Cox, George - Aryan Mythology Vol 2
Cox, George - Aryan Mythology Vol 2
Cox, George - Aryan Mythology Vol 2
VOL.
II.
LONDON: PBINTED BY 8POTTI9WOODE AND CO., NEW-STBEBT 8QUABE AND PABLIA.MENT STBEET
THE MYTHOLOGY
OF
BY
/
GEOEGE
W.
COX, M.A
IN
TWO VOLUMES.
VOL.
II.
LONDON:
CO.
All
rights
reserved.
CONTENTS
THE SECOND VOLUME.
BOOK
CHAPTER
II.
II.continued.
THE LIGHT,
Section VII. APHRODITE.
VI
CONTENTS OF
Section
The Fish-sun
of Narkissos
.
Iamos and Asklepios Ixion and Atlas The Gardens of the Hesperides Hyperion Helios and Phaethon Patroklos and Telemachos The Bondage of Phoibos and Herakles
.
Character of Herakles Herakles and Eurystheus The Lions of Kithairon and Nemea
Repetitions of the
Myth
of neraklc;
The Story
The
of Perseus
.
Journey
Theseus at Athens
Hipponoos Bellerophontes
The Story
of Telephos Twofold Aspect of the Trojan Pari.'The Birth and Infancy of Paris
Vll
PAGE 78
79
81
82
.
82
83
84
Chandragupta Kadmos and Europe Minos and the Minotaur Rhadamanthys and Aiakos Nestor and Sarpedon
.
85 88
88 89
Memnon
the Ethiopian
90
91
94
.
94 95 96 98
Myth wholly without Historical Foundation Utter Impossibility of the Swiss Story
Other Versions of the
Myth
of Tell
102
Section
Emblems
Symbols of Wealth
Gradual Refinement of the Myth Aryan and Semitic Mysteries Real meaning of Tree and Serpent Worship
Worship of Vishnu
Vlll
CONTENTS OF
PAGE 131
131
132
Section
Selene and
Pan
.
16 the Heifer
Argos Panoptes 16 and Prometheus Hekate Artemis The Arkadian and Delian Artemis Artemis Orthia and Tauropola
Iphigeneia and Britomartis
.
142
143 143
145
CHAPTER
III.
GOLDEN FLEECE.
the
The Myth of Stolen Treasure found among all Kepetition of this Myth under different forms The Golden Fleece
The Argonautic Voyage Iason and Medeia
Aryan Nations
147
149 150
152
154
LLHELEN.
155 156 157 159 160 162
163
Wealth of Helen Stealing of Helen and her Treasures Story of Conall Gulban Voyage of the Achaians to Ilion Meleagros and Kleopatra Thetis and Achilleus The womanly Achilleus The Career of Achilleus The Nostoi Odysseus and Autolykos Odysseus and Penelope The womanly Odysseus Odysseus the Wanderer Odysseus and Aiolos The Laistrygonians The Lotos-Eaters Kirke and Kalypso
163
171
171
173
IX
.... .....
CONTEXTS OF
PAGE 208 210
211
Section V.-
XI
Section
IV. PAN.
PAOR
in the
Reeds
Section
Section
VI. AIOL08
.
AND
AEES.
252
253
254
CHAPTER
VI.
THE WATERS.
Section I. THE
DWELLERS IN THE
SEA.
XI
CONTEXTS OF
CHAPTER
VII.
THE CLOUDS.
Section I. THE Phrixos and Helle
273
CLOUDLAND.
274 275 276 278 278
The Phaiakians The Palace of Alkinoos The Fleets of Alkinoos The Phaiakians and Odysseus Niobe and Leto The Cattle of Helios
.
280
The Swan-shaped Phorkides The Muses and the Valkyrien The Swan-shaped Zeus
Inchanted Maidens
282 283
Aktaion
Section
Orion
Seirios
291
CHAPTER
VIII.
THE EARTH
Section
I.
Xlll
ELDEMETEE.
PAGE 29 6
The Story of Persephone Iduna The Stupifying Narcissus The Sleep of Winter The Story of Rapunzel The Lengthening Days The Ill-tempered Princess The Story of Surya Bai The nourishing Earth Holda The Eleusinian Myth Demeter and Iasion Ceres and Saturn
.
298
299 300
301
302
303
303
305
306
306
307
308
Erechtheus
Kekrops
Pelops
Section
Graia
and Ouranos
Shea The Kouretea and Idaioi Daktyloi The Kabeiroi and Korybantes
Section
Priapos
.311
312
.313 .314
315
.316 .318
318
CHAPTER
IX.
The buried Treasure Hades or Aidoneus The Rivers of the Unseen Land
.
319
319
320
Section II.ELYSION.
321
322
XIV
CONTEXTS OF
CHAPTER
X.
THE DARKXESS.
Section I.VRITRA
AND
AHI.
PAGE
The Story
of
Worms
The Stolen Cattle The Blocking-up of Fountains The Stolen Nymphs Ravana and Sit a The Trojan Paris Helen and Penelope Herakles and Echidna
.
.
328
328
329 329
330
332 333 335 336
Orthros
Typhon
Section II. THE
Hercules and Cacus
.
L \TIN MYTH.
337 338 339
The Monster
LeophoDtes
Belleros
341
343
Section
345 347
Section
348
Section
VI.THE GLOAMING
The Phorkides, Graiai, and Gorgons The Night and the Winter Modification of the Myth
.
......
.
.
350
.361 .352
XV
Names
in Vedic
Azidahaka and Zohak Iranian Dualism Its Influence on the Jews The Epic of Firdusi
.... ....
SEMITIC
.
.
353
AND ARYAN
DEVIL.
358 359
361
362
365
APPENDICES.
I.
367
II.
III.
368 369
THE MYTHOLOGY
OF
II.
continued.
THE LIGHT.
Section
VII.APHRODITE.
The
Theogony
is
manifestly a
n Yet it resolves itself almost at the first touch into the early myth- Birth of ical phrases. From the blood of the mutilated Ouranos A P hrodit ewhich fell upon the sea sprang the beautiful goddess who made Ejthera and Kypros her home, as Phoibos dwelt in Lykia and in Delos. This is but saying in other words that the morning, the child of the heaven, springs up first from the sea, as Athene also is born by the water-side. But as Athene became the special embodiment of the keen wisdom which Phoibos alone shared with her, so on Aphrodite, the child of the froth or foam of the sea, was lavished all the wealth of words denoting the loveliness of the morncomparatively late form of the legend of Aphrodite.
-
chap.
1 have already seen, vol. i. p. 358, that Kronos is a mere creation from the older and misunderstood epithet Kronides or Kronion, the ancient of days, but that when these days, or time, had come to be regarded as a person, the myth would certainly follow that he devoured his own children, as time is the devourer
We
of the dawns. So too, as the dawn and the morning are born from the heaven, the mutilation of Ouranos or Kronos would inevitably be suggested. The idea is seen in another form in the splitting of the head of Zeus before the birth of Athene,
VOL
II.
ing
the grass sprung up under her feet as she moved, that Eros,
Love, walked by her side, and Hiineros, Longing, followed At her birth she is not only the beautiful after her.
1
Anadyoniene of Apelles, as the sun whom Selene comes to greet is Endymion, 2 but she is also Enalia and Pontia, the deity of the deep sea. 3 In our Iliad and Odyssey the myth In the former poem Aphrodite is scarcely yet crystallised. is the daughter of Zeus and Dione, in whom was seen the mother of Dionysos after her resurrection. Li the Odyssey she is the wife of Hephaistos, whose love for Ares forms the Here she is attended by subject of the lay of Demodokos. Charites who wash her and anoint her with oil at the Paphos. In the Iliad, however, the wife of Hephaistos is Char is, and thus we are brought back to the old myth in which both Charis and Aphrodite are mere names for the In Charis we have simply the brilliance glistening dawn. produced by fat or ointment, 4 which is seen again in Liparai Athenai, the gleaming city of the morning. In the Vedic hynms this epithet has already passed from the dawn or the sun to the shining steeds which draw their chariot, and the Haris and Harits are the horses of Indra, the sun, and the dawn, as the Rohits are the horses of Agni, the fire. 5
Thus
1
Theog. 194-201.
each its own story, the one denoting uprising from water, as the other denotes the down-plunging into it, the root being found also in the English di ve, and the German taufen. 3 This notion is seen in the strange myth of transformations in which to es* 'ape from Typhon in the war between Zeus and the Titans, Aphrodite, like Phoibos and Onnes, Thetis or Proteus, assumes the form of a fish. Ov. Met.
2
The words
tell
'
v.
331.
With
is
in this instance notion of the vesica piscis as the emblem of generation, and denoting the special The same emfunction of Aphrodite. blematical form is seen in the kostos or cestus of Aphrodite, which answers to the necklace of Harmonia or Eriphyle. This cestus has the ma^ic power of inspiring love, and is used by Here, when she wishes to prevent Zeus from marring
bably mingled
prothat
grow into airy fairy Lilians, so do words and ideas,' and that the Psalmist, does not shrink from even bolder metaphors,' as in Psalm exxxiii. That the root which thus supplied a name for Aphrodite should also be employed to denote gracefulness or charm in general, is strictly natural. Thus the Sanskrit
'
arka is a name not only for the sun, but also for a hymn of praise, while the cognate arkshas denoted the shining
stars.
*
Max
'}
CHAP.
IL
.
Hellenic mythology
is
always human.
With
inent
name
Charis
all
mini-
have gathered round the Charites are in the closest agreeand they do but resolve themselves, somewhat mo;
A^hrodit*
notonously, into expressions denoting the birth of the morning from the heavens or the sky, and the sea or the waters.
Hephaistos
that of
In the Hesiodic Theogony, the Charis who is the wife of is called Aglaia (the shining), whose name is also
Aigle,
Glaukos, and Athene of the bright face In other versions their mother is herself Aigle, who here becomes a wife of Phoibos in others again she is Eurydomene, or Eurynome, names denoting with many others
(Glaukopis).
;
or she
is
Lethe, as
and the bright Dioskouroi spring from the colourless Leda. So too the two Spartan Charites are, like Phaethousa and Lampetie, Klete and Phaenna (the clear and glistening). But beautiful though they all might be, there would yet be room for rivalry or comparison, and thus the story of the judgment of Paris is repeated in the sentence by which Teiresias adjudged the prize of beauty to Kale, the fair. The seer in this case brings on himself a punishment which answers to the ruin caused by the verdict of Paris. 2 As the goddess of the dawn, Aphrodite is endowed with
is
Phoibos
The
a r ws of / f Aphrodite.
1 .
arrows irresistible as those of Phoibos or Achilleus, the ravs 7 J which stream like spears from the flaming sun and are as
fatal to the darkness as the
Polypheinos.
Nay,
spoked wheel, the golden orb at its first rising but she does not share his punishment, for Aphrodite is not seen in the
blazing noontide. 3
1
is
Arjuni, a
Professor MUller, Led. 372. remarks that in Greek the" name Charis never means a horse, and that it never passed through that phase in the mind of the Greek poets which is so familiar in the But the poetry of the Indian bards.' Greek notion, he observes, had at the mind of the Vedic least dawned on the
'
poets, for in one hymn the Harits are called the Sisters, and in another are
represented with beautiful wings, - Sostratos ap. Eustath. ad Horn. p. 166o. Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Horn. Biography, s. v. Charis. 3 Pind, Pyth. iv. 380.
b 2
companion
Her
children.
of Krishna, and the Hellenic Argynnis. Bnt the conception of the morning in the form of Aphro-
none f the severity which marks the character She is the dawn in all her loveliness and splenof Athene. dour, but the dawn not as unsullied by any breath of passion, but as waking all things into life, as the great mother who
preserves and fosters all creatures in whom is the breath of She would thus be associated most closely with those life. forms under which the phenomena of reproduction were uni-
^ g^^g
She would thus be a goddess lavish of her love, most benignant to her closest her smiles and of imitators ; and as the vestals of Athens showed forth the purity of the Zeus-born goddess, so the Hierodouloi of Corinth would exhibit the opposite sentiment, and answer
versally set forth. to the
women who
The former is really Aphrodite Ourania the latter Aphrodite known by the epithet Pandemos. Aphrodite the not all of them is thus the mother of countless children, herself, for the dawn may be relovely and beautiful like
Mylitta.
garded as sprung from the darkness, and the evening (Eos) as the mother of the darkness again. Hence like Echidna and
(fear
the bright Paphian goddess bore to Ares, offspring and Bacchos are her children by Dionysos. while Priapos Nor is her love confined to undying gods. The so-called Homeric hymn tells the story how in the guise of a simple
whom
where the Trojan Anchises was tending his flocks, and how Aineias was born, whom the nymphs loved by the Seilenoi and Hermes the Argos-Slayer
to the folds
war
Aphrodite, as the mother of Aineias, fights on tlie s i c e f iiion, not so much because she has any keen wish for the victory of the one side rather than the other, as because she desires to preserve her child and make him a
In the
Iliad,
fa,ther of
many
nations.
Nowhere
in fact do
we more
clearly
see the disintegration of the earliest myths than in the part which the several deities play in the long struggle before the
1
Hymn
to
Aphrodite, 2o8.
That struggle
is
CHAP
avenge the wrongs and woes of Helen and to end the return in her return to her ancient home in the west, of the beautiful dawnlight, whom the powers of darkness
which
is
to
,!_
had borne away from the western heavens in the evening. It is unnecessary to do more here than to refer to the evidence by which this conclusion may be regarded as proved but it follows hence that not only is the faithless Helen the
tSarama
whom
hymns of the Veda, but Paris is Pani, the cheat and the thief, who steals away and shuts up the light in his secret
form of the myth, Helen is all light and Paris is all blackness and his kinsfolk are the robbers which are associated with the great seducer. Hence we should expect that on the side of the Trojans there would be only the dark and forbidding gods, on the side of the Achaians only those who dwell in the The latter is indeed the case ineffable light of Olympos. Here, the queen of the pure ether, is the zealbut although ous guardian of the Argive hosts, and Athene gives strength
lurking-place.
in the early
strict
;
Thus
and
to the
Odysseus, yet Apollon and Aphrodite are not partakers in their counsels. Throughout, the latter is anxious only for the
and Apollon encourages and comforts the noble and self-devoted Hektor. There was in truth nothing in the old mythical phrases which could render this result
safety of her child,
The victory of the Achaians either impossible or unlikely. might be the victory of the children of the sun over the dark
beings who have deprived them of their brilliant treasure, but there was no reason why on each hero, on either side, there should not rest something of the lustre which sur-
rounds the forms of Phoibos, Herakles, Perseus, and Bellerophon. There might be a hundred myths inwoven into the history of either side, so long as this was done without vioGlaukos must not lating the laws of mythical credibility.
himself take part in the theft of Helen but if local tradition made him a Lykian chief not only in a mythical but also in
:
a o'eographical sense, there was no reason why he should not leave his home to repel the enemies of Priam. Phoibos must
the vengeance of Achilleus is accomplished, she may again perform her own special work for the fallen Hektor. The
and hence body of Hektor had been tied by the feet to though the Achilleus' chariot wheels and trailed in the defiling dust, 2 still all that is unseemly is cleansed away and the beauty of death brought back by Aphrodite, who keeps off" all dogs and anoints him with the ambrosial oil which makes all decay impossible, while Phoibos shrouds the body in a purple mist, It is true that to temper the fierce heat of the midday sun. 3 this kindly office, by which the bodies of Chundun Rajah and Sodewa Bai are preserved in the Hindu fairy tales, is performed for the body of Patroklos by Thetis but Thetis, like Athene and Aphrodite, is herself the child of the waters, and the mother of a child whose bright career and early doom is,
is
;
:
dawn
the subject warrepeating that too great a stress cannot be laid on this passage of the Iliad (xxii. 213). With an unfairness which would be astounding if we failed to remember that Colonel Mure had an hypothesis to maintain which must be maintained at all costs, the author of the Critical History of Greek Literature thought fit to glorify Achilleus and vilify Hektor, on the ground that the latter overcame Patroklos only because he was aided by Phoibos, while the former smote clown Hektor only in fair
1
The importance of
rants
my
any comparison which may turn the balance in favour of either warrior. In neither case are the conditions with which we are dealing the conditions of human life, nor can the heroes be judged by the scales in which mankind must be weighed. Nay, not only does
left for
Phoibos leave Hektor to his own devices, but Athene cheats him into resisting Achilleus, when perhaps his own sober sense would have led him to retreat within the walls. 11. xxii. 231. 2 //. xxii. 396. Yet it has been
gravely asserted that 'Homer knows nothing of any deliberate insults to the body of Hektor, or of any barbarous indignities practised
3
force,
But in point of fact Achilleus cannot slay his antagonist until Phoibos has
upon
it.'
room whatever
is
//.
xxiii.
185-191.
ADONIS.
like that of Meleagros,
brilliant
but short-
CHAP,
v__
lived day.
as bringing
Aphrodite n
A?
In other words, Aphrodite loves Adonis, and pathway. The word Adonis is would have him for ever with her. manifestly Semitic, and the influence of Asiatic thought
may
be readily admitted in the later developements of this myth but the myth itself is one which must be suggested
;
the cultus of
Demeter or Baldur,
ness.
we except
its
go through all the details not one of which, however, later mythographers, of the presents any real discordance with the oldest forms of the Adonis, as denoting the fruitfulness and the fruits legend. of the earth, must spring from its plants, and so the story
It is scarcely necessary to
ran that he was born from the cloven body of his mother
into a tree, as
the cloven head of Zeus. The beautiful babe, anointed by the Naiads with his mother's tears (the dews of spring-time)
Eos fall for her dead son Memnon, was placed in a chest and put into the hands of Persephone, the queen of the underworld, who, marking his wonderful lovelias the tears of
ness, refused to yield
It is
the seeming refusal of the wintry powers to loosen their clutch and let go their hold of the babe which cannot thrive
until it is released from their grasp.
is
not
thus to be
foiled,
and she
who
each year with Persephone, and for with his mother, while the remaining four were to be at In a climate like that of Greece the his own disposal.
myth would
of
Norway
guards
it
up the
jealously
on
the
Heath.
was compelled to spend them in Mflheim. Still the upon him. He must beware of all noxious and biting beasts. The fair summer cannot longer survive the deadly bite of winter than Little Surya Bai the piercing of
that
lie
doom
is
and brave, he is to meet his death bite, which only leaves a life-long mark on the body of Odysseus, brings to an end the dream of Aphrodite. In vain she hastens to stanch the wound. The flowers (the last lingering flowers of autumn) spring up from the nectar which she pours into it, but Adonis the beautiful must die. Once again she carries the tale of her sorrow to Zeus, who grants her some portion of her prayer. Adonis may not, like Memnon or like Sarpedon (for in some versions he also is raised again), dwell always in the halls of Olympos, but for six months in the year he may return
Loki.
fair
in a boar-hunt
and the
to
cheer Aphrodite
is
as,
in
the
Eleusinian legend,
Perlove
sephone
Of the
shepherd,
is
a priest
enough to say that Boutes, the of the dawn-goddess Athene, who, as the
Argonauts approach within hearing of the Seirens, throws himself into the sea, but is saved by Aphrodite and carried
away to Lilybaion.
as that of
Lastly, Aphrodite
may assume
Athene
herself.
of the sky,
is invincible, so Aphrodite, as the child of Ouranos and Hemera, the heaven and the day, has a power which nothing can resist, and the Spartan worshipped her as a conquering goddess clad in armour and possessing the strength which the Athenian poet ascribes to Eros the in-
vincible in battle. 2
to
The Latin Venus is, in strictness of speech, a mere name, which any epithet might be attached according to the conveniences or the needs of the worshipper. The legends which the later poets applied to her are mere importations from Greek mythology, and seem to be wholly unnoticed in
earlier
Soman
1
tradition.
25.
VENUS.
the story of Anchises was followed naturally by other myths
CHAP,
.
from the same source ; the genuine belief of the people, for whom a profusion of With them epithets supplied the place of mythical history.
soil in
it
was enough
to have a
Venus Myrtea
(a
name
of doubtful
origin),
or Cloacina
the purifier,
barbata,
the
bearded,
and a host of others, whose personality to call for any careful distinction. was too vague The name itself has been, it would seem with good reason,
militaris, equestris,
Meaning
6
connected with the Sanskrit root van, to desire, love, or ^Jj^ Thus, in the "Rig Veda, girvanas means loving favour.
invocations,
sacrifices,
while
the
common
woman.
pleasure, the
To the same root belong the Anglo-Saxon wynn, German wonne, and the English winsome. The word Venus, therefore, denotes either love or favour. To the former signification belongs the Latin venustas to
;
the latter the verb veneror, to venerate, in other words, to seek the favour of any one, venia being strictly favour or
permission. 2
oldest,
and
cer-
Oscan deity The myth of Adonis links the legends of Aphrodite with those of Dionysos. Like the Theban wine-god, Adonis is born only on the death of his mother and the two myths are in one version so far the same that Dionysos like Adonis
as the
:
of love in Italy,
Adonis
^J
10 "
is
is
carried
where the body of his mother is buried. But like Memnon and the Syrian Tammuz or Adonis, Semele is raised from the underworld and on her assumption receives
to Brasiai,
the
name
of Dione.
Section
VIII. HERE.
Myths
re-
In the Hellenic mythology Here, in spite of all the majesty with which she is sometimes invested and the power
From cluere = K*uei/, to wash or Most of these epithets lie becleanse. yond the region of mythology. They
1
the birth
of Here.
are mere official names, like Venus Calva, which seemingly has reference to
the practice of devoting to her a lock of the brides hair on the day of marriage, I am indebted for this explanation to Professor Aufrecht through the kindness of Dr. Muir.
sometimes exercised by her, is little more than a being of the same class with Kronos. The same necessity which produced the one evoked the other. Zens mnst have a
which
is
and the name of this father was suggested by the epiIn like manner he must have a and her name must denote her abode in the pure and wife, Accordingly the name Here points to the brilliant ether. Sanskrit svar, the gleaming heaven, and the Zend hvar, the Sanskrit appears in the kindred form Surya, sun, which She is thus strictly the consort of and in Latin as Sol. Zeus, with rather the semblance than the reality of any independent powers. In the Iliad she speaks of herself as the eldest daughter of Kronos, by whom, like the rest of his progeny, she was swallowed, and as having been given by Rheia into the charge of Okeanos and Tethys, who nursed and tended her after Kronos had been dethroned and im2 This myth prisoned by Zeus beneath the earth and sea. passed naturally into many forms, and according to some she was brought up by the daughters of the river Asterion (a phrase which points to the bright blue of heaven coming into sight in the morning over the yet starlit waters), while 3 others gave her as her nurses the beautiful Horai, to whose charge are committed the gates of heaven, the clouds which they scatter from the summits of Olympos and then bring 4 In other words, the revolving seasons all to it again. sustain the beauty and the splendour of the bright ether. When she became the bride of Zeus, she presented him with
father,
5 the golden apples, the glistening clouds of the morning, guarded first by the hundred-headed offspring of Typhon
Welcker, Gricchische Gotterlehre, i. 363, regards the name as a cognate form of epa, earth, and traces it through a large number of words which he supOf this and poses to be akin to it, other explanations, Preller, who refers the name to the Sanskrit sv:u\ says
1
4 In this case we hare the authority of the Iliad itself for an interpretation which would otherwise he probably censured as a violent straining of the text but the office of the gatekeeper of Olympos is expressly stated to be
:
briefly
Die gewohnlichen Erklarongen von %oa, die Erde, oder yon aiip, die Luft, oder-Hpo, d. i. Hera, die Fran, die Herrin schlechthin, lassen sich weder etymologiseh noch dem Sinne nach rechtferti%*: --Gricchische Mythology, i. 124.
'
ImOeiuac
v.
751.
7/
'
v on!
!.
l yaus. n. 13,
,'
3.
*ritaj. Gr. Myth. 374. Jhis myth, which arose from the confusion of the word ^Xov an apple, th a aheap, really only anotner torm of the legend which gave the story of Phaethousa and Lampetie. J r
M^,
HERE AND
ZEUS.
11
and Echidna, and afterwards by Aigle, Erytheia, Hestia and Arethousa, the glistening children of Hesperos, whether in Libya or in the Hyperborean gardens of Atlas. Throughout the Iliad, which makes no mention of this incident, the will of Here, though compelled to submit, is by
1
CHAP,
_^
*
Relations
and Sre.
no means always in harmony with the will of Zeus. The Argives, the children of the bright evening land, are excluand the story of the judgment sively the objects of her love
;
of Paris
favour.
was designed
So the tale went that when the gods were assembled at the marriage board of Thetis and Peleus, Eris flung on the table a golden apple to be given to the fairest The trial which follows before the shepherd of of the fair. Ida (the sun still resting on the slopes of the earth which he
loves) is strictly in
whom,
as
the embodiment of the mere physical loveliness of the dawn (apart from the ideas of wisdom or power underlying the
and Athene), the golden prize is awarded. Henceforth Aphrodite threw in her weight on the side of the Trojans, while Athene and Here gave their But the aid to the kinsfolk or the avengers of Helen. way was not so clear to Zeus as it seemed to be to Here. Hektor himself was the darling of Apollon, and here alone
conceptions of Here
was a reason why Zeus should not be eager to bring about the victory of the Achaians but among the allies of Priam there were others in whose veins his own blood was running,
;
the Aithiopian
Memnon, the
the brave chieftain from the land of light, and, dearest of all,
Sarpedon.
Here at once there were causes of strife between and in these quarrels Here wins her ends partly by appealing to his policy or his fears, or by
Zeus and
his queen,
Only once do we hear of any attempt at force, and this instance is furnished by the conspiracy in which she plots with Poseidon and Athene to make Zeus a prisoner. This scheme is defeated by Thetis and Briareos, and perhaps with
this
may be connected
1
hung up
5,
11.
12
BOOK
II.
Here and
Ixion.
The sun
ether,
be bound to the fiery cross, or whose flaming orb must be made to descend to the west, like the stone of Sisyphos, just
when
Here
Akraia.
it
hill.
Among
she was
known
cities, but which was applied also Athene as denoting the bright sky of morning. Tims viewed she is the mother of Hebe, the embodiment of everlasting youth, the cupbearer of Zeus himself. Here, however, like Athene, has her dark and terrible aspects. From the heaven, spring the gigantic monsters, Thunder Ouranos, and Lightning and as the source of like convulsions, Here is the mother of Ares (Mars), the crusher, and Hephaistos,
1
But her relations to marriage are those which were most prominently brought out in her worship throughout Hellas. She is the wife of Zeus in a sense which could not be applied
to any other of the
offspring
and, apart from the which she produces by her own unaided powers, she has no children of which Zeus is not the father. Hence she was regarded both as* instituting marriage, and punishdeities
;
Olympian
ing those
who
It is she
who
is
sends the
Eileithyiai to aid
1
women, when
their hour
i.
come; and
125.
IDEA OF NECESSITY.
thus she has that power of hastening or retarding a birth which is used to give Eurystheus priority over Herakles.
1
13
CHAP,
.
In these functions she is practically identical with the The But Latin Juno (a name closely akin to that of Zeus). She is the special over marriage. Juno not only presides protectress of women from the cradle to the grave, and as As Moneta, the guardian such, is Matrona and Virginalis.
of the mint, she bears a
Latin
functions
Section
IX.THE ERINYES.
Doctrine
ity>
In the whole cycle of Greek mythology no idea perhaps is more prominent than that of the inevitable doom of toil, sorrow, and suffering which is laid without exception on every one of the heroes, and on all the gods, unless it be For none is there any permanent rest or Zeus himself.
repose.
Phoibos
may
and his glance must be fatal to the maiden whom he loves. Nay, more, he must fight with, and destroy the Kyklopes, the loathsome giants or storm-clouds but these are the children of Zeus, and Phoibos must therefore atone for his deed by a long servitude in the house of Admetos. But on this house there rests the same awful fate. In the midst of all her happiness and wealth Alkestis must die if her husband is to live, and the poet who tells the tale declares in the anguish of his heart that he has searched the heaven above and the
;
sway.
The
history of Phoibos
the history of
all
who
are
of kin to him.
Herakles, with
all his
strength and
spirit,
must still be a slave, and the slave of one infinitely weaker and meaner than himself. Perseus must be torn away from his mother Danae, to go and face strange perils and fight with fearful monsters. He must even unwittingly do harm to others, and his mischief must end in the disorder of his own mind, and the loss of power over his own will. He must
1
Vol.
i.
p.
354.
14
BOOK
show certain dispositions, and do certain acts. The sun must rise in the heavens, must seem to woo the queen of the deep blue ether, must rouse the anger of her lord, must be hurled down from his lofty place. Hence, Ixion must writhe on his fiery cross, and Sisyphos must roll the huge stone to
the hilltop only to see
beneath.
it dash down again to the plain There would not be wanting more terrible crimes
and more mysterious complications. The Sun must be united again in the evening to the mother from whom he was parted in the morning and hence that awful marriage of Oidipous with Iokaste, which filled his house with woe and brought his lineage to an end in blood. Iphigeneia must die that Helen may be brought back, as the evening twilight must vanish away if the light of dawn is to come again. But Iphigeneia has done no wrong. She is the darling of her father's heart, and the memories linked with her image are those only of tenderness and love. Must there not then be vengeance taken for the outpouring of her innocent blood ? And can Ate rest till she has visited on Agamemnon himself
;
Without going further, we have here the germs, and more than the germs, of doctrines which, from the time that these ideas were awakened in the human mind, have moulded the theology of the world the doctrines of irresistible force, of the doom which demands blood for blood, of the destiny which shapes a man's life even before he is born. These doctrines necessarily assume at an early age a moral or a but the ideas which underlie them were spiritual character
of nature. The moral and antagonism between Ormuzd and Ahriman points to the earlier struggle in which Indra fights with and
phenomena
who
hides
and the battle between spiritual good and evil takes form from the war between the light of the Sun and the darkness of the night. But while these ideas were passing more and more into the region of things spiritual, and were becoming crystallized in theological systems, the growth of a physical mythology was not wholly arrested. The vengeance for iniquity may belong
away
15
CHAP,
*
to
them
fearful
so
wor-
and
.^ u
them rather the Eumenides, or merciful beings, to win from them the pity which they were but little supposed to feel. Yet
of them, called
Saranyu, the beautiful morning whose soft light steals across the heaven, and of whom it was said that she would find out
the evil deeds committed during the night, and punish the
wrongdoer.
Still,
may
have been of the nature of the beings whom or venerated, they retained some of their ancient characteristics. Terrible as they might be to others, they had only a genial welcome for the toilworn and suffering Oidipous, the
he thus dreaded
being
who all his life long had struggled against the doom which had pressed heavily on the Argive Herakles. Close
dawn
goddess,
is
their sacred
grove ; and under the shadow blinded Oidipous will tranquilly wait until it is his time to die. Where else can the weary journey come to an end
than amidst the sacred groves in which the Erinyes are seen in the evening, weaving, like Penelope, the magic web which
1
aeixvai deai.
16
BOOK
II.
to be
fail
to speak of
them
as children of Gaia,
sprung from the blood of the mutilated Ouranos, or as the daughters of the night, or of the earth and darkness parentage which will apply with equal truth to Phoibos or
When we are told that, in cases where own power seems inadequate they call in the aid of Dike or Justice, we are manifestly on the confines of allegory, which we are not bound to cross. In the conceptions of later
the Dioskouroi.
their
poets, they appear, like the Gorgons, with writhing snakes
and with blood dripping from their eyes; when their number was limited to three, they received names which, like Allekto, Megaira, and Tisiphone, imply relentless hatred, jealousy, and revenge. Their domain is thus far wider and more terrible than that of the Moirai, who weave, deal out, and cut short the thread of
in place of hair,
and
as naturally,
The Fatal
Sisters.
round the
may be regarded
as thoroughly
artificial.
The
and to invest this which it has to perform. It may be instructive to trace the process by which the single Moira of the Iliad and Odyssey suggests the notion of many Moirai, and is represented by the Hesiodic but the process is sisters, Klotho, Lachesis, and Atropos altogether different from that which, starting with phrases denoting simply the action of wind or air in motion, gives us first the myths of Hermes, Orpheus, Pan, and Ampliion, and ends with the folk-lore of the Master Thief and the Shifty Lad. In the latter case, the mythmaker knew little, probably nothing, of the source and the meaning of the story, and worked in unconscious fidelity to traditions which had taken too strong a root to be lightly dislodged or materially changed. In the former we have the work rather
divisions severally to one personal being,
office
THE FATES.
of the moralist or the theologian.
existence and of all earthly things
of thread,
is
17
CHAP.
