Dear Readers,
I think this is one of the most frightening lines to read in
English literature: “Mr. Holmes, it was
the foot prints of a Gigantic Hound!”
---- “Hound of the Baskervilles” by A. Conan Doyle.
Conan Doyle, in that novel, was describing what was believed
to be a Hound from Hell or Hellhound. In
the novel the Hellhound was called upon when in 1750 Sir Hugo Baskerville
lorded over the Baskerville mansion in Devonshire, England. Hugo was lecherously
obsessed with a local yeoman's daughter, whom he kidnapped.
Trapped in an
upstairs room, the girl escaped climbing down an ivy-covered wall and fled
across the moors outside. Enraged finding she escaped, Hugo shouted a bargain to
the devil and mounted his horse in pursuit of the young girl, his friends
drunkenly followed him across the moors
only to come across the body of the girl dead from exhaustion and shocked to
discover Sir Hugo with his throat ripped out by "a foul thing, a great,
black beast."
Ever since, according to the legend in the novel, the
supernatural hound has haunted the family, allegedly killing every Lord of
Baskerville Hall with Sir Charles Baskerville, the latest inhabitant of
Baskerville Hall, as the hound’s latest victim and Sherlock Holmes is asked to
investigate and prevent another death, that of Sir Henry Baskerville the new
Lord of Baskerville Hall.
Read the
novel, it is entertaining on a dark, cold, foggy or rainy night.
Conan Doyle in that novel gave the best idea and concept of
what a Hell Hound is supposed to be in Modern Times.
This post is going to be what I consider “off-topic” for my
blog, but I also believe that anyone who does “the work” should know about all
kinds of strange and occult things. I
say this because one time (many years ago) I was helping out at a metaphysical
shop owned by an acquaintance of mine who was a practioner of the Ifa and
Santeria beliefs, now she was born, raised and educated in the USA and she got
her degree in psychology and comparative religions, became attracted to
Santeria and traveled all over the world to understand and be trained in this
practice.
That day she needed to do a consultation for a client and
her regular store worker was running late, I happened into the shop to pick up
some candles and maybe chat with her when this situation arose and I agreed to
watch the shop while she did her consultation in the rear office of her
shop.
She was back there for some 15 minutes when she came out and
asked me “What is a Hell Hound?” I
looked at this college educated in comparative religions graduate and thought
“She doesn’t know what a Hell Hound is?”
So I quickly educated her, I saw the light go on in her eyes and she said
“Ahh, thanks” and went back in. An hour
later they came out, the client was satisfied.
Then my acquaintance said to me “I had no idea what a Hell Hound is.”
Now anyone who does “the work” had really better know what
various creatures are out there in the metaphysical world and now with the
internet you can get a very fast update on such information. But this was long before the internet and
she didn’t know about this creature, it was not part of her Santeria training. To her if she was not trained in it, it
didn’t exist, I told her it Does exist and she better open her mind, because
that is what my Granny taught me, and I have a degree in “common sense”.
So I have been asked by several of you about “What are hell hounds?” and in some
instances “How can I call upon one to
use”
First I want to make it very clear, I’m writing from my own personal
opinion, research and understanding about Hell Hounds and I will be reprinting
a portion of an earlier post about how a friend of mine created a Hell Hound
and directed it to do what she needed, and maybe it was not exactly like the
Hell Hound as one would think but for her it certainly did the work.
So where did the concept of Hell Hounds or Hell Hound begin?
Hellhounds show up in many cultures and have many names
including three-headed Cerberus in Greek mythology, Anubis in Egyptian
mythology, Garmr in Norse mythology, Perro Negro in Latin America, and Black
Shuck in England. More recently hellhounds were used in fiction in such as The Hound of the Baskervilles, the
Grim (although not technically a Hell Hound, but displays those tendencies) in
the Harry Potter series, and in movies like The Omen and the Television Show
“Supernatural”.
According to Wikipedia a hellhound, or devil dog, is a
supernatural animal found throughout mythology, folklore, and fiction.
Hellhound legends date back to ancient times and alleged sightings and attacks
have been reported throughout history. Hellhound descriptions tend to have
black fur, glowing eyes, supernatural strength or speed, large teeth, long claws,
and sometimes multiple heads (of course that could be from an over exaggeration
by the observer). In cultures that
associate the afterlife with fire, hellhounds may have fire-based abilities and
appearance and that their paw-prints will appear as if burned into the ground.
