16 March 2016

Owls "nailed to the walls" of Breton farms

One more item gleaned from The Phantom of the Opera (a pretty good book, but not an addition to this blog's category of recommended books).

I was startled to encounter (on pg 144 of my paperback copy) this sentence:
"If we really saw Erik, what I ought to have done was to nail him to Apollo's lyre, just as we nail the owls to the walls of our Breton farms; and there would have been no more question of him."
The reference to Apollo's lyre is to an ornament on the roof of the opera house.  My puzzlement is to the indication that owls were once (19th century, apparently) nailed to farm walls.  I would think most farmers would consider owls to be beneficial in terms of rodent control, so that act would not be appropriate as a triumph over a pest.  Was it perhaps done on an outside wall rather than indoors, to frighten away other granivores (?birds)?

This blog has readers in Brittany.  Perhaps one of you could inquire of an elderly grandparent...

Addendum:  A tip of the blogging hat to reader Abie, who has found what appears to be the explanation (Google-translated from Chouette effraie):
The Barn is the basis of many legends and ghost stories. Indeed, by its hiss, screeches, its ghostly flight and cavalcades in the attic which serves as a cottage, lent credence to a spectral presence. In the Middle Ages the owl was the symbol of heresy . It thus appears about 40 times in the works of Hieronymus Bosch which in Temptation of St. Anthony (it is painted on the character's head after St. Anthony). The bad reputation of the "white lady" has earned him nailed to the doors of the barns where she lived, a practice that was supposed to protect thunderstorms, chase disease, ward off bad luck and scare other owls. This bad reputation is evidenced by Buffon in 1780 who wrote about the Barn:
"It grows sour different sounds all so unpleasant that this, together with the idea of the vicinity of cemeteries and churches, and even in the dark of night, inspires horror and fear to children, women, and even men subject to the same prejudices and who believe in ghosts, sorcerers, soothsayers to: they look like the funeral frightens bird, the messenger of death; they believe that when it is attached to a house, and that she sounds a different voice of its common cry is to call someone at the cemetery " .

14 comments:

  1. My neighbor has a fake owl attached to his balcony to keep birds away. Maybe something like that?

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  2. Nailing barn owls at doors, especially barn doors was supposed to protect against bad fortune. But I think I remember from books read in my childhood that it could also be ominous if someone else nailed it on your door, a way to say *you* were a bad influence.
    cf. https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chouette_effraie#Symbolique for example.

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    1. Outstanding, Abie! I've added your information to the post - and even changed the title to reflect that the question has been answered.

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    2. You have interesting content in you Twitter feed, btw.

      And the link you provided eventually led me to this interesting and blogworthy website:

      http://www.esotericbosch.com/

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  3. can you provide the original french text - just to prove that this is not another 'diplomatic' translation error?

    I-)

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    1. Si vraiment nous avons aperçu Érik j’aurais dû le clouer sur la lyre d’Apollon, comme on cloue la chouette sur les murs de nos fermes bretonnes, et il n’en n’aurait plus été question.

      I-)

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  4. Nailing owls on barn doors was a tradition pretty much everywhere in France :
    http://dick.wursten.be/apollinaire_bestiaire_Hibou.htm
    I don't know why Leroux decided to make it a britton thing... Maybe because of some symbols : Brittany was a duchy, and some owls are called "hibou grand duc", "moyen duc" or "petit duc" in french. It could also be a reference to the chouannerie :
    https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Chouannerie
    Chouan's coat of arms contained owls :
    https://www.wikiwand.com/fr/Chouans

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    1. did they nail real owls, or were those figures / statues / etc.?

      because real owls might start to stink after a while...

      I-)

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  5. I've always wondered about the lyrics to "Old Coat," sung by Peter Paul and Mary-- knowing it was a common practice makes my sense of horror even more pronounced.

    Like some ragged owlet with its wings expanded,
    Nailed to some garden gate or boardin'.
    Thus will I by some men all my life be branded
    Never hurted none this side of Jordan.

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  6. Hello Stanley, Awesome posts. Really loved the 4 copperheads. Took me forever to find all four.

    Dennis

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    1. Greetings, Dennis. I hope springtime weather gets started up there soon for you.

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  7. Thank you so much for this insight!!! Was always intrigued by this passage in the novel and have been trying to dig deeper into such passages to understand story as it might have been construed when first published. That book
    Is a treasure, possibly because I was introduced to
    It at a young age so there’s a nostalgia element that allows me to overlook some of its flaws.

    Thank you again!!!!!

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