break tabus during pregnancy. As ghosts, they also are called too. Tzotzil, "big hats" are of two kinds of non-Indians. One is the ghost of unbaptized babies. "Water spirits" live in the water near a Fijian island in the Rewa River delta. They come from miscarriages of Polynesians of rank. They were once known as Fearful Spirits.



Anchimallen is a child or witch ghost (form) who appears to Mapuche and Hispanics in Chile as an 18 to 24 inch-tall, ugly white-dressed pygmy. The male aspect of Anchimallen is a baby stolen by witches or a ghost made from human bones, a fate avoided by burying a baby near one's house.

Afro-Americans also tend to view their little people/ghosts as evil. Baku in Haiti is evil sorcerers, humanoid spirits with red eyes and legs. Known in Guyana and the Dominican Republic, Baka at times can come from evil human ghosts or unbaptized children who die in childbirth. Baku from Suriname are made from dead body parts and are animated by ghosts. Baka also are now ghosts who eat Haitians. Drolls among blacks in the U.S. are the spirits of children who died painfully. Matinta Pereira is an evil Hispanic and Afro-American spirit with a phosphorescent face like that of many human ghosts. In Ita's she or, less often, he is a ghost.


Matinta Pereira, is a mythological creature of Brazil. She is a shapeshifter witch, who turns into bird and brings death.
Matinta Pereira, is a mythological creature of Brazil. She is a shapeshifter witch, who turns into bird and brings death.

Although only about 30 types of American little people out of about 600 come from ghosts, small humanoids often are associated with ghosts in ways other than just originating from them. One common association is that both ghosts and little people usually live underground, where most dead are buried. P'uz turned to stone when the sun first rose in Guatemala. The survivors of similar beings now live underground with human Yucatec ghosts. Amarhiri, known as Yanomamo in Brazil comes from human ghosts. They unintentionally drown people by dragging them to their underground homes.


Euro-American tales of ghosts and little people may reflect a fear of death not so dominant among many Native Americans. Native ghosts/dwarfs tend to be both helpful and harmful. For example, both ghosts and little people sponsor shamans and their curing abilities in many cultures. The Pilaga payak in Argentina refers to little people and to powerful ghosts, such as from dead shamans. Only ghosts give stronger power to Shoshone curers in Wyoming than do Na-na dwarfs. The Seed Eater Shoshone band believed that the strongest curing power was obtained from ghosts and mountain dwarfs. Guya of the Pomo in California was monkey-like spirits 2-3' tall. These spirits ("devils'' or "ghosts") were part of the "Outside People". A Pomo summer feast, impersonation dance, and songs atoned for offending Outside People and kept them in good humor. Then they helped to punish Porno offenders and cure sickness.


Both ghosts and little people serve as psychopomps, those who guide the newly dead to the land of the dead. Nunnehi usually are spirits who look and speak like Cherokee, but they at times appear tall Cherokee ghosts who guide the dead and/or are part of the little People. Dying may attract little people and ghosts as well as making them more visible through windows of altered consciousness.

Civilizations of Mesoamerica  Explanation (from National Geographic source)
Civilizations of Mesoamerica Explanation (from National Geographic source)

Perhaps because humans lose heat when they die, ghosts are associated with coldness. So are little people. Inga and Hispanicdwarfs in South America felt cold. Wild Man in British Columbiafelt icy to Kwakiutl. Illness from Mayan, Nahuatl, and Zoquedwarfs in Mesoamerica was "cold" and therefore was treated with"hot" remedies both high in temperature and in spices. As with some ghosts, psychics and seance levitations (Holroyd, 1975:55,107), a sudden chill heralds approaching Anglo fairies.

Though human dead and little people often share being old, ethereal, dark, mediators, cold, cave-dwellers, phosphorescent, psychopomps, shaman helpers and invisible, most little people and ghosts aren't the same. Unlike most little people, ghosts most often occur around or in human dwellings. Unlike ghosts, most dwarfs can die. When a Flathead died in Montana so did his dwarf, becoming a "spirit ghost".