According to various legends these Devil dogs/Hell Hounds in
mythology may guard the entrance to the Underworld such as Cerberus, and the
grounds of graveyards, or they are sent to hunt lost souls or could be set to
protect a supernatural treasure. In European folklore, seeing a hellhound or
hearing it howl is believed to be an omen of doom or the cause of death,
especially if seen or heard three times.
Certain Goddesses are associated with Dogs or wolf-like Hell
Hounds such as the Norse Goddess Hel and her dog Garmr, it is said that when the Titan Hecate she
walks Dogs or Hell Hounds bay to
announce at her coming, and the Goddess Diana hunts with Dogs, another is Herne
the Hunter who hunts with a wild pack of dogs.
It seems the mythology behind these creatures is a bit
contradicting such as it’s an omen of death, or nothing may occur, or possibly
a protector of something, a guardian at the gates of a cemetery etc. sometimes
they may be benign; so where did it
start?
I’m going to go on record here and say, In My Humble
Opinion, that it started with Anubis the black Jackal headed dog God of the
Ancient Egyptians who oversaw the mummification of the dead and guided their
souls to the afterlife, along with his wolf brother Wepwawet (also called
Upuaut), who was sometimes called “the
opener of the way.
Anubis is considered a benign God of the
ancient Egyptians in the First Dynasty from 3100 B.C. to 2890 B.C. he was depicted
as a protector of graves and was also an embalmer. By the Middle Kingdom 2055
B.C. to 1650 BC he was replaced by Osiris in his role as lord of the
underworld. One of his prominent roles was as a god who ushered souls into the
afterlife.
He attended the weighing scale during the "Weighing of the
Heart," in which it was determined whether a soul would be allowed to enter
the realm of the dead. According to Wikipedia that despite being one of the most
ancient and "one of the most frequently depicted and mentioned gods"
in the Egyptian pantheon, Anubis played almost no role in Egyptian myths.
So from the description of Anubis we get the concept of the
black fur, as a guide of the souls of the dead, as a protector of graves which
gives us the earliest inkling of a Hell Hound’s duties. As a guardian of the gateway to Hades we have
the most famous hellhound Cerberus from Greek mythology, but even Cerberus
could be outwitted if sweet music was played to lull him to sleep.
Perhaps the most ferocious is two of them in Norse Mythology,
Garmr or Garm is a wolf or dog associated with both Hel and Ragnarök, and is described
as a blood-stained guardian of Hel's gate. Hel is referred to as a daughter of Loki, and
to "go to Hel" is to die. So
if anyone curses you by saying “You can go to Hell” they are saying for you to
die.
The other hell hound is Fenrir
wolf, but it is believed when comparing the various stories that Garmr and
Fenrir became merged as one. Garmr is sometimes seen as a hellhound, much
like Cerberus, but is supposed to destroy (in his Fenrir incarnation) Odin with
the coming of Ragnarok.
In Greek mythology like the Titan Goddess Hecate, the dog is
a creature of the threshold, the guardian of doors and portals, and of
crossroads, so it is appropriately associated with the frontier between life
and death, and with demons and ghosts which move across the frontier, and
Hecate is considered a Goddess of the Crossroads, to be in the mortal world and
in the underworld, which is why when one hears baying hounds it means Hecate
walks in the night.
Some people believe that the idea or myth of the Hell Hound
started in the early 1500’s when they were used in combat and died; in ancient
combat soldiers used dogs as an elite attack force. These deceased dogs are said
to look like their former selves’ but reek of brimstone and ash. According to legend they are supposed to warn
people of coming death but it says you have to see it three times.
However hell hounds were known in the Bible, in 2nd
Samuel 16:5-8 it says “When the king
(David) got to Bahurim, a man appeared who had connections with Saul’s family.
His name was Shimei son of Gera. As he followed along he shouted insults and
threw rocks right and left at David and his company, servants and soldiers
alike. To the accompaniment of curses he shouted, “Get lost, get lost, you
butcher, you hellhound! God has paid
you back for all your dirty work in the family of Saul and for stealing his
kingdom. God has given the kingdom to your son Absalom. Look at you now—ruined!