IL
work
the
is
and the gods are the spinners of it. Thus this specially set apart to Aisa, the spoken word of Zeus,
of the Latins, or to Moira, the apportioner
is
;
Fatum
for
1
weaving or spinning assigned, and Aisa and Moira are alike the ministers of Zeus to do his will, not the despotic and irresponsible powers before whom, as before the Ananke of Euripides, Zeus himself must bow. Nay, even a mortal may have a certain power over them, and Achilleus may choose either a brief career and a brilliant
this task of
to both alike
home which shall The dualism of the ideas of birth and death would lead us to look for two Moirai in some traditions, and accordingly we find the two at Delphoi, of whom Zeus and Apollon are the leaders and guides. 3 The three Hesiodic Moirai, who are sisters of the Erinyes,
stand him in the stead of glory. 2
are also called the Keres, or masters of the destinies of
men. 4 Of these three one alone is, by her name Klotho, charged with the task of spinning but in some later versions this task is performed by all three nor is the same account always given of their functions with regard to the past, the present, and the future. Commonly Klotho spins the threads,
; ;
the
while Lachesis deals them out, and Atropos severs them at moment of death ; but sometimes Klotho rules over the
and Lachesis over the future."' again, they are sometimes represented in comparative youth, they sometimes appear with all the marks of old age
If,
1
77.
2
3 4
11. ix.
xxiv. 209.
the
*
hammer
habet
digitis,
;
davaroio
the
nypes
ravyXeyeos
to
name belonging
the
same root which has yielded the words Kvpios, Koipovos, and the Latin ereare, (cf. Gr. Kpeiu), creator. The name Moira
answers to that of the Latin Mors, the grinding, crushing power, the fxoTpa Kparcuy of the Iliad. Yet the etymology was not wholly without reason, which connected the word with fxepos, a share or portion, the idea of pieces or fragments being naturally expressed by the root used to denote the working of
Atroquia quod in fuso perfectum est, prseteriti temporis habet speciem; Lachesis futuri, quod etiam illis, quse futura sunt, finem suum Deus dederit. Apuleius, de Mundo, p. 280 Grimm, Deutsche Myth. 386. The Hesiodic poet, in his usual didactic vein, makes the Moirai strictly moral beings who punish the wrong doing, or transgressions, whether of gods or men.
momenti
pos
prseteriti
fatum
est,
Theog. 220.
VOL.
II.
18
BOOK
and thus we come to the Teutonic Norns. The Hellenic Moirai, as knowing what was to befall each man, had necessarily the power of prediction, a characteristic which is the
The Teutonic
Norns.
most prominent attribute of the fatal sisters of the North. These in the German myths are Vurdh, Yerdhandi, and Skuld, names purely arbitrary and artificial, denoting simply that which has been, that which is in process of becoming or is in being, and that which shall be hereafter. Of these names the two last Lave dropped out of English usage, while Vurdh has supplied the name by which the sisters were known to Shakespeare and thus we have the weird sisters whom Macbeth encounters on the desolate heath, the weird elves of Warner's Albion, the Weird Lady of the Woods of the Percy Ballads, 2 the Fatal Sustrin of Chaucer. These Norns, gifted with the wisdom of the Thriai, 3 lead us through all the bounds of space. They are the guardians
1
of the great ash-tree Yggdrasil, whose branches embrace the whole world. Under each of its three roots is a marvellous
fountain, the one in heaven, the abode of the Asas, being the fountain of Vurdh, that of Jotunheim being called by the
of the wise Mimir, while the third in Mflheim, or is the Hvergelmir, or boiling cauldron. At the first the Asas and Norns hold their court ; at the second Mimir
name
Hades,
keeps his ceaseless watch, a being whose name has apparently a meaning closely akin to that of the Latin Minerva, 4 and
1 Vurdh represents the past tense of the word werden. Verdhandi is the present participle, werdend, while Skuld is the older form of Schuld, the obligation to atone for the shedding of blood. Skuld thus represents really the past tense
help Shortshanks, as the three sisters in the tale of Farmer Weathersky, and the three loathly heads in the' story of
Bushy
3
Bride.
skal,
therefore
tion for
'
'
I
to
have
killed,
and
make compensa-
difference between our shall ' and will is thus at once explained. Max Muller, Chips, ii. 62;
'
'
The
Their wisdom is inherited by the bards whose name, Skalds, has been traced by Professor Kuhn to the same root with the Sanskrit Xhandas, metre and Zhandas Professor Max Muller regards as identical with the term Zend. For the evidence of this see Chips, c.
i.
Max Muller, Lectures on Language, second series, 563. The Norns are the Three Spinsters of the German story in Grimm's collection, who perform the tasks which are too hard for the delicate hands of the Dawn-maiden. In the Norse Tales (Dasent) they reappear as the Three Aunts, or the three one-eyed hags, who
84, note.
4
Grimm, who traces the word through many changes, notes also the relation of the Latin mcmor with the Greek lAituEOfxai the mimic being the man who
its
remembers what is done by another; and thus 'mummery' is but another form of memory.' D. Myth. 353. Mimir is thus the Kentaur Mimas and the wisdom of the Kentaur, it may be
'
;
19
to
Wuotan
(Odin)
him a
becomes snow-white, and the dew which falls from the On the crown of the tree tree is always sweet as honey. under its roots lurks the serpent or dragon sits an eagle Mdhogr and between these the squirrel, ever running up and down, seeks to sow dissension. This mighty ash-tree in Grimm's belief is only another form of the colossal Irminsul, the pillar which sustains the whole Kosmos, as Atlas bears up the heaven, the three roads which branch from the one representing the three roots of the other. The tree and the pillar are thus alike seen in the columns, whether of Herakles or of Roland while the cosmogonic character of
by
it
the
myth is manifest
man
Askr,
its
selection, speaks as
stretching
its
down
ISTorns
and defined
their Nemesis
we have
^a
as
hurled out of Olympos for bringing about the birth of Eurystheus before that of Herakles, but who in the hands of iEschylos becomes the righteous but unrelenting avenger of
blood.
The statement that the Litai are beings who follow closely when a crime is done, and seek to make amends for and what is it, is a mere allegory on the office of prayer
;
became a proverb. In one story is sent by the Asas to the Vanir, who cut off his head and sent it back to them. Wuotan utters a charm over it, and the head, which never wastes away, becomes his counsellor a legend which can scarcely fail to remind us of the myth of Memnon's head with its pro-
Mimir
Irmin cannot be identified with the Greek Hermes (Grimm, D. Myth. 328), yet we may compare the Greek kpiiiliov
with the German Irminsul, the pillar or column of Irmin, answering to the Imsls of Hermes fixed on the Hermai at Athens Cf. the note of M. and elsewhere. Breal in Professor Max Midler's Lectures, second series, 474. z See also Max Muller, Chips, ii. 207.
'
0,
20
BOOK
on the one
side
we
have the squalid beggar, on the other the man whose prosperity is so unvarying that his friend, foreseeing the issue, sends to renounce all farther alliance with him. This inequality it is the business of Nemesis to remedy ; and thus
she becomes practically an embodiment of righteous indignation at successful wrong, although she is also regarded as the minister of the gods who are jealous when the well-being In either aspect she of man passes beyond a certain limit.
1
is
Tyche
Akraiii.
whom there is no escape. meaning commonly attached to the word, Tyche denoted the idea of mere blind chance, scattering her gifts
Adrasteia, the being from
In
"the
without any regard to the deserts of those on whom they might fall. But this was not the conception which led some to represent her with a rudder as guiding the affairs of the
world, and not only to place her among the Moirai, but to 2 In her endow her with a power beyond that of the others.
more fickle aspect she carries the ball in her hand, while her wealth and the nature of her gifts are denoted by the horn of Amaltheia at her side, and the boy Eros who accompanies As her, or the Good Demons who sometimes surround her.
Akraia, Tyche becomes simply a name of Athene, the wealthbringer ; with the epithet Agathe, good, she becomes practically identical with the Agathos Daimon, the nameless
benignant deity invoked by cities and individual men. The names Theos and Daimon are often given to those unnamed forces in nature which, in Preller's words, are more felt in 3 JSTor is the their general influences than in particular acts. genuine utterances of the assertion without warrant that the heart were addressed to this incomprehensible power, of whose goodness generally they felt assured, and not to any mythical
on whose capricious feelings no trust could be placed. When the swineherd Eumaios talks with Odysseus, we hear nothino- of Zeus or Phoibos, but we are told simply that the
deities
unnamed God
1
gives
best.
to
which
rb haifxoviov the doctrine the root of the philosophy attributed by Herodotos to Solon, and of the policy of Amasis in his dealings with Polykrates. The myth of the
d>6ovepbi>
lies at
21
CHAP,
IL
.
Nor can we doubt that even the mass of the people were impressed with the belief in a deity or power different in kind
from the mythical deities brought before them by their epic or tragic poets. This deity was simply the good God, or the unknown Being, worshipped ignorantly, whom St. Paul said that he came only to declare to them. Doubtless even this conception underwent many modifications and in the end not only each state or city, but each man and woman, from the
;
_.
moment
to lead
of birth, had a guardian demon or angel who sought them always in the right way. This guardian was in1
voked on
or the
*
all
Quod bonum,
sit
'
of the Latins. 2
Section
The Ionian
Homeric
The Ionian
the simple tale that Leto, the mother of the tKirth unborn Phoibos, could find no place to receive her in her ofPhoibos.
tells
Hymn,
more
cliffs
fertile
lands she
in vain
its
rugged
Delos trembled with joy not unmingled with fear. The unborn child, she knew, would be a being of mighty power, ruling among the undying gods and mortal
hills,
and
men; and
birthplace
and spurn
for
it
sea.
It re-
mained only
Leto to
Delos,
that here should be the sanctuary of her child for ever, and
all lands to his high should lavish on her inexhaustible wealth of gold and treasures. So the troth was plighted ; but although
Dione and Amphitrite with other goddesses were by her side, Here remained far away in the palace of Zeus, and the child of Leto could not be born unless she should suffer Eileithyia
to hasten to her relief.
tall
8a.lfu.wv avdpl ffv(nra.pl<TTa.Tai vdvs yeaofxevcp /xvaTaywybs tov jSi'ou aya66s. jMenander, quoted by Clem.
airavTi
22
BOOK
._
life
IL
The goddesses bathed him in pure water, and wrapping him in a glistening robe, fine and newly wrought, placed a golden band round the body of Chrysaor, while Thetis touched his lips with the drink and food of the p-ods. But no sooner had the child received this nourishment, than he was endowed with an irresistible strength, and his swaddling bands fell off him like flax, as he
earth smiled around her.
men
From
sea.
The
Delphian
This
hymn
as being
when the
at Delos was celebrated with a magnificence which the Lydian and Persian conquests grievously impaired. To the hymn writer Delos is the abode dear above all others to the lord of light; and thither come worshippers whose beauty and vigour would seem beyond the touch of sickness, pain, or The rest of the hymn is manifestly a different poem, death.
the rocky
islet
highest reputation; but the blind old bard of of Chios is well aware that, apart from any
festivals, it is impossible
all
that the
God never
fails to
with ever-increasing delight, as in the old Vedic hymns the Dawn is said to come back with heightened beauty In truth, almost every phrase of the hymn every morning. transparent in its meaning. The name Leto is close akin is
dusky mother of the glorious Dioskouroi, and is in fact another form of the Lethe, in which men forget alike their joys and sorrows, the Latinos in which Endymion sinks into his dreamless sleep, and the Ladon, or lurkingto that of Leda, the
dragon,
But
for
who guards the golden apples of the Hesperides. many a weary hour the night travails with the birth
of the coming day, and her child cannot be born save in the
28
lies
Dawn.
toilsome journey
CHAP,
_ IL
.
and the meaning of the old myth is singularly seen in the unconscious impulse which led the hymn-writer to speak of her as going only to lofty crags and high mountain summits. Plains and valleys it would obviously be useless to seek the light of the sun must rest on the hill tops long before it reaches the dells beneath. In another version, she is said to have been brought in twelve days from the land of the Hyperboreans to Delos in the form of a shewolf, 2 Lukos, a phrase which carries us to the story of Lykaon, and to the interpretation given to the name of the Lykeian Apollon. So again in the Phoinix or palm, round which Leto casts her arms, we have that purple hue of dawn which marks the early home of the children of Agenor and Telephassa. 3 But there were other traditions about his birth. Any word expressing the ideas of light and splendour might be the name of his birthplace and so the tale ran that Apollon and Artemis were both born in Ortygia, the land of the quail, the earliest bird of spring, and thus of the early morning. No mythical incidents were attached to his epithet Lykegenes but this name speaks of him simply as born in that land of light, through which flows the Xanthian or golden stream, and where dwell Sarpedon, the creejring flush of morning, and Glaukos the brilliant, his friend. He 4 is the Phanaian or glistening king, who gave his name to the Chian promontory on which his worshippers assembled
1
to greet him.
In the Delian hymns Apollon soon attains his full might and majesty. Still for a time he lies still and helpless, with a golden band around his body which is clad in white swaddling clothes. These white mists which seem to cling to the rising sun are wrapped more tightly round the Theban Oidipous, and the golden band gives place to the nails which pierce his feet when he is exposed on the heights of Kithairon.
1
The
infant
-
Fhoibos
as account-
ing for a supposed fact connected with the breeding of wolves. Grote, History
of Greece, i. 62. a Europe, the broad spreading dawn, is necessarily the child of the being who
sends her light from afar; and the connection of the purple hue with the birth and early life of the sun is seen not only in the myth of the bird known as the Phenix, but in Phoinix, the teacher and guide of Achilleus in his childhood,
4
Virg. Gcorg.
ii.
98.
24
BOOK
II.
r
'
he slays the dragon which had chased his mother Leto in her wanderings to Delos. The more elaborate legend of the
Hymn
Python
but like the Sphinx, Python is not only the darkness of night, but the black storm-cloud which shuts up the waters, and thus it guards or blockades the fountain which is to 2 In other respects the yield water for the Delphian temple. together in the Homeric hymn later of the two poems woven In both Phoibos is as transparent in meaning as the earlier.
journeys gradually westward ; in both riches and glory are promised to those who will receive him. But the bribe is held out in vain to the beautiful fountain Telphoussa, near
whose waters Phoibos had begun to lay the foundations of a By warnings of the din of horses and of cattle shrine. brought thither to watering she drove him away, and Phoibos following her counsel betook himself to Parnassos, where Trophonios and Agamedes raised his world-renowned home.
It is at this point that the author of the hymn introduces T the slaughter of the w orm or dragon to account for the
name Pytho,
its
1
Python is here called the nurse of Typhaon, the dragon-ehild or monster, to which Here gives birth by her own unaided power, as Athene is the daughter of Zeus alone. Typhaon, one of the many forms of Vritra, Ahi, and
Cacus, stands to Here, the bright goddess of the upper air, in the relation of the Minotauros to the brilliant Pasiphae, wife of Minos. 2 In a Slovakian legend the dragon sleeps in a mountain cave through the winter months, but at the equinox "In a moment the heaven bursts forth. was darkened, and became black as pitch, only illumined by the fire which flashed from the dragon's jaws and eyes. The earth shuddered, the stones rattled down the mountain sides into the glens right and left, left and right, did the dragon lash his tail, overthrowing pines
'
think
it impossible not to see in this description a spring-tide thunderstorm.' Gould, Werewolf, p. 172.
3 The word is connected by Sophokles not with the rotting of the snake but with the questions put to the oracle, The latter is the more plausible conjecturo but the origin of the word is uncertain, as is also that of Apollon, of
;
which Welcker (Griechisehe Gbtterlehre, i. 460) regards Apellon as the genuine form, connecting it in meaning with the
epithets aA.e|iWos, airoTpoiraios, a/ce'cnos, and others. This, however, is probably as doubtful as the derivation which con-
25
CHAP,
,'
,
him
of a bright
home
beside her
The stream was choked by a large crag, the crag beetling over Tantalos, which he toppled down upon it, and the glory departed from Telphoussa for ever. It now remained to find a body of priests and servants for his Delphian sanctuary, and these were furnished by the
glancing waters.
Phoibos
1
1-
Jv
crew of a Cretan ship sailing with merchandise to Pylos. In the guise of a dolphin Phoibos urged the vessel through the waters, while the mariners sat still on the deck in terror as the ship moved on without either sail or oar along the
whole coast of the island of Pelops. As they entered the Krisaian gulf a strong zephyr carried them eastward, till the Then Apollon leaped ship was lifted on the sands of Krisa. like a star, while from him flew sparks of from the vessel light till their radiance reached the heaven, and hastening to his sanctuary he showed forth his weapons in the flames which he kindled. This done, he hastened with the swiftness of thought back to the ship, now in the form of a beautiful youth, with his golden locks flowing over his shoulders, and asked the seamen who they were and whence they came. In their answer, which says that they had been brought to Krisa against their will, they address him at once as a god, and Phoibos tells them that they can hope to see their home, But a higher their wives, and their children again no more. Their name shall be known throughout lot awaits them. the earth as the guardians of Apollon's shrine, and the interpreters of his will. So they follow him to Pytho, while the way filling the air with heavenly melodies. the god leads But once more they are dismayed as they look on the naked crags and sterile rocks around them, and ask how they are The answer is that to live in a land thus dry and barren. they should have all their hearts' desire, if only they would avoid falsehood in words and violence in deed. Such was the legend devised to account for the name and The Fishsun. the founding of the Delphian temple. It is obviously a myth
By Proneets Phoibos with <pws, light. fessor Max Miiller the latter name is identified with the Sanskrit Bhava, a word
belonging to the same family with the Greek cpvcc, the Latin /w, and the English Phoibos is thus the living God. be.
26
BOOK
II.
Translation
of
H.
II.
Wilson,
p. 575.
herself into a duck or who becomes a lily in a hedge, while Roland plays on
;
See vol. i. pp. 165, 400. The story of the Frog-prince agrees closely wi h the Gaelic tale of the Sick Queen (Campbell, ii. 131), for whom none but the Frog can supply the water of life. 3 The power of Phoibos and Protous is shared by Thetis, and again in Grimm's story of Poland, by the maiden, who changes her lover into a lake, and
2
I
like
which makes the witch, the Jew on the thorns, dance till
she drops down dead. The same transformations occur in the stories of FirApple and the Two Kings' Children, in Grimm's collection, and in the Norse tales of Dapplegrim and Farmer
Weathersky.
27
CHAP.
._
.,'
.,
whisper while leaves and waters tremble in the dazzling sunlight bat willing though Phoibos may be to grant the
;
it is
impossible
him
no distinction between Phoibos Both are beings of unimaginable brightness; both have invulnerable weapons and the power of wakening and destroying life both can delight and torment, bring happiness or send scorching plagues and sicknesses both which can never be exhausted; have wealth and treasures both can mar the work which they have made. That each of these qualities might and would furnish groundwork for separate fables, the whole course of Aryan mythology fully shows. Their wisdom would be shown by such words as Sisyphos, Metis, Medeia their healing powers by the names and both these faculties might be Akesios, Soter, Akestor
Essentially, then, there is
Phoibos
Helios,
and Helios.
The alternations of beneficence and malignity would mark them as capricious beings, whose wisdom might degenerate into cunning, and whose riches might make them arrogant and overbearing. But for these things there must be punishments
;
for a host of
strict
accordance
spoke of the sun as scorching up the fruits and waters which he loves would give rise to the stories of Tantalos and
Lykaon the pride of the sun which soars into the highest heaven would be set forth in the legend of Ixion the wisdom which is mere wisdom would be seen in the myths of Sisyphos or Medeia. The phrases which described the sun as revolving daily on his four-spoked cross, or as doomed
;
when
his
There
that
is
Troy,
as
Amphion
as those of Kallimachos and Ovid, describe Apollon as himself inventing the lyre and buildfact,
later versions,
by playing on his
would give rise to the stories of Ixion on his flaming wheel and of Sisyphos with his recoiling stone. If again the sun exhibits an irresistible power, he may also be regarded as a being compelled to do his work, though it be against his own will. He must perform his daily journey he must slay the darkness which is his mother he must be parted from the Dawn which cheered him at his birth and after a few hours he must sink into the darkness from which he had sprung in the morning. His work again may be benignant the earth may laugh beneath his gaze in the wealth of fruits and flowers which he has given her. But these gifts are not for himself; they are lavished on the weak and vile beings called men. These are really his masters, and he must serve them as a bondman until his brief career conies to an end. These ideas lie at the bottom of half the Aryan mythology. They meet us, sometimes again and again, in every legend and it is scarcely possible to arrange in strict method either the numberless forms in which these ideas are clothed, or the stories in which. we find them. The order of the daily phenomena of day and night may furnish the best clue for threading the mazes of the seemingly endless labyrinth. In the myth of Daphne we see the sun as the lover of the Dawn, to whom his embrace is, as it must be, fatal. Whether as the daughter of the Arkadian Ladon or of the Thessalian Peneios, Daphne, or- the Dawn, is the child of the earth springing from the waters when the first flush of But as the beautiful tints light trembles across the sky. the deepening splendour of the sun, so Daphne fade before The more eager flies from Apollon, as he seeks to win her. his chase, the more rapid is her flight, until in her despair
;
1 From the roots ah and dah (to burn), which stand to each other in the relation of as and das (to bite), as in the Sanskrit asrit and the Greek 8a/cpu, a tear, are produced the names Ahana, the Vedic dawn-goddess, and Athene, as well as the Sanskrit Dahana and the These names denote Hellenic Daphne. simply the brightness of morning but the laurel, as wood that burns easily, Afterwards received the same name. the two, as usual, were supposed to be one, or to have some connection with
;
'
each other, for how the people would say could they have the same name ? And hence the story of the transformation of Daphne. Max Miiller, Lectures on Language, second series, 502 Chips, c. ii. 93. The idea of fury or madness was closely connected with that of fire hence the laurel which grew on the tomb of Amykos had the quality of making the crew of a ship quarrel till they threw it overboard. Plin. H.
xvi. 89.
29
CHAP,
grew up on the spot where she disappeared, or that Daphne was changed into the laurel tree, from which Apollon took his incorruptible and glorious wreath. The same fatal pursuit is the burden of the legend of the Like Daphne and Aphrodite Anahuntsman Alpheios. dyomene, he is the child of the waters, whether he be described as a son of Okeanos and Thetis, or of Helios himself. He is in short the Elf, or water-sprite, whose birthplace is the Elbe or flowing stream. But Arethousa must fly from
herself
1
Alpheios
6"
Xrasa.
him
as
Daphne
flies
from Phoibos
to the Syracusan Ortygia, where she sinks into a well with which the waters of Alpheios become united. This is but
Dawnland, where Eos closes as she begins the day, and where the sun again greets the love whom he has lost,
Like spirits that lie In the azure sky, Where they live but love no more. 2
In another version she is aided by Artemis, who, herself also loved by Alpheios, covers her own face and the faces of her companions with mud, and the huntsman departs baflled or, to recur to old phrases, the sun cannot recognise the dawn on whom he gazes, because her beauty is faded and
;
these legends are closely connected the stories of Hippodameia, Atalante, and the Italian Camilla, who become the prize only of those who can overtake them in
gone.
With
fair field
<
in the
German
story,
How Six travelled through the World.' Phoibos himself in the myth of Bolina, who, to escape from his pursuit, threw herself into the sea near the mouth of the
It is
1
repeated of
The
Daphnis
is
simply a weak version of that of Daphne, with some features derived from other myths. Like Telephos, Oidipous, and others, Daphnis is exposed in his infancy and, like Apollon, whose favourite he is, he is tended by nymphs, one of whom (named in one version Lyke, the shining) loves him, and tells him that blindness will be his punishment if he is
;
This blindness is the unfaithful to her. blindness of Oidipous. The sequel is that of the legends of Prokris or Koronis, and the blinded Daphnis falls from a rock (the Leukadian cliff of Kephalos) and is slain. If the sun would but remain with the dawn, the blindness of night would not follow, 2 Shelley, Arethusa.
30
BOOK
^_
Argyros (the
silver stream).
much like
The
EndymiOn.
transparent
myth
parent story of
JSTarkissos.
The former
When
we
find a being, described as a son of Zeus and Kalyke (the heaven and the covering night), or of Aethlios (the man of many struggles), or of Protogeneia (the early dawn), married to Selene (the moon), or to Asterodia (the being whose path is among the stars), we at once see the nature of the problem with which we have to deal, and feel a just confidence that
names in other Greek myths meant which they appear to mean. Thus, when we find that Prokris is a daughter of Herse, we know that whatever Prokris may be, she is the child of the dew, and hence we have solid grounds for connecting her name with
other equally transparent
originally that
it
cannot be ex-
The myth of Entomb was shown in the days of Pausanias), doubtless because it was the westernmost region of the Peloponnesos, just as the Leukadian rocks, the most westerly point of northern Hellas, were assoand when it was once ciated with the name of Kephalos incidents, mostly of little value or localised, fresh names and Thus one significance, were readily imported into the tale. version gave him fifty daughters by Selene, to match the others gave fifty sons and daughters of Danaos and Aigyptos him Neis, Iphianassa, and others as his wives, or made
dymion was
localised in Elis (where his
;
him, under the unconscious influence of the old mythical phrases, the father of Eurydike, the broad flashing dawn,
who
is
In
fact,
the
myth
of
Endymion
little init
has produced rather an idea than a tale. It has cident, and scarcely anything which might entitle
to be
regarded as epical history, for the few adventures ascribed to him by Pausanias 2 have manifestly no connection with the
original legend.
1
The
by an endless
1.
Pausanias
23, 3.
viii.
31
CHAP.
*._
by Pausanias with so many variations as to show that the myth, from its obvious solar character, was too stubborn to be more than thinly disguised. If Endymion heads an army, or dethrones a king, this is the mere arbitrary and pointless fiction of a later age. The real scene of the myth is the land of Latinos, not the Karian hill or cave to which Pausanias made him migrate from Elis, but that western region of the heavens where the wearied The word itself belongs to the sun finds a resting-place. root which has produced the word Lethe, forgetfulness, as well as the names of Leto and Leda, the mothers of Phoibos and the Dioskouroi. The simplest form of the story is perhaps that of Apollodoros, who merely says that Selene loved him and that Zeus left him free to choose anything that he might desire. His choice was an everlasting sleep, in which he might remain youthful for ever. 2 His choice was wiser than that of Eos (the morning or evening light), who obof;
and even
this is related
myth
is
as transparent as
but also the mother of Tithonos, who in one version is a son of Laomedon the Hian king, in another of Kephalos, who woos and sla}r s Prokris. The hidden chamber in which Eos
is the Latmian hill, where more fortunate Endymion lies in his charmed sleep. the Endymion is in short, as his name denotes, simply the sun Looking at the tale setting opposite to the rising moon. by the light which philology and comparative mythology have thus thrown upon it, we may think it incredible that any have held it to be an esoteric method of describing early
1 An address of Ossian to the Setting Sun, which Mr. Campbell (iv. 150) pronounces to be a close translation of Gaelic, assumed to be older than 1730, vividly expresses the idea of this myth:
' '
To gaze on thee beauteous asleep, They witless have fled from thy Take thy sleep within thy cave,
Jo icin g-
side,
the blue distance of heaven ? Sorrowless son of the gold-yellow hair Night's doorways are ready for thee, Thy pavilion of peace in the Wesl The billows came slowly around, To behold him of brightest hair,
Hast
left
Here we have not only the Latmian cave, but the idea which grew into the myths of Memnon, Adonis, and Baldur.
i.
7, .
32
BOOK
>_
,'
.
in
it,
as
sleep. 1
some have discerned, simply a personification of In his father Aethlios, we see one who, like Odysseus,
has suffered much, the struggling and toiling sun, 2 and his own name expresses simply the downward plunge of the sun
into the western waters. 3
is
The whole
idea of
is
Endymion, who
altogether distinct
The story
kissos."
from that of the separate divinity of Phoibos Apollon, to whom he stands in the relation of Gaia to Demeter, or of Nereus to Poseidon. Of the story of Narkissos Pausanias 4 gives two versions, ^ ne former which describes him as wasting away and dyingthrough love of his own face and form reflected in a fountain he rejects on account of the utter absurdity of supposing that Narkissos could not distinguish between a man and his shadow. Hence he prefers the other, but less known, legend, that Narkissos loved his own twin sister, and that on her death he found a melancholy comfort in noting the likeness of his own form and countenance to that of his lost love. But the more common tale that Narkissos was deaf to the
entreaties of the
nymph Echo
is
His
and Roman Biography and Mythology, Endymion ') holds that his name s. v. and all his attributes confirm this opinion. Endymion signifies a being
'
It
iuSvfxa ijAiov
f]\iov
he is called a king because he has power over all living creatures shepherd, because a he slumbers in the cool caves of Mount Latmos, that is, the mount of oblivion.' If it be meant that the sleep here
;
Svcr/xai,
can hardly be questioned that was once the equivalent of and that originally the
sun eVeSu itSvtop, where in the Iliad and Odyssey we have only the simple verb, Had Endymion remained a recognised
personified is the sleep of man, the assertion rests on a very questionable, and if not a very forced, etymology
;
myth of EndyMiiller remarks {Chips, Qc. ii. 80), could not have arisen ; but as its meaning was forgotten, the
for the sunset, the
name
mion, as Professor
Max
the title of king or shepherd no more belongs to the mythical conception, than does his tomb in Elis. But Endvmion is not spoken of as a being who comes over any one else, or as having power over all living creatures, but as one who cannot shake off his own sleep, a sleep so profound that they who are vexed in heart may well envy it.
ZaKwrbs
&v
ifitu
Vnvou
lavcvv
T^7 oT'
i.
p. 393.
'Eudvfilcoy
Theokr.
49.
THE HEALERS.
very
66
CHAP.
name denotes
;
dymion
and hence
is
it
of darkness,
It is
of her capture.
slumber on the Glistening Heath, and drowns Briar Rose and her fellows in a sleep as still as death. From the lot of Endymion, ISTarkissos, and Tithonos,
Apollon
visible
is
iamos and
Asklepios.
sun who
regarded not as the dies when his day's journey is done, but as
is
who
as natural as the other, and we still speak of the tired or the unwearied sun, of his brief career and his everlasting light, without any consciousness of inis
consistency.
Phoibos
is
who can
ever to
He
is
mar.
He
is
and
and destroyer, who can slay and make alive at will, and from whose piercing glance no secret can be kept hid. But although these powers are inseparable from the notion of
Phoibos Apollon, they are also
beings whose united qualities
attributed
separately to
divinity.
;
make up
his full
knowledge of things to come is given to Iamos his healing and life-giving powers to Asklepios. The story
his
Thus
of the latter brings before us another of the countless instances in which the sun
is faithless
is
ration
In every case there must be the sepaand the doom of Koronis only reflects the fate which
to him.
1
life of Daphne and Arethousa, Prokris and The myth is transparent throughout. The
Eilhart, the Russian hero Dobruna Nikitisch, of the Scottish Macduff, of Volsung who yet kissed his mothpr before she died, of Sigurd, and of Sceaf the son of Scild, the child brought in the mysterious skiff, which needs neither sail, rudder, nor oarsmen. Whence came the popular belief attested by such a phrase as that which Grimm quotes from the Chronicle of Pderhoime, de
'
1 The story of the birth of Asklepios agrees substantially with that of Dionyand the legends of other Aryan sos tribes tell the same tale of some of their mythical heroes. Of children so born, Grimm says generally, Ungeborne, d. h. aus dem Mutterleib gesehnittne Kinder pfiegen Helden zu werden,' and adds that this incident marks the stories of the Persian Rustem, the Tristram of
; '
VOL.
II.
34
BOOK
____TJ
.
precisely
Dionysos, Asklepios
flames
;
Like born amidst and rescued from the in other words, the light and heat of the sun which
is
ripen the fruits of the earth, scorch and consume the clouds
and the dew, or banish away the lovely tints of early mornThroughout the myth we have to deal with different ing. 3 versions which, however they may differ from each other, still point to the same fountain-head of mythical speech. In one form the story ran that Koronis herself exposed her child on the slopes of mount Myrtion, as Oidipous was There he is nourished by a goat left to die on Kithairon. and a dog, incidents which are reproduced in the myths of
talibus excisis literse testantur quod, si vita comes fuerit, felices in mundo habeantur?' Deutsche Mythologic, 362. The Teutonic myths must clearly be
which Orpheus vainly yearns to give to Eurydike as she vanishes from his sight,
l
'Pind. Pyth.
iii.
14.
Apollod.
iii.
10, 3.
who
this
compared with that of Hlodr (Lodur), is born with helmet and sword, and
again with the story of Athene, springs fully armed from the forehead of Zeus, a story as transparent These, as that of Phoibos Chrysaor. therefore, are all dawn-children or sons In the latter of the bright heaven. case the forehead of Zeus, the sky, is cloven; in thp former, the body of the dawn. In other words, the dawn dies almost before the sun has had time It is impossible to bid her farewell. not to see in the kiss which Volsung gives to hia dving mother the embrace
who
The Dawn cannot long survive the birth of the sun. Hence the mother of Volsung dies as soon as her child has kissed her. So in Grimm's story of the Almond Tree, the mother of the sunchild, who is as white as snow and as red as blood, is so delighted at seeing her babe that she dies. The same lot is the portion of the mother in the story of Little Snow-white, the Dawn-maiden story which suggests a comparison with the myths of the glass of Agrippa and of the well of Apollon Thyrxis as related by Pausanias.
ASKLEPIOS.
85
CHAP.
1
.
Cyrus and Komulus. When at length the shepherd Aristhanas traced the dog and goat to the spot where the infant
lay,
he was
child,
by the splendour which surrounded the like the flame round the head of the infant Servius in the
terrified
tale.