Unlike ghosts, most American little people don't symbolize or personify death alone for many reconcile death and life as well as the non-human. Some, like Ona dwarfs of Chile, are of a nature between people and dead souls. Ojibwa Little People come from souls between the human world and the land of the dead.



Many dwarfs mediated between ghosts and humans. Crow dwarfs in Montana are enemies to Morningstar and belong to the sky, ghost, and water beings, a clan called "Without Fires' '. The other clan are the earth beings. But Awakure' at times seem to be in both clans. Some Crow said they lacked fire; others said they used it for cooking.


 Saatchi Art Ghost Painting by Mary Hayes
Saatchi Art Ghost Painting by Mary Hayes

Little people often counter ghosts rather than being them themselves. Tokway is a feared yet cherished trickster who embodies "Mataconess" in Argentina. He made death permanent by scaring away returning ghosts. Ute water babies gave power to stop bullets or cure any illness, especially those caused by ghosts. When Snuqualmie shamans in Washington began a spirit canoe to recover souls from ghosts. Little Earths came running, demanding to be taken along. Little Earths held the ghosts until the shamans killed them and rescued the souls.

Photo by Mads Schmidt Rasmussen
Photo by Mads Schmidt Rasmussen

A Quileute seer near the north Washington coast had a guardian spirit dwarf who heard a carved rattle wrapped in cedar bark and with dentalium tied to it. She could foretell when visitors came. Her spirit helped recover a soul stolen by a ghost. Dwarfs taught a Tachi shaman in California how to cure ghost fright.


People who fear or deny death also may fear what humans link death to: time loss, darkness, decay, madness, sleep, helplessness, and the unknown -- ways or times imps and ghosts can most likely hurt humans. Such people may not be ready for the lessons that dwarfs teach and so are scared off during vision quests, as among Northern Paiute, NaDene, Pueblo, Sioni, and whites who embody their fear of death as ghosts, witches or doomsday may rarely see little people. Separation from nature may heighten one's fear of death, as among some witches.

Little people as ghosts are likely only in priestly religions where links with non-human nature have been partly cut. Thus, Yanomamo priests have human ghosts as tiny hekura while the hekura of shamans are the "vital principles" of plants and animals. Fear of death also fuels totalitarianism, the neotenic willingness to follow. tyrants so as to get a portion of their "immortality". In contrast, a Tolupan dwarf in Nicaragua dissuaded a god bestowing immortality on humans as this would have meant destroying Earth.

Some American little people teach humans not to fear death. but to use it to propel them to a more expansive plane of existence. A little man among Afro-Americans in Alabama both announces the death and brings good fortune. Only if Arapaho dwarfs in Colorado are killed can they go to a pleasant world. Little people and their shamanic links suggest that the way to an open, long and rich life is through at least symbolic rebirth. Death in at least the Great Basin is a metaphor for trance or other altered states used in meeting little people (Whitley, 1992). With death and decay comes new life and value, as in the Ona dwarf colored like rotten wood in Chile or the sacred rotten wood of a Dakota elk.

Photo by Pelly Benassi
Photo by Pelly Benassi

Acceptance of individual death doesn't condone the death of species, ecosystems or Earth. Extinction is the end of birth, a horror to hunchbacks/dwarfs who personify creativity or fertility in a dozen tribes. Dwarfs protect animals and plants even though extinction may increase dwarf populations.

This odd effect may come from some native little people being psychic fields echoing through aeons rather than individual ghosts, such as an Afro-Brazilian dwarf from a slave beaten to death. Just as people and their artifacts may leave mental imprints of their emotional deaths, to be picked up by sensitives and interpreted as ghosts, so may the murder of a culture or species leave its mark in the form of elf images seen by a sensitive few. In Great Britain, individual "ghosts" seem to last several hundred years before fading away; those of human races or other animals may take aeons. The fields they create both help create visions and in turn are strengthened over time by human belief in their validity.