And good riddance, you pathetic old man!”
So the concept, the word Hellhound could go back as far as
before the birth of Jesus as a demon thing, possibly changed and morphed from
benign Anubis to a demon creature. Because it appears that the basic attributes
of Anubis and Cerberus coupled with the ferocity of Garmr/Fenrir, became merged
to the idea of the Hell Hound as we know and understand it today.
According to Wikipedia these hounds are given several
different names in local folklore, but they display typical hellhound
characteristics. The myth is common across Great Britain, and many names are
given to the apparitions: Moddey Dhoo of the Isle of Man, Gwyllgi of Wales and
other ghostly black dogs that exist in legend. The earliest mention of these
myths are found in both Walter Map's De Nugis Curialium (1190) and the Welsh
myth cycle of the Four Branches of the Mabinogi (ca. tenth to thirteenth
century).
The Welsh Cŵn Annwn, were regarded as benign hell hound, but
encountering them was still considered a sign of imminent death. In southern Mexico and Central America
folklore, the Cadejo is a big black dog that haunts travelers who walk late at
night on rural roads. The term ‘hell hound’ is also common in American blues
music, such as with Robert Johnson's 1937 song, "Hellhound on My Trail".
Going further (according to Wikipedia) “The Bearer of Death”
is a term used in describing the Hellhound and it’s described as black as coal
and smelling of burning brimstone. Again
they tend to leave behind a burned area wherever they go. Their eyes are a
deep, bright, and almost glowing red. They have razor sharp teeth, super
strength, and speed, and are commonly associated with graveyards and the
underworld.
These Hellhounds are called The Bearers of Death because
they were supposedly created by ancient demons to serve as heralds of death.
According to legend, seeing one leads to a person's death. Sometimes it is said
to be just once; other times it requires three sightings for the curse to take
effect and kill the victim. These factors make the Hellhound a feared symbol
and worthy of the name “Bearer of Death”.
According to the Mythical Creatures Guide " While considered a bad omen, the hellhound has often helped many as
well. The supernatural dog was said to warn people of danger and protect
them when they needed it. The dog is often very loyal to those who call
upon one and is said to be very watchful. While the creatures are often
known as evil, they are not as evil as one would suggest.
Hellhounds have been reported all around the globe and about half of the time it is of bad things about to happen. The other half of the time, they cause the bad things to happen. Hellhounds not only are guards for cemeteries but they are often seen as helper dogs for those who are about to pass. But they also can show up to said loved ones and sort of inform them or a loved ones passing.
While most pictures show the Hellhound as being evil and vicious, this is simply not the case. Hellhounds do not have to be evil looking or scary looking. They can look like any large dog only with pure black fur. Hellhounds can be very good creatures and feel remorseful when they do something they do not fully agree with."
Hellhounds have been reported all around the globe and about half of the time it is of bad things about to happen. The other half of the time, they cause the bad things to happen. Hellhounds not only are guards for cemeteries but they are often seen as helper dogs for those who are about to pass. But they also can show up to said loved ones and sort of inform them or a loved ones passing.
While most pictures show the Hellhound as being evil and vicious, this is simply not the case. Hellhounds do not have to be evil looking or scary looking. They can look like any large dog only with pure black fur. Hellhounds can be very good creatures and feel remorseful when they do something they do not fully agree with."
I'm not sure where the writer of that post (The Elegant Shadow) got his/her information unless it was a legend that combines the attributes of Anubis and has softened it.
The Hellhound, allegedly has been seen several times
throughout history, and it is not specific to any one place. The most recent sightings of alleged Hell Hounds
have occurred in Connecticut, Kentucky, Louisiana, Ohio, and Vilseck, Germany, as
well as Hawaii in or near cemeteries.
So the myth or legend has traveled and migrated as people have migrated.
They have appeared in literature, the most famous is Doyle’s
“Hound of the Baskervilles”, in Piers Anthony's fantasy novel “On A Pale Horse”,
where Satan sends hellhounds to attack Zane (Death) and bring him back to hell.
The hounds are immortal but are dispatched by Death's magical scythe. And they have appeared in movies such as
“The Omen”.
