[274] Yasts, x. 84.

[275] Chapman, Travels in the Interior of South Africa, i. 341.

A poor man is able not only to punish the uncharitable by means of his curses, but to reward the generous giver by means of his blessings. During my residence among the Andjra tribe in the mountains of Northern Morocco, our village was visited by a band of ambulant scribes who went from house to house, receiving presents and invoking blessings in return. When a goat was given them they asked God to increase the flocks of the giver, when money was given they asked God to increase his money, and so forth. Some of the villagers told me that it was a profitable bargain, since they would be tenfold repaid for their gifts through the blessings of the scribes. A town Moor who starts for a journey to the country generally likes to give a coin to one of the beggars who are sitting near the gate, so as to receive his blessings. It is said in Ecclesiasticus:—“Stretch thine hand unto the poor, that thy blessing may be perfected. A gift hath grace in the sight of every man living.”[276] Whilst he that withholdeth corn shall be cursed by the people, “blessing shall be upon the head of him that selleth it.”[277] Among the early Christians those who brought gifts for the poor were specially remembered in the prayers of the Church.[278] Of the Nayādis of Malabar Mr. Iyer says that the purport and object of their prayers are, among other things, “that all the superior castes, who give them alms, may enjoy long life and prosperity.”[279] In various cases the nature of the rewards promised for charitable acts suggests that they are due to the blessings of the recipient. According to Vasishtha, “through liberality man obtains all his desires, even longevity.”[280] In the Yasts it is said that the children of a charitable man will thrive.[281] According to Talmudic ideas, men acquire wealth for their children by distributing alms among the poor.[282] Considering how widely spread is the belief in the efficacy of curses and blessings, there can be little doubt that charity and generosity are connected with this belief in many cases where no such connection has been noticed by the European visitor.

[276] Ecclesiasticus, vii. 32. Cf. Proverbs, xxii. 9.

[277] Proverbs, xi. 26.

[278] Uhlhorn, op. cit. i. 141.

[279] Iyer, in the Madras Government Museum’s Bulletin, iv. 72.

[280] Vasishtha, xxix. 1 sq.

[281] Yasts, xxiv. 36.

[282] Kohler, in Jewish Encyclopedia, i. 436. Cf. Proverbs, xxviii. 27.