Fantasy Character Ghost Dwarf
Fantasy Character Ghost Dwarf

Long-lasting memory helps atone for genocide, an at-ones with and for past deeds. Brazilians wiped out the Mbaya culture but now see a Mybaya as a duende. "Trolls' ' may record the slow extermination of Negrito tribes by Malay settlers invading Pacific Islands. Ancient Aymara may have given their name to a lone dwarf in Bolivia. Sightings of little people increased after the CivilWar destroyed the slave-based culture of the South. Dwarfs become spirits when Spoken first came to Washington and perhaps displaced an earlier culture. If touched, artifacts by ancient groups may activate memories left by their owners. An Ojibwa inside a dwarf's home heard 30-year-old prayers of his grandmother. Sbast, Mapuche, and Numic shape-shifters could be found near ancient artifacts.


Ancient Greek Ghost Artwork
Ancient Greek Ghost Artwork

Ancient human ghosts, if we may call them that, may merge with non-human spirits, especially species killed by man. Sightings of supposedly extinct animals include Tasmanian tigers in Australia, giant ground sloths in Patagonia, condors in Illinois, and moas in New Zealand. There are links of names and appearances between nonhuman dwarfs and extinct and nearly extinct Caribbean owls in Dominica. Iroquois, Huron, and Montagnais dwarfs in the Northeast are associated with what may be extinct mastodons while Snuqualmielittle people are connected to giant elks. Before meeting elves, ancient forests appear in Newfoundland.

If some visions of little people may be triggered by racial memories, then our increasing global extinction of species and cultures may increase experiences of ghosts and non-human dwarfs. Encounters may increase but most little people who originate from or are altered by extinctions probably now appear as shape-shifters, more like Euro-American fairies and aliens. As NativeAmerican cultures lose their belief in their own distinctive non-human dwarfs, the overall diversity of dwarf tribes declines.


Daily Dark: The Legend of the Wild Hunt
Daily Dark: The Legend of the Wild Hunt


The legend of the Wild Hunt with deadly consequences because of its beholders is just another historical superstition, which can be considered to have originated in Anglo-Saxon times. It was often thought that anybody who beheld the Wild Hunt, could immediately be hauled into a foreign territory, which if that individual were reckless enough to tackle the Huntsman himself, the results will almost surely be dire and probably fatal. Because of this, Christianity becoming the recognized religion of this land, lots of the ancient gods were demoted to the status of mere devils, and the function of the Huntsman was identified that of Satan himself.


In some regions that the huntsmens' horses seem to have transformed themselves 'headless' horses, frequently with a headless motorist, forcing a ghost coach. Again we're confronted with the part of 'heedlessness'. Could this be an instance of the success of the Celtic beliefs, or is it a long-forgotten Folk memory of an early sacrificial ritual between decapitation. Occasionally it's been stated that the saying 'headless', was a misnomer for 'heedless', particularly where the driving rates of those spectral Coachmen were worried. Shortly after the orthodox theological concept of a live devil began to recede the identity of this Huntsman was occasionally merged to this of a National Hero, like the freebooter Sir Francis Drake, whose ghost coach can be alleged to have been driving furiously throughout the wild and rocky heath property of Dartmoor, at the South Western County of Devon.



Deep in the center of Dartmoor is to be located one of its most haunted places, which for this day is called ''Wishtman's Wood''. Here could be seen early trees dispersing into all kinds of grotesque shapes, while rising from moss-covered granite boulders, so outdated they should have witnessed the beginning of our island's history. From this dreaded place that the dreadful Wisht Hunt may at times be observed at midnight, headed by the Devil or even Dewer, as he's sometimes known everywhere. So dreadful are that if anybody sees them, they can't be expected to endure the year. Their immediate purpose is to search the souls of unbaptized infants, some stating that the hounds, themselves are these spirits, transformed to hellish shapes.