But for the last 5 to 8 years they’ve been either seen or
mentioned in the T.V. show “Supernatural” and two of them have been named,
Juliet and Ramsey. Ramsey (according to “Supernatural” legend) was the mother
of all Hellhounds and was Lucifer’s pet. Only Lucifer could control Ramsey so
when she was set loose by dissatisfied demons, Crowley told the Winchesters they had problems
because only Lucifer could control Ramsey, Crowley couldn’t and Ramsey was
killed in that episode. Juliet, the other Hell Hound was guarding the
First Blade in a cemetery and was told by Crowley to stand down to allow Sam
and Dean to retrieve the first blade.
Many devices in film and television have come up on how to
keep a Hell Hound away, such as putting Sea Salt across the threshold of your
room, or a barrier of either Goofer Dust or Devil’s Shoestring. Can they be killed? Well not according to the various legends
I’ve read with the exception of the events in Ragnarock, but in the T.V. show “Supernatural”
they supposed to be killed with either the First Blade or an Angel
Blade, but then that’s T.V. for you, always coming up with an “out”.
Granny and her ladies had heard about Hell Hounds from the
different stories that they had heard from their various countries and they
said the only way to keep one away was to live a good and kind life, to help
folks, go to church and pray, do no evil, and never make a deal with the devil,
if you think you hear one then pray the Lord’s Prayer and the St. Michael's
prayer and wear (at least among Catholics) a blessed Sacred Heart of Jesus
medal and a St. Michael s medal. Mrs.
Byrd was Lutheran but she wore them as well, “Faith in the Lord” she told me
and so did Mrs. Washington and she was a Baptist.
I do believe that some of these attacks by alleged Hell
Hounds which resulted in death may have been by Dogs or Wolves that had
contracted rabies, which would explain the agonizing death of the receiver of
the Hell Hound attack, since wolves have really a tendency to avoid humans as much as possible and only extreme starving hunger or rabies would have them behave in such a manner.
But the mind and the negative energy that can be out there
can form strange things. And so can
anger and fear. A friend of mine went
so far as to create her own version of a Hell Hound and I posted it in another
post and I’ve re-printed it here.
“A casual acquaintance
of mine that I’d sometimes have coffee with when she wants to discuss
metaphysical matters, told me how after
hearing an old recording of Robert Johnson’s song “Hell Hound on my Trail” got
an idea to create the use of a hell hound
using Hot Foot Powder, which I will describe further down….
… this casual
acquaintance of mine who got an idea to have a type of Hell Hound Hot Foot done
on a cheating, despicable, lazy, pot smoking, no-good (and abusive) boyfriend of
hers and get him out of her life and to make sure he never cheated on (or
abused) any other woman either.
Trust me I knew the
fella and he was bad news from the very beginning, why she let him into her
life even she had no idea, but after a few weeks she knew he had to leave but
he wouldn't, no matter what she threaten to do.
What gave her the idea
was when she was listening to a new blues CD of old style Delta Blues and heard
Robert Johnson’s “Hell Hound on my Trail.”
She realized that
there were things she could use, but the main thing was the type of graveyard
dirt she’d use. She found a Pet Cemetery
that had several K-9 and Military Dogs buried.
She did the usual ritual to gather graveyard dirt and she asked each
spirit who would be willing to serve and although all of them were willing she
decided upon one and thanked the rest by leaving flowers and dog biscuits
saying that she made need their services later on. And then completed the purchase of the one
that she chose and in that case besides the usual payment she added 9 large
Milk Bone biscuits. Well it was a
Dog!
She called it Hell Hound Hot Food Powder
2 parts cayenne pepper
2 parts any very hot
red pepper
2 parts black salt for
banishing
1 part ground black
pepper
1 part graveyard dirt
(from a Military or Police Dog)
1 part anvil dust
1 part iron shavings
1 part sulfur
And a few hairs from a
living black dog (her neighbor’s dog is a black German Shepard and she brushed
him so used his shed hairs---she also thought if she could get some shed wolf
hair that would be good as well, but no poodles or Labradors)
She said the full Psalms 35 and 59 and her intent which (she
chanted as she charged the powder) was
“Be as a Hell Hound on so and so’s trail, never let him rest, never let him
deceive another woman again, keep him moving from place to place, to never lay
his weary head, until the skin falls off
his bones and his lungs breathe no more, then you, faithful friend can return
to your place of rest, until I call upon you once more.”
Then she mixed it
thoroughly using a wooden spoon labeled for that use and stored it in an
airtight container.
Now she told me that
the portions were small so 1 part was equal to 1 teaspoon, and she had made it
to consecrate it towards a specific person, and she applied it in the usual
manner (as like regular Hot Foot Powder).
What happened to
him? He left her in a week, sold off or
gave away most of his stuff packed what he could in two duffel bags, got into
his Beater of a car and drove off. She
hears about him from time to time, and told me that the last time she heard
about him was that he didn’t look too good.
“Too much drug use.” She said.
But as we talked she realized she could make a
Master batch and then when ready, add the Graveyard dirt and then activate it
when she says the Psalms and then direct it towards whom she wishes out of her
life. It was just important to keep it
in a sealed crock until ready to active what every portion she wished to use.
But she also realized that if she had one dog working on one person, she'd have
to have a different dog work on another, until the previous dog had done its
duty.
It made sense to me.”
Then just recently a reader asked about the application of
the Hell Hound Hot Foot Powder and I responded:
“Funny that you would ask that. The other day my friend who had come up
with making and using the Hell Hound Hot Foot Powder dropped by for coffee and
as we chatted that very same subject came up.
She remarked that she had last seen the
horrible, abusive bad-news ex-boyfriend earlier this year and he looked
horrible, a few months later she saw his obituary in the newspaper. I
asked her if that is what she wanted and she replied, without any guilt, “yes”
because he was bad news for any woman.
We talked about the Hell Hound Hot Foot
Powder, she said she applied it the same way as you would any standard hot foot
powder, a little in his shoes (all of his shoes), a little in the back pocket
of his jeans, a little in the pocket of his jacket, a little on the side of his
bed where he usually gets up out of bed (and usually barefoot).
She even put a tiny amount between the
bottom sheet and mattress cover of his bed. She made sure she never slept in
his bed. She put it in any of his clothes that had pockets. She even put a tiny
amount in the bill-fold section of his wallet, but it had to be tiny amounts so
he wouldn’t wonder about it. (seeing the dust etc.)
He even had a pair of favorite Jeans
that he rarely washed so she sprinkled a bit on the inside leg of those jeans.
She was creative.
So he left her, but he could never
settle down, couldn’t hold a job for any long period of time, he said to mutual
friends that he thought he was being followed, they thought he was being
paranoid, “stop smoking the mary jane” they said.
He couldn’t even keep an apartment so
he’d bunk out at any friends place but didn’t stay long.
One of them that knew her said when her
ex-boyfriend was staying with him that he thought there was a dog in his
apartment because he could hear panting and like the sound of dog nails on the
wood floor when the bad-news boyfriend was staying with him. One time he heard
what sounded like a dog growling, it stopped when the ex-boyfriend left.
Once she read that he had died, she
went to the jar of the left over graveyard dirt of the K-9 that she got it
from, (she kept some of it in reserve to keep a spiritual connection to the
dog) she held it between her hands and thanked the dog/hound for his service
and he could now rest from his duties.
Later she went back to the cemetery and
put on that dog’s grave 9 more biscuits for services rendered as a reward
saying “Good Boy, that’s a Good Dog!”
She said that if she needed to do it
again, she’d once again ask the dogs at the cemetery to see which one would
like to take on the job, she said if it’s the same one that’s fine.
But she knows you have to do payment.”
So what did she create, was it a Hell Hound? Maybe but it never directly killed him, but
it did stalk him to the point that he never rested, just like Robert Johnson the blues singer
never rested and he did die young. Was
what she created a demon? I would say
more like commanding a spirit with a specific purpose.
Would she do it again?
I’d say only if the need was extremely great, because if anything you
cannot create something just ‘willy-nilly’ or as a joke or for a lark, no this
is done with great responsibility and a full understanding of the possible
consequences, otherwise it can backlash on you.
And she knew and understood that
responsibility.
I have in my office a beautiful statute of Hecate where she
is standing at a cross roads, and with a dog next to her. Whenever I hear of any cruelty to animals I
call upon her to wreak vengeance on the persons who would do such a thing.
My husband and I own a very large muscular pit-bull/boxer
mix breed dog, the dog never smiles, and most dogs do sort of smile but he
doesn’t. When he was a puppy who ever
had him tortured this poor dog and tried to make him mean and into a fighting
dog, but this dog never wanted to fight, in the end the dog was abandon and
then rescued by an animal shelter that socialized the dog and we adopted him,
he is incredibly gentle and friendly, especially with children, even with all
the abuse that poor dog had been put through, he is gentle and friendly. But
because the dog has such a serious looking face he intimidates strangers while
not even trying. He sleeps in our bedroom
to be near us and he goes everywhere with us, unless the day is too hot, then
he stays home with the air conditioning.
He is our guardian at the gate, our own non-ferocious hell hound.
So that is all that I can squeeze into this blog post, there
is more information out there, one could devote an entire book to the legend of
the Hell Hound but I don’t have the time for it, but at least what I’ve posted
here is a start for you.
Bright Blessings,
Ms. Q
hello ms. Q. i just wanted to start out by saying i love your blog. i had a question and i'm not sure if this is the right place to put it, but here it goes. the mother of one of my friends used to practice magic and she would have a bible left open to certain pages in her bedroom. she told me that keeping it open on certain passages does different things. she never explained more beyond that though. do you happen to know anything about this?
ReplyDeleteHello My Dear,
DeleteI’m glad you’re enjoying my blog.
Some people consider this an “old Wives Tale” but serious practitioners who use the psalms as part of their workings put serious consideration in using the bible.
Usually they would have it open to either Psalm 91 or to Psalm 23 or even Psalm 37 depending upon what was the sense of negativity they felt.
It’s based upon the belief that the word of God even in an open Bible is powerful enough to keep Satan and all his evil minions away, including negative workings done by someone else.
It is thought that Evil does not like to hang around in a room where God's word is prevalent.
If evil exists, and it does, then Good also exists for balance and evil cannot do anything unless one allows it to, but if one works with the word of God, Satan has no power even though it would like you to think that it does.
It’s a bully, but bullies can be put under control.
But just leaving an open Bible doesn’t do it alone, you need to read the passage when you go to bed at night and when you wake up in the morning.
Midnight Hoodoo has stated “Make no mistake, there are many people out there who want to remove the Bible from conjure work, due to their own belief systems or the fact that they have none. The same people usually want to remove any reference to God, the angels and the saints too. If you take these elements out of conjure, you are left with a neo-pagan magical system that has no resemblance to genuine hoodoo. God, the Bible, the angels and the saints are all an integral and vital element of conjure.”
And I agree, the Bible in many passages gives strength in doing various workings. Some conjure workers use only the Bible as their work book.
Back in the late 1930’s & 1940s, Harry Middleton Hyatt toured the South to collect as many of these conjure beliefs as possible compiling them into 3 very heavy volumes .
Some of these workings are fairly modern, less than 100 years old; others, are much, much older.
For example:
Go and buy a Bible. Do not open until you get it home. Once you get inside, find Psalm 17, take the Bible to the center of your garden. Face East, walk 17 steps, and read the Psalm aloud, “and then close the book. And no harm will befall your home or nothing will happen to your wife.”
Sleeping with the Bible under your pillow is supposed to rid you of ghosts. If you open it and read Psalm 37 first, it will also rid you of unwanted (living) people.
From a Henry Hyatt informant 1940’s--- "Whenevah ah'm afraid of someone doin' me harm ah read the 37 Psalms an' co'se (of course) ah leaves the Bible open with the head of it turned to the east as many as three days."
In Wikipedia it states that In hoodoo, "All hold that the Bible is the great conjure book in the world." It has many functions for the practitioner, not the least of which is a source of spells. This is particularly evident given the importance of the book “Secrets of the Psalms” in hoodoo culture. You can buy this on Amazon.
I have several Bibles scattered about my house open to different pages. And I travel with one as well.
Whenever we rent an RV and we are traveling I start the day with Psalm 23 before we hit the road, and it is a comfort to read as the last thing at night.
You have given me another idea for another post, which I will expand upon this subject, Thank You!
Bright Blessings,
Ms. Q