Roman
abroad, and throughout land and sea the tidings were carried
The
power he received from the teaching of the wise centaur Cheiron but we have to
this
;
mark
who
wisdom and
daylight.
When
way
the
mist-maiden Nephele from whom was born the Kentaur, 2 as the sun in the heights of heaven calls forth the bright clouds
which move
It is difficult not to
reflection of the
mythology a
Vedic Gandharvas,
clouds.
3
who
sunlit
Not only has Indra the Harits (the Greek Charites) morning herself as the bride of the sun
spoken of as a horse, 4 and a hymn addressed to the sunhorse says, ' Yama brought the horse, Trita harnessed him,
ii. To this marvel of the 26, 4. flame was referred his title Aiglaer, the gleaming, which simply reproduces the Lykian epithet of his father Phoibos. The healing powers of Asklepios are seen in the German stories of Grand1
question
de ces divinites, M.
est le
Kuhu a nom du
father
2 8
Pind. Pyih.
80.
Breal, in his masterly analysis of the myth of Oidipous, has no doubt of their identity. M. Adalbert Kuhn,'
'
M.
moment ou il repose parmi les nuees et semble celebrer son union avec elles, et que les Gandharvas sontles nuages qui paraissent chevaucher dans le ciel. Ixion chez les Grecs est le Centaure par excellence, puisqu'il est le pere de cette famille de monstres il correspond au Gandharva vedique.' 4 Professor Max Midler cites the ex-,
:
he says,
dans un de ses plus ingenieux travaitx,amontrel'identite des Centaures et des Gandharvas, ces etres fantastiques, qui juuent dans la mythologie indienne le nieme role que les Centaures chez les
'
Grees.
lis portent le
meme nom
c'est ce
que prouve 1'analyse grammatical des deux mots. Comme les Centaures, les Gandharvas ne forment qu'une seule famille. Ilssontle fruit de l'union du Gandharva avec les Nuees. En examinant les passages vediques ou il est
Saranyu, the of Yaska daughter of Tvashtar, had twins from She placed another Vivasvat, the sun. like her in her place, changed her form into that of a horse, and ran off. Vivasvat the sun likewise assumed the form of a horse, followed her, and embraced her. Hence the two Asvins were born, and the substitute (Savarna) bore Manu.' Lectures on Language, second series, 482. These Asvins are See vol. i. p. 390. &c. the Di'^kouroi.
planation
:
'
36
BOOK
._
**
..
first
rein.' 1
It
sat on him, the Gandharva took hold of his was inevitable that, when the word ceased to be
its
understood in
which seem to stretch in endless ranks to the furthermost abyss of heaven should suggest the notion of a wisdom which Phoibos receives from Zeus but cannot impart in What part of the heaven is there its fulness to Hermes. to which the cloud may not wander ? what secret is there in nature which Cheirou cannot lay bare ? There were, howone of which asserted that Asklepios wrought his wonderful cures through the blood cf Gorgo, while another related of him the story which is assigned elsewhere to Polyidos the son of Koiranos. 2 But like almost all the other beings to whose kindred he belonged, Asklepios
ever, other traditions,
The doom of Patroklos and Achilleus, must soon die. Sarpedon and Memnon, was upon him also. Either Zeus feared that men, once possessed of the secret of Asklepios, might conquer death altogether, or Plouton complained that and the thunderbolt his kingdom would be left desolate which crushed Phaethon smote down the benignant son of Phoibos, and the sun-god in his vengeance slew the Kyklopes,
;
The
stories
and Atlas
But throughout Hellas Asklepios remained the healer and the restorer of life, and accordingly the serpent is everywhere his special emblem, as the mythology of the Linga would lead us to expect. 4 The myth of Ixion exhibits the sun as bound to the fourspoked wheel which is whirled round everlastingly in the In that of Sisyphos we see the same being condemned sky. 5
1
Max
515.
2
Apollod.
10,
3,
and
iii.
3,
1.
is
8e<r uoi\ Pind. Tyth. wheel reappears in the Gaelic story of the Widow and her Daughters, Campbell, ii. 265, and in
TerpaKva/xov
ii.
80.
This
that of the Snake Leaves, and reappears in Hindu as well as in Teutonic fairy tales. See vol. i. p. 160. s Apollod. iii. 10, 4. Diod. iv. 71. In the Iliad, Asklepios is simply the blameless healer, who is the father of Machaon and Podaleirios, the wise physicians, who accompany the Acbaians to Ilion. These are descendants of
Grimm's German tale of the Iron Stove. The treasure-house of Ixion, which none
may
like
blood, reappears in a vast of popular stories, and is the foundation of the story of Bluebeard,
gold
or
number
xii.
of this chapter.
sequel of the Gaelic tale already mentioned represents Grimm's legend of the Feather Bird.
collection.
Compare Grimm's
the
Woodcutter's
Child
in
The
37
summit of a
hill
CHAP.
II.
from which
it
immediately
rolls
down.
by means of punishment, is found also in the myth of Atlas, a name which like that of Tantalos denotes endurance and suffering, and so passes into the notion of arrogance or presumption. But the idea of a being who supported the heaven above the earth, as of a being who guides the horses
of the sun, was
awakened
is
in the
human mind
Indeed,
it
long before
regarded as a penalty.
can scarcely
which says of Atlas that he knows all the depths of the sea and that he holds or guards the lofty pillars which keep the It is scarcely proheaven from falling to crush the earth. minent even when the Hesiodic poet speaks of him as doing his work under a strong necessity, for this is no more than the force which compels Phoibos to leave Delos for Pytho, and carries Kephalos, Bellerophon, and Odysseus to their doom in the far west. Nor in either of these poems is there
1
anything to warrant the inference that the poet regarded This idea comes up in the myth of Perseus, who sees the old man bowing beneath his fearful
Atlas as a mountain.
and holding the Gorgon's face before his eyes, turns him into stone and the stone which is to bear up the brazen heaven must needs be a great mountain, whether in Libya or in other regions, for the African Atlas was not the only mounBut the phrase in the Odyssey tain which bore the name. which speaks of him as knowing all the depths of the sea points to a still earlier stage of the myth, in which Atlas was possessed of the wisdom of Phoibos and was probably Phoibos himself. Eegarded thus, the myths which make
load,
;
the Okeanid Pleione his wife and the Pleiades his children, or which give him Aithra for his bride and make her the
be doubted that the Od. i. 54, do not mean that these columns surround the earth, for in this case they must be not only many in number, but it would be obvious to the men of a mythmaking and mythspeaking age, that a being stationed in one spot could not keep up,
1
It can scarcely
words a/Mph
exovcriv,
or hold, or guard, a
number
of pillars
It is at the least certain that not the meaning of the Hesiodic piet, who gives to Atlas a local habitation at the utmost bounds of the earth near the abode of the Hesperides, and makes him bear the heavens on his heads and hands. The Hellenic Atla< is simply the Vedic Skambha, vol. i. p. 388,
earth.
38
BOOK
^__,_L_.
He
is
most beautiful star of the heavens, who appears as the herald of Eos in the morning and is again seen by her side in the
evening.
Lucifer, the
Lightbringer,
The
who
is
Phosphoros,
is
Far away
^ ne
in the west
is
Hespende*.
ever approaches, and where the ambrosial streams flow perpetually by the couch of Zeus,
is
Ahi and Pani, of Geryon, Hence the dragon Ladon guards with them the golden apples which Gaia gave to Here when she became the bride of Zeus, these apples being the golden tinted clouds or herds of Helios, the same word being used to denote both. 2 It remained only to give them names easily supplied by the countless epithets of the morning or evening twilight, and to assign to them a local habitation, which was
darkness which
is
the abode of
Atlas and
found close to the pillars or the mountain of Atlas which bears up the brazen heaven above the earth. Atlas is thus brought into close connection with Helios,
the bright god? the Lat i n g
i
Hyperion.
Odyssey he
is
Theogony, Hyperion becomes his father by the same process which made Zeus the son of Kronos, his mother being
In the former poems he rises every morning light. from a beautiful lake by the deep-flowing stream of Ocean, and having accomplished his journey across the heaven Elsewhere this plunges again into the western waters. lake becomes a magnificent palace, on which poets lavished but this splendid abode is none all their wealth of fancy
broad
;
So transparent are all these names, so many the combinations in which they are presented to us, that even the later mythographers can scarcely have
1
and
been altogether unaware of the sources of the materials with which they haa to
deal.
-
See note
5, p. 10.
HYPERION.
other than the house of Tantalos, the treasury of Ixion, the
palace of Allah-ud-deen in the Arabian tale.
o9
CHAP,
.
Through the
heaven his chariot was borne by gleaming steeds, the Rohits and Harits of the Yeda but his nightly journey from the west to the east is accomplished in a golden cup wrought by Hephaistos, or, as others had it, on a golden bed. But greater than his wealth is his wisdom. He sees and knows all things and thus when Hekate cannot answer her question, Helios
; ;
tells
Demeter
to
an inconsistency when the poet of the Odyssey represents him as not aware of the slaughter of his oxen by
Eurylochos, until the daughters of Neaira bring him the
tidings
;
when
he makes avenged, he will straightway go and shine among the dead. These cattle, which in the Yedic hymns and in most other Greek myths are the beautiful clouds of the Phaiakian land, are
here
(like
number of which and their death is the of the days by the comrades of
each, the
;
The same process which made Helios a son of Hyperion made him also the father of Phaethon. In the Iliad he is Helios Phaethon not less than Helios Hyperion but when the name had come to denote a distinct personality, it served
;
Helios aud
Phaethou
The hypothesis of madness was called in to explain the slaughter of the boy Eunomos by Herakles but it was at the least as reasonable to say that if the sun destroyed the fruits and flowers which his genial warmth had called into life, it must be because some one who had not the skill and the strength of Helios was holding the reins of his chariot. Hence in times of excessive heat or
of the year.
; 1
mena
drought the phrase ran that Phaethon, the mortal son of an undying father, was unable to guide the horses of Helios,
1
This
is
the Conquest.
40
BOOK
v-
while the thunderstorm, which ended the drought and discomfited Vritra and the Sphinx, dealt also the deathblow to
.
sea.
The
fell
tears of the
from the eyes of Zeus on the death of his son Sarpedon, answer to the down-pouring rain which follows the discharge of the
Heliades, his sisters, like the drops which
lightning.
Patroklos
Phaethon, then,
is
with
machos.
a^ n ^ s beauty and
all his
;
would but abstain from this, they would bring him safely to his journey's end but he fails to obey, and is smitten. The parallel between this legend and that of Patroklos is singularly exact. Mr. Grote has remarked the neutral characters and vaguely defined personality both of Patroklos and of Telemachos, and we are justified in laying special stress on the fact that just as Phaethon is allowed to drive the horses of Helios under a strict charge that he shall
story.
;
not touch them with his whip, so Achilleus suffers Patroklos to put on his armour and ascend his chariot under the injunction that so soon as he has driven the Trojans from the ships he is not to attempt to pursue them to the city. Patroklos disobeys the
command and
is
is
slain
by Hektor
but
agony of Achilleus. It is in truth impossible not to see the same weakened reflection of a stronger personality in the Latin Remus the brother of Romulus, in Arjuna the companion of Krishna, in Peirithoos the associate of Theseus, and in all the other mythical instances cited by Cicero as examples of genuine friendship. In the folk-lore of the East these secondaries, represented by faithful John in the Teutonic story, reappear as Luxman in the legend of Ramah, and as Butti in the tale of Vicram Maharajah. Nor can we fail to discern the same idea in the strange story of Absyrtos, the younger and weaker brother of the wise and unscrupulous
Medeia,
who
of Aietes, a vivid
among
ALKESTIS.
in isolated patches
41
on the sea seems to set bounds to the CHAP, way before the conqueror _ ,J
Hera "
The slaughter of the Kyklopes brought on Phoibos the sentence of a year's servitude and thus we have in the myth
;
The bondphoibos
j^s
less
weighs down Herakles through his whole career, and is only prominent in the mythical histories of Perseus, Theseus, and other heroes, who, like Achilleus, tight in a quarrel which The master whom is not of their own choosing or making.
1
Phoibos serves
is
one between
whom
is
no such with Eurystheus. He is no hard exacter of tasks set in mere caprice to tax his servant's strength to the utmost but he is well content to have under his roof one who, like the Brownie of modern superstition, has brought with him health and
;
contrariety of will as
marks the
relations of Herakles
wealth and
One thing alone is wanting, all good things. even Phoibos cannot grant him. It is the life of Alkestis, the pure, the devoted, the self-sacrificing, for it had been told to Admetos that he might escape death, if only his
and
this
parents or his wife would die in his stead, and Alkestis has
herself. 2
Thus
summoned by Thanatos, death, to leave her home and children, and to cross with him the gloomy stream
which separates the land of the living from the regions of the dead; and although Phoibos intercedes for a short respite, the gloomy being whose debtor she is lays his icy hands upon her and will not let her go until the mighty Herakles grapples with him, and having by main force rescued her from his grasp, brings her back to Admetos. Such is the story told by Euripides, a story in which the character of
Herakles
is
Hymn
to
Hermes.
We
see in
it
main
features of the
cognate legends.
It is
man
for,
of the sun as a bondInca to deny his pretension to be the doer of all things;
The thought
if
he were
free,
Inea, like a tied beast who goes ever round and round in the same track.' Max Midler, Chips, $c. ii. 113. s Hence the connection of the name with that of Alkmene or of (Athene)
He
is,
said
the
Alalkomene.
42
BOOK
II.
myth
of Orpheus
only in this, that he must go and seek for her himself. In the one story the serpent stings and causes the death of
Eurydike
in the
other,
when Admetos
enters his
bridal
on the bed a
knot of twisted snakes, the omen of the grief that is coming. But although Alkestis may die, death cannot retain dominion over her and thus we have again the story of the simple
;
dawn
or twilight,
who
is
the bride
if the sun himself is to live on and gladden the world with his light, must die, if she herself is to live again and stand before her husband in all
At
myth
of
Admetos stops
Odyssey leaves the chief, after his toil is ended, with the faithful Penelope, although it hints at a coming separation which is to end in death. The legend of Admetos carries on the tale a step further, and the vanishing
of Eurydike just as she reaches the earth
is
the vanishing
Alpheios, or
it
of
is
Character
of Herakles.
the death of Prokris slain by the unwitting Kephalos. But this idea of servitude which is thus kept in the back-
ground in the myths of Apollon serves as the links which all the phases and scenes of the life of He is throughout the toiling, suffering hero, who Herakles. is never to reap any fruit of his labour, and who can be cheered even by the presence and the love of Iole, only when the fiery garment is eating deep into his flesh. When this idea once became prominent, a series of tasks and of successful achievements of these tasks was the inevitable sequel. What is there which the sun-god in his majesty and power
connect together
cannot accomplish?
What
is
It mattered not
whither or against what foes Eurystheus might send him he must assuredly return triumphant over every adversary.
On
stem would grow up a wealth of stories which mythographers might arrange according to any system suggested by their fancy, or which might be modified to suit any passing whim or local tradition and association and so
this fruitful
;
43
CHAP.
II.
we remember
most convenient way of dealing with the endless series of legends, all of them more or less transparent, and all pointing
who
soil.
out with unmistakeable clearness the character of the hero is the greatest representation of Indra on Hellenic
From first to last, his action is as beneficent to the children of men as it is fatal to the enemies of light, and the child who strangles in his cradle the deadly snakes of darkness grows
up into the irresistible hero whom no danger can daunt and no difficulties can baffle. The immense number of exploits attributed to him, the arrangement of which seems to have afforded a special delight to more recent my thographers, would lead us to expect a large variety of traditions modified by local associations. To go through them all would be an endless and an unproand we may safely accept the notices of the fitable task Homeric and lyric poets as the more genuine forms of the myth. Like Phoibos, Hermes, Dionysos, and others, he is a son of Zeus, born, as some said, in brilliant Argos, or as With him is born others related, in the Boiotian Thebes. brother Iphikles, the son so the tale went of his twin Amphitryon and thus the child of the mortal father stands to the son of the undying king of Olympos in the relation
;
Herakles
'J^ the^.
of Phaethon to Helios, of Patroklos to Achilleus, or of Telemachos to the chieftain of Ithaka. The subjection of the
hero to his kinsman was brought about by the folly of Zeus, who, on the day of his birth, boasted himself as the father of
one who was to rule over all the house of Perseus. Here thereupon, urged on by Ate, the spirit of mischief, made him swear that the child that day to be bom of his lineage should be this ruler, and summoning the Eileithyiai bade them see So that Eurystheus came into the world before Herakles. wroth was Zeus when Here told him that the good man Eurystheus must, according to his oath, be king of Argos, that he seized Ate by the hair of her head, and swearing that she
should never again darken the courts of heaven, hurled her from Olympos. Thus the weaker came to be tyrant over the stronger but when the mythographers had systematized his
;
44
BOOK
s_
,'
-,
made a compact by which Herakles should become immortal when he had brought his
The
story of his birth
but of an infancy as troubled as that of Telephos or Oidipous. Like them, Alkmene, favouring the jealousy of Here, exposed
the babe on the plain which thence received the
name
of
Herakles
Athene,
nourish
and it
is
who
it.
The
and Here
;
flings it
back to
Athene,
who
the model of
and his teachers Autowrestle and to lykos and Eurytos, by whom he is taught to shoot with the bow, denote the light and splendour of morning Kastor, who shows him how to fight in heavy
strength and power
;
human
armour,
is
swering to the Yedic Asvins or horsemen and Linos, who teaches him music, is akin to Hermes, Pan, Orpheus, and
is slain
way
him to tend cattle, and in this task, which other myths is performed by Sarama or the daughters of
he
lives until
JSTeiara,
full
strength of
youth.
Thus far we have a time answering to the bright period in which Phoibos is tended by the nymphs in his infancy, when his face is unsoiled, and his raiment all white, and his terrible sword is not yet belted to his side. It is the
picture of the unclouded sun rising in pure splendour, seeing
the heavens which he must climb, and ready for the conflicts
which may await him gloomy mists and angry stormclouds. The moral aspect which this myth may be made to assume must be that of self-denial. The smooth road of indulgence he who takes the rugged is the easiest on which to travel path of duty must do so from deliberate choice and thus
; ;
the brave Herakles, going forth to his long series of labours, suggests to the sophist Prodikos the beautiful apologue in
'
Diod.
iv. 9.
45
CITAP.
human
action.
The apologue
and truth, and there is manifestly no harm in such applications of myths when the myths themselves The images of are not strained or distorted in the process. for the good of others, are proself-restraint, of power used minent in the lives of all or almost all the Zeus-born heroes but these are not their only aspects, and it is as necessary to remember that other myths told of Herakles can no more be reconciled with this standard of generous self-devotion than the conduct of Odysseus as he approaches the Seirens' island
of beauty
;
with the Christian duty of resisting temptation. With this high heroic temper Herakles sets forth for his The lions first great fight with the lion of Kithairon, and whether from airfaAnd
its
Nemean
lion's skin
with which he is seen so commonly represented, and which reappears in the jackal's skin in the story of the The myth of the fifty daughters enchanted Hindoo rajah. of Thestios or Thespios, which in some versions is con1
first
great exploit,
fifty
is
fifty
children
whom
Asterodia
It
is
many
in
With this lion's skin must he compared the fish-skin with which the sungod is represented in the characters of Proteus and Onnes or Dagon, and which might he worn hy Phoibos DelWith the later, it is simply a phinios. sign of the sun as rising like Aphrodite from the sea; the lion's skin may denote perhaps the raiment of tawny cloud which the sun seems to trail behind him as he fights his way through the vapours whom he is said to overcome. See vol. i. In his chapters on Ancient p. 135.
Faiths avd Lrr/r?uJs, 31. Maury enters at length into the physiological questions which on the Euemeristic hypothesis must be connected with the myth of the Nemean Lion. However conclusive his arguments may be, the inquiry is almost It cannot be necessary superfluous. to disprove the existence of lions in the Peloponnese, unless we must also disprove that of the Sphinx or the Chimaira. 8 See p. 30.
4G
BOOK
II.
Neoptolemos, the child of Achilleus, the brilliant but shortlived sun, and by Odysseus, whom Athene restores to youthful
beauty as his life's labour draws towards its end. But we have no historical evidence that poisoned arrows were used by any Hellenic tribes, or that they would not have regarded the employment of such weapons with the utmost horror.
then comes it to pass that the poets of the Iliad and Odyssey can attribute to the Achaian heroes practices from which their kinsmen would have shrunk with disgust ? The mystery is easily solved. The equivocation which turned the violet-tinted rays of morning into spears was inevitable
;
How
and necessary. 2
is
As
the
first
great
and Kerberos.
exploit,
This story
is
is
and Agamedes,
the father of Trophonios the builders of the the myth of the I)elphian shrine children of darkness raising the sanctuary of the, lord of light answering to the legend which makes Apollon himself the child of (Leto) the sombre night. 2 The word 16s, iov, which furnished a name for the violet hue, for a spear,
1
Erginos
by Indra.
Max
Miiller, Chips,
ii.
and
for poison, is
to
really a
homonym
;
182, 188.
traceable
and
47
CHAP.
,
tell
rJ
On this framework was built an elaborate superstructure, which we need not examine closely, but of which some at
least of the details are significant.
The slaughter
of the
Kentaurs by Herakles, for which he needed purification before descending to Hades, is the conquest and dispersion
of the vapours by the sun as he rises in the heaven ; and the crime of Herakles is only another form of that of Ixion. As
he returns to the upper world he rescues Theseus, himself one of the great solar heroes, and the child of Aithra, the pure air; but Peirithoos must remain behind, as Patroklos must die even though he be the friend of Achilleus. The dog of Yama thus brought back is, of course, carried down
again by Herakles to the nether world. But the sun as he rises in the heaven acquires a fiercer The madpower and thus Apollon becomes Ohrysaor, and Herakles herakles.
;
becomes mad.
the
fruits of
which burns up
slays his
own
of Iphikles.
At
this point
he
represented by some as
asking the Pythian priestess where he should make his abode, and as receiving from her, instead of his former title, Alkaios or Alkides, the sturdy, the name of Herakles, the
heavenly. 2
As such, he is the avenger of the fraud of Laomedon, who had refused to pay the promised recompense to Poseidon and Phoibos for building his walls and tending his As in the case of Kepheus or of Oineus, the offended flocks. deities send a monster to ravage the fields of Hion, and Laomedon promises to bestow his immortal horses on any one who will slay it. But again he breaks his oath, by giving
mortal steeds to Herakles
1
when the
Od.
xi.
626
U.
viii.
369.
The
here speaks of Zeus as mad, hard of heart, a blunderer, and an obstacle in her path.
-
between Athene and Zens which Mr. Gladstone is anxious to keep as much Athene as possible in the background.
is
the
same as
denoting
48
MYTHOLOGY OF
TITE
ARYAN NATIONS.
BOOK
v
,1
The result is the first Trojan war mentioned in the Iliad, which relates how Herakles, coming with six ships and few men, shattered its towers and left its streets desolate. In other words, Herakles is mightier than Agamemnon he is the sun-god demanding his own recompense the Achaians
1 ;
:
among whom
and the treasures which have been stolen with her from the west.
Orthros
Of the other
number
and
Hydra
it is sprung and Ahi, the throttling snake of darkness, and it is as surely slain by Herakles as the snakes which had assaulted him in the cradle. Another child of the same horrid parents is the Lernaian Hydra, its very name denoting a monster who, like the Sphinx or the Panis, shuts up the waters and causes drought. It has many heads, one being immortal, as the storm must constantly supply new clouds while the vapours are driven off by the sun into space. Hence the story went that although Herakles could burn away its mortal heads, as the sun burns up the clouds, still he can but hide away the mist or vapour itself, which at its appointed time must again darken the sky. In this fight he is aided by Iolaos, the son of Iphikles, a name recalling, like that of Iole, the violet-tinted clouds which can be seen only when the face of the heaven is clear of the murky
;
offspring of
thief,
vapours.
rises
Hence it is that Eurystheus is slain when Iolaos from the under world to punish him for demanding from the children of the dawn-goddess Athene the surrender of the Herakleids, who had found among them a congenial home. The stag of Keryneia is, according to some versions, slain, in others only seized by Herakles, who bears it with its golden antlers and brazen feet to Artemis and Phoibos.
'
II. v.
640.
This story
is
put into
as in the
mouth of the Herakleid Tlepolemos when he is about to slay Sarpedon. The other Grute, Hist. Gr. i. 388.
the
Libyan
on Andromeda, the Herakles, of daughter of Kepheus. course, plays the part of Perseus, and is
tale
it
falls
simply repeat the story of The oracle says that a Kepheus. maiden must be given up to the seamonster, and the lot falls on Hesione,
incidents
aided by Athene and the Trojans, who build him a tower to help him in the
fight,
THE MARATHONIAN AND CRETAN BULLS. The light god is angry because he had thus laid hands on an animal sacred to his sister, and thus the stag becomes a cloud crowned with golden tints, and dispersed as the sun
it. The story of the Erymanthian boar is in some accounts transferred from Argos to Thessaly or Phrygia, the monster itself, which Herakles chases through deep snow, being closely akin to the Chimaira slain by Bellerophon.
49
CHAP,
**'
-
pursues
of Indra,
1
In the myth of the Augeian stables Herakles plays the part when he lets loose the waters imprisoned by the Pani. In this case the plague of drought is regarded not
so
in its effects on the health of man as in its on nature generally, in the disorder, decay, unseemliness, and filth which must follow from it. The clouds,
influence
much
may move across the sky, but they drop down no water on the earth, and do nothing towards lessening the evil. Of these clouds Augeias prohere the cattle of Augeias,
if
he can
Laomedon, refuses
to
The task is done, but Augeias, abide by his bargain, and even
defeats Herakles and his companions in a narrow Eleian gorge. But the victory of Augeias is fatal to himself, and
with Kteatos and Eurytos he is slain by Herakles. The myth of the Cretan bull seems to involve a confusion The Marasimilar to that which has led some to identify the serpent t^"" who is regarded as an object of love and affection in the
1
Phallic worship, with the serpent who is always an object of mere aversion and disgust. 2 The bull which bears Europe from the Phoinikian land is obviously the bull Indra, which, like the sun, traverses the heaven, bearing the dawn from the east to the west. But the Cretan bull, like his fellow in the
city of the
1
Gnossian labyrinth, who devours the tribute children from the dawn-goddess, is a dark and malignant monster
Gaelic story of the Battle of the Birds, of which Mr. Campbell (Tales of Ike West Highlands, i. 61) says that 'it might have been taken from classical mythology if it stood alone, but Norwegian peasants and West Highlanders could not so twist the story of Hercules into the same shape.' 8 See section xii. of this chapter.
This exploit, in the Norse story of is performed by the prince, who finds that, unless he guides
the Mastermaid,
the pitchfork aright, ten pitchforks full of filth come in for every one that he
which recalls the growth of the heads of the Lernaian Hydra. This myth is repeated in the
tosses out, an incident
tale of the
Two
Stepsisters,
and
in the
VOL.
II.
50
BOOK
.
who
fj:
said,
makes
he
mad
is
home on
his back,
who
go again, and it reappears as the bull Marathon, till it is slain by the hands of Theseus, who is the slayer also of the Minotauros. The clouds and vapours pursued and conquered by the hero
compelled to
ravages the
are seen again in the mares of Diomedes, which consume their
master and are thus rendered tame, perhaps as the isolated clouds are unable to resist the sun when the moisture which
has produced them has been subdued.
bling those
of the
They appear
also as
men and beasts. These birds, had taken refuge in the Stymphalian lake, because they were afraid of the wolves a phrase which exhibits the
human
flesh or destroyers of
it is said,
dark storm-clouds as dreading the rays (Lykoi) of the sun, which can only appear when themselves have been defeated.
cattle stolen
by Ge-
myth
of which the
legend of Cacus exhibits the most striking and probably Nor is the legend of the golden the most genuine form.
Hesperides anything more than a same idea, being itself, as we have seen, a result of the same kind of equivocation which produced the myths of Lykaon, Arktouros, and Kallisto.
apples guarded by the
repetition of the
The
lyte.
girdle
LPP"
In the girdle of Hippolyte we have one of those mysterious emblems which are associated with the Linga in the worship of Vishnu. It is the magic kestos of Aphrodite and the
wreath of the Kadmeian Harmonia. Into the myth which rehow Herakles became its possessor, the mythographers have introduced a series of incidents, some of which do not belong to it, while others merely repeat each other. Thus,
lated
of the bright being against the roaring monsters who are his enemies ; and thus, after he has slain Hippolyte and seized
the girdle, he visits Echidna, a being akin to the beautiful but mysterious Melusina, who throws her spell over Ray-
ARfiS
AND XYKNOSi
51
chap.
IL
.
of Toulouse, and then takes vengeance on the Trojan Laomedon, slaying the bright Sarpedon, who in the Iliad falls by the spear of his descendant Tlepolemos. The narratives of these great exploits, which are commonly
mond
Myths
in-
known
J^J^fe
tlio
significance, legends of
twelve*
Thus, in his
tormented by
labours of Herakles.
the heat of the sun, and shoots his arrows at Helios, who,
admiring his bravery, gives him his golden cup in which to cross the sea. In Kyknos, the son of Ares the grinder or crusher, he encounters an antagonist akin to Cacus, or even
more formidable.
With
his
father
on his
fiery
and the
altar
It is the
of
and lighting up
fire.
streams of deadly
such a foe none but Herakles and his faithful Iolaos would But the son of Alkinene is journeying dare to make a stand.
to Trachis,
must
and Kyknos, whose chariot blocks up the road, up the path or die. On the challenge of Herakles a furious conflict ensues, in which we see the spears of Indra hurled against his hateful enemy. The crash of the thunder rolls through the heaven, and the big thunderdrops fall from
yield
the sky. 1
At
last
Kyknos
is slain,
whom
cannot slay him. Ares is indeed not the passing storm, but the power from whom these storms come he is that head of the Lernaian hydra which cannot die, and thus he escapes
:
with a thigh wound, while the body of Kyknos, stripped of In Autaios 2 Heraits glittering armour, is buried by Keyx.
Asp. HeraH. 384. Antaios, the uncouth awkward giant, may be fairly taken as a type of the Teutonic Troll, in whom is combined the unsightliness of Folyphemos with the stupiditv which, tolerably characteristic of the Kyklops, is brought out still
1
clearly in the Teutonic devil. "Whether in Greek, Hindu, or other mythology, these monsters are generally outwitted, and hence nothing is gained by hypotheses which see in these Trolls
more
the aboriginal inhabitants who had not wit enough to hold their ground against
e 2
52
BOOK
_
name
latter,
of Polyphe-
Herakles
m}
tcs
the Libyan monster is a son of the sea-god the black storm-vapour which draws to itself new strength from the earth on which Hence Herakles cannot overcome him until he it reposes. lifts him off the earth and strangles him in the expanse of heaven, as the sun cannot burn up and disperse the vapours until his heat has lifted them up above the surface of the land. The fiercer heats of summer may, as we have seen, suggest a ^ ano ^ ner hand less firm than that of ea no ^ on ty * ne
Like the
draw too near the earth, has been smitten with madness, and but that Helios himself cares not whether in his fury he slays those whom he has
Helios
is
most loved and cherished. The latter idea runs through the myths of the raging Herakles, and thus, when he has won
daughter of Eurytos as the prize for success in fulfil the compact because a who has killed one bride and her offspring may repeat being and thus he is parted from Iole at the very the crime
Iole the
moment
of winning her.
Daphne,
Prokris, or Arethousa, with this difference only that the legend of Iole belongs to the middle heats of summer. But
Herakles
cattle of
may not be injured with impunity. The beautiful Eurytos are feeding like those of Helios in the pas-
morning
suspected of driving them away, as the tinted clouds of tide vanish before the sun. His friend Iphitos
when he
recovering the lost cattle, the angry hero turns on his friend and slays him. The friendship of Herakles is as fatal to
the new invaders of the land, and who therefore betook themselves to the mountains. It is of the very essence of the myths of Indra, Herakles, Bellerophontes, Perseus, or any other lightborn heroes, that they should be victorious over the enemies opposed to them, and that these enemies should appear in horrible shapes which yet are not so formidable as they seem in other words, they cannot stand against the hero
;
we need say is that they become more stupid as we go further north. The
Kyklops of the Odyssey is not quite such a fool as the Troll who slits his stomach that he may eat the more, because Boots who ate a match with the Troll' and has made a slit in the scrip which he carries under his chin, assures him that the pain is nothing to speak of. The giant in the story of the Valiant Tailor (Grimm) is cheated much in the
'
whose
insignificant
stature
and mean
All that
same
fashion,
53
Incident
is
now
CHAP,
crowded on incident, all Herakles apIt is the time of the wild simoom. proaches the sanctuary of Phoibos, but the Pythia will yield no answer to his questions, and a contest follows between Herakles and Phoibos himself, which is ended only when
idea.