In precisely the same place, a genuine sentinel on watch over the centuries would be that the Amazing Hound Tor, a tor having a large rock or heap of stones, and stones sprinkled on the tops of mountains, as a consequence of primeval volcanic action and quite typical in Devon. It's said that the stones here resemble a bunch of hounds in full cry, but suddenly turned into rock. Space doesn't permit me to estimate additional examples, but there's lots of evidence to demonstrate that the legends of the Wild Hunt are still very much alive and have formed an essential characteristic in the lives of our ancestors, and had they had been passing fancies, they wouldn't have nobly withstood the ravages of time. Some purists within the area of Parapsychology may believe the topics dealt with in this article are insignificant, in which scientific investigations are involved, but allow them to remember the fact that lots of the instances of inexplicable happenings experienced nowadays, might well have their origins at the Folklore memories of yesterday.



Daily Strange Mhyth: The Utah Lakes Monsters
Daily Strange Mhyth: The Utah Lakes Monsters

Utah folklore says the nation's Great Lakes house, not one, not two, but five fearsome water creatures. Native Americans thought some lakes were murdered by Water Babies,' who'd coax passengers. By the time pilgrim settlers began to arrive, nearby tribes told tales of a water lizard with large ears. Natives said the serpents that were fantastic disappeared in the 1820s, but from the 1860s settlers were reporting incidents between huge, terrifying, scaly creatures.

The Bear and Utah Lakes from the north have had most sightings of these monsters; really, the explanation witnesses provide to suggest these lakes each have just one of a set of twin water-dragons. One of the first appearances of the creatures was in 1864 when a man was at the Utah Lake. He reported seeing something that looked like a snake, but with the mind of a greyhound, which frightened him so much he fled to the water. Such as priests that are local, there were accounts of men and women that are reliable, Through time. All witnesses supplied brief, trunk-like legs climbing with eyes that were black and a huge mouth to the same description - that of a giant snake body.

From the 1860s of hunting down the critters, that the idea gained favour. Young local men attempted shooting. Although no one was ever able to satisfactorily wound the beasts so as to catch them some reach their targets. One night, one farmer heard rustling. Using his old gun, he faced and shot at the creature, only to discover it had been his neighbor's heifer. When fishermen from Springsville discovered a large skull on the jaw with a tusk in 1870 real evidences was recovered. The following year the Salt Lake Herald even disclosed the creature was caught, but what happened to the body of the seized creature is unknown.

When they found the monster rise from the water in 1871, two guys were out fishing on Bear Lake. They stated they were able to hit the beast with shots from their rifles, but the monster swam away. A wagon train captain called William Bridge stated in 1874 he had seen the Bear Lake beast. Bridge reported that the monster was around 20 yards from shore when it surfaced in the water. 'portion and Its face of its mind was covered with fur or short hair using a mild snuff color,' he said. It was also described by bridge as having a face with large eyes, prominent ears and a five or four - feet.



Bear Lake (Idaho–Utah)
Bear Lake (Idaho–Utah)

Bear Lake residents were affected by Bridge's testimony that they decided to make a snare to catch the beast. Two regional taxpayers, Brigham Young and Phineas Cook, hatched a plan which involved over a giant fishing line. They connected a 300 — feet-long, a single — inch thick rope to a hook with a massive slab of mutton attached as lure. The rope's position has been marked by a buoy floating on the lake surface. Even though the trap was robbed of beef, no creature was caught.

Lake monster sightings had fallen away drastically by the end of the century. Then the entire area more quietened down, although there was one sighting of the Utah Lake creature in 1921, which indicated a resurgence that is limited in interest. Ever since that time, among the few reports was by a regional Scout master who said he'd seen the creature that is eccentric appears on the surface of the lake in 1946. The account was widely regarded to be this comprehensive and accurate that only the most ardent sceptic could doubt it. Local wags have also pointed out that Scouts do not he. However, a few still do question the fact of these Utah Lakes creatures. In his lecture on the subject to the Utah State Historical Society, local historian D. Robert Carter stated he actually believed the monster was a species of giant bug - humbug.


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