- Gef
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For other uses, see GEF (disambiguation).
Gef (The Talking Mongoose
The Dalby Spook)Creature Grouping Talking animal
SpiritSub grouping Mongoose Data First reported 1931 Country Isle of Man Gef (pronounced /ˈdʒɛf/ jef), referred to as the Talking Mongoose or the Dalby Spook, was a talking mongoose reported to inhabit a farmhouse known as Cashen's Gap near the hamlet of Dalby on the Isle of Man. Gef has been variously interpreted as a poltergeist, a normal animal, a cryptid or a hoax.
Contents
History
By their own account on September 1931, the Irving family, consisting of James, Margaret and 13 year old daughter Voirrey, heard persistent scratching and rustling noises behind their farmhouse's wooden wall panels. Initially they thought it was a rat, but then the unseen creature began making different sounds. At times it spat like a ferret, growled like a dog or gurgled like a baby.
The entity soon revealed an ability to speak and introduced itself as Gef, a mongoose. It claimed to have been born in New Delhi, India, in 1852. According to Voirrey, the only person to see him properly, Gef was the size of a small rat with yellowish fur and a large bushy tail. (The Indian mongoose is in reality much larger than a rat and does not have a bushy tail).
Gef claimed at times to be "an extra extra clever mongoose", an "Earthbound spirit" and "a ghost in the form of a weasel". He once said: "I am a freak. I have hands and I have feet, and if you saw me you'd faint, you'd be petrified, mummified, turned into stone or a pillar of salt!"
He had many characteristics traditionally ascribed to poltergeists, in that he had an uneven temper, threw objects at people, and made exaggerated claims about his powers.
Gef remained friendly towards the Irvings, and joked around with them, though he supposedly went too far the time that he pretended to be poisoned. Gef also supposedly bothered the Irvings' neighbours, spied on them and reported back to the Irvings. James Irving kept diaries about Gef between 1932 and 1935. These diaries, along with reports about the case, are in Harry Price's archives in the Senate House Library, University of London.[1]
The story of Gef became popular in the tabloid press, and many journalists flocked to the Isle to catch a glimpse of the creature.[2]
Investigation
Price and Lambert
In July 1935 the editor of The Listener, Richard S. Lambert (known as "Rex"), and his friend, paranormal investigator Harry Price, went to the Isle of Man to investigate the case and produced the book The Haunting of Cashen's Gap (1936) which was described in its introduction as "an essay in the Veracious but Unaccountable" and was more light-hearted journalism than serious research. In the book they avoided saying that they believed the story but were careful to report it as though with an open mind, even when they recounted how a hair from the supposed mongoose was sent to Julian Huxley who then sent it to naturalist F. Martin Duncan who identified it as a dog hair.[3]
Price asked Reginald Pocock of the Natural History Museum to evaluate pawprints made by Gef in plasticene together with an impression of his tooth marks. Pocock could not match them to any known animal, though he conceded that one of them might have been "conceivably made by a dog". He did state that none of the markings had been made by a mongoose.[4]
Records of Price's investigation are available in his archives, which are also held by Senate House Library, University of London.[1]
In 1937 Lambert brought an action for slander against Sir Cecil Levita, after Levita suggested to a friend that Lambert was unfit to be on the board of the British Film Institute. Levita said that Lambert was "off his head" because he had believed in the talking mongoose and the evil eye. Lambert was pressured to abandon his action by Sir Stephen Tallents but persisted with it and won, receiving £7,600 in damages, then an exceptional figure for a slander case, awarded because Lambert's counsel managed to introduce a BBC memo which showed Lambert's career had been threatened if he persisted with the case. The case became known as "the Mongoose Case".[5][6]
Price was not the only psychic researcher to have investigated Gef. Another was Nandor Fodor, Research Officer for the International Institute for Psychical Research. Fodor was influenced by Freudian theory and later became a psychoanalyst. He pioneered the theory that poltergeists are external manifestations of conflicts within the subconscious mind rather than autonomous entities with minds of their own.
Fodor stayed at the Irvings' house for a week without seeing or hearing Gef. However, he interviewed both the family and the locals and left believing that the tales he had heard were true. He said of the Irvings that he found them "sincere, frank and simple" and that "deliberate deception on the part of the whole family cannot be entertained as a solution of the mystery". Fodor did not believe that Gef was a poltergeist as none of the family members were psychic, Gef showed no paranormal powers and he had been seen, photographed and touched and consistently appeared as a small animal.[7]
The Irvings left their home in 1937. They reportedly had to sell the farm at a loss because it had the reputation of being haunted. In 1946, Leslie Graham, the farmer who had bought their farm, claimed that he had shot and killed Gef. The body displayed by Graham was, however, black and white and much larger than the famous mongoose and Voirrey Irving was certain that it was not Gef. Irving died in 2005. In an interview published late in life, she maintained that Gef was not her creation.
Theories and scepticism
The story was widespread throughout Britain in the early 1930s due to extensive press coverage, but apparently no one other than the Irvings ever claimed to have heard Gef speak, or even saw him, though some neighbours claimed to have heard "strange noises" outside their homes.
The only physical evidence cited in support of Gef's existence would appear to be a series of footprints,[4] none of which were identified as those of a mongoose, while a single photo said to show Gef exists.
Media
- Lemon Demon, Neil Cicierega's music group, wrote a song about Gef titled 'Eighth Wonder'.
- Harry Price: The Psychic Detective, by Richard Morris, published by Sutton 2006
- Gef is a recurring character in the web comic 'Semi-Charmed'
- The Jarvey, a magical talking ferret species from the Harry Potter series, may have been based on Gef.
Notes
- ^ a b archive catalogue entry for Gef and the Irvings
- ^ Out of this World, Mysteries of Mind, Space and Time, 1989, page 419–420.
- ^ Rachael, Low (1996). History of British Film. Routledge. pp. 193–194. ISBN 0415156505.
- ^ a b Willett, Cliff. "The Evidence for Gef: Pt 2 Gef's Pawprints". Gef: The Eighth Wonder of the World. http://dalbyspook.110mb.com/gefpawprints.html. Retrieved 2008-09-03.
- ^ "The Mongoose Case 1936". The BBC under Pressure. BBC. http://www.bbc.co.uk/heritage/in_depth/pressure/mongoose.shtml.
- ^ Lambert, Richard Stanton (1940). Ariel and All His Quality: An Impression of the BBC from Within. Victor Gollancz. p. 216. ISBN 0946976112.
- ^ Carrington, Hereward; Nandor Fodor (2006). Haunted People: The Story of the Poltergeist Down the Centuries. Lightning Source Inc.. ISBN 142548106X.
See also
References
- The Haunting of Cashen's Gap: A Modern "Miracle" Investigated by Harry Price and R.S. Lambert, Methuen & Co. Ltd., hardback, 1936
- Fodor, Nandor (1964). Between Two Worlds. Parker Publishing Company.
- Graves, Robert; Alan Hodge (1941). The Long Week End: A Social History of Great Britain 1918-1939. Macmillan. p. 346.
External links
Categories:- Carnivorous cryptids
- Forteana
- Ghosts
- Talking animals
- Mythological carnivorans
- Legendary mammals
- Talking animals in mythology
- Hoaxes in the United Kingdom
- 20th-century hoaxes
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