Zeus sunders them by a flash of lightning. When thus for is told that he can be loosed from and again become sound in mind only by conhis madness
the time discomfited, he
senting to serve for a time as a
which makes Apollon serve in the house of Admetos, and which made Herakles all his life long the slave of a mean He is now sold to tyrant, is again brought into the story. Omphale (the correlative of Omphalos), and assumes something like the guise of the half- feminine Dionysos. But even
with this story of subjection a vast number of exploits are interwoven, among these being the slaying of a serpent on the river Sygaris and the hunting of the Kalydonian boar.
The tale of his return from the conquest of Hion presents Herakles and Auge the same scenes under slightly different colours. In his fight with the Meropes he is assailed by a shower of stones,
another thundereven wounded by Chalkodon, the fight with Ares and Kyknos and the storm recalling same battle of the elements comes before us in the next task which Athene sets him, of fighting with the giants in the
'
and
is
burning fields of Phlegrai. These giants, it had been foretold, were to be conquered by a mortal man, a notion which takes another form in the surprise of Polyphemos when he finds himself outwitted by so small and insignificant a being At this point, after his return to Argos, some as Odysseus. mythographers place his marriage with Auge, the mother
of Telephos, whose
Perseus.
story reproduces that of Oidipous or
His union with Deianeira, the daughter of the Kalydonian Heraklea n scenes of his troubled and D /ianira tumultuous career. The name points, as we have seen, to
chief, brings us to the closing
the darkness which was to be his portion at the ending of His his journey, and here also his evil fate pursues him.
spear
is fatal
to the boy
Eunomos,
as
it
had been
to the
54
,J
BOOK
'
him during
his sickness
but the
hero lies in
ambush, like the sun lurking behind the clouds while his rays are ready to burst forth like spears, and having slain some of his enemies, advances and takes the city of Elis, making Phyleus king in place of Augeias, whom he slays together with his children. When at length the evening of his life was come, Deianeira received the tidings that her husband was returning in triumph from the Euboian Oichalia, not alone, but bringing with him the beautiful Iole, whom he had loved since the hour when he
first
prize.
put the shaft to his bow in the contest for that splendid Now he had slain her father, as Perseus slew Akrisios
and as Oidipous smote down Laios, and the maiden herself was coming to grace his home. Then the words of Nessos come back to the memory of the forsaken wife, who steeps in his blood the white garment which at the bidding of HeraThe hero is about kles Lichas comes to fetch from Trachis. to offer his sacrifice to the Kenaian Zeus, and he wishes to
offer it
the
fair
not to
up in peace, clad in a seemly robe of pure white, with and gentle Iole standing by his side. But so it is Scarcely has he put on the robe which Lichas be.
55
CHAP,
-
,'
on fire, when he shall have laid himself down upon it. Only the shepherd Poias ventures to do the hero's will but when the flame is kindled, the thunder crashes through the heaven, and a cloud comes down which bears him away to Olympos, there to dwell in everlasting youth with the radiant Hebe as his bride. It is a myth in which looms a magpile
:
'
nificent sunset,'
the forked flames as they leap from the smoke of the kindled wood being the blood-red vapours which
It is the reverse of
all the brightness of early youth, knowing indeed that the night
must come, yet blessed in the profound calm which has followed the storms and troubles of the past. It is the picture
of a sunset in wild confusion, the multitude of clouds hurry-
now
hiding,
now
revealing the
manmore
is
none
is
Iole
Herakles. 3
1 There was no reason why the myth should stop short here; and the cycle already so many times repeated is carried on by making Herakles and Hebe the parents of Alexiares and Aniketos, names which again denote the irresistible strength and the benignant nature of the parent whose blood flows The name Alexiares in their veins. belongs to the same class with Alexiwhich Herakles shares kakos, an epithet with Zeus and Apollon, along with Daphnephoros, Olympios, Pangenetor,
and
2
3
others.
Max
Miiller,
ib. ii.
Chips,
ii.
89.
Max
It
Miiller,
88.
never wearied and never dying, but as journeying by the Ocean stream after sun-down to the spot whence he comes again into sight in the morning. Hence in the Orphic hymns he is self-born, the wanderer along the path of light (Lykabas) in which he performs his mighty exploits between the rising and the setting of the sun. He is of many shapes, he devours all things and produces all things, he slays and he heals, Eound his head he bears the Morning and the Night (xii.), and as living through the hours of darkness he wears a robe of stars {a,<npoxiru)v
s \,
was easy
to think of
Herakles as
The Latin
Of the Latin Hercules we need say but little here. The most prominent myth connected with the name in eomparatively recent times is that of the punishment of Cacus for stealing the oxen of the hero and this story must be taken
;
along with the other legends which reproduce the great contest between the powers of light and darkness set forth in
the primitive
myth
of India
and Ahi.
is
The god
;
or hero of
whom
certainly the
but, as
same
in
Alkmene
Mebuhr
not of the genuine Latin Hercules or Herculus, a deity who was the guardian of boundaries, like
told
from the
first
name and
that of Herakles.
like
genuine mythology, the story of the Potitii and Pinarii being, a thousand others, a mere institutional legend, to account
Still less is
it
between the Hellenic Herakles and Herodotos or other writers speak as the Herakles of Egypt or other countries. By their own admisand the sion their names at least had nothing in common the Greek hero and the Egyptian Som, Chon, affinity between
likeness or
difference
the deities of
whom
must be one of attributes only. It is, indeed, obvious that go where we will, we must find the outlines, at least, of the picture into which the Greek mind crowded such an astonishing variety of life and action. The sun, as toiling
or Makeris,
for others,
not for himself, as serving beings who are as noown strength and splendour, as
is
his
bride, as faithful or fickle in his loves, as gentle or furious in his course, could not fail to be the subject of phrases which, as
their original meaning grew fainter, must suggest the images wrought up with lavish but somewhat undiscerning zeal into
Not
less
certainly
would these stories exhibit him u ider forms varying indefinitely from the most exalted majesty to the coarsest bur-
57
CHAP.
He might be the devoted youth, going forth like Sintram to fight against all mean pleasures, or the kindly giant who almost plays the part of a buffoon in the house of the sorrowing Admetos. Between the Herakles of Prodikos
lesque.
and that of Euripides there was room for a vast variety of it was easy to number the heroes bearing this name by tens or by hundreds. The obvious resemblances between these deities would lead the Greeks to identify their own god with the Egyptian deity, and suggest to the Egyptians the thought of upholding their own mythology as the
colouring, and thus
sole source or fountain of that of Hellas.
is
bound up with
Repe1
*
of
tf
many
The myth might have stopped short with the death of the hero but a new cycle is, as we have seen, begun when Hebe becomes the mother of his children in Olympos, and Herakles, it is said, had in his last moments charged his son Hyllus on earth to marry the The ever-moving wheels, in short, may not beautiful Iole. The children of the sun may return as conquerors in tarry. the morning, bringing with them the radiant woman who with her treasures had been stolen away in the evening. After long toils and weary conflicts they may succeed in bearing her back to her ancient home, as Perseus bears Danae to Argos but not less certainly must the triumph of the powers of darkness come round again, and the sun-children Thus was framed be driven from their rightful heritage. that woful tale of expulsion and dreary banishment, of efforts
historic annals of Greece.
; ;
to return many times defeated but at last successful, which make up the mythical history of the descendants of Herakles. But the phenomena which rendered their expulsion necessary
it is at Athens alone and from the children of the dawn- goddess that the Herakleids can be sheltered from Thus we find their enemies, who press them on every side. ourselves in a cycle of myths which might be repeated at will,
58
BOOK
._ IL
were repeated many times in the so-called preand which doubtless would have repeated again and again, had not the magic series been been cut short by the dawn of the historical sense and the
fact
rise of
The
story of Perseus.
In the Argive tradition the myth of Perseus is made to embrace the whole legend of Herakles, the mightiest and the most widely known of all the mythical heroes of the Greeks. It is as belonging to the race of Perseus, and as being by the
Here brought into the world before his cousin, that Eurystheus becomes the tyrant of Herakles. Yet the story of Perseus is essentially the same as the story of his more and the profound unconsciousness of illustrious descendant the Argives that the two narratives are in their groundwork identical is a singular illustration of the extent to which men can have all their critical faculties lulled to sleep by
arts of
;
mere difference of names or of local colouring in legends which are only modifications of a single myth. In either case we have a hero whose life, beginning in disasters, is a long
undertaken at the behest of one who is in and who comes triumphantly out of these fearful ordeals, because he is armed with the invincible weapons of the dawn, the sun, and the winds. Nor is there perhaps a single feature or incident in the whole myth to which a parallel is not furnished by other Hellenic, or even
series of labours
every
way
his inferior,
other Argive, legends. Before his birth, Akrisios, his mother's father, learns at Delphoi, like the Theban Laios, that if his
daughter has a child, that child will be his destroyer. At once then he orders that Danae shall be shut up in a brazen tower, an imprisonment answering to that of Persephone in the land of Hades, or of Brynhild in Niflheim. But here, as with them, a deliverer
is
wanted
and
the lord of the life-giving ether, who had wooed Leda in the form of the white swan, the spotless cloud, and who now
enters the
dungeon of Danae
ing rays which herald the approach of spring with its new Thus in his mother's dreary life for the trees and flowers.
prison-house the golden child
1
is
born
and Akrisios
in his
XpvaSirarpos, the
Gold Child,
in
Grimm's
DANAE AND
DIKTYS.
59
CHAP,
re-
wrath decrees that his daughter and her babe shall share the doom of Oidipous and Dionysos. Like Semele, she is placed with the infant in a chest or ark, which is thrust out into the sea, and carried by the waves and tide to the island of Seriphos, where the vessel is seen by Diktys, who of course is fishing, and by him Danae and her child are taken
to
the house of his brother Polydektes, the chief of the island, a myth which we have to compare with those of
Artemis Diktynna and Persephone. Throughout the story, Diktys is the kindly being whose heart is filled with pity for the sorrowing mother, while Polydektes, a name identical with that of Hades Polydegmon, is her unrelenting perseHe is thus a champion of the lord of light, which is cutor. reflected in his name as in that of Diktynna and the Diktaian
cave in Crete
cisely the
;
is
pre-
same as in the other. Polydektes now tries all his win Danae, and his efforts at once recall the temptation of Sarama by Pani but Danae is true to her child and to his father, and Polydektes resolves to be rid of the youth who stands thus in his way. So, like Eurystheus, he sends him away with a strict charge that he is not to return unless he brings with him the Gorgon's head, the sight of which can freeze every living being into stone. Thus the dawn is parted from her son, for Phoibos himself must leave his He starts mother Leto and begin his westward journey. alone, and as he thinks unbefriended, but with the high and
arts to
;
1
which marks the youthful Herakles in the apologue of Prodikos, and heavenly beings come to his aid From as Arete promises to strengthen the son of Alkmene. the dawn-goddess, Athene, he receives the mirror into which
generous
spirit
he is to gaze when he draws his sword to smite the mortal Gorgon, the fiend of darkness from Hermes he obtains the sword which never falls in vain and the Nymphs bring him the bag in which he is to carry away the head of Medousa, the tarn-kappe or invisible helmet of Hades, and the golden sandals which will bear him along as swiftly as a dream, in other words, the golden chariot of Helios, or the armour of
;
1 If Niebuhr is right in connecting together the names Daunos, Danaos, Lavinus, Lakinus, Latinus, &c, the
name Danae is only another form of Ahana and Athene, of Dahana and Daphne See vol. i. p. 242.
'
which bears him up as a bird upon the wing. He is now the Chrysaor, armed for the battle and ready for his journey and like the sun, he may veil himself in clouds when he wishes not to be seen. But he cannot reach the
Achilleus,
;
Gorgon's den until he has first passed the home of the Graiai, the land of the gloaming, whose solitary eye and tooth he refuses to restore until they have pointed out the road which shall bring him to his journey's end. In other words, the sun must go through the twilight-land before he
can pierce the regions of utter darkness and reappear in the beautiful gardens of the Hyperboreans, the asphodel meadows of the tinted heavens of morning. When at length his task is done, and he turns to go to the upper world, the
Gorgon
up
in fury,
and
him
is
going on in which he
is
;
The stormcloud
seeking
in other
dawn and
words, the Libyan dragon seeks to make Andromeda his prey, as the maiden stands motionless on the rock to which she has been fastened. The monster is soon destroyed, as the
and the awful Sphinx is soon discomfited by Oidipous power of the Gorgon's glance is seen in the death of Phineus, and in the merciful ending of the long labours of Atlas. But the great work remains yet to be done, the avenging of the wrongs of Danae,. as the Achaians fought to avenge the The vengeance of Perseus must griefs and woes of Helen.
;
be as terrible as that of Achilleus or the stern chieftain of Ithaka. But when Polydektes and his abettors have been turned into stone and Diktys made king of the land, Perseus
yields
up
his
departs with his mother to the old home in Argos. Once more Danae treads her native soil, as Helen graces the halls
of Menelaos
when
But the
doom pronounced by the Delphian priestess was still unsooner hears that Perseus is fulfilled ; and Akrisios no
coming than he
him, not as a
flies
to Larissa.
foe,
61
CHAP.
**'
.
.
The
sequel
is
and shame for the death of Akrisios drive him to abandon his Argive sovereignty for that of Tiryns, where his kinsman Megapenthes is king. In the latter, he may be compared with Bellerophon wandering in gloom and loneliness through the Aleian plain in the former we have the tranquil time which follows the great vengeance of Achilleus and Odysseus. Thus as the unwilling destroyer even of those whom he loves, as the conqueror of monstrous beasts and serpents, as toiling for a mean and cruel master, yet as coming forth in the end
;
is
and the counterpart of Herakles. He is himself born in Argos the bright land, as Phoibos springs to life in Delos or Artemis in Ortygia but his mother Danae is almost as neutral and colourless as Leto or Iokaste or Hekabe or
father
;
Semele. The Argive tradition runs in a circle, and the Athenian myth, jealously prized as a wholly independent history, is made up of the same materials. The practical identity of the Athenian legend of Theseus and the Argive
Another had been specially fixed on the task of tracing out such resemblances, would very keen powers of criticism have been needed to show that the same process might be applied to the legends of all the Hellenic tribes. The myth of Theseus is indeed more transparent than that of his two great kinsmen. As Perseus is the son of the
Herakles
;
nor, if attention
Birth and
Theseus,
Theseus the child of Aithra, the pure air and if in one version he is said to be a son of Aigeus, king of Athens, in another he is called a son of Poseidon, as Athene
golden shower, so
is
but ; Aigeus himself is only Poseidon under a name denoting the dash of the waves on the shore, and when Apollodoros speaks
is
1
E.
ix.
411;
xyi. 685.
62
BOOK
_
IL
we
are
still
the island of Skyros seems tohave in the same magic 1 been noted especially for the worship of the Ionian Poseidon. In some of its earlier incidents the myth carries ns to the story
circle, for
As he grows up his mother tells him before him so soon as he could lift the
great stone beneath which lay his father's sword and sandals, the sword and sandals which Perseus had worn when he went to the Gorgons' land. Thus gaining these prizes as
started on
The
six
exploits of
he fights with and overcomes robbers, murderers, dragons, and other monsters. Like some of them, also, he Like them, he is the terror not is capricious and faithless. only of evil men but of the gods of the underworld. At his birth Poseidon gave to his son the three wishes w}1 i c i1 appear again and again in Teutonic folk-lore, and
sometimes in a ludicrous form. 2
deities is also
journey.
sea-
by Pausanias 3 that when Minos cast doubts on his being a son of Poseidon, and bade him, if he were such, to bring up a ring thrown into the
shown
sea, Theseus dived and reappeared not only with the ring but with a golden crown, which Aphrodite herself had placed upon his head. His journey from Troizen to Athens is signalised by exploits which later mythographers regarded as
number, as twelve were assigned to Herakles. They are all, as we might expect, merely different forms of the great fight waged by Indra and Oidipous against Vritra,
six in
is
the club-
bearing son of Hephaistos, who, being weak in the feet, uses an image of the his weapon to smite down the passers by stormcloud which in a mountain pass seems to rest on the
hill-side,
1
and
to
discharge
its
fiery bolts
Eur. Hipp. 46.
on defenceless
Preller, Gr.
ib.
The Gr. Myth. ii. 287. is manifestly a maseuline form of Pandia, an epithet of Selene, the moon, when at its full.
Preller,
Myth.
name Pandion
ii.
288.
3
i.
16, 3
Preller,
SINIS,
THE PINE-BENDER.
Sinis the robber, or plunderer,
is
63
his
travellers below.
But
kinsman, being like himself a son of Poseidon, and from his name Pityokamptes is the stormwind which bends the pine
trees.
^^
CHAP,
Hence the myth went that he slew his victims by compelling them to bend a fir tree which he allowed to fly back upon them, and that Theseus who caught him in his own trap nevertheless felt that he needed to purify himself
for the
who was also a son of the sea. The same idea gave rise to the myth of Phaia, the dark or ashencoloured sow of Krommyon, who shares the fate of all such monsters, and again to that of Skeiron, who hurls from the
death of one
the travellers whom he has constrained to kneel and wash his feet, and who in his turn is in like manner destroyed by Theseus. In Kerkyon, whose name apparently connects him with the Kerkopes, we have a reflection of Laios, Akrisios, Amulius, and other beings who seek from fear for themcliffs
1
The
The robber Prokroustes is a being of but the myth attached to his name does not explain itself like the rest, and may perhaps have been suggested by the meaning of the word which may denote either
own
art
and
slain.
;
hammering
out, or simply a
down-
In the
would simply be
under another name in the former, the which he fitted the limbs of his victims by stretching them or cutting them off might not unnaturally
Sinis or Periphetes
story of a bed to
spring up.
Theseus now enters the dawn city with a long flowing robe, and with his golden hair tied gracefully behind his head; and his soft beauty excites the mockery of some workmen, who pause in their work of building to jest upon the maiden who is unseemly enough to walk about alone.
It is the story of the
1
Theseus Athens
-
at
hiess
dieser
Pass,
seheint wohl dass dieser Skeiron. ein Bild fur die heftigen Sturme ist, welche den Wanderer von den Skeiron1
Es
Gr. Myth.
ii.
290.
a ;
Theseus bears, and, embracing him as his, bids Medeia depart with her children to her own land. He encounters
foes
more formidable
who
have thrust themselves into the place of Aigeus, as the but by suitors in Ithaka usurp the authority of Odysseus
;
who
is
He
is,
The fields of Marathon are the beginning of his toils. being ravaged by a bull, 3 in whom we see a being akin to the terrible Cretan Minotauros, the malignant power of darkness
hidden away in its labyrinth of stars. In his struggle with this monster he is aided by the prayers and offerings of the benign and aged Hekale, whose eyes are not permitted to look again on the youth whom she has so tenderly loved
myth which brings before us the gentle Telephassa sinking down in utter weariness, before her heart can be gladdened once more by the sight of her child Europe. 4 He has now before him a still harder task. The bull which now fills Athenian hearts with grief and fear has his abode not at Marathon, but at Knossos. In the war waged
by Minos in revenge for the death of his son Androgeos, who had been slain on Attic soil, the Cretan king was the conqueror. 5 With the war had come famine and pestilence
1
Paus.
291.
i.
19, 1
Preller,
Gr. Myth.
ii.
2 These fifty sons of Pallas must be compared with the fifty sons and daughters of iEgyptos, Danaos, Aster-
clearly
images of the starry heavens; and thus the myth of the Pallantides is simply a
story of the night vieing with, or usurping the prerogatives of, the day.
3 In the story of Krishna this bull is animated by the demon Arishta. Vishnu Purana, H. H. Wilson, 536. 4 The name Hekale is the same as TIekate and Hekatos, and thus, like Telephassa, has simply the meaning of rays shot from a distant orb. 5 The myth of Androgeos has many versions. The most important exhibits him as a youth of great beauty and
65
CHAP,
s_
/ _,
is
may
Twice had the black-sailed ship departed from its doomed freight when Theseus offered himself as one of the tribute children, to do battle with the monster. In this task he succeeds only through the aid of Ariadne, as Iason does the bidding of Aietes only because he has the help of Medeia. The thread which the maiden places in his hand leads him through all the mazes of the murky labyrinth, and when the beast is slain, she leaves her home with the man to whom she has given her love. But she herself must share the woes of all who love the bright sun. Beautiful as she is, she must be abandoned in Naxos, while Theseus, like Sigurd, goes upon his way and in his place must come the vine-crowned Dionysos, who shall place on her head a glittering diadem to shine among the everlasting stars. Theseus himself fulfils the doom which
1 ;
places
fatal children.
He
forgets to hoist
the white
black hue of the ship, throws himself into the sea which
bears his name.
In another adventure he
mysterious beings of J
is
it is
Theseus
a nd the
enough to say that thev are J opposed or slaughtered not only by Theseus, but by Herakles, Achilleus, and Bellerophon, and that thus they must be
classed with the other beings in
features of the cloud
city, their
whom
Amazons.
whom
enemy of Indra. Their beauty, their feroseclusion, all harmonise with the phenomena of the
2
and
charged him to slay in other words, he is Patroklos striving to slay an enemy who can be conquered only by
:
of Achilleus for the death of his comrade. This is the work of Daidalos, the cunning smith and in Icelandic Volundurshus, the house of Wayland, means a
'
;
Achilleus; and the war which Minos wages answers to the bloody vengeance
labyrinth. 2 If the name be Greek at all, it seems to suggest a comparison with and the story of the cutting &deK<pos
;
VOL.
II.
M
BOOK
II.
away the
clouds.
They
and the friends of his enemies; for Antiope, who is stolen away by Herakles, becomes the bride of Theseus and the mother of Hippolytos, whose story exhibits the action of a moral sentiment which has impressed itself even more deeply on the traditions of Thebes. Hippolytos is to Theseus what Patroklos is to Achilleus, or Phaethon to Helios, the reflection of the sun in all its beauty, but without its strength and power and the love of Phaidra (the gleaming) for the glorious youth is simply the love of Aphrodite for Adonis, and, like that of Aphrodite, it is repulsed. But Phaidra is the wife of Theseus, and thus her love for Hippolytos becomes
1 ;
doubly a crime, while the recoil of her feelings tempts her to follow the example of Anteia in the myth of Bellerophon.
Her
and Hippolytos, going forth under his father's curse, is slain by a bull which Poseidon sends up from the sea, the storm-cloud which Theseus had fought with on the plains of Marathon. But Hippolytos, like Adonis, is a being whom death cannot hold in his power, and Askletrick is successful
;
pios raises
him
to
life,
brought back
nymph Egeria.
is
underworld.
He
is
sail in
the breasts would thus be the result mistaken etymology. It should be added that some see in the name an intensive force which makes it the vielbeequivalent of the German briistete,' and thus identify it with the
of a
'
Ephesian Artemis whose images answer who was description, and to this The Amazon worshipped as Amazo. identified with would thus be further Isis, the horned moon; and her wanderings would follow as a matter of course, With this must as in the myth of 16. be compared the Fortuna Mammosa of
the same form as the Ephesian Artemis. Some have supposed that Tacitus meant this deity, when he spoke of German tribes as worshipping Isis others identify the name with the Greek tt0tj. Nork. s. v. Others make Hippolytos a son of Hippolyte, the Amazonian queen, whose girdle Herakles brings to Eurystheus, and who is thus not the enemy of Theseus, as in some versions, but his bride.
:
67
Epigonoi before Thebes. But a more noteworthy myth is that which takes him, like Orpheus, into the nether world to
bring back another Eurydike in the form of the maiden Persephone.
heaven or the Peirithoos proud sun, and Dia, the clear-shining dawn. had already aided Theseus when he took Helen from Sparta and placed her in the hands of his mother Aithra, an act requited in the myth which carries Aithra to Ilion and makes her the handmaid of Helen. The attempt of Peiriin Peirithoos, a son of Zeus or Ixion, the
and Theseus himself is shut up in Hades until Herakles comes to his rescue, as he does also to that of Prometheus,
The presence
men, complicates the story. These carry away Helen and Aithra, and when Theseus comes back from the unseen land, he finds that his stronghold of Aphidnai has been destroyed, He therefore and that Menestheus is king in Athens. sends his sons to Euboia, and hastens to Skyros, where the chief Lykomedes hurls him from a cliff into the sea, a death which Kephalos inflicted upon himself at the Leukadian or White Cape. But though his own life closes in gloom, his children return at length with Aithra from Ilion, and are
restored, like the Herakleids, to their ancient inheritance.
This
is
Demoi
which he rules as a constitutional sovereign, conThere is fining himself strictly to his definite functions. nothing more to be said against the method by which this satisfactory result is obtained than that it may be applied
with equal
profit, if
of
c
_
dides.
Boots and Jack the Giant- Killer. In the Corinthian tradition, Hipponoos, the son of Glauko^
or of Poseidon,
is
Hipponoos
known
J^^J
whom
1 The carrying off of Hippodameia, the bride of Peirithoos, at her weddingfeast, by the drunken Kentaur Eurytion,
f 2
;:
68
BOOK
>_
whom we
much
are
now
whose
Like
features
sea and his career is throughout that of the sun journeying through thunderstorms and clouds. In his youth he attracts the love of Anteia, the wife of Proitos, who on his refusal and deals with him as Phaidra deals with Hippolytos
;
;
him
signs which are to bid Iobates, the Lykian king, to put the messenger to death. The fight with the monster Chimaira which ensues must come before us among the many forms assumed by the struggle between the darkness and the light and in the winged steed Pegasos, on which Bellerophon is mounted, we see the light-crowned cloud soaring with
But although or above the sun into the highest heavens. he returns thus a conqueror, Iobates has other toils still in He must fight with the Amazons and the store for him. Solymoi, and last of all must be assailed by the bravest of the Lykians, who, by the king's orders, lurk in ambush for him. These are all slain by his unerring spear and Hipponoos is welcomed once more to the house of Proitos. But
;
the
lies
doom
is
The hatred
of the gods
heavy upon him. Although we are not told the reason, we have not far to seek it. The slaughter of the Kyklopes roused the anger of Zeus against Phoibos the blinding of Polyphemos excited the rage of Poseidon against Od} sseus and these victims of the sun-god are all murky vapours which arise from the sea. The wrath of Athene and Poseidon added sorely to the length and weariness of the wanderings nor could it leave Bellerophon at rest. Like of Odysseus Odysseus, he too must roam through many lands, and thus
:
we
find
him wandering
the paths of men, treading, in other words, that sea of pale ljght in which, after a day of storms, the sun sometimes goes
to break its
monotonous
surface.
When
1 '
Theseus
fur einen
Poseidon, weil die Sonne aus dem Meere Preller, Gr. Myth, ii. 78. uufsteigt.'
bJ
who
king
here.
stands by his
side
to
CHAP,
.
mortal
is
man might
Theseus to her
care,
Hence no sooner is Oidipous born than the decree goes forth that the child must be slain but
be his destroyer.
;
the servant to
whom
he
is
exposing the babe on the slopes of Kithairon, where a shepherd finds him, and carries him, like Cyrus or Romulus,
to his wife,
who
and all things go smoothly until some one at a feast throws out a hint that he To the questions is not the son of his supposed parents. which he is thus driven to put to Merope the answers returned satisfy him for a time, but for a time only. The
the son of Polybos and Merope;
anxious doubts
already, that his
return
and
in
his
utter perplexity he
doom would make him the destroyer of and the husband of his mother. Gloomy and sick at heart, he takes the way towards Thebes, being resolved not to run the risk of killing Polybos (whom he supposed to be his father), if he returned to Corinth, and as he journeys, he falls in with a chariot in which rides an old
his father
man. The servant insolently bids Oidipous to stand aside, and on his refusal the old man strikes at him with his staff. Oidipous thoroughly angered slays both, and goes on his
way, unconscious that he has fulfilled the prediction of Phoibos, the murdered man being Laios the king of Thebes.
Laios
is
thus a being whose nature closely resembles that The career which is the parent of the sun, * ldl
"
and which may be regarded with equal justice as hating its Apart from his fear of the son of offspring or loving it. Iokaste, his character is as neutral as that of the mother of
Phoibos
;
indeed,
we can
scarcely be said to
know anything
70
BOOK
.
tale that he stole away the beautiful Chrysrppos with his golden steeds, as the eagie of Zeus
of
carried Ganyinedes up to Olympos, the latter being an image of the tinted clouds of morning bearing the dawn to the high heaven, the former a picture of the night robbing the sky of its splendour. The story of his cruel treatment of his son was regarded as accounting for the name Oidipous, or Swellfoot, from the tight bandages which hurt his limbs as he lay exposed on Kithairon. The explanation has about the same value as that by which the nurse Eurykleia professed to account to Odysseus for the name which he bore. The sequel of the myth furnished another explanation, to which probably less exception may be taken. When Oidipous drew near to Thebes, he found the city full of misery and mourning. The Sphinx had taken up her abode on a rock which overhung the town, and there sat watching the people as they died of famine and wasting sickness. Only when the man came who could expound her mysterious riddle would she free them of her hateful presence; and so in their perplexity the chiefs of the city had decreed that he who discomfited the monster should be made king and have Iokaste as his bride. Meanwhile the Sphinx sat motionless on the cliff, uttering from time to time the mysterious sounds which conveyed no sense to the ears of mortal men. This dreadful being who shut up the waters is, it may be enough to say here, only another Vritra, and her name has the exact meaning of Ahi, the choking or throttling snake and the hero who answers her riddle may thus not unnatuThus much is rally receive his name from his wisdom. certain, that the son of Laios speaks of himself as knowing nothing when he first drew near to encounter the Sphinx, while afterwards he admits that his name is a familiar word
1
1
M. Breal
name
taken as denoting the touches the horizon, lorsque, par l'effet de vapeurs qui flottent dans les couches ini'erieures de l'atmosphere, il semhle de
be compared with those of Achilleus in the Hellenic mythology, of Baldur and Sigurd in the Teutonic legends, and of Isfendiyar and Eustem in the Persian story. It might, however, he said with
not less truth that the swelling of tho sun has reference to his rising, and to its apparent enlargement at the hase until half its disk becomes visible.
moment
volume.'
au
moment
thinks
inflicted
augmenter
also
lo
He
that
the
wounds thus
on Oidipous must
into existence.
pleased, have
made
Euryganeia, the broad shining dawn, the mother of Antigone and Ismene, of Eteokles and Polyneikes, instead of Iokaste, the violet light, which reappears in the names Iole, Iamos, Undoubtedly the mother of Iolaos, Iasion, and Iobates. Oidipous might be either Euryganeia, Iokaste or Asty-
all
assigned to
to his
him
as his wives
but only
mother and his wife could by giving the same name the moral horrors of the story be developed, and the idea once awakened took too strong a hold on their imagination
to be lightly dislodged.
Thus far the story resolves itself into a few simple phrases, which spoke of the thundercloud as looming over the city from day to day, while the waters remained imprisoned in its gloomy dungeons, like the rock which seemed ever going of the sun as alone being able to to fall on Tantalos, understand her mysterious mutterings and so to defeat her scheme, and of his union with the mother from whom he had been parted in his infancy. The sequel is not less transparent. Iokaste, on learning the sin of which she has unwittingly been guilty, brings her life to an end, and
The
^^
Oidipous tears out the eyes which he declares to be unworthy to look any longer on the things which had thus far
1
Soph.
ib.
8.
Breal,
Le mythe
d'Edijx-, 17.
72
BOOK
II.
him with
delight.
winged steed Pegasos. and blinded, and the story may be compared with the blinding of Samson before he bends the pillars of the temple and brings death and dark2 The feuds and crimes ness on all who are around him. which disgrace his family when he has yielded up his sceptre to his sons are the results of a moral process, and not of the strictly mythical developement which makes him the slayer of Laios, a name which, denoting simply the enmity of the darkness to the light, is found again in Leophontes as an
Bellerophon,
is
epithet of Hipponoos,
Oidipous
who
is also
called Bellerophon. 3
But
if
over
and
Antigone.
him
out
at his birth,
its
not with-
His sons may fill the city with strife and bloodshed his daughter Ismene may waver in her filial allegiance but there yet remains one who will never forsake him, and whose voice shall cheer him in his last hour.
consolation.
;
;
So in the German story of Rapunthe prince, when his bride is torn from him, loses his senses with grief, and springing from the tower (like Kephalos from the Leukadian cliff) falls into thorns which put out his eyes. Thus he wanders blind in the forest (of winter), but the tears of Rapunzel (the tears which Eos sheds on the death of Memn6n) fall on the sightless eyeballs, and his sight is given to him again. In the story of the Two Wanderers (the Dioskouroi or Asvins, the Babes in the Wood) one of the brothers, who is a tailor, and who is thrust out to starve, falls into the hands of a shoemaker who gives him some bread only on condition that ho will consent to lose his eyes his sight is, of course, restored as in the other story. In the story of the Prince who was afraid of Nothing' (the Sigurd of Brynhild), the hero is blinded by a giant, but the lion sprinkling some water on his eyes restores the sight in part, and bathing himself in the stream which he finds near him, the prince necessarily comes out of the water able to In the Nurse Talcs see as well as ever.
1
zel,
(Dasent) Oidipous appears as the blinded brother in the story of True and Untrue, and as the blinded prince in that of the
Blue Belt. 2 In the code of the Lokrian (Epizephyrian) law-giver Zaleukos, the punishment of adulterers is said to have been It is unnecessary to loss of the eyes. say that the evidence for the historical existence of Zaleukos is worth as much and as little as that which is adduced for the historical character of Minos,
Manu,
Lykourgos
and
Numa.
The
story told of Zaleukos himself that he agreed to have one of his own eyes put
out rather than allow his son, who had been convicted of adultery, to lose both his eyes, is a mingling of the myths of the blinded Oidipous and the one-eyed
'
The law by
inflicted
simply
who
is
strictly
of his eyes and the name Zaleukos, the glistening or gleaming, carries us to Apollon Lykios, the Latin Lucius, Lucna, Luna, &c.
3
See Appendix A.
73
CHAP,
._
whom
M. Breal
sees
flushes the eastern sky as the sun sinks to sleep in the west. 1
certainly be
;
dymion or of Echo
of Oidipous, her
for the
life
own
brought about indeed by the despotic cruelty of Kreon ; but the poet could scarcely withstand the force of the feeling, which in accordance with the common phenomena of the heavens bound up the existence of Oinone, Kleopatra, Brynhild, Althaia,
with the
life
of the being
whom
they had
to the
loved and
lost.
But
brought about, there is a time of brief respite in which Oidipous reposes after all the griefs and sorrows which have come upon him, some at the rising of the sun or its setting, some at noonday or when the stars
twinkled out in the sky.
All these had burst as in a deluge
but
to the
;
haven
His feet tread the grass-grown pathway over his head the branches sigh in the evening breeze and when an Athenian in holy horror bids him begone from the sacred grove of the Eumenides, Oidipous replies that their sanctuary can never be violated by him. He is not merely their suppliant, but their friend and they it is who will guide him peacefully through the dark valley of the shadow of
;
death.
some one
before he dies.
make, and this is that Athenian king, to his side realised and we see before us
to
;
perhaps the most striking of all mythical groups, the blinded Oidipous sinking peacefully into his last sleep, as he listens to the voice of the man who rules in the city of the
feels
Breal,
My the
d'Edipc. 21.
74
BOOK
TT
.
,
'
more than ever the loveliness of the Eastern Saranyu. Then comes the signal of departure, that voice of the divine thunder which now, as before, when he encountered the Sphinx, Oidipous alone can understand. Without a murmur he prepares to obey the summons, and with Theseus alone, the son of the sea and air, by his side,
calmly awaits the end. With wonderful fidelity to the old mythical phrases, the poet brings before us a sunset which dazzles the eyes even of the Athenian king, and tells us
of the hero
of disease,
for sickness could not fasten on his glorious form, by no thunderstroke or sea-roused whirlwind, but guided by some heaven-sent messenger, or descending into the kindly earth
where pain and grief may never afflict him more. Well may the poet speak as though he were scarcely telling the story of the death of mortal man. The tomb of Endymion was shown in Elis, and the Cretans pointed to the grave of Zeus but no man could say in what precise spot the bones of Oidipous reposed. It was enough to know that a special blessing would rest on the land which contained his sepulchre and what place could be more meet for this his last abode than the dearest in1
heritance of Athene P
The
lios
story
Me ~
the-
The Theban myth of Oidipous is repeated substantially in Arkadian tradition. As Oidipous is the son of Laios and Iokaste, the darkness and the violet-tinted sky, so is Telephos (who has the same name with Telephassa, the far- shining), the child of Aleos the blind, and Auge the
brilliant
:
and
as Oidipous
is
is left
to die
on the slopes of
Kithairon, so Telephos
There the babe is suckled by a doe, which represents the wolf in the myth of Komulus and the dog of the Persian story of Cyrus, and is afterwards brought up by the Arkadian king Korythos. Like Oidipous, he goes to Delphoi to learn who is his mother, and is there bidden to go to
But thither Auge had gone Teuthras, king of Mysia. before him, and thus in one version Teuthras promised her
to Telephos as his wife, if he
1
his
TELEPHOS AND
PARIS.
75
CHAP,
,'
-
enemy Idas. This service lie performs, and Auge differs from Iokaste only in the steadiness with which she refuses to wed Telephos, although she knows not who he is. Telephos now determines to slay her, bnt Her aides reveals the mother to the child, and like Perseus, Telephos leads his mother back to her own land. In another version he be-
comes the husband not of Auge, but of a daughter of Teuwhose name Argiope shows that she is but Auge under another form. In this tradition he is king of Mysia when the Achaians come to Ilion to avenge the w rongs of Helen, and he resists them with all his power. In the ensuing strife he is smitten by Achilleus, and all efforts to heal the wound are vain. In his misery he betakes himself again to the oracle, and learns that only the man who has inflicted the wouud can heal it. In the end, Agamemnon prevails on Achilleus to undo his own work, and to falsify in the case of Telephos the proverb which made use of his name to The means employed is the describe an incurable wound. an explanation rust of the spear which had pierced him, which turns on the equivocal meaning of the words ios, ion, as denoting rust, poison, an arrow, and the violet colour. As we read the story of Telephos we can scarcely fail to
thras,
x
Twofold
think of the story of the Trojan Paris, for like Telephos Paris ^Trojan is exposed as a babe on the mountain side, and like him he Paris.
receives at the hands of Achilleus a
wound which
is
either
It
myth
of Paris introduced
away of
Helen, and to the time which she spent with him in Ilion
it is really unnecessary to adduce again the evidence which proves that the poets of the Iliad used only those myths or portions of myths which served their immediate Even in what they do tell us about him we discern purpose. that twofold aspect which the process of mythical disintegration would lead us to look for. There is on the one side not the slightest doubt that he is the great malefactor who by taking Helen from Sparta brings the Achaian chiefs to the assault and as Helen is manifestly the Vedic Sarama, the of Troy beautiful light of the morning or the evening, Paris as con-
but
BOOK
veying her to his stronghold is the robber who drives off the shining cattle of Indra to his dungeon. The fight at Troy is thus the struggle of the children of the Sun to recover from the dreary caves of night the treasure of which the darkness
deprived them in the evening in other words, Ilion is the fortress of Yritra or Ahi, and Paris the successful seducer of
;
Helen represents the unsuccessful seducer of Sarama. On the other hand it is not less clear that the character of Paris
in his capriciousness, his
moody
and
so like-
The cause
Achilleus
angry because Briseis is taken away Paris is indignant because he is desired to give up Helen we have therefore simply to distinguish the incidents which exhibit Paris as the dark cheat and plunderer, from the details which ascribe
:
to
solar heroes.
plexity.
If the Trojans as a whole represent the enemies of Indra, we cannot shut our eyes to the fact that many of those chiefs who take his part are heroes whose solar origin
is
beyond
all
question.
On
his side
may
pian Memnon, over whose body the morning weeps tears of dew, and who, rising from the dead, is exalted for ever to the bright halls of Olympos. With them are ranged the chieftains
and assuredly in Glaukos o.f the bright Lykian land Sarpedon we discern not a single point of likeness with and the dark troops of the Panis. There is nothing in the history of mythology which should make this result a matter of
;
poems of the Aryan world are the aggregations of single phrases which have been gradually welded into a coherent narrative and the sayings which spoke of the light as stolen away in the evening from the western sky and carried away to the robber's stronghold far away towards the east, of the children of the light as banding together to go and search out the thief, of their struggle with the seducer and his kinsfolk, of
surprise.
The
the return of the light from the eastern sky back again to its home in the west, were represented by the mythical statements that Paris stole Helen from the Western Sparta
77
CHAP.
11.
Helen roused
the Achaian chiefs to seek out the robber and do battle with
him and his people, and that after a hard fight Helen was rescued from their grasp and brought back to the house But there was a constant and an irresistible of Menelaos.
tendency to invest every local hero with the attributes which are reflected upon Herakles, Theseus, and Perseus from
chiefs
Phoibos and Helios the lords of light ; and the several whose homes were localised in Western Asia would as
Over every
be given to
one of these the poet might throw the rich colours of the
heroic
ideal,
while
also
and sympathies in the portraits of the actors on either side. If Paris was guilty of great crimes, his guilt was not shared by those who would have made him yield up his prey if they could. He might be a thief, but they were fighting for their homes, their wives, and their children and thus in Hektor we have the embodiment of the highest patriotism and the most disinterested self-devotion, a character, in fact, infinitely higher than that of the sensitive, sullen, selfish and savage Achilleus, because it is drawn from human life, and not, like the other, from traditions which rendered such a portrait in his case impossible. Hence between Paris the Ilian hero and the subject of local eastern myths, and Paris in his relations with the Western Achaians, there is a sharp and clear distinction and if in the latter aspect he is simply the Yritra of Hindu mythology, in the former he exhibits all the features prominent in the legends of Herakles, Dionysos, Theseus and Achilleus.
purely
instincts
:
human
Wie Aphrodite unci Helena, so erschien auoh Paris in den Kyprien, ver1
'
unci gross
im Harem,
die geracle
Gegen-
satz zu den
muthlich nach Anleituug ortlicher Traeinem andern Lichte unci als Mittelspunkt eines grosseren Sagencomplexes, weleher gleiehfalls hei den spateren Dichtern und Kunstlern einen lebhaften Anklang gefonden hat. Er ist ganz der Orientalische Held, zugleich mannhaft und weichlich wie Dionysos. wie Sardanapal, wie der Lyditionen, in
Preller,
must
one of
the characteristics (ywai/j.aurjs) by which Paris js specially distinguished, is also See section seen in Indra and Krishna. Nor are Herakles xiii. of this chapter. or Sigurd less treacherous or inconstant
than Paris,
The eastern myth then begins with incidents precisely parallel to those which mark the birth and childhood of
Dionysos, Telephos, Oidipous, Romulus, Perseus, and many Before he is born, there are portents of the ruin others.
people.
is to bring upon his house and His mother Hekabe dreams that her child will be a torch to set Ilion in flames and Priam, like Laios, decrees that the child shall be left to die on the hill side. But the babe lies on the slopes of Ida (the Yedic name for the earth as the bride of Dyaus the sky), and is nourished by a she-
bear.
The
among
the shepherds
and skill in defending them against the attacks of thieves and enemies he is said to have been called Alexandros, the helper of men. In this his and their
flocks,
and
early life he has the love of Oinone, the child of the river-god
Kebren, 2 and thus a being akin to the bright maidens who, Meanlike Athene and Aphrodite, are born from the waters. His mother's while, he had not been forgotten in Ilion.
heart was
still full
of grief,
a solemn sacrifice should be offered to enable his dead son The victim chosen is a to cross the dark stream of Hades.
favourite bull of Paris,
who
follows
it
in indignation, as the
men
In the games now held he puts forth his strength, and is the victor in every contest, even over Hektor. His brothers seek to slay the intruder, but the voice of Kasandra his sister is heard, telling them that this is the
lead
it
away.
very Paris for whose repose they were now about to slay the and the long-lost son is welcomed to his home. victim,
At
myth.
this
When
of Peleus, Eris,
who
golden apple, 3 with the simple inscription that it was a gift Her task of sowing the seeds of strife was for the fairest.
The equivocal meaning of the name Arktos, the bear, has already come before us in the myths of the seven arkand proshas and the seven rishis bably all the animals selected to perform this office of nourishing exposed children will be found to have names which, like
1
;
denote the
is
That
this
name Kebren
probably
the same as Severn, the intermediate forms leave little room for doubting. 3 See Campbell's Tales of the West Highlands, i. lxxxii. &C
THE JUDGMENT OF
clone.
PARIS.
79
CHAP.
,
The golden apple is the golden ball which the Frogprince brings np from the water, the golden egg which the red hen lays in the Teutonic story, the gleaming snn which is born of the morning and the prize is claimed, as it must be claimed, by Here, Athene, and Aphrodite, the queens of heaven and the goddesses of the dawn. For the time the dispute is settled by the words of Zeus, who bids them carry
;
'
them.
near, the shepherd beyond that of all the children of men, is abashed and scared, and it is only after long encouragement that he summons spirit to listen to the rival
is
claims.
him the
he
will
its
men's minds and souls, assures him of renown in war and fame in peace but Paris is unable to resist the laughter;
who tells him that if his verdict is for her he have the fairest bride that ever the world has seen. Henceforth Paris becomes the darling of Aphrodite, but the
loving goddess,
shall
Ilion.
wrath of Here and Athene lies heavy on the doomed city of Fresh fuel was soon to be supplied for the fire. A famine was slaying the people of Sparta, and Menelaos the king learnt at Delphoi that the plague could not cease until an offering should be made to appease the sons of Prometheus, who were buried in Trojan soil. Thus Menelaos came
to Ilion,
whence Paris went with him first to Delphoi, then to The second stage in the work of Eris was reached. The shepherd of Ida was brought face to face with the fairest of all the daughters of men. He came armed with the magic powers of Aphrodite, whose anger had been kindled against Tyndareos, because he had forgotten to make her an offering and so, when Menelaos had departed to Crete and the Dioskouroi were busied in their struggle with
Sparta.
;
who
and
sailed
yielded herself to him with all her with him to Ilion in a bark which
Aphrodite wafted over a peaceful sea. There is scarcely a point in this legend which
fails of
p ar
an d
Helen.
,0
BOOK
_
a parallel in other
IL
stranger,
Aryan myths. The beautiful who beguiles the young wife when her husband is
is seen again in the Arkadian Ischys who takes of Phoibos in the story of Koronis, in the disguised the place Kephalos who returns to win the love of Prokris. The de-
gone away,
the voyage of the sun in his golden cup from west to east when he has reached the and the treasures which Paris takes waters of Okeanos
is
away
life
are the treasures of the Yolsung tale and the Nibelung many versions, the treasures of light and
which are bound up with the glory of morning and evening, the fatal temptation to the marauding chiefs, who in the end are always overcome by the men whom they have wronged. There is absolutely no difference between the quarrel of Paris and Menelaos, and those of Sigurd and Hogni, of Hagene and Walthar of Aquitaine. In each case the representative of the dark power comes in seeming
alliance with the
husband or the lover of the woman who is to be stolen away in other words, the first shades of night thrown across the heaven add only to its beauty and its charm, like Satan clothed as an angel of light. In each
;
case the wealth to be obtained is scarcely less the incitement than the loveliness of Helen, Brynhild, or Kriemhild. Nor must we forget the stress laid in the Iliad on these
Paris leaves none behind Antenor and Hektor embrace the him and the proposals of surrender of these riches not less than that of Helen. The
stolen treasures.
2
;
narrative of the
this
crime belongs
rather to the legend of Achilleus; and the eastern story of Paris is resumed only when, at the sack of Troy, he is
wounded by Philoktetes
in the Skaian or western gates, and from the poisoned wound, hastens to with his blood on fire Ida and his early love. Long ago, before Aphrodite helped
him
which was to take him to Sparta, Oinone had warned him not to approach the house of Menelaos, and when he refused to listen to her counsels she had told him to come to her if hereafter he should be wounded.
to build the fatal ship
But now when he appears before her, resentment for the great wrong done to her by Paris for the moment over1
//. iii.
70, 91.
IAMOS.
love,. and she refuses to heal him. Her anger but for a moment; still when she comes with the healing medicine it is too late, and with him she lies down
81
CHAP,
**
>
masters her
lives
Eos cannot save Memnon from death, though she happier than Oinone, in that she prevails on Zeus to bring her son back from the land of the dead.
to die.
is
1
death
of 0in6n ^-
A happier fate than that of Telephos or Paris attends the Arkadian Iamos, the child of Evadne and Phoibos. Like his father and like Hermes, he is weak and puny at his birth, and Evadne in her misery and shame leaves the child to die. But he is destined for great things, and the office of the dog and wolf in the legends of Cyrus and Romulus is here performed by two dragons, not the horrid snakes which seek to
strangle the infant Herakles, but the glistening creatures
Iamos the
'jjjj?
the chieftain of Phaisana, and the father of Evadne, had learnt at Delphoi that a child of Phoibos had been born who should become
all the seers and prophets of the earth, and he asked all his people where the babe was but none had heard or seen him, for he lay far away amid the thick bushes, with his soft body bathed in the golden and purple rays of
who bear a name of like meaning with that who feed the child with honey. But Aipytos,
of Athene, and
the greatest of
So when he was found, they called him Iamos, and as he grew in years and strength, he ; went down into the Alpheian stream, and prayed to his father that he would glorify his son. Then the voice of Zeus
the violets. 2
the violet child
1
Apollod.
iii.
12, 6.
In this myth Pindar uses the word ios, twice, as denoting in the one case honey, in the other the violet flower, But the phrase which he uses, fiefipeyixh-os aKrtaiv fav (01. \i. 82), leads us to another meaning of ios, which, as a
spear, represents the far-darting rays of the sun and a further equivocation was the result of the other meaning of poison
;
attached to the same word. Hence the poisoned arrows of Aehilleus and Philoktetes.
is
The word as applied to colour traced by Prof. Max Miiller to the root?, as denoting a crying hue, i.e. a loud colour. The story of Iamos is the institutional legend of the Iamidai, on whom Pindar bestows the highest praise alike for their wisdom and their truthfulness.
vol.
ii.
Poseidon was heard, bidding him come to the heights of Olympos, where he should receive the gift of prophecy and the power to understand the voices of the birds. The local legend made him, of course, the soothsayer of the Eleian Olympia, where Herakles had founded the great games. The myth of Pelias and Neleus has the same beginning Their with the stories of Oidipons, Telephos, and Paris. mother Tyro loves the Enipean stream, and thus she becomes the wife of Poseidon in other words, her twin sons Pelias and Neleus are, like Aphrodite and Athene, the children of These Dioskouroi, or sons of Zeus Poseidon, are the waters. and left to die, but a mare suckles the one, a dog the other in due course they avenge the wrongs of Tyro by putting to death. the iron- hearted Sidero, whom her father Salmoneus
;
had married.
tale,
now come
before us so often
is
the
we Groundwork of the great Roman traditions. Here have the Dioskouroi, Romulus and Remus, the children of Like Perseus Mars and the priestess Rhea Ilia or Silvia. Dionysos, the babes are exposed on the waters but a and wolf is drawn to them by their cries, and suckles them until they are found by Acca Larentia, and taken to the house of her husband the shepherd of king Faustulus. There they o-row up renowned for their prowess in all manly exercises,
also
;
all
their youth-
and when at length Remus falls into the of king Amulius, Romulus hastens to his rescue, and hands the tyrant undergoes the doom of Laios and Akrisios. These two brothers bear the same name, for Remus and Romus are and thus a only another and an older form of Romulus
neighbours
;
!
foundation might be furnished for the story of their rivalry, even if this feature were not prominent in the myths of
and Neleus and the Dioskouroi who are the sons of and Leda, as well as in the rivalry of Eos and ProZeus Nor does kris, of Niobe and Leto, of Athene and Medousa. Oidipous less in the close of his life than Romulus resemble
Pelias
1
Hence they
are
mere eponymoi,
like Boiotos,
Orchomenos, &c.
83
CHAP,
.
in the clouds
He is taken away in a thunderstorm, wrapped which are to bear him in a fiery chariot to the
differs
palace of Jupiter.
from the Komulean legend only in the fact that here it has gathered round an unquestionably historical person. But it cannot be too often repeated that from the myth we learn nothing of his history, and his history confers no sort of credibility on the myth. So far as
the latter
is
Cyrus and
&
yd ^
all
that relates to
us, while
all
such
As Laios
Theban myth
is
the enemy,
Dasyu, of the devas or bright gods, so is Astyages only a Grecised form of Asdahag, the Azidahaka or biting snake of
Like
a son,
Mandane has
is
not a torch but a vine which overspreads the whole of Asia, and the babe who is exposed is not the child whom Harpagos delivers to
the herdsman clad in a magnificent golden robe, but the
emblem seen
dead child which happens to be born in the herdsman's house just as he enters it with the doomed son of Mandane. Under this man's roof Cyrus grows up with the true spirit
of kingship, and when he is chosen despot by the village boys in their sport, he plays his part so well that Artembares,
his orders,
The bearing
of the
youth and his apparent age make Astyages think of the babe whose death he had decreed, and an examination of the herdsman justifies his worst fears. On Harpagos, to whom he had in the first instance intrusted the child, he takes an awful vengeance but the magi satisfy him that the election of Cyrus to be king of the village boys fulfils the terms of the prophecy, and that therefore he need have no further fears on his account. Thus Cyrus is suffered to grow up in the palace, and is afterwards sent to his father, the Persian Kambyses. Harpagos thinks that the time is now come for requiting Astyages for his detestable cruelty, and
;
84
BOOK
II.
The sequel
is
an institutional legend, of
story of the setting
much
Dahak
or biter of
The child is difference with that of Cyrus. exposed to great danger in his infancy but it is at the hands, not of his kinsman, but of a tributary chief who has
some points of
;
it is
his
mother who,
relinquishing
him
him
and deposits him at the door of a cattle-pen.' Here a bull named Chando comes to him and guards him, and a herdsman, noting this wonder, takes the child and The mode by which he is subserears him as his own. differs from the Persian story only by the quently discovered substitution of the chopping off of hands and feet instead of This is done by axes made of the horns of goats scourging. for blades, with sticks for handles and the lopped limbs are restored whole at Chandragupta's word when the play is Slightly altered, this story becomes the legend of done. Semiramis, whom her mother the fish-goddess Derketo exposes in her infancy; but she was saved by doves, and like Cyrus, Romulus, and Chandragupta, brought up by a
in a vase,
; 1
shepherd until her beauty attracts Onnes, one of the king's generals, and afterwards makes her the wife of king Ninus
himself,
in
whom
in
order that
she
some versions she presently puts to death, may reign alone, like Eos surviving
Kephalos. 2
1
Max
those countries
Sesostris
is
is silent
on the subject.
Unlike Cyrus and Chandragupta, Ninus and Semiramis are, like Romulus, purely mythical or fabulous beings. 'The name of Ninus is derived from the city: he is the eponymous king and founder of Nineveh, and stands to it in the same relation as Tros to Troy, Modus to Media, Mason to Mseonia, Romulus to
2
Assyria
Rome.
miramis
unreal as those of the characteristic of these fabulous conquerors, that, although they are reported to have overrun and subdued many countries, the history of
Sesostris.
It
doubtless one of those whom he harnessed to his chariot. But the history of Assyria makes no mention of Sesostris. Semiramis is related to have conquered Egypt but the history of Egypt makes no mention of Semiramis.' Sir G. C. Lewis, Astronomy of the Ancients, 408. Romulus is one of seven kings whose chronology is given with great precision but this chronology is throughout, in Niebuhr's trenchant words, a forgery and a fiction.' Hist.
;
'
85
or Arethousa,
The
the
Daphne
CHAP.
Kadmoa
Europe.
Psyche or Urvasi,
myth
scene is region belonging to the same aerial geography with Lykia, Delos, Ortygia, the Arkadia of Kallisto or the Athens of
here laid in
to
name
not long wanting, which asserted that Agenor was born in Tyre or Sidon, or some other spot in the territories of Canaanite tribes. Of these we need take no account, while in
names and incidents generally the myth explains itself. Agenor is the husband of Telephassa, the feminine form of the name Telephos, a word conveying precisely the same meanits
known
epithets
His children are Kadmos, Phoinix, Kilix and Europe, although in some accounts Europe is On this maiden, the broadherself a daughter of Phoinix. light of dawn, Zeus, the heaven, looks down with flushing and the white bull, the spotless cloud, comes to bear love her away to a new home, in Crete, the western land. She becomes the mother of Minos, Ehadamanthys, and Sarpedon. But in the house from which she is thus torn all is grief and sorrow. There can be no more rest until the lost one is found again the sun must journey westwards until he sees again the beautiful tints which greeted his eyes in the mornKadmos therefore is bidden to go in search of his ing. sister, with strict charge never to return unless he finds her. With him goes his mother, and a long and weary pilgrimage brings them at length to the plains of Thessaly, where Telephassa worn out with grief and anguish lies down to die. But Kadmos must journey yet further westward and at Delphoi he learns that he must follow a cow which he would be able to distinguish by certain signs, and where she lay down from weariness, there he must build his city. The cow, doubtless one of the herd to which belong the bull of Europe and the cattle of Helios, lies down on the site of
; ; ;
Rome,
1867,
vol.
p.
i.
Literature
and Art,
s. v.
'
Tabulation of
130
Dictionary
of Science,
Chronology.
>b
BOOK
_
,'
own
people.
men whom he
it
sends to fetch
;
it.
Kadmos
is
He
sows in the
slay each
Thebans. It is the conflict of the clouds which spring up from the earth after the waters have been let loose from the prison-house, and mingle in wild confusion until a few only remain upon the battle-field of the heaven. But if Phoibos
himself paid the penalty for slaying the Kyklopes,
Kadmos
must not the less undergo, like him, a time of bondage, at the end of which Athene makes him king of Thebes, and Zeus gives him Harmonia as his bride. These incidents interpret themselves while the gifts which Kadmos bestowed on Harmonia suggest a comparison with the peplos of Athene and the hangings woven for the Ashera by the Syrian women, as well as with the necklace of Eriphyle, and thus with the circular emblems which reproduce the sign of the Toni. There is but little more worth telling in this Theban legend. The wars in which Kadmos fights are the wars of Kephalos or Theseus, with fewer incidents to mark them and the
; ;
spirit of the
old
myth
is
when
Minos and
the
Mino
taur.
their work here was done, Kadmos and his wife were changed into dragons (like the keen-sighted creatures which draw the chariot of Medeia), and so taken up to Elysion. The children of Europe are more prominent in Hellenic mythology than Kadmos himself. Minos who appears first
1
1 The question of the colonisation of Boiotia by Phenicians must be settled, if settled at all, by evidence which it is vain to seek in the incidents of the myth, One item may perhaps be furnished by the name Kadmos, if this be the Grecised form of the Semitic Kedem, the east.
This word, together with the occurrence of Banna as the Boiotian word for daughter, seemed to satisfy Niebuhr as to the fact of this Phenician settlement. We must add to the list of such words the epithet of Palaimon, Melikertes, the Syrian Melkarth or Moloch.
THE MINOTAUROS.
in the lists of Apollodoros, is in some accounts split up into two beings of the same name but the reason which would justify this distinction might be urged in the case of almost It is enough all the gods and heroes of Aryan tradition. to say that as the son of Zeus and Europe he is the son of the heaven and the morning as the offspring of Lykastos and Ida, he has the same brilliant sire, but his mother is the earth. In his name he is simply man, the measurer or
;
;
CHAP
,_
Manu and
:
if in
the
enters the ark with the seven rishis at the time of the great
deluge, so Minos
is
human
family,
merely like Manu the giver of earthly codes or institutes, but a judge of the dead in the nether world, with Rhadarnanthys and Aiakos, who were admitted to share this office. The conception which made Manu the builder of the ark is seen
apparently in the maritime power and supremacy attributed
to the Cretan
Minos, a supremacy which to Thucydides seemed as much a fact of history as the Peloponnesian war. This power, according to Apollodoros, Minos the grim
l
Asterion
obtained by overcoming his brothers, who quarrelled after the king of Crete had married their mother
Europe, in other words, after the evening stars began to twinkle in the light-flushed skies. But although Minos had boasted that whatever he desired the gods would do, he
was none the more shielded against disaster. At his wish Poseidon sent up a bull from the sea, on the pledge of Minos that he would offer the beast in sacrifice. Minos offered one of his own cattle in his stead and Poseidon not only made the bull mad, but filled Pasiphae with a strange love for the
;
monster.
Erom the union of the bright heaven with this progeny of the sea sprang the Minotauros, who in sombre his den far away within his labyrinth of stars devoured the tribute children sent from the city of Athene, and who, by the help of Ariadne, falls under the sword of Theseus as lason by
the aid of Medeia conquers the fire-breathing bulls of Kolchis. So transparent is the legend of the solar hero and solar king
'
1
Od.
xi.
322.
88
MYTHOLOGY OF THE
of Crete/
l
'ARYAff NATIONS.
5
BOOK
II.
who
which reappears in the myth of the tribute children. Like Indra and Krishna, like Phoibos and Alpheios and Paris, he is the lover of the maidens, the hot and fiery sun greeting the moon and the dew. 2 Hence, in the words of one who professes to distrust the conclusions of Comparative Mythology, the great king of Crete met his end in the distant evening-land where the sun goes down.' 3 He is slain in Sicily by king Kokalos, a name which reminds us of Horatius Codes, 4 and which seems to denote simply the eyeless gloom of night. Of Ehadamanthys, who in the ordinary version is like Minos, a son of Zeus and Europe, little more is told us, apart from the seemingly later story of Apollodoros, than that for the righteousness of his life he was made the judge of Elysion, and that Minos was afterwards joined with him in this office. Pausanias, who gives this priority to Ehadamanthys, adds that some spoke of him as a son of Hephaistos, who in this myth was a son of Talos, a son of the eponymos
'
Kres. 5
The same reputation for impartial justice added to their number Aiakos, who in one version is a brother of Minos and Ehadamanthys, in another a son of Zeus and Aigina, the nymph whose names denotes the beating of the surf on
the island which was called
after
her. 6
In this island
Preller, Gr.
3
4
Preller, Gr.
Myth.
ibid.
Apollodoros. iii. 15, 1. Prokris avoids the doom which befalls all other victims his love by making Minos take the of antidote of Kirke. Of these myths Preller says, 'In noch andern Sagen von Kreta erscheint Minos als grosser Jager, der in den Bergen nnd Waldern seiner Insel das Wild nnd die Nymphen jagt, wie wir namentlich von seiner Liebe znr Diktynna und zur Prokris wissen, die wieder den Mond bedeuten, wie Minos in solchen Fabeln die heisse und feurige Sonne zu bedeuten scheint.' Gr. Myth. ii. 122.
This word seems to be akin to the Latin adjective ca^us, and possibly with Kaikias, the word which seems to have suggested the myth of Cacus. It is made up of the particle denoting sepa-
and the root oc, which we find in the Latin oculus, the German auge, the English eye. The same formation has given us the words halt, half, &c. Bopp, Comp. Gr. 308. 5 Pans. viii. 53. 2. 6 Its former name is said to have been Oinone or Oinopia. Aigina belongs to the same root with Aigai. Aigaion, and Aigeus, the eponymos of the Aigaian
ration, ha,
p.
405, et seq.
89
CHAP,
IL
.
_.
With Poseidon and Phoibos he takes part in the work of building the Ilian walls and here also the dragons are seen again. Three of them rush against the walls, and one makes its way through the portion built by Aiakos, while the other two fall dead beneath the structure of the gods, a myth which was interpreted to mean the future overthrow of Ilion by the descendants of
falls
1
Aiakos.
In the Cretan myth Sarpedon also is a brother of Minos, and therefore a son of Zeus and Europe. Other versions told of a Sarpedon who was the child of Laodameia, the
daughter of Bellerophontes. As in the case of Minos, mythographers made two beings out of one, as they might indefinitely have extended the number. Of the one Sarpedon
it
is
a"
peclon.
!/
life
men
told
The
legend
is
transparent throughout.
grandsire Hip-
ponoos received the name by which he was commonly known from his slaying of a monster answering to the Pythian
Paus. ii. 29, 6. If the myth of Odysseus, as contrasted with that of Achilleus, points to the slow sinking of the unclouded sun in perfect repose after the weary battle and wanderings of a stormy day, and thus suggests the idea of the tranquil evening of life for the chief who has grown old in fighting, the notion of age thus given is brought out more prominently in other legends, whether of the Greek or the Teutonic nations. The decrepitude preceding the death of the sun. a notion as familiar as that of his undying vigour and everlasting youth, is exhibited in the story of TitliQnos, which differs from that of Nestor only in the weakness which paralyses the being once so powerful. With the wisdom of Phoibos Nestor retains the
2
1
vigour of Herakles, whose friend he had been, and whose skill in the management of chariots and horses he has inherited in double portion. Like Phoibos, again, he has the gift of honey, d eloquence, the gift of Hermes to th< sun-god; and more particularly as he grows in wisdom, he becomes more keen-sighted, more prudent, more sagacious. Nestor then and Odysseus stand as an idea altogether distinct from thai which is embodied in the conceptions of Achilleus and Siegfried, and the two types may be traced through the Aryan
mythology generally, in the Godmund who lives five hundred years, as in the
Sigurd who falls in the lull glory of his Grimm, D. M. 365 youth. Max Muller, Chips, &c. ii. 84.
;
90
BOOK
.
dragon or the Theban Sphinx, his daughter Laodameia is as clearly the beautiful evening weaving together her tinted clouds, and slain by Artemis, the cold moon, before her web
is finished.
To her
a brilliant career
is
allotted.
With
bright day
as Sarpedon
the banks of the golden stream of Xanthos, and throws in his lot with the brave and fierce-minded Hektor; but the
designs of Here requie that he must die, and the tears of Zeus fall in big raindrops from the sky because it is not
So Sarpedon falls possible for him to avert the doom. beneath the spear of Patroklos but no decay may be sufPhoibos himself is charged to fered to mar his beauty.
;
bathe the body in Simoeis, and wrap it in ambrosial robes, while Thanatos and Hypnos, death and sleep, are bidden to bear it away to his Lykian home, which they reach just as
Eos
is
quisite variation
spreading her rosy light through the sky, an exon the myth of Endymion plunged beneath
the waters, or Narkissos in his profound lethargy, or Helios moving in his golden cup from the western to the eastern
ocean.
M?mnAn
the^Etiro-
From
Memnon,
it is
with which it represents the old phrases. Sarpedon, though a being akin to Phoibos and Helios, is yet regarded as the ruler of mortal Lykians, and his cairn is raised high to keep
alive his
people.
He
is
Like Zeus, Eos weeps tears of dew at the death of her child, but her prayers avail to bring him back, like Adonis or Tammuz, from the shadowy region, to dwell always in Olympos. If again Sarpedon is king of the
land of light (Lykia),
Memnon
is by some called the child of Hem era, the day; and his gleaming armour, like that of Achilleus, is
MEMNON AND
MIMIR.
91
CHAP.
^_
]l
,
wrought by the fire-god Hephaistos. When Memnon falls atonement for the slaughter of Antilochos, the son of Nestor, his comrades are so plunged in grief that they are changed into birds, which yearly visit his tomb to water the ground with their tears. Not less obvious is the meaning of another story, which brings before us the battle of the clouds over the body of the dead sun a fight which we see in a darker form in the desperate struggle of the Achaians and Trojans over the body of Achilleus. To comfort Eos, Zeus makes two flocks of birds (the swan maidens or winged clouds of Teutonic folk-lore) meet in the air and fight over Memnon's funeral sacrifice, until some of them fall as victims on the altar. Of Memnon's head the tale was told that it retained the prophetic power of the living Helios, a story which is found in the myth of the Teutonic Mimir, and which might also have been related of Kephalos, the head of
in
the sun.
is
of the
myth
account he
Tithonos
is
a son of
whose the same idea; but there is no him into two persons. In the one Hermes and Herse, the morning by him Eos becomes the mother of
to
different
In the other he
is
the son of the Phokian Deion, and Herse appears as the wife
of Erechtheus, and the mother of his wife Prokris or Prokne,
who
the
is
only the
Nor
story anything
series of pictures
dew
who
is
also
loved by the morning, until at last his fiery rays dry up the
1
Preller, Gr.
to regard the
form of
r]
Myth.
name
of irp6Kpiv for TvpdKpiaiu by Hesiod, a fact which, if proved, is but a slender warrant for the other. But Herse, the mother of Prokris, is confessedly the dew, and Prokne, the other form of Prokris, cannot be referred to t) irpofceKpifj.4vr). Preller adduces the expression irepl ttolvtcov Zeus applied to Hekate, Kpovi8r)s Tifirjcre, in illustration of his etymology and of his belief that Prokris is
tV
But the incidents in the life the moon. of Prokris do not point tu the course of the moon and its phenomena and Prokris is not preferred or honoured, but and neglected, slighted throughout Hence there is absolutely no reason for refusing to take into account the apparently obvious connection of Prokris and Prokne with the Greek 7rpw|, a dewdrop, and the cognate words which with it are referred to the root prish. See vol. i. p. 430.
;
92
BOOK
>r-
>
last drops which still lurk in the deep thicket. Hence we have at once the groundwork of the jealousy of Eos for Prokris, as of Here for 16 or Europe. But the dew reflects many images of the same sun and thus the phrase ran that Kephalos came back in disguise to Prokris, who, though faithless to her troth, yet gave her love to her old lover, as Koronis welcomed in Ischys the reflection of Phoibos Apollon. All that was needed now was to represent Eos as tempting Kephalos to test the fidelity of Prokris, and to introduce into the legend some portion of the machinery of every solar tale. The presents which Eos bestows on Kephalos to lure Prokris
;
on which his wife Dia and when Prokris awakes to a sense of her shame, her flight to Crete and her refuge in the arms of Artemis denote the departure of the dew from the sunscorched hills to the cool regions on which the moon looks down. But Artemis Hekate, like her brother Hekatos, is a being whose rays have a magic power, and she bestows on Prokris a hound which never fails to bring down its prey, and the spear which never misses its mark. Prokris now
live
;
who has
Artemis except in return for his love. made, and Prokris stands revealed in all her ancient loveliness. Eos for the time is baffled but Prokris still feels some fear of her rival's power, and as from a thicket she watches Kephalos hunting, in other words, chasing the
up the
gifts of
is
The compact
is
smitten by the
had hoped to outlive the day. The same mythical necessity which made Delos, Ortygia, or Lykia, the birth-place and home of Phoibos and Artemis, localised the story of Prokris in the land of the dawn-goddess Athene, and then carried him away on his westward journey, toiling and suffering, like Herakles, or Apollon, or Kadmos. He must aid Amphitryon in hunting the dog which, sent by Poseidon or Dionysos, like the Marathonian bull, ravaged the plain of Thebes he must go against the Teleboans, the sea-robbers of the Akarnanian coast; and finally, wearied
it
;
93
CHAP.
^
he must
1
fall
ing cape into the sea, as the sun, greeting the rosy sinks beneath the waters.
Section
In Csedmon and the epic of Beowulf the word baldor, - x n i d is found in the sense of prince or chief, as niagm Hence the name Baldr or Baldur bealdor, virginum princeps. might be referred to the Gothic barSs, our bold, and stress
bealdor,
Baldur andBrond.
might be laid on the origin of the name of Baldur's wife Nanna from a verb nenna, to dare. But Grimm remarks that the Anglo-Saxon genealogies speak of the son of Odin not as Baldur but as Baldag, Beldeg, a form which would Although lead us to look for an Old High German Paltac. Either then Baldag this is not found, we have Paltar. and Bealdor are only forms of the same word, as Regintac and Reginari, Sigitac and Sighar, or they are compounds in which bal must be separated from dag and thus the word
;
Brond, who
Baldur, howwhich Grimm establishes ever, was also known as Phol, a fact with abundant evidence of local names and thus the identity Forseti, or of Baldr and Bjelbog seems forced upon us. Eosite, is reckoned among the Asas as a son of Baldur and Nanna, a name which Grimm compares with the Old High German forasizo, prseses, princeps. 2 The being by whom Baldur is slain is Hodr, a blind god of enormous strength, whose name may be traced in the forms Hadupracht, Haduis
hans, &c, to the Chatumerus of Tacitus. He is simply the power of darkness triumphing over the lord of light ; and
1 Another account made the dog of Prokris a work of Hephaistos, like the golden statues of Alkinoos, and spoke of it as a gift from Zeus to Europe, who
to Kephalos.
Prokris
she
Minos,
whom
spells of a
ga^-e
it
to
also called
;;
94
BOOK
^
hence there were, as we might expect, two forms of the one of which left Baldur dead, like Sarpedon, another which brought him back from the unseen world, like Mem-
m jth,
Th 4 tf of Bald
ndn and Adonis. But the essence of tne myth lies in his death, the cause of which is set forth in a poem of the elder Edda, entitled Baldur 's dream, a poem so beautiful and so true to the old
myth
that I
may
it
in full.
The gods have hastened all to the assembly, The goddesses gathered all to the council The heavenly rulers take counsel together, Why dreams of ill omen thus terrify Baldur.
the all-creator
on Sleipnir's back, he to Nebelheim, Where a dog met him from the house of Hel.
Spotted with blood on his front and chest, Loudly he bayed at the father of song But on rode Odin, the earth made moaning, When he reached the lofty mansion of Hel.
But Odin'rode on
Where well he knew was the Vola's mound The seer's song of the wine-cup singing,
Till
he forced her to
rise,
a foreboder of
ill.
What man among men, one whom I know Causes me trouble and breaks my rest ?
not,
'
The snow hath enwrapped me, the rain beat upon me, The dews have drenched me, for I was long dead.' Wegtam my name is, Waltam's son am I
Speak thou of the under world, I of the upper For whom are these seats thus decked with rings, These shining chains all covered with gold?'
;
The mead is prepared for Baldur here, The gleaming draught covered o'er with the
;
shield
There is no hope for the gods above Compelled I have spoken, but now am I mute.'
'
'
Hodur
the Mighty, the Famed one, He will become the murderer of Baldur, And bring down their end on the heirs of Odin Compelled I have spoken, but now am I mute.'
:
will strike
down
Who
And
'
know all things. And this will I know; will accomplish vengeance on Hodur,
'
Rindur
in the west hath won the prize shall slay in one night all Odin's heirs. His hands he shall wash not: his locks he doth comb not, Till he brings to the scaffold the murderer of Baldur.'
Who
95
CHAP.
II.
*
know all things. And this will I know: The name of the woman who refuses to weep,
Till I
And
1
Thou
'
art not
Wegtam
as erst I
deemed
But thou
art
Odin the
all-creator.'
And
thou art not Vola, no wise woman thou, Nay, thou art the mother of giants in Hel.'
Odin, and
'Ride home,
Till
make thy
boast,
me, Loki hath broken his fetters and chains, And the twilight of gods brings the end of all things.'
shall a
visit
man
Some
in
Greek mythology.
is
The hound of
hell
who
confronts the
Father of Song
the
who
bars
Orpheus until he is lulled to sleep by his harping while the errand of Odin which has for its object the saving of Baldur answers to the mission of Orpheus to recover Eurydike. Odin, again, coming as Wegtam the wanderer reminds us at once of Odysseus the far-journeying and long-enduring. The ride of Odin is as ineffectual as the pilgrimage of Orpheus. All created things have been made to take an oath that they will not hurt the beautiful Baldur but the mistletoe has been forgotten, and of this plant Loki puts a twig into the hand of Baldur's blind brother Hodr, who uses it as an arrow and unwittingly slays Baldur while the gods are practising archery with his body Soon, however, Ali (or Wali) is born, a brother as a mark. to Baldur, who avenges his death, but who can do so only by
to
;
:
way
The mode
not
fail
in
which
this catastrophe is
Sarpedon as a mark for the arrows of his uncles, and with the stories of golden apples shot from the heads of blooming
youths, whether by William Tell, or William of Cloudeslee, or
any others. In short, the gods are here in conclave, aiming their weapons at the sun, who is drawing near to his doom, They have no wish to as the summer approaches its end. rather, it is the wish of all that he should not slay him
;
die
but he must be killed by his blind brother, the autumn The sun, when the nights begin to be longer than the day. younger brother born to avenge him is the new sun-child,
;
96
BOOK
II.
who
Europe and Pasiphae, the broad- spreading light is slain by the wintry sun, and avenged by Ali or Wali, the son of Odin and Rind, immediately after his birth. Ali is further called Bui, the tiller of the earth, over which the plough may again pass on the breaking of the frost. These incidents at once show that this myth cannot have been developed in the countries Bunsen rightly lays stress, and too of northern Europe. great stress can scarcely be laid, on the thorough want of correspondence between these myths and the climatic conditions of northern Germany, still more of those of Scandinavia and of Iceland. It may be rash to assign them dogmatically to Central Asia, but indubitably they sprung up in a country where the winter is of very short duration. Baldur then is the god who is slain,' like Dionysos who is killed by his brothers and then comes to life again but of these myths the Vedic hymns take no notice. In the region where they arose there is no question of any marked decline of temperature,' and therefore these poems stop short at the collision between the two hostile forces of sunshine and
precisely to
'
'
'
storm.'
The
story of Tell and
G-esler.
1
The myth of
'
Tell,
The tragedy of the solar year, of the murdered and risen god, is familiar to us from the days of ancient Egypt must it not be of equally primaeval origin here?' [in Teutonic tradition]. Bunsen, God in History, ii. 458. The evidence which has established the substantial identity of the story of the Iliad with that of the Odyssey has also shown that the Nibelung Lay practically reproduces the myth of the Volsungs, and that the same myth is present ed
undoubtedly
historical.'
left
On
this point,
indeed,
Bunsen has
no work to be
in
the legends of Walthar of Aquitaine and other Teutonic romances, vol. i. eh. xii. The materials of these narratives are, in short, identical with the legends of the Teutonic Baldur and the Greek Helen, and the whole narrative thus be-
If he has left in the Lay of the Nibelungs two or three historical names, he has left nothing more. The narrative or legend itself carries us to the Breidablick (Euryphaessa) or Ganzblick Pasiphae) which is the dazzling abode of Baldur, the type of the several Helgis, of Sigurd and Siegfried, as he is also of Achilleus and Odysseus, of Rus-
done.
comes
97
CHAP,
IL
there
is
Even
if
it indicates some fact, and must be the oppression of the Swiss by Austrian tyrants and yet this supposed fact, without which the story loses all point and meaning, has been swept away as effectually as the incidents which have been supposed to illustrate it. The political history of the Forest Cantons begins at a time long preceding the legendary date of Tell and Gesler and the election of Eudolf of Hapsburg as king of the Romans in 1278 was important to the Swiss only from their previous
;
its
representatives
all
in
lust
or
wanton
insult.
That
it
was
so
becomes
which the two were mixed up with those of particular persons.' In these quarrels, the Edinburgh Reviewer goes on to say, the symptoms of violence, as is natural enough, appear rather on the side of the Swiss Communities than on that of the aggrandising imperial house and the attack on the abbey of Einsiedeln was treated not as a crime of which the men of Schwitz were guilty, but as an act of war for which the three Cantons were responsible as a separate state.' The war of Swiss independence which followed this event was brought to an issue in the battle of Morgarten
since there are plentiful records of disputes in
interests of the
'
'
'
1 The evidence of tin's connexion has been ably summarised by the writer of the article on Rilliet's Origines de la
p.
134
et.
seq.
VOL.
II.
but the documents which have preserved the terms of peace simply define the bounds of the imperial authority, without questioning that authority itself. In all this there is no real need of the exploits of Tell or rather there is no room
for
them, even if the existence of the Confederation were not traced back to a time which according to the legend would probably precede his birth. This legend, which makes Tell not less skilful as a boatman
than as an archer, is not noticed by chroniclers who would gladly have retailed the incidents of the setting up of the ducal cap by Gesler in the market place, of TelPs refusal to do obeisance to it, of his capture, and of the cruelty which compelled him to shoot an apple placed on his son's head, of his release during the storm on the lake that he might steer the skiff, and finally of the death of Gesler by Tell's unerringshaft.
When
examined more
the myth were found to be of modern manufacture. The two chapels which were supposed to have been raised by
Utter impossibility
of the
Swiss
story.
trumpery works of a much showmen were true, the place had remained unchanged by the growth and decay of trees and otherwise for six centuries and a half.' Further, the hat set on a pole that all who passed by might do obeisance is only another form of the golden image set up that all might worship it on the plains of Dura, and here, as in the story of the Three Children, the men who crown the work of Swiss independence are three in number. Yet so important is this story as showing how utterly destitute of any residuum of fact is the mythology introtroduced into the history even of a well-known age, that I feel myself justified in quoting the passage in which M. Rilliet sums up the argument proving the absolute impossibility of the tale from beginning to end.
eye-witnesses of the events were
'
more recent
date,'
and
c
if
them from
the tyranny of King Albert of Austria a denial which the consequent conduct of this prince and that of his sons fully confirms. A revolt which would have resulted not only
in defying his
it
by the expul-
WILLIAM OF CLOUDESLEE.
sion and murder of his officers, would not have been for one instant tolerated by a monarch not less jealous of his power than resolute to make it respected. So when we see
CHAP,
.
him in the month of April 1308, when he went to recruit in Upper Germany for his Bohemian wars, sojourning on the banks of the Limmat and the Reuss, and approaching the theatre assigned to the rebellion, without making the slightest preparation or revealing any intention to chastise its authors when we find him at the same time entirely occupied in
celebrating the festival of the Carnival with a brilliant train
of nobles and prelates when we find him soon afterwards, on April 25, confirming to the abbey of Zurich the possession of domains comprehending the places which were the
;
when we
was
to cost
him
banqueting with the sons and the nephew whose hands were already raised against him, and thence proceed, full of eagerness, to meet the queen who was on her way to
his
life,
join him,
seems impossible to admit that he was swallowhim by insolent peasants, and which an inexplicable impunity could only render all the more mortifying to his self-love and compromising to his
it
authority.'
The myth
republic.
is
soil
of the
Helvetian
Otl
growing as congenially in almost every Aryan land, and in some regions which are not Aryan
at
all.
We
si ops
Clym
of the Clough,
Walter
Scott's
is
deed of
Tell.
made
Hee is to me full cleere I will tye him to a stake All shall see him that bee here And lay an apple upon his head,
And
And
Hanging
is
is
The
result
of course as in the
myth
which
Vogt
00
BOOK
_
IL
,
Adam
and Clym of the Clough), which answers to the Swiss triumvirate and Grimm is fully justified in remarking that Cloudeslee's Christian name and Bell's surname exhibit By Saxo Grammathe two names of the great Swiss hero.
Bell
;
a writer of the twelfth century, the story is told of Palnatoki, who performs the same exploit at the bidding of King Harold Gormson, and who when asked by the king why he
ticus,
had taken three arrows from his quiver when he was to have only one shot, replies, That I might avenge on thee the swerving of the first by the points of the rest.' In the Vilkina Saga the tale is related, and almost in the same
'
terms, of Egill,
' the fairest of men,' the brother of Volundr, Smith, while in the Malleus Maleficarum it is our Wayland 2 Another told of Puncher, a magician on the Upper Ehine.
version
seen in the Saga of Saint Olaf, who challenges Eindridi, a heathen whom he wishes to convert, to the same Olaf's arrow grazes the task, only leading the way himself.
is
child's head,
and the pleading of Eindridi's wife then induces an end to the contest. With some differences of detail the legend reappears in the story of another Harold Here the rival or (Sigurdarson), in the eleventh century. opponent of the king is Heming, whose arrows, as Harold
all inlaid
remarks, are
Enraged
at
many
defeats, the
with gold, like the arrows of Phoibos. king at last dares Heming
to shoot a nut
on the head not of his son but of his brother. some of its touches is the Earoese Not attributes TelFs achievement to Geyti, tradition, which Aslak's son, the king being the same who is confronted by
less significant in
Heming. Learning that Geyti is his match in strength, Harold rides to the house of Aslak, and asking where his
1
'
noeh eino altenglische in dem northunibrischenLiedevondendreiWildschiitzen Adam Bell, Clym, und William of
Cloudesle aufweisen
Brll,
;
der
letzte,
desscn
ersten,
dcm Konig, seinem siebenjahrigen Sohn einen Apfel auss haupt zulegen und 120 Schritte weit herab zu schiessen.' Grimm, D. Myth. 35o. " The passages from these three works are quoted at length by Dr. Dasent, Norse Tales, introduction xxxv.xxxix.
MYTH OF TELL.
lie
JWJ
youngest son
is,
is
The king
insists
dead and on
CHAP.
,
,1
many
dead it would not be easy to find the corpse of his son. But as Harold rides back over the heath, he meets a huntsthe dead Geyti,
man armed
is
with a bow, and asking who he is, learns that it who has returned to the land of the living,
or Euridyke, or Adonis.
if at
all,
like
Memnon,
The
story otherwise
from that of Heming. Mr. Gould, who like Dr. Dasent has thoroughly examined this subject, cites from Castren a Finnish story, in which, as in the Tell myth, the apple is shot off a man's head but the archer (and this feature seems specially noteworthy) is a boy of twelve years old, who appears armed with bow and arrows among the reeds on the banks of a lake, and threatens to shoot some robbers who had carried off his father as a captive from the village of Alajarvi. The marauders agree to yield up
differs little,
;
the old
man
if
him
as Tell
do by their sons.
parison with the
much
until
of the night during which the sun lies hid from the sight of
men
for the
work
in
which
*
his
triumph is assured. The myth might if it were necessary to do so. In Dr. Dasent's words, it is common to the Turks and Mongolians and a legend of the wild Samoyeds, who never heard of Tell or saw a book in their lives, relates it, chapter and verse, of one of their marksmen. What shall we say, then, but that the story of this bold master-shot was primaeval amongst many tribes and
be traced yet further,
;
races,
and that it only crystallised itself round the great name of Tell by that process of attraction which invariably leads a grateful people to throw such mythic wreaths, such garlands of bold deeds of precious memory, round the brow
of
its
Further still, it seems impossible not to discern the same myth in the legend which tells us of the Lykian Sarpedon, that when Isandros and Hippolochos
darling champion.
5
1
102
BOOK
II.
man who
could shoot a
ring from the breast of a child without hurting him. The tale is here inverted, and the shot is to be aimed at the child
who lies exposed like Oidipous on Kithairon, or Eomulus among the reeds of the Tiber, but who is as sure to escape
the danger as Tell and the others are to avoid the trap in
which their enemies think to catch them. William Tell, the To say more is but to slay the slain. archer, whose mythological character Dr. Dasent has good established beyond contradiction, is the last reflection of the sun-god, whether we call him Indra, or Apollo, or Ulysses.'
'
l
Section
XIL-THE VIVIFYING
SUN.
In strictness of speech the Vedic Vishnu is nothing but a name. The writers of the Aitareya-brahmana could still 2 Hence say, Agni is all the deities, Vishnu is all the deities.' dignity greater even than that of he rises sometimes to a Dyaus and Indra, while at others he is spoken of as subordinate to them, or is regarded as simply another form of the In some hymns he is three deities Agni, Vayu, and Surya. associated with Indra as Varuna is linked with Mitra, and
'
Dyaus with
6
Prithivi.
communicated
when
thou,
impetuous deity,
it
up the
In truth,
may
may be
monotheism. Thus Vishnu is himself Agni and Indra. Thou, Agni, art Indra, bountiful to the excellent thou 4 art Vishnu, the wide-stepping, the adorable.' These are again identified with other gods
' ;
:
1 Max Muller, Ch ips, &c. ii. 233. See Appendix B. Max Muller, Sanskrit Lit. 391.
Sanskrit
R. V.
ii.
1,
3; Muir,
ib.
103
CHAP.
^
fices.'
6
Thou
art
self- controlled,
possessest
the secret
name
Agni, again, although along with Indra, Soma, and Parameshthin he is a son of Prajapati, 2 is according to the same
writers Prajapati himself.
'
is
who
kindled on the
altar.'
This
japati
4
name
is
Daksha
he
is
also
is
end of our life.' 3 Elsewhere Prajapati is Brahma. Those men who know Brahma know him who occupies the highest place (Parameshthin) he who knows Paramesh'
:
thin and who knows Prajapati, they who know Brahmana (deity?), they know Skambha.' 4
the ancient
It is scarcely necessary, then, to say that in all the phrases Vishnu the
which describe the attributes of Yishnu, the origin of each conception is plainly discernible. He is especially the god
mg
d.
who
taken by some commentators to denote his manifestations as fire on the earth, as lightning in the atmosphere, and as the san in heaven, or in other words, his identity with Agni, Vayu, and Surya. By others they are regarded as setting
forth the rising, culmination,
there can be
little
and setting of the sun and doubt that the latter idea was at the first
;
5 It most closely associated with the thought of Yishnu. would seem indeed that these gods are distinguished only
1
B. V.
v.
ii.
3, 1
M\iir, SansJc.
xi.
Texts,
1,
sect, 1.
Brahmana,
is
6;
This porter or propper, vol i. p. 37. function, Dr. Muir remarks, is frequently ascribed to Indra, Varuna, Vishnu, and
Savitri.
The
idea
'Vishnu, thou didst prop asunder these two worlds thou didst envelope the earth on every side with beams of
;
light,'
a
i?.
V.
vii.
99, 3.
iv. p.
57-
104
BOOK
II.
whom
to add to the titles of the being he invokes in his litanies. ' Agni, Varuna, Mitra, ye gods, give ns strength, and ye hosts of Maruts, and Vishnu. May both the Asvins, Rudra, and the wives of the deities, with Pushan, Bhaga, and Sarasvati, be pleased with us. I invoke for our protection Indra and Agni, Mitra and
'
Varuna, Aditi, heaven, earth and sky, the Maruts, the mountains, the waters, Vishnu, Pushan, Brahmanaspati, Bhaga, Samsa and Savitri.
'
And may
the
Much
the
Dwarf Incarnation, which may be compared with the myth of the maimed Hephaistos. In both cases the defect
is
the god.
The
fire at its
little
and it might well be said that none could tell how vast a power lay in these seemingly weak and helpless
beings.
tains from the Asuras as
much
the great
enemy of the
gods,
is
overcome.
Having con-
who, with other deities, beseeches Vishnu to take the shape of a dwarf and deceive their conqueror. Having in this shape approached the son of Virochana and obtained the boon of the three paces, 'the thrice-stepping Vishnu assumed a miraculous form, and with three paces took possession of the worlds. For with one step he occupied the whole earth, with a second the eternal atmosphere, and with a third the sky. Having then assigned to the Asura Bali an abode in Patala (the infernal region), he gave the empire of the three worlds to Indra.' 2 In the Mahabharata this fact is ascribed to
quered the three worlds, Bali
terrifies Indra,
1
R. V.
v.
Ramayana,
i.
322; Muir,
ib.
117.
DWARF
GODS.
105
CHAP.
Krishna, who, having become the son of Aditi, was called In the Bhagavata Purana the story assumes proVishnu.
1
_^J_
whom
it
seeks to
glorify. No sooner has Bali granted the seemingly moderate request of Hari or Vishnu, than the body of the dwarf begins to expand and fills the whole universe, and Bali is bound with the chains of Varuna. 2 This dwarf appears elsewhere
Kumar a,
Thus throughout we are dealing with phrases which the Hindu commentators knew to be mere phrases and thus without a thought of injustice done to the deities whom he seemed to disparage, the worshipper could say that Varuna himself and the Asvins do the bidding of Vishnu, and that Vishnu is more beneficent than his chosen companion Indra. King Varuna and the Asvins wait on the decree of this Vishnu possesses excellent ruler, attended by the Maruts which knows the proper day, and with his friend wisdom, opens up the cloud. The divine Vishnu who has chosen companionship with the beneficent Indra, himself more beneficent, the wise god
daughter of the dawn. 3
; 6
:
And
'
again,
;
Thou, Agni, art Indra, bountiful to the good thou art Vishnu, the wide-stepping, the adorable.' 5 So when Indra is about to smite Vritra, he is at once represented as bidding his friend Vishnu to stride vastly. sky, give room for the Friend* Vishnu, stride vastly
6
:
Majesty of
thunderbolt to strike
waters.'
6
let
let loose
the
Yet although in some passages Vishnu is described as having established the heavens and the earth, and as susMuir, Sanskrit Texts, pt. iv. p. 118. Id. ib. p. 125, &c. 3 The diminutive size Id. ib. p. 284. of many of the heroes of popular tradition must be traced to this idea. Odysseus is small, when he stands, as compared with Menelaos: in other words he is Shortshanks (Grimm). Boots is
1
Tom Thumb
but
Tom Thumb
is
in
any
despised for his insignificant stature, and the Master Thief incurs the same
other hero of Aryan legends. 4 It V. i. 156 Muir, Sanskrit Texts, part iv. p. 66. 5 Muir, ib. 6 R. V. viii. 89, 12; Muir, ib. p. 68.
;
106
BOOK
own
inherent force,
_^
in others to
make
Indra.
'
When,
battle,
6
then thy dear steeds grew. When, thunderer, thou didst by thy might slay Yritra who stopped up the streams, then thy dear steeds grew. < When by thy force Vishnu strode three steps, then thy
dear steeds grew.'
l
The palace
of Vishnu.
being born, or has been born, has attained, 2 divine Vishnu, to the furthest limit of thy greatness.' short, as The personality of the mythical Vishnu is, in transparent as that of Helios or Selene. He dwells in the
No
one who
is
aerial mountains, in a gleaming palace where the many Here that supreme horned and swiftly moving cows abide. wide-stepping vigorous god shines intensely abode of the These cows are in some places the clouds, in others, forth.' the rays which stream from the body of the sun. But on the whole it must be admitted that the place of Vishnu in the Eig Veda, as compared with the other great deities, is in
'
the background
Brahmanic
literature
idea of this
and the institutional legends of later throw but little light on the mythical and perhaps none on the mythology of deity,
;
Avatars of Vishnu.
spirit,
are amon g the later developements of Hindu theology, Vishnu is associated or identified not only with Siva or Mahadeva, but with Kama in the Eamayana, and with Krishna in the Mahabharata. 3 But the Mahadeva, with whom he is thus identified, is himself only Varuna or Dyaus, He is Eudra, he is Siva, he is Agni, under another name. he is Saiva, the all-conquering he is Indra, he is Vayu, he is the Asvins, he is the lightning, he is the moon, he is
'
;
Iswara, he
is
;
Surya, he
is
is
Varuna, he
is
time, he
is
;
death
the ender
1
he
12
;
he
63.
is
R. V,
viii.
Muir,
ib. p.
ii.
VISHNU AND KRISHNA.
the months and the half-months of the seasons, the morning Krishna, again, is and evening twilight, and the year.'
1
107
CHAP.
.
god
spoken
of are as indefinite
but the phrases in which Krishna is and elastic as those which speak
is
But
as
Vishnu
is
also
Brahma,
it is
Krishna
also the
supreme
deity. 2
Elsewhere
said
that
na,
Brahma and Mahadeva themselves proceed from Krishwho again identifies himself with Rudra, although in
Rudra
is
other passages
described as mightier; 3
and in
each case commentators, as we might expect, are ready with the reasons which reconcile the seeming inconsistency.
rises to greater
importance in later
more abundant measure. The popular affections were more and more fixed on the bright god who was born in a cave, at whose birth the exulting devas sang in the heavens, whose life was sought by a cruel tyrant, and who, like Zeus or Berakles, had many loves in many lands. In this later theology the idea which regarded the sun as Emblems the generator of all life left the attributes of Vishnu by f comparison in the shade and the emblem thus especially worship of associated with this deity marks a singular stage in the history of religion. If the subject is one which must be approached with the utmost caution, it is also one in which we are especially bound not to evade or misrepresent the facts. If the form of faith, or rather it should be said, of worship, with which we have now to deal, has prevailed in all lands and still prevails amongst a large majority of mankind, it becomes our duty to trace fairly, to the best of our power, its origin and growth, and to measure accurately the influence which it has exercised on the human intellect and on human morality. If in our search we find that phrases and emblems, to which we now attach a purely spiritual signification, have acquired this meaning gradually as the ruder ideas which marked the infancy of the human race
ii.
sect, 5.
2 Id. ib. p. 152. 'Do you not know,' says Krishna to Balarama, that you and I are alike the origin of the world, who
'
have come clown to lighten its load?' Vishnu Purana, II. II. Wilson, 519. 3 Muir, Sanskrit Texts, part iv. pp.
214, 216, 239.
108
BOOK
II.
we
and
prejudices to stand in the place of evidence, or suffer the discovery to interfere with or weaken moral or religious
convictions with which these phrases or emblems have no The student of the history of reinseparable connexion.
ligion can have
will receive a
shock
Him from which it cannot recover, if his faith is with whom there is no variableness nor shadow of turning, and whose work human passion can neither mar nor hinder. He can walk in confidence by the side of the student of language and mythology, and be content to share his labour, if he hopes that such efforts may one day 'lay bare the
placed in
Sensuous
stage of language.
world-wide foundations of the eternal kingdom of God.' In truth, the evidence which must guide us at the outset of the inquiry can be furnished by the science of language The very earliest records to which we can assign alone.
1
any
which are
The history of words comparatively late developements. carries us back to an age in which not a single abstract term existed, in which human speech expressed mere bodily
wants and mere sensual notions, while
either of morality or
it
conveyed no idea
of religion.
If every
name which
throughout the whole world is or has been employed as a name of the One Eternal God, the Maker and Sustainer of
all
was originally a name only for some sensible object or phenomenon, it follows that there was an age, the duration of which we cannot measure, but during which man had not yet risen to any consciousness of his relation to the great Cause of all that he saw or felb around him. If all the words which now denote the most sacred relations of kindred and affinity were at the first names conveying no such special meaning, if the words father, brother, sister, daughter, were words denoting merely the power or occupation of the persons spoken of, then there was a time during which the ideas now attached to the words had not yet been developed. 2 But the sensuousness which in one of its results produced mythology could not fail to influence in This whatever degree the religious growth of mankind.
things,
1
Max
Miiller,
&c,
i.
378.
See
vol.
i.
ch.
ii.
109
human
race,
CHAP.
._
,1
<
same life They had every of which men were conscious themselves. thing to learn and no experience to fall back upon, while the very impressions made upon them by the sights and sounds of the outward world were to be made the means of leading them gradually to correct these impressions and to rise beyond them to facts which they seemed to contraThus side by side were growing up a vast mass of dict. names which attributed a conscious life to the hosts of heaven, to the clouds, trees, streams and flowers, and a multitude of crude and undefined feelings, hopes, and longings which were leading them gradually to the conscious acknowledgment of One Life as the source of all the life The earliest utterances of which they saw around them. human thought which have come down to us belong to a period comparatively modern but even some of these, far from exhibiting this conviction clearly, express the fears and hopes of men who have not yet grasped the notion of any The return of daylight might natural order whatever. depend on the caprice of the arbitrary being whom they had watched through his brilliant but brief journey across the heaven. The sun whose death they had so often witnessed might sink down into the sea to rise again from it no more. The question eagerly asked during the hours of night betray a real anguish, and the exultation which greeted the dawn, if it appear extravagant to us, comes manifestly from men
consisted in ascribing to all physical objects the
1
for
nature afforded but a very slender basis for arguments from analogy. 2 But although the feeling of confidence in a permanent order of nature was of long or slow
whom
which produced their fruit more quickly. The dawns as they came round made men old, but the Dawn herself never lost her freshness, and sprang from the sea-foam as fair as when she first gladdened the eyes of man. Men might sicken and die, but the years which brought death to them could not dim the light of the sun and this very contrast supplied, in
;
1
Max
See
Miiller,
i.
'
Sue.,
i.
3o5.
vol.
p. 41.
110
BOOK
II
-.
Professor
Max
Miiller's words,
.
'
the
first
.
intimation of beings
.
which do not wither and decay of immortals, of immortality.' When from this thought of the immortality of other beings they awoke at length to the consciousness that man himself might be among the number of immortal creatures, the feeling at once linked itself with another which had thus far remained almost dormant. To adopt once more the words of Professor Max Muller, ' by the very act of the creation God had revealed himself;' 2 but although many words might be used to denote that idea which the
1
first
breath of
life,
the
first
first
planted in the
this
human
Aryan and
Monotheism.
Unchangeable Being could be awakened in men only to feel that their existence was not bounded to the span of a few score years. A twofold influence, however, was at work, and it produced substantially the same results with the Semitic as
w ith the
Aryan
races.
effects
nature of this
many names.
into a
and the many thoughts as to the Creative Power would express themselves in The Yedic gods especially resolve themselves
;
mere
same idea and the consciousness of this fact is strikingly manifested by the long line of later interpreters. A monstrous overgrowth of unwieldy mythology has sprung np round these names, and done its deadly work on the minds of the common peojDle but to the more thoughtful and the more truthful, Indra and Varuna, Dyaus and Vishnu, remained mere terms to denote, however inadequately, some But the Vedic Indra and quality of the Divine Nature. Dyaus might have a hundred epithets, and alike in the East and West, as the meaning of these epithets was either in part or wholly forgotten, each name came to denote a separate being, and suggested for him a separate mythical history. Thus the Hindu sun-god Surya was represented among the Hellenic tribes not only by Helios and Phoibos, but by
aspects of the
;
1
May
Id.
'
Muller, Comparative Mythology,' Chips, ii. 973 Id. ib. 363. Semitic Monotheism,' Chips, ii. 352.
'
Ill
CHAP.
.
Endymion, Narkissos, Kadmos, Oidipous, Meleagros, Achilleus, Tantalos, Ixion, Sisyphos, and many more. The Vedic Dahana reappeared not only as Daphne and Athene, but as Eurydike, Euryphassa, Iole, Iokaste, Danae, Briseis, Aphrodite, Europe, Euryganeia, with other beings, for most of whom life had less to offer of joy than of grief. But although
the fortunes of these beings varied indefinitely, although
some were exalted to the highest heaven and others thrust to the nethermost hell and doomed to a fruitless toil for ever and ever, yet they were all superhuman, all beings to be thought of with fear and hatred if not with love, and some of them were among the gods who did the bidding of Zeus himself, or were even mighty enough to thwart his Thus these names remained no longer mere appelwill.
down
and from the Dyaus, Theos, and Deus, of Hindus, Greeks, and Latins, sprung the Deva, Theoi, Dii, and the plural form stereotyped the polytheism of the Aryan world. The history of the Semitic tribes was essentially the same. The names which they had used at first simply as titles of God, underwent no process of phonetic decay like that which converted the name of the glistening ether into the Yedic Dyaus and the Greek Zeus. The Semitic epithets for the Divine Being had never been simple names for natural phenomena they were mostly general terms, expressing the greatness, the power, and the glory of God. But though El and Baal, Moloch and Milcom, never lost their meaning, the idea which their teachers may have intended to convey by these terms was none the less overlaid and put out of sight. Each epithet now became a special name for a definite deity, and the people generally sank into a worship of many gods as effectually as any of the Aryan tribes, and clung to it more obstinately. Of the general monotheistic conviction, which M. Kenan regards as inherent in all the Semitic tribes, there is not the faintest trace. The gods of Laban are stolen by Rachel, and Jacob bargains with God in language which not only betrays a temporary want of faith/
same being
'
Max
Miiller, 'Semitic
Monotheism,' Chips,
ii.
369.
'
112
BOOK
*..
,J
'
yet acquired
to injure,
and
symbols of
the vivify ing power
in
nit"iiT*p
perhaps placable enough to benefit, the children of men, They were all involved the necessity of a worship or cultus. of them gods of life and death, of reproduction and decay, of
the great mystery which forced itself upon the thoughts of men from infancy to old age. If the language of poets in
general describes the
in the animal
and multiplication and vegetable world, the form which the idea
tribes
The words
do but throw a veil of poetry over an idea which might easily become coarse and repulsive, while they point unmistakeably to the crude sensuousness which adored the principle of life under the signs of the organs of reproduction in the world The male and female powers of of animals and vegetables. respectively by an upright and an oval nature were denoted emblem, and the conjunction of the two furnished at once the altar and the ashera, or grove, against which the Hebrew prophets lifted up their voice in earnest protest. It is clear that such 'a cultus as this would carry with it a constantly increasing danger, until the original character of the
emblem should be
names
of
soil. some of the Yedic deities when But they have never been so disguised in India as amongst the ancient Semitic tribes 2 and in the kingdoms both of
transferred to Hellenic
Max
ii.
Miiller,
'
Semitic Monotheism,'
Ckips.
368.
2 * Wie Wenig das Alterthum don Begriffder Unzucht mit diesem Bilde verband, beweist, dass in den Eleusinien nur die Jungfrauen die dir6ppr)Ta tragen durften (Thucyd. vi. 56; Suid. s. v. 'AppriQopla) und des Phallus Verehrang selbst von den Yestalisohen Junpfrauen (Plin. xxviii. 4, 7).' Nork,
and the coarser developements of the cultus are confined to a comparatively small number. Professor Wilson says that 'it is unattended in Upper Egypt by any indecent or indelicate ceremonies,' ('On Hindu Sects,' Asiatic Review, vol. xvii.) and Sir William Jones remarks that it seems never to have entered into the heads of the Hindu legislators and people that
varies greatly,
; '
Eeal-Worterbuch
s.
v. Phalluscult,
52.
Even -when the emblems still retain more or less manifestly their original
character, the moral effect on the people
anything natural could be offensively obscene a singularity which pervades all their writings, but is no proof of the depravity of their morals hence the
THE QUICKENING SUN.
113
Judah and of
emblems assumed their most corrupting form. Even in the Temple Itself stood the Ashera, or the upright emblem, on the
1
CHAR
II.
circular altar of Baal-Peor, the Priapos of the Jews, thus reproducing the Linga and Yoni of the Hindu. For this symbol
the
women wove
Rakshas' claw, and Eustem slain by the thorn of winter. Here also, on the third day, they rejoiced at the resurrection
Hence, as most intimately connected life on earth, it became the symbol under which the sun, invoked with a thousand names, has been worshipped throughout the world as the restorer of the powers of nature after the long sleep or death of winter. As such the symbol was from the first venerated as a
with the reproduction of
protecting power, and the Palladion thus acquired
worship of the Linga by the followers of and of the Yoni by the followers Works, vol. ii. p. 311. In of Vishnu.'
Siva,
Rods and
pillars.
its
magic
by this name is stated by Tzetzes and Lykopkron, 831. 6 "A5wj/ts Tavas irapa.
KviTpioLS Ka\e7raL Tavas here being merely a transcriber's error for 'lavas. Adonis again stands to Dionysos in the
other words, the origin of the Phallosworship nicht aus der moralischen Verdorbenheit der Vcilker .... sondern aus ihrer noch kindlich naiven Denkweise erklart werden muss, wo man unbekummert um die Decenz des Ausdrucks oder des Bildes stets dasjenige wahlte, welches eine Idee am passendsten bezeichnete. Welches Grlied konnte aber bezeichnender an den Schopfer mahnen als ebendas schaffende Organ?' Nork, Beal- Wurtcrbuch, s. v. Phallus'
relation
Zeus
vtto
of Helios to Phoibos, or of Aeyerai fjikv 6 "AZwvis rov crvbs Zia<pQapr]vai tov 8' ''Ahusviv
to Ouranos.
oi>x eVepoi/
d\Ka
Movers,
On
the
cult, 49.
1 This Ashera, which in the authorised English version of the Old Testa-
Pentateuch, part v. appendix iii. Thus we come round again to the oracle of the Klarian Apollon, which teaches that the supreme god is called, according to the seasons of the year, Hades, Zeus, Helios, and Iao.
Opci^eo tou ttolvtwv virarov 6eoi> ejUfxeu 'law, ^ei'^aTi [x.iv t 'Ald-riv, A/a t' empos
apxopi-evoio,
is translated grove,' was in fact a pole or stem of a tree and hence it is that the reforming kings are said to hew it down, while the stone altar, or Yoni, on which it rests is broken up.
' ;
ment
'HeAtof
5e
Oepovs,
/xeTOTrwpov
5'
afipbv
'law.
is thus supreme lord while Persephone abides in the unseen land, and the name of Zeus here retains something of its original meaning. He is the god of the bright sky from which the rain Indra or sap-god of the falls, the
also
by
Hades
doubted. The epithet specially applied to this darling and in of Aphrodite is afipSs, tender the oracle of the Klarian Apollon the god of the autumn is called afiphs 'law. That Adonis was known to the Cyprians
the
;
Hellenes.
I
VOL.
II.
114
BOOK
II
So guarded, Jacob
is
content to
lie
;
down
to sleep^
Laban and according up was carried to Jerusalem, and there reverenced. But the erection of these stone columns or pillars, 2 the forms of which in most cases tell their own story, are common throughout the East, some The of the most elaborate being found near Ghizni. 3 wooden emblem carries us, however, more directly to the The rod acquired an innatural mythology of the subject. herent vitality, and put forth leaves and branches in the Thyrsoi of the Dionysiac worshippers and the Seistron 4 of Egyptian priests. It became the tree of life, and reappeared as the rod of wealth and happiness given by Apollon to Hermes, 5 the mystic spear which Abaris received from the Hyperborean Sun-god, and which came daily to Phoibos in It was seen as the his exile laden with all good things.
in his weary journey to the house of
to later Jewish tradition the stone so set
lituus of the augur, the crooked staff of the shepherd, the
sceptre of the king, and the divining rod which pointed out hidden springs or treasure to modern conjurors. 6 In a form
1
figure
Pallas, and Pallas is but another form of Phallos. To the same class
of
god of
belong the names of Pales, the Latin flocks and shepherds, and of the The former is conSicilian Palikoi. nected with the Roman Palatium, the
spot doubtless where the
and they might he combined in many ways. Das Zeichen Schiba's ein Triangel, mit der Spitze nach oben (A), das aufwarts strebende, Feuer versinnlichend, wie umgekehrt, des feuchten Wischnu Symbol das (v). das abwarts
fliessende
Wasser versinnlichend.
Da-
first
twin sons of Zeus and Thaleia, although they have rather the character of demons. 2 They are the columns of Herakles, The Dionysos, Osiris and Sesostris. statements of Herodotos about the pillars set up by this last-named god
are distinctly connected with virile strength, although he supposes that they were erectedtoreceiveinscriptions. Thenames of those nations, who had won a reputaare
mit die Welt geschaffen werde, musste "Wischnu einst dem Schiba die Dienste des Weibes leisten. Der monotheistische Israelit gab beide Zeichen dem Jehovah, wie der Judische Talisman
/v_
(
Y v
singularly significant.
They
tion for bravery, were carved on them without further marks: otcW 5e d/uaxyrl koI 6U7reTe'a>s TrapeKafie rds irdMs, tovtokti 5e eVe'7pcuJ/e eV rrjai <rrr}\r)(ri Kara ravrd Ka\ TO?cri disSprjioun rusv 9v4wv yevoIA4t/oi<rL,
Nork, s. v. Schiba. cannot hesitate to connect with these columns the pillared Saints whether of the East or the West. The Stylite did not choose thus to exalt himself without any reason. He found the column or pillar, Phallos, an object of idolatrous reverence, and he wished doubtless to connect the emblem with more spiritual associations.
weist.'
We
koX
877
/ecu
cu'Sota yvvaiichs
-npoa-
cveypaipe,
-noUeiv
ws
In
short,
they exhibited, like the representations of Vishnu, the two emblems combined
Sec Appendix C. 3 Fergusson, Hist, of Arch. ii. 642. 4 This instrument exhibits both the symbols in combination. 5 Hymn to Hermes, 529. 6 In a picture of St. Zeno of Verona the two emblems are combined, the fish
115
CHAP.
.
ijl__
In this form, or in that of a ring inclosing a cross of four spokes, this emblem is found everywhere. It is peculiar neither to Egyptians nor Assyrians, neither to Greeks, Latins, Gauls, Germans, or Hindus; and no attempt to explain
its
original
employment
it
b}r
is
admissible, unless
all.
them
for
We
don or Proteus, and in the fylfot or hammer of Thor, which, assumes the form of a cross pattee in the various legends which turn on the rings of Freya, Holda, Venus, or Aphrodite. In each of these stories the ring is distinctly connected with the goddess who represents the female power
in nature, or tells its
own
In one
Rome
wedding ring on a statue of Venus, and finds to his dismay not only that he cannot dislodge it from her
him
stony finger, but that the goddess herself claims to stand to in the relation of Aphrodite to Adonis. 2 As we might
(vesica piscis) being seen pendant from the pastoral or shepherd's staff. Jamieson, Sacred and Legendary Art, p. 417. 1 See Appendix C. 2 This story is given by Fordun, Matthew of Westminster, Eoger of Wendover, and Vincent of Beauvais. Mr. Gould cites from Csesarius Heisterbachensis a tale, in which a necromancer warns some youths placed within a
magic ring
to be
was about
of whom, singling out a youth, holds out to him a ring of gold, which tho youth touches, thus placing himself in Curious Myths, i. 225. her power. See also Scott, Border Minstrelsy, introduction to ballad of Tamlane.
expect, this
myth was
the knight whose ring- she refuses to surrender looks upon himself as betrothed to the mother of God, and dedicates
In the older
allows Earl Hakon to draw it from her statue after he This ring Hakon had besought her for it with many tears. gives to Sigmund Brestesson, bidding him never to part with When Sigmund afterwards refused to yield it to Olaf, it. the Norwegian warned him that it should be his bane, and the prediction was fulfilled when, for the sake of this ring, Sigmund was murdered in his sleep. Finally, the symbol
who
form of the serpent, which thus became the emblem of life and healing, and as such appears by the side of the Hellenic Asklepios, and in the brazen crucified serpent venerated by the Jewish people until it was destroyed by Hezekiah. 2 Here then we have the key to that tree and serpent worship which has given rise to much ingenious and not alto> This ring is the teterrima causa of the war of Troy (Horace, Sat. i. 3, 107),
' '
thus his narrative exhibits the animal indulgence inseparable from those
idolatrous rites, as destructive alike to the body and the mind of man. The serpent is therefore doomed to perpetual contempt, and invested with some of the characteristics of Vritra, the snakeenemy of Indra. But Vritra is strictly the biting snake of darkness and it is scarcely necessary to say, that the Egyptian serpent is the result of the same kind of metaphor which has given to the elephant the epithet of anguimanus. The phallic tree is also introduced into the narrative of the book of Genesis but it is here called a tree not of life but of the knowledge of good and evil, that knowledge which dawns in the mind with the first consciousness of difference between man and woman. In contrast with this tree of carnal indulgence tending to death is the tree of life, denoting the higher existence for which man was designed, and which would bring with it the happiness and the freedom of the children of God. In the brazen serpent of the Pentateuch the two emblems of the cross and serpent, the quiescent and energising Phallos, are united.
;
and carries with it the same doom which the marriage of Brynhild brought With these to Sigurd the Volsung. legends may be compared the story of
the crown of the hero Astrabakos (Herodotos, vi. 69), the counterpart of the Sir W. Scottish myth of Tamlane. Scott (Border Minstrelsy, li. 266) cites from Gervase of Tilbury an account of the Dracae, a sort of water spirits, who inveigled women and children into the recesses which they inhabit, beneath lakes and rivers, by floating past them on the surface of the water, in the shape of gold rings or cups and remarks that 'this story in almost all its parts is current in both the Highlands and Lowlands of Scotland, with no other variation than the substitution of Fairies for Dracse, and the cavern of a hill [the Horselbcrg] for that of a river.' 2 This symbol of the serpent reappears in the narrative of the temptation and fall of Eve, the only difference being that the writer, far from sharing the feelings of the devotees of Baalpeor, regarded their notions and their practices with the utmost horror; and
;
117
CHAP,
IL
>
The
that
we know
__.
The condition of thought which led men to use the names applied first to the visible heaven or the sun as names for the Supreme God could not possibly make choice of any other emblems to denote the power which maintains and multiplies life. The cruder realism which suggested the image of the serpent was in some degree refined in the symbol of the (stauros) tree, and the stake or cross of Osiris gradually assumed a form in which it became capable of denoting the
1
But the
Sacrifices
Semitic or with Aryan tribes, be but imperfectly developed without sacrifice; and although the blood of slain victims
C0
"JJ
ec
^d
worship,
to
another sacrifice more in accordance with the origin of the symbols employed to denote that power. It was possible to
invest with a religious character either the sensuality to
which the Jewish or Phenician idolatry appealed, or the impulse which finds its complete developement in a rigorous In the former shape the idea was realised in asceticism. the rites of the Babylonian Mylitta, and in the vocation of the Hierodouloi of Greek and Hindu temples. 2 In the latter the sacrifice was consummated by a vow of virginity, 3 and the Gerairai and Yestal Virgins of the Athenians and the Romans became the type of the Catholic and Orthodox nun.
1
'
Gaume
The learned and still living Mgr. (Traite du Saint Esprit) joins
had
this
origin,
will
probably
be
conceded
by
Camerarius in the belief that serpents bite women rather than men.' Burton, Talcs of Indian Devilry, preface, p. xix. The facts already cited account for the
superstition.
-
Herod,
translated
Eastern Monarchies, iii. 465. 3 In this case, they were devoted to the service of Sacti, the female power in the formia* they were the ministers of 'Aphrodite. That the 'institution of the virgin priestesses of Vesta and of the female devotees of Mylitta or Sacti
another source, and in my belief carries us back to that conviction of the utter corruption of matter which lies at the root of all the countless forms of the Manichean philosophy. Latin and Teutonic Christendom, ch. iii. In the theory of monachism for Christian women this conviction is blended with the older sensuous ideas which are painfully sometimes prominent in language addressed to the spouses or
118
BOOK
-,
IL
.
Symbols of
is
hidden behind
it is
the Achaian chieftains through the weary darkness of In this form the emblem
Linga, and passes into a legion of shapes, all closely resembling the original form, all possessing in greater or less degree a talismanic power, but all manifesting the presence
of the essential idea of boundless fertility which the symbol was specially adopted to denote. The Argo itself is divine.
It
was the work of a being akin to, if not identical with, Argos Panoptes, the all-seeing, who guards the heifer 16. In its prow Athene, the dawn-goddess, herself places a piece of wood fromTthe speaking oaks of Dodona, and the ship is thus endowed with the power of warning and guiding the This mystic vessel reappears chieftains who form its crew. in the shell of Aphrodite, and in the ship borne in solemn procession to the Parthenon on the great Panathenaic 2 festival, as the phallos was carried before the god in the
1
Over this ship floated the saffroncoloured robe woven for it by the hands of Athenian maidens, as the women in the temple at Jerusalem wove hangings for This ship again is the bark or boatthe Ashera of Baal.
o-reat feasts of
Dionysos.
brides
monachism
The idea of the Lamb. or asceticism for woman probably never entered the head of Hindu or Buddhists theologians and
of
1
philosophers.
Seemingly the Phallos, which gave In the issue this title of Pallas. piece of wood, or pole, is as fatal to Ias6n
her
as the Stauros to Osiris, or the Mistletoe to Baldur. 2 The connexion of the robe or veil
nence in the Phrygian or Eastern mythology. Nun erzahlt Arnobius, Cybele habe mit ihrem Kleide den abgeschnittenen Phallus des Attes bedeekt, ein Grebrauch, welcher in den Mysterien der Isis gleichfalls vorkam, denn zu Byblos wurde im Tompel der Baaltis (Gottermutter) das heilige Holz cpaWos, pains) von der Isis mit Leinwand be' (
Plut. de Is.
'Attes.'
16.
Nun wirdauch
with the Phallic emblem is brought out, as we might expect, with great promi-
Nork,
s. v.
THE SHIP OF
ISIS.
119
CHAP.
II.
shaped vessel of which Tacitus speaks as the symbol employed by the Suevi in the worship of Isis. Whether this goddess is to be identified with the Teutonic Ziza worshipped
in the country about
is
Augsburg
is
an indifferent matter.
It
more
attributes, as
name is given from a resemblance of he calls Wuotan Mercury and Thor Mars.
But
it is
with the remark, that the sign pointed simply to a foreign cultus brought across the sea, when not only was the same
symbol used
in the
Roman
rustic calendar
This ship of Isis was, however, on the 5th of March. nothing more nor less than the vehicle of the earth-goddess Herth or Aerth, whose sacred island Tacitus mentions in the same treatise. 2 Here too, as with the Ashera at Jerusalem and the ship of Athene, the vehicle was carefully covered with a robe which no profane hand might touch, and carried 3 in procession drawn by cows.
1 The parallelism of these myths was pointed out with singular accuracy by Mr. Richard Price in his introduction to AYarton's History of English Poetry. It is impossible for any student of comparative mythology to read this
remarkable treatise, written some forty years ago, without feeling that, here as elsewhere, other men have laboured, and
Th. 754, and of Sophokles, 0. T. 1257, The to the gardens of Adonis. mode in which the advent of this ship was greeted may be seen in a passage quoted at length by Grimm (D. M. 237) from the chronicle of Rudolph of St. Trudo, given in the Spicilcgium of
and
we enter into their labours. It deserves in every way to be repxiblished separately, as being the work of a critic far too keen-sighted and judicious to produce a book of which the interest and the valuo may soon pass away. 2 the Mr. Gould having quoted passage from Appuleius in which the goddess says, that yearly her priests dedicate to her a new ship laden with the first fruits of spring, adds that the carrying in procession of ships, in which the Virgin Mary takes the place of Aphrodite or Astarte, has not yet wholly gone out of use, and notices the prohibitions issued at different times against the carrying about of ploughs and ships on Shrove Tuesday or other Curious Myths, ii. 68, 69. The days. plough is only one of the many forms of the Phallos, and carries us at once to the metaphor of iEschylos, Septcm c.
The rites were Bacchic D'Achery. throughout, and at the end the writer adds qua? tunc videres agere, nostrum tacere et defiere, quibus modo est
'
graviter luere.' Not less as to the meaning of the plough carried about after a like sort, is the statement of another chronicler, Mos erat antiquitus Lipsise ut Liberalibus (um Bacchusfest, d. i. Fassnachts'l personati juvenes per vicos oppidi aratrum circumducerent. pucllas obvias per lasciviam ad illius jugum accedere etiam repugnantes cogerent, hoc veluti ludicro poenam expetentes ab iis quae innuptEe ad eum usque diem mansissent.' Grimm, ih. 243. 3 These ships, chests, or boats are the KicTTai fxvffTLKal of the Mysteries, and we see them in the chest or coffin of das Grab des verstorbenen Osiris,
contingit
significant
' '
Jahrgotts, der aber in der Idee nur stirbt, wcil er vom Tode wieder aufersteht,' in the Korykian cave in which
120
BOOK
'
. . ,
of the earth
The
Lotos,
and its fecundation. In this form it is Harpichruti (Harpokrates) and of Bhayanana or Mahakali, the sanguinary deity of later Hindu worship and the patron
the seat of the child
Odyssey are warning to all who care for higher things not to imitate their selfish pleasures, and so forget their children and their
The eating of the lotos is thus the fruit, and the Lotojmagoi of the an example of unrestrained sensuality, and a
Goblets
and horns.
folk-lore of the
f
Deccan the
falls in
vessel is represented
by
^g mii;k W omaii,
As a
mango when
number of myths. It is the golden cup into which Helios It is the crater or mixing sinks when his journey is done.
bowl in which the Platonists spoke of the Demiourgos as
mino-lhio; the materials
of the future
Kosmos.
It
is
the
horn of Amaltheia, the nurse of Zeus, who gave to it the power of supplying to its possessor all that he could desire This horn reappears in the myths of Bran, and to have. Ceridwen, and Huon of Bordeaux, to whom Oberon gives a horn which yields the costliest wine in the hands of a good man only. 2 The talismanic power of this horn is still further shown in the prose romance of Tristram, when the liquor is dashed over the lips of any guilty person who ventures to lift it to his mouth, and in the goblet of Tegan Euroron, the wife of Caradoc of the strong arm. 3 It is seen again in the
Zeus
is bound till Hermes (the breath of life) comes to rescue him, and in the boats in which the bodies of Elaine and Arthur are laid in the more modern
'Arche.'
to eat the lotus, with the so-called
to abstain
from
beans. to the
kv4q},
Whether the word Kva/xos belong same root which has yielded kuo>, Kvnpa, Kvfxa, or not, the word
shows
clearly
the prohibition, also attributed to Pythagoras, to abstain from fish, in connexion with the purpose especially ascribed to him, and the ascetic discipline which he is said to have established. It will scarcely be maintained that these precepts, in a peculiarly esoteric system, are to be interpreted literally. The technical meanings acquired by the words Kva/mos and icva/iifa seem to point in the same direction.
2 Price, Introd. to Warton's Hist. Eng. Poetry, 66. 3 lb. 59. This goblet reappears in
<f>do-ri\os
enough
how
readily tho shape of the bean brought up the idea of a boat, or a boat-shaped Nor can we well omit to note vessel.
tho
Scottish
ballad
of
the
Luck of
CUPS
AND MIRRORS.
Rhyd-
121
CHAP,
/
-
derch the Scholar, in the basket of Gwyddno, in which food designed for one becomes an ample supply for a hundred;
round which Arthur and his peers hold high in the lamp of revelry; in the wishing-quern of Frodi; Allah-ud-deen, which does the bidding of its owner through the Jin who is its servant in the purse of Bedreddin Hassan, which the fairy always keeps filled in spite of his wastefulness in the wonderful well of Apollon Thyrxis in Lykia, 2 which reveals all secrets to those who look into it. This mysterious mirror is the glass vessel of Agrippa, and of the cruel stepmother in the German tale of Little Snow-white, who, like Brynhild, lies in a death-like sleep, guarded under a case of ice by dwarfs until the piece of poisoned apple and we see it again in the cups falls from between her lips of Rhea and Demeter, the milkwoman or the gardener's wife of Hindu folk-lore, and in the modios of Serapis. It becomes
in the table
1 ; ; ;
nook of mount Ithome a treasure which, if guarded would insure the restoration of Messene. When the battle of Leuktra justified the hopes of Aristomenes, the Argive Epiteles saw a vision which bade him recover the old woman who was well nigh at her last gasp beneath the sods His search was rewarded by the discovery of a of Ithome. water-jar, in which was contained a plate of the finest tin. On this plate were inscribed the mystic rites for the worship
secret
carefully,
Edenhall. When it was seized by one of the family of Musgrave, the fairy train vanished, crying aloud,
<
perity from the wonderful quern, allowing them no sleep longer than while the
cuckoo
.
was
silent.
fall,
The
narrowly escaped fell from the hands of the Duke of Wharton. Of course it was caught in its fall by his butler, and the old idea of its inherent fertility remained in the fancy that the lees of wine are still apparent at the bottom.' Scott, Border Minstrelsy, ii.
goblet,
it is
said,
it
a S ainsfc Fr S rouI\d a P* 8 * ^' * a sea king slew him, carrying off great it the quern and the booty, and with two slaves. These were now made to grind white salt in the ships, till they sank in Pentland Firth. There is ever since a whirlpool where the sea falls As the quern into the quern's eye.
At length
they
'
roars, so does the sea roar, and thus it was that the sea first became salt.'
277.
1
'
When
claimed his peace, he set two women slaves to grind gold, peace, and pros-
Thorpe, Translation of Scemund's Ed da, See also the story 'Why the ii. 150. Sea is Salt,' in Dasent's Norse Tales. - Paus. vii. 21, 6.
122
BOOK
and in
late traditions it
how Rehoboam
inclosed
the book containing his father's supernatural knowledge in an ivory ewer and placed it in his tomb. The fortunes of
by Flegetanis, who is said to have traced up his genealogy on the mother's side to Solomon and Mr. Price 3 has remarked that it will be no matter of surprise to
this vessel are related
; '
those
who remember
name
in the
general history of fiction, that a descendant of this distinguished sovereign should be found to write its history, or
of con-
veying
it
This mystic
vessel, the
at once a store-
house of food as inexhaustible as the table of the Ethiopians, and a talismanic test as effectual as the goblets of Oberon and Tristram. The good Joseph of ArimathaBa, who had
gathered up in
of Jesus when
it
fell
by
it
years
and when at length, having either been brought by him to Britain, or preserved in heaven, it was carried by angels to the pure Titurel and shrined in a magnificent temple, it supplied to its worshippers the most delicious food,
1
Pans.
iv.
20,
26.
With
this
may
heir,
It
was
be compared the legend of the great wizard Michael Scott, In this case the Mighty Book is found not in an ewer, but in the hand of the magician. Still
the
boat-shaped vessel
(it
is
is
not wanting,
a
is
is
lamp
in the
at his knee;
opened, the
Streamed upward
is seen in the legend of the Caldron of Ceridwen, This story is given the Keltic Demeter. by Mr. Gould (Curious Myths, ii. 335), who adds that this vessel of the liquor of wisdom had a prominent place in Sir Walter Scott British mythology.' remarks, that in many Scottish legends ^orn will prove a cornua driuk
'
iS
And
,
through the galleries far aloof. Xo earthly flame blazed e'er so bright, t?shone ,-, heavens own blessed light. r,,i like It
i
c0 P la
>
iii
4.
and bear stream. As an it across a running , ^^j^/i , r t i, , +1 emblem this cup is combined with the
it
f snatch
on
?
**
Minstrel, ii. 18. The same vessel in Taliesin imparts to its possessor the wisdom of Iamos. It healed all the evils to which flesh is
Scott,
'-'
serpent in the representations of St. John, 3 Introd. to Wartons Hist, of Eng. Poetry.
THE SANGREAL.
and preserved them in perpetual youth. As such, it differs way from the horn of Amaltheia, or any other of the oval vessels which can be traced back to the emblem of the
in no
123
CHAP,
IL
,
Hindu
the of
its
Sacti.
We
is
nature; nor
in the
is is
The symbol
in this
and
form
it
King Pelles, he sees a great which he beheld four angels supporting an aged
man
whom
'
bishop of Christendom."
candles
Then the
from
by upon the table, and " the fourth set the holy speare even upright upon the vessel," as represented on an ancient churchyard crucifix,
fell
which
spear,
collected
angels in a box.
This mysterious throughout the legend. When Sir Bors had seen the Sangreal in the house of Pelles, he was led into a fair chamber, where he laid himself in full armour And right as he saw come in a light that he on the bed. might wel see a speare great and long* which come straight upon him point-long.' 2 Indeed the whole myth exhibits
l
is
Greek dynastic legends. Perceval, in the episode of Pecheur, the Pisher-king, answers to Sir Galahad in the quest of the Sangreal. In both cases the work can be done only by a pure-minded knight, and Perceval as well as Galahad goes in search of a goblet, which has been stolen from the king's table. The sick king, whom he finds lying on his couch, has been wounded while trying to mend a sword broken
1 Mr. Gould, from whom these words are quoted, gives a drawing of this
emblem. Curious Myth*, ii. 348. Mortc oVArthure. Gould, ib. 340.
124
BOOK
II.
The
title
a comparison with that of Bheki in the Hindu legend and German story. The latter denotes the
it
sun as
rests
king cannot regain his health until Pertinax has been slain. He is avenged by Perceval, who bears away the holy vessel and the bleeding lance as the reward of his prowess. An earlier heathen version of this story is found in the legend of Pheredur, in which the boat-shaped vessel appears with the head of a man swimming in blood a form which carries us to the repulsive Maha Kali of later Hindu mythology.
myth.
In the myth of Erichthonios we have a crucial instance of a coarse and unseemly story produced by translating into the language of human life phrases which described most innocently and most vividly some phenomena of nature. In
the
myth
of the Sangreal
we
For those who first working of the opposite principle. sought to frame for themselves some idea of the great mystery of their existence, and who thought that they had found it in the visible media of reproduction, there was doubtless far less of a degrading influence in the cultus of the signs of the male and female powers and the exhibition of their symbols than we might be disposed to imagine. But that the developement of the idea might lead to the most wretched results, there could be no question. No degradation could well be greater than that of the throngs who hurried to the temples of the Babylonian Mylitta. .But we have seen the myth, starting from its crude and undisguised forms, assume the more harmless shape of goblets or horns of plenty and fertility, of rings and crosses, of rods and It has brought before us the spears, of mirrors and lamps. mysterious ships endowed with the powers of thought and speech, beautiful cups in which the wearied sun sinks to rest, the staff of wealth and plent} with which Hermes
r
the cup of Demeter into which the ripe fruit casts itself by
MYSTERIES.
125
CHAP,
ll
have seen the symbols assume the character of talismanic tests, by which the refreshing draught is dashed from the lips of the guilty; and, finally, in
an
irresistible impulse.
We
come a sacred thing, which only the pure in heart may see and touch. To Lancelot who tempts Guenevere to be faithless to Arthur, as Helen was unfaithful to Menelaos, it either remains invisible, or is seen only to leave him stretched senseless on the earth for his presumption. The myth which
corrupted the worshippers of Tarn muz in the Jewish temple
picture of unselfish
devotion
mysteries.
In the Arabian story the part of Sir Galahad is played by AUah-ud-deen, who is told by the magician that no one in the whole world but he can be permittcd to touch or lift up the stone and
1
Boots or Cinderella.
a
is
The
treasure is
lamp
in
go
tellers
The Eastern storybeneath it. were not very careful about the
legends. The their of consistency magician, it is true, singles out the boy ;' simplicity and artlessness for his bur the portrait drawn of the child at the outset of the tale is rather that of
'
not oil; with the possession of it are bound up wealth, happiness, and splendour: it is, in short, the Sangreal. The ring which the magician places on Plato, his finger is the ring of Gryges. If it does not make himself Polit. 359. invisible, the visibility of the minister of the ring depends upon the way in which it is handled, this being in both stories the same.
126
BOOK
._
IL
_,
were ever used for the exposition of theological doctrines Mr. Grote's conclusion differing from the popular creed.' In his judgment it is to the last degree definite. is more improbable that any recondite doctrine, religious or philosophical, was attached to the mysteries, or contained in the
'
<
holy stories
'
If
by
meant
God and the Divine government of the world, their judgments may perhaps be in accordance with fact but it
nature of
;
can scarcely be denied that the thoughts aroused lay the recognition of the difference between man and woman are among the most mysterious stirrings of the human heart,
and that a philosophy which professed to reconcile the natural impulses of the worshippers with the sense of right and duty would carry with it a strange and almost irresistible fasThe Corinthian Aphrodite had her Hierodouloi, cination.
the pure Gerairai ministered to the goddess of the Parthenon, and the altar of the Latin Yesta was tended by her chosen
viro-ins.
different
forms of the same sacrifice in the purity of the one and the abandonment of the other, might well be said to be based on a recondite, though not a wholesome, doctrine. Nor, indeed, is it supposed that the character of the Hellenic mysteries
was
dramatic than those of Egypt or Hindustan. Every act of the great Eleusinian festival reproduced the incidents of the myth of Demeter, and the processions of Athene and Dionysos exhibited precisely the same symbols which marked
less
the worship of Vishnu and Sacti, of the Egyptian Isis and the Teutonic Hertha. The substantial identity of the rites
justifies
1
'
In den Eleusinischen Mystericn ein Phallus entblosst und den Eingeweihten gezeigt (Tert. ad Valent. p. 289): und Demeter wird dadurch, dass Banbo ihre wrcb entblosst, zur Heiterkeit gestimmt. Clem. Al. Protr. Arnob. adv. Gent. v. p. 218. p. 16;
wurde
Dies lasst voraussetzen, class desgleichen in den Elcusinien wirklicli geschah, was mann also ra lepa SeiiewaOai nannte. Vgl. Lobek. Aglaoph. p. 49.' Nork, The form of dismissal at the iv. 53. Eleusinian mysteries, icbyt fywraf, has been identified by some with the
THE ELEUSIXIAN MYSTERIES.
no accident which has given to Iswara Arghanautha, epithet which makes him the lord of that divine ship which bore the Achaian warriors from
It
is
IZi
CHAP.
IL
the
Hindu Dionysos, an
the land of darkness to the land of the morning. The testiof Theodoret, Arnobios, and Clement of Alexandria, an emblem similar to the Yoni was worshipped in the that
mony
mysteries of Eleusis needs no confirmation, when we rethat the same emblem was openly carried in procession at Athens. The vases in the Hamiltonian collection
member
at the British
purification of
Museum leave us as little in doubt that the women in the Hellenic mysteries agreed closely
with that of the Sacti in the mysteries of the Hindus. That ornaments in the shape of a vesica have been popular in all
countries as preservatives against dangers, and especially from evil spirits, can as little be questioned as the fact that they still retain some measure of their ancient popularity in England, where horse-shoes are nailed to walls as a safeguard against unknown perils, where a shoe is thrown by
way
of good-luck after
the villagers have not yet ceased to dance round the Maypole on the green.
It
may be
facts
now
stated Real
and serpent worship. fact, and it is useless to build on hypothesis. If there is any one point more certain than another, it is that, wherever tree and serpent worship has been found, the cultus of the Phallos and the Ship, of the Linga and the Yoni, in conis
the phenomena of tree meaning of tree and The whole question is indeed one of serpent
worship.
nection with the worship of the sun, has been found also. It impossible to dispute the fact ; and no explanation can be
other.
accepted for one part of the cultus which fails to explain the It is unnecessary, therefore, to analyse theories which
it
profess to see in
venomous
A religion based on the worship of the must have been a religion of terror in the earliest glimpses which we have of it, the serpent is a symbol of life and of love. Nor is the Phallic cultus in any respect a
wide-branched
tree.
reptile
Cansha
i.
Om
vii.
Nork,
cultns of the full-grown and branching tree. In its earliest form the symbol is everywhere a mere stauros, or pole ; and although this stock or rod budded in the shape of the thyrsos
staff,
yet even in
its latest
developements
is
it
Nor
possible
fact,
meaning which the Brahman now attaches to the Linga and the Yoni. That the Jews clung to it in this special sense with vehement tenacity is the bitter complaint of the prophets and the crucified serpent, adored for its healing powers, stood untouched in the temple until it was removed and destroyed by Hezekiah. This worship of serpents ' void of reason,' condemned in the Wisdom of Solomon, probably survived even the Babylonish captivity. Certainly it was adopted by the Christians who were known as Ophites, Gnostics, and Nicolaitans. In Athenian mythology the serpent and the tree are singularly prominent. Kekrops, Erechtheus, and Erichthonios, are each and all serpentine in the lower portion of their bodies. The sacred snake of Athene had its abode in the Akropoiis, and her olive-tree
;
lay at the feet of Asklepios, and snakes were fed in his temple at Epidauros and elsewhere.
1
That the ideas of mere terror and death, suggested by the venomous or the crushing reptile, could never have given
under the Iason, Iasion, &c., which bear the equivocal meaning of saving or destroying life, as they are referred to It is the 16s, poison, or Idofxai, to heal. means by which the waste caused by Daher die Phallusdeath is repaired. schlange, auch die Heilschlange 'Aya0oSat/Acou: daher der mit Schlangen umtriirtete Phallusstab in der Hand des Hermes lOvcpaWLKos, und des Acsculap, dessen weibliche Hiilfte, Hygiea ihm die Schalo entgegen tragt, welche ein Symbol des Mutterbeckens ist.' Nork, s. v. 'Arzt.' This shell is the shell of
1
It
is,
many names,
serpents played a prominent part in the Zeus Sabazios, whose worship was practically identical with that of the Syrian Tammuz or Adonis. The epithet Sabazios, which, like the words
rites of
'
Adonai and Melkarth, was imported into Greek mythology, is applied not less to Dionysos than to Zeus but the stories told of this deity remained vague and shadowy. Sometimes he is a son of Zeus and Persephone, and is nursed by the nymph Nyssa, whoso name reappears in Dionysos: sometimes Dio;
nysos
is
who
is,
Aphrodite.
It is
or of Kronos.
scarcely necessary to
add that
129
CHAP,
lI '
.
before those of
life,
obvious enough
and the
with the serpent as the object of adoration. The deadly beast always was, and has always remained, the object of the horror and loathing which is expressed for Ahi, the
choking and throttling snake, the Yritra whom Indra smites with his unerring lance, the dreadful Azidahaka of the Avesta, the Zohak or biter of modern Persian mythology, the serpents whom Herakles strangles in his cradle, the
Python, or Eafnir, or Grendel, or Sphinx, whom Phoibos, or Sigurd, or Beowulf, or Oidipous, smite and slay. That the worship of the serpent has nothing to do with these evil beasts is abundantly clear from all the Phallic monuments
of the East or West.
In the topes of Sanchi and Amravati the disks which represent the Yoni predominate in every part of the design the emblem is worn with unmistakeable
;
distinctness
by every female
many
of the disks, a
group of women with their hands resting on the Linga, which they uphold. It may, indeed, be possible to trace out the association which connects the Linga with the bull in Sivaism, as denoting more particularly the male power,
while the serpent in Jainaism and Vishnavism
the female
is found with So again in Egypt, some may discern in the bull Apis or Mnevis the predominance of the male idea in that country, while in Assyria or Palestine the serpent or Agathos Daimon is connected with the altar of
Baal.
torical inquiry is
These are really questions of no moment. The hisended when the origin of the emblems has
been determined. For the student who is willing to be taught by the facts The eduwhich he regards as ascertained, this chapter in the history eatlon of of human thought will involve no more perplexity than the
fact that there
was a time when human speech had none but sensuous words, and mankind, apparently, none but sensuous
If from these sensuous words have been evolved terms
ideas.
capable of expressing the highest conceptions to which the human mind has yet risen, he may be well content to accept
BOOK
II.
man.
natural reproduction as a necessary stage in the education of If our limbs are still shackled and our movements
hindered by ideas which have their root in the sensuousness of the ancient language, we shall do well to remember that a real progress for mankind might in no other way have
been possible. If the images of outward and earthly objects have been made the means of filling human hearts and minds with the keenest yearnings for Divine truth, beauty, and love, the work done has been the work of God.
Section XIII.
be urged that the attribution to Krishna of qualities or powers belonging to other deities is a mere device by which his devotees sought to supersede the more ancient gods, the answer must be that nothing is done in his case
If
it
which has not been done in the case of almost every other member of the great company of the gods, and that the systematic adoption of this method is itself conclusive proof of the looseness and flexibility of the materials of which the cumbrous mythology of the Hindu epic poems is composed. As being Vishnu, Krishna performs all the feats of that god. And thou, Krishna, of the Yadava race, having become the son of Aditi and being called Vishnu, the younger brother of Indra, the all-pervading, becoming a child, and vexer of thy foes, hast by thy energy traversed the sky, the atmosphere, and the earth in three strides.' He is thus also identified with Hari or the dwarf Vishnu,
'
1
myth which
bull, he is Govinda. a name which gave rise in than those of the Mahabharata to the stories of times later his life with the cowherds and his dalliance with their wives; but in the Mahabharata he is already the protector of cattle, 2 and like Herakles slays the bull which ravaged the herds. His name Krishna, again, is connected with another parentage, which makes him the progeny of the black hair of Hari,
Nanda, the
ir. p.
118.
lb. 206.
131
CHAP,
**
.
But he is also Hari himself, and Hari Narayana, the god who transcends all, the minutest of the minute, the vastest of the vast, the greatest of the great.'
the dwarf Vishnu.
'
1
is
is
undisguised, for
the soul of
all,
all,
the all-know-
all,
the god
whom
bore to Vishnu. 2
the maker of the Rudras and the Vasus, as both the priest
Know
that
Dharma
(righteousness)
is
my
beloved
first-
born mental son, whose nature is to have compassion on all creatures. In his character I exist among men, both present and past, passing through many varieties of mundane existence. I am Vishnu, Brahma, Indra, and the source as
well as the destruction of things, the creator and the annihilator of the whole aggregate of existences.
While
all
men
live in
unrighteousness,
I,
bulwark of righteousness, as the ages pass away. 53 As such he is not generated by a father. He is the unborn. The character of Rudra, thus said to be sprung from Krishna andRudra Krishna, is not more definite. As so produced, he is Time, and is declared by his father to be the offspring of his But in the character of Mahadeva, Rudra is woranger. 4 shipped by Krishna, and the necessary explanation is that in so adoring him Krishna was only worshipping himself. 5 Rudra, however, is also Narayana, and Siva the destroyer. There is no difference between Siva who exists in the form of Vishnu, and Vishnu who exists in the form of Siva, just as in the form of Hari and Hara Vishnu and Mahadeva are combined. He who is Vishnu is Rudra he who is Rudra is Pitamaha (Brahma, the great father) the substance is one, the gods are three, Rudra, Vishnu and Pitamaha. Just as water thrown into water can be nothing else than water, so Vishnu entering into Rudra must possess the nature of Rudra. And just as fire entering into fire can be nothing else but fire, so Rudra entering into Vishnu must
6 ; ;
.
to
lb. 224.
lb.
235.
lb. 205.
225.
132
book
IL
nature of
Vishnu
andKama.
Hindu
mystici
Vishnu is declared to possess the Moon) and the world, moveable and immoveable, possesses the nature of Agni and Soma.' It is the same with Kama, who is sometimes produced ^if of y islinu s ^vAe power, and sometimes from t addressed by Brahma as the source of being and cause of destruction, Upendra and Mahendra, the younger and the He is Skambha, the supporter, and Trivikelder Indra.' 2 rama, the god of three strides. 3 But the story of his wife Sita who is stolen away and recovered by Rama after the slaughter of Havana runs parallel with that of Sarama and Pani, of Paris and Helen. This cumbrous mysticism leads us further and further
fire
:
Soma
(the
>
'
from the simpler conceptions of the oldest mythology, in which Rudra is scarcely more than an epithet, applied sometimes to Agni, sometimes to Mitra, Varuna, the Asvins, or
the Maruts.
Thou, Agni, art Eudra, the deity of the great sky. Thou Thou art lord of the sacrificial art the host of the Maruts. Thou, who hast a pleasant abode, movest onwards food.
<
Tii.
story
of Krishna.
was in accordance with the general course of Hindu mywho is sometimes regarded as self-existent, should be obscured by that of his children. The two opposite conceptions, which exhibit Herakles in one aspect as a self-sacrificing and unselfish hero, in another
It
in the one
is filled
who
offers
up a
sacrifice
upon him
as
sustaining all
life, is in the other a being not much pure than Aphrodite or Adonis. If, like the legends of the Egyptian Isis and Osiris, the myth seems to lend itself with singular exactness to an astronomical inter-
more
lofty or
pretation,
it
also
many
stories of other
all
Muir, Sanskrit Texts, pt, iv. p. 237. R. V. ii. 1, G Muir, Sanskrit Texts,
;
lb,
151.
133
CHAP.
>.
myths from a common germ. Thus if Pausanias speaks of Dionysos Antheus, Krishna 'also is Vanamali,
these several
_JL
the flower-crowned.
overthrows
the giant Madhu, and the cruel tyrant of Madura. Like Oidipous, Komulus, Perseus, Cyrus and others, he is one of the fatal children, born to be the ruin of their sires ; and the king of Madura, like Laios, is terrified by the
him
of his
life.
It
is
in another form.
The
desire of
Kamsa
is
but her husband promises to deliver all her children into the hands of the tyrant. But although six infants were thus
placed in his power and slain, he shut up the beautiful Devaki and her husband in a dungeon; and when the seventh child was about to be born, Devaki prays, like Khea, that this one at least may be spared. In answer to her entreaty, Bhavani, who shields the newly-born children, comes to comfort her, and taking the babe brings it to the house of Nanda, to whom a son, Balarama, had been born. When Devaki was to become for the eighth time a mother, Kamsa was again eager to destroy the child. As the hour drew near, the mother became more beautiful, her form more brilliant, while the dungeon was filled with a heavenly light as when Zeus came to Danae in a golden shower, and the air was filled with a heavenly harmony as the chorus of the gods, with Brahma and Siva at their head, poured forth then* gladness in song. All these marvels (which the Bhagavata Purana assigns to the birth of the child) are reported to Kamsa by the warders, and his jealousy and fear are
1
This song would of itself suffice to prove how thoroughly Krishna, like Dyii, Indra, Varuna, Agni, or any other names, denotes the mere conception of the One True God, who is but feebly
1
shadowed forth under these titles and by the symbolism of these myths. 'As
Aditi,'
say the gods to Devaki the mother of the unborn Krishna, 'thou
art the parent of the gods; as Diti, thou art the mother of the Daityas, their foes. The whole earth, decorated with oceans, rivers, continents,
. .
.
hamlets, and towns all the fires, waters, and winds; the stars. asterisms, and planets the sky crowded with the variegated chariots of the gods, and ether that provides space for all substance; (lie several spheres of earth, sky, and heaven, of saints, sages, the whole egg ascetics, and of Brahma of Brahma with all its population of gods, demons, spirits, snake-gods, fiends, ghosts and imps, men and brutes, and whatever creatures have life, comprised in him who is their eternal lord and
cities, villages,
;
:
still
more vehemently
excited.
But the
fatal
hour draws-
born with four arms and all the the day of his birth the quarters of the horizon were irradiate with joy, as if more light were diffused over the whole earth. The virtuous experienced
is
incarnation of Vishnu,
'
On
new
The
delight
when Janarddana was about to be born. murmurings made the music, while the spirits and the nymphs of heaven danced and sang.' For a moment he takes away from the eyes of his earthly parents the veil which prevents them from seeing
glided tranquilly
seas with their melodious
l
deity in
all
his
and they see only the helpless babe in his voice of an angel sounds in the father's ears, bidding him take the child and go into Gokala, the land of cows, to the house of Nanda, where he should find a new-born maiden. This child he must bring back, leaving Krishna in her place. This he is at once enabled to do, for the fetters fall from his hands and the prison doors open of their own accord and guided by a dragon or snake, who here plays the part of the dragons or snakes in the myths of Iamos or Medeia, he
;
Nanda himself
is
in
pro-
and his wife prostrate from pain when Krishna was left under their roof. As the husband of Devaki reenters the prison, the doors close again and the chains fasten themselves on his wrists, while the cry of the infant
found
sleep,
who
;
the object of all apprehension whose real form, nature, names, and dimensions are not within human apprehension, are now with that Vishnu in thee. Thou art Swaha; thou art Swadha: thou art wisdom, ambrosia. light, and heaven. Thou hast descended upon earth for the prcservation of the world.' Vishnu Purana, H. H. Wilson, p. 501. The same idea animates much of the devotion addressed to the Virgin Mary, as in the Litanv of Loretto and in many among the authorised hymns of the Breviary. Vishnu Purana, H. II. Wilson, 503.
Hymn:
peaceful was the night Wherein the Pnnce of Light HiS rei S n of P eace uPon the
oartIx
began: The winds with wonder whist Smoothly the waters kissed, W hispenng new joys to the mild Ocean,
forgot to rave, JJJo now hath quite * hlle bmls of calm slt brooding on the charmed wave.'
, TT1
'
lo
CHAP.
,
At midnight Kamsa enters the dungeon, and Devaki entreats his mercy for the babe. She prays in vain
the king.
;
but before
Kamsa
will,
from his grasp, and he hears the voice of Bhavani, telling him that his destroyer is born and has been placed beyond Mad with rage, the tyrant summons his council his reach. and asks what should be done. The answer is that, as they know not where the child is, he should order all the newlyborn infants or all children under two years to be slain.
his great
enemy was
his sister's
he
sets everything in
motion
summarily as the dragons who seek to This demon, finding Krishna strangle the infant Herakles. asleep, took him up and gave him her breast to suck, the doom of all who do so suck being instant death but Krishna strains it with such violence as to drain Putana of all life, a touch which recalls the myth of Herakles and Here in As Krishna grew up, he connexion with the Milky Way. became the darling of the milk-maidens, in whom some have seen the stars of the morning sky, an inference which seems to be here warranted by the myth that Krishna stole
dealt with
as
;
their milk, seemingly as the sun puts out the light of the
by the story which connected the formation of the milky way with the nursing When the maidens complained of the of Herakles by Here. wrong, Krishna opened his mouth, and therein they saw
stars
;
and
in the midst of all created things, receiving adoration from all. But from this glimpse of his real glory the legend
returns to the myths told of swan-maidens and their lovers. In the nine days' harvest feast of Bhavani (the nine days'
festival of
Demeter) the Gopias, each and all, pray to the goddess that they may become the brides of Krishna.
1
1-'
See page 44. This myth is in strict accordance with the old Vedic phrase addressed to After thee is the Sun as the horse the chariot after thee, Aryan, the man after thee, the host after thee the cows
2
:
'
of the
girls.'
is the husband of the wives, an expression which, in Professor Max Mailer's opinion, was probably meant originally for the evening sun as surrounded" by the splendours of the
and Yama, he
'
As they bathe
her raiment.
in a stream,
refuses to surrender
them
fulfilled,
and Krishna,
among the
Apollon Noruios, whose harp is the harp of Orpheus, rousing all things into life and energy. With these maidens he
dances, like Apollon with the Muses, each maiden fancying
which we find again in Only Eadha, who loved Krishna with an absorbing affection, saw things as they really were, and withdrew herself from the company. In vain Krishna sent maidens to soothe her and bring her back. To none would she listen, until the god came to her himself. His words soon healed the wrong, and so great was his joy with her that he lengthened the night which followed to the length of six months, an incident which has but half preserved its meaning in the myth of Zeus and Alkmene, but which here points clearly to the six months which Persephone spends with her mother Demeter. The same purely solar character is impressed on the myth in the Bhagavata Purana, which relates how Brahma, wishing to prove whether Krishna was or was not an incarnation of Vishnu, came upon him as he and Balarama were sleeping among the shepherd youths and maidens. All these Brahma took away and shut up in a distant prison, and Krishna and his brother on awaking found themselves alone. Balarama proposed to go in search of them. Krishna at once created the same number of youths and maidens so precisely like those which had been taken away that when Brahma returned at the end of a year, he beheld to his astonishment the troop which he fancied that he had broken up. Hurrying to the prison he found that none had escaped from it, and thus convinced of the power of Krishna, he led all his
is
gloaming, as
repetition of the
were by a more serene dawn. The Dawn herbut the self is likewise called the wife expression " husband of the wives " is in
it
;
'
The
parallel
is
exact.
Phoibos
another passage clearly applied to the " The sinking sun, R. V. ix. 86, 32 husband of the wives approaches the Lectures, second series, 513. end.'"
:
giving to Hermes charge over his cattle is represented by Indra, who says to Krishna, I have now come by desire of the cattle to install you as Upendra, and as the Indra of the cows thou shalt be called Govinda.' Vishnu Purana,' H. H. Wilson, 528.
'
137
CHAP,
-
who then suffered the phantasms which he had evoked to vanish away. Here we have the sleep of the sun-god which in other myths becomes the sleep of Persephone and Brynhild, of Endyinion or Adonis, the
prisoners back to him,
slumber of autumn when the bright clouds are imprisoned in the cave of Cacus or the Panis, while the new created youths and maidens represent merely the days and months
as in the years that had passed In his solar character Krishna must again be the slayer of the Dragon or Black Snake, Kalinak, the old
In the fight which and which Hindu art has especially delighted in symbolising, Krishna freed himself from the coils of the snake, and stamped upon his heads until he had crushed them all. The sequel of the myth in its more recent form goes on to relate his death, how Balarama lay down to sleep beneath the Banyan tree, how from his throat issued a monstrous snake, like the cobra of Vikram in the modern Hindu story, how Krishna himself became sorely depressed, how, as he lay among the bushes with his foot so placed that his heel, in which alone he, like so many others, was vulnerable, was exposed, a huntsman, thinking that he was aiming at a gazelle, shot him with an arrow, and the ground was bathed with his blood, incidents which are at once explained by a reference to the myths of Baldur, Adonis, or
1
follows,
Osiris. 2
'
tells
ritual,
in
separate mansions.
Sixteen
thousand and
ments of Nanda. Krishna lays hold of the middle hood of the chief of the snakes with both hands, and, bending it down, dances upon it in triumph, Whenever the snake attempted to raise bis head, it was again trodden down, and many bruises were inflicted on the hood by the pressure of the toes of Krishna. Among the many foes conquered by Krishna is Naraka, from whom he rescues elephants, horses, women, &c. At an auspicious season he espoused
1
hundred was the number of the maidens and into so many forms did the son of Madhu mulone
;
damsels thought that he had wedded Vishnu Puher in her single person.' " This myth is beyond all rana, ib. 589. doubt simply that of Prokris in another The dew beconus visible only form.
when
all
the maidens whom Naraka had carried off from their friends. At one and the same moment he received the hands of all of them, according to the
the blackness of the night is disand the same sun is reflected in the thousands of sparkling drops: but the language of the Purana is in singular accordance with the phraseology in which Reman Catholic writers delight to speak of nuns as the brides of Christ, 2 It is. of course, true that these
pelled,
Section
BOOK
**
As Endymion sinks into his dreamless sleep beneath the Latmian hill, the beautiful Selene conies to gaze upon the being whom she loves only to lose. The phrase was too transparent to allow of the growth of a highly developed
myth.
the full
in the other
is little
moon comes
which
before he
Hence there
it
an obvious meaning. She is the beautiful eye of night, the daughter of Hyperion, of Pallas, or of Helios the sister of Phoibos Apollon. Like the sun, she moves across the heaven in a chariot drawn by white horses from which her soft light
told of Selene
carry with
streams
down
to the earth
and
She
is
and the hills, she is beloved by Pan, who entices her into the dark woods under the guise of a snow-white ram. 2 In other
words, the soft whispering wind, driving before
fleecy
it
the shining
sombre In another version, she is Asterodia, the wanderer among the stars, the mother of the fifty daughters of Endymion, the Ursula of modern legend with her many
clouds, draws
the
moon onwards
into the
groves.
virgins. 3
In the story of
myths have been name of Krishna
the
in ages
Jo, the
moon
crystallised
round the
subsequent to
period during which the earliest Vedic literature came into existence but the myths themselves are found in this older literature associated with other gods, and not always only in germ. Krishna as slaying the dragon is simply Indra smiting Vritra or Ahi, or Phoibos destroying the Python. There is no more room for inferring foreign influence in the growth of any
of these
insists, there is
Practiraturc of the Teutonic tribes. cally the myths of Krishna seem to have been fully developed in the days of
Megasthenes, who identifies him with Nork, s. v. the Greek Herakles. Krishna, 398. Pandia, d. h. die ganz leuchtende/ Preller, Gr. Myth. i. 347. 2 Virg. Georg. iii. 391. 3 Preller regards the number oO here as denoting the fifty moons of tho OlymGr. Myth. i. 348. pian Festal Cycle. But the myth must be taken along with the legends of the fifty sons or daughtersof Aigyptos, Danaos, or Priam.
1
'
THE WANDERINGS OF
10.
139
16
is
CHAP,
/
,
is
one of
;
much
suffering,
is
of the
moon
in its several
phases, from full to new, and thence back to the full again.
She
is
whom
down
2
with unfailing
(the
But Here
is
whom
well-known symbol of the young or horned morn), and Argos Panoptes, the being with a thousand eyes, some of which he opens when the stars arise, while others he closes when their orbs go down. Whether these eyes are, as in some versions, placed on his brow and on the back of his head, or, as in others, scattered all over his body, Argos is the star-illumined sky watching over the moon as she wanders
places in the charge of
Pale for very weariness
earth,
Among
Iii
this
aspect Argos
myth
as
mazes of the star-clothed heavens. bondage she is rescued at the bidding of Zeus by Hermes, who appears here as a god of the morningtide. By the power of his magic rod, and by the music of his flute, the soft whisper of the morning breeze, he lulls even Argos himself into slumber, and then his sword falls, and the thousand eyes are closed in death, as the stars go out when the morning comes, and leave the moon alone. 4 This rescue of 16 by Hermes is, in the opinion of Preller, the temlabyrinth, the
Prom
this terrible
Argos
Pano Ptes
16 becomes a mother e| eimrvoias Supp. 18; a myth which may be compared with the story of the mares of Diomedes. " In the Norse story of Tatterhood, the younger of the two sisters who answer to the Dioskouroi is changed into a calf, and the tale immediately connects the transformation with the voyage of Isis. The same incidents are found in the Arabian Nights in the story
Aios, iEseh.
of the Old Man and the Hind, where the transformation is precisely owing to the jealousy of Here for 16 and her offspring.
3 It is not likely that Shelley was thinking of the myth of Argos Panoptes when he wrote these lines; but he has singularly reproduced this idea of the antagonism between the moon and the
stars.
4
The myth
is
140
BOOK
II.
toil,
and
so the
16 was
driven from one place to another by a gadfly sent by Here, who suffers her neither to rest by day nor to sleep by night.
16 and
Prometheus.
These wanderings have been related by iEschylos in his immortal drama of the bound Prometheus. They carry her over regions, some of whose names belong to our earthly
geography ; but any attempts to fix her course in accordance with the actual position of these regions is mere labour lost. That for such accuracy iEschylos cared nothing is plain from
the fact that the course which 16 takes in his play of the Suppliants cannot be reconciled with the account given in
the Prometheus.
his
It is
enough
moon from the West towards the North, gradually approaching the East and the South, until in the beautiful Aigyptos she is suffered to resume her proper form, or in other words, appear as the full moon, the shape
in
which she was seen before Here changed her into the horned heifer or new moon. This mention of Egypt, or the land of the Nile, as the cradle of her child Epaphos, naturally led the Greeks to identify 16 with the Egyptian Isis, and her son with the bull Apis an identification to which no
objection can be raised, so long as it is not maintained that the Hellenic names and conceptions of the gods were bor-
among
and peoples which excited his curiosity, his wonder, or his She from whom was to spring the deliverer veneration. of Prometheus must herself learn from the tortured Titan what must be the course of her own sufferings and their She must cross the heifer's passage, or Bosporos, issue. which bears her name she must journey through the country
:
who
in the
of Odysseus
a and the craftiest of character which, as Preller remarks, is Gr. simply reflected from Hermes.
men
as transparent as that of Argos PaThe eyes of the dead Argos are nopt&s. placed by Here in the peacock's tail;
ib.
ii.
41.
Myth.
i.
305.
is
14
forge the
Ky Hopes who
CHAP
thunderbolts of Zeus
of the
Amazons who
to see the
end of her sorrows when she reaches the well or fountains of the sun. There her child will be born, and the series of generations will roll on, which are to end in the glorious
1 victories of her descendant, Herakles.
To Phoibos,
Hekate stands in the relation which Diana holds towards Dianus or Janus. She falls, in short, into the ranks of correlative deities with the Asvins and the Dioskouroi, Surya and Savitri, and many others already named. Her keenness of hearing and sight is second only to that of Helios, for when Demeter is searching in agony for her lost child, it is Hekate alone who says that she has heard her cries, while Helios is further able to tell her whither Hades has departed with the maiden. She is then the queen of the night, the moon, and as such she may be described as sprung either from Zeus and Here, or like Phoibos himself, from Leto, or even from Tartaros, or again, from Asteria, the starlit night.'2 In a comparison of offices and honours it is hard to see whether Phoibos or Hekate stands higher and all that
;
can be said is spoken of her in a strain so highflown if the thought of Apollon and his wisdom, incommunicable even to Hermes, had at the moment crossed his mind, just as the worshipper of Brahma or Yishnu must have modified his language, had
he wished to bring it into apparent consistency with what he may have said elsewhere in his devotions to Varuna, Dyaus, or Soma. She is the benignant being, ever ready to hear those who offer to her a holy sacrifice. Nor has she fallen from
1
It
is,
with this particular myth of 16 some features borrowed from Semitic mythology may have been designedly blended. The Phenician Astarte, Ashtaroth, was also represented as a wandering heifer,
Both alike lose or a horned maiden. their children and search for them as searched for Demeter Persephone, Preller, Gr. Myth. ii. 44. 2 Hes. Theog. 411.
142
BOOK
IL
,
,.
the earth, and in the sea. She is the giver of victory in war, the helper of kings in the ministration of justice, the guardian of the flocks and of the vineyards ; and thus she is named
pre-eminently Kourotrophos, the nurse and the cherisher of men. But these great powers could scarcely fail to throw She would be someover her an air of mystery and awe. the solitary inhabitant of a dismal region, caring times
nothing for the sympathy or the love of others ; and the very help which with her flaming torch she gives to Demeter would make her a goddess of the dark nether world to which Her ministers therefore she leads the sorrowing mother. must be as mysterious as herself, and thus the Kouretes and
Kabeiroi become the chosen servants of her sacrifices. Like Artemis, she is accompanied by hounds, not flashing-footed like that which Prokris received from the twin-sister of Phoibos, but Stygian dogs akin to Kerberos and the awful
Only one step more was needed to reach that ideal of witchcraft which is exhibited in its most exalted form in the wise woman Medeia. It is from a cave, like that in which Kirke and Kalypso dwell, that she marks the stealing away of Persephone, and her form is but dimly seen She thus becomes the as she moves among murky mists. her gloomy realm vain dreams spectral queen who sends from and visions, horrible demons and phantoms, and who imparts to others the evil knowledge of which she has become posHer own form becomes more and more sessed herself.
hounds of Yama.
Like Kerberos, she assumes three heads or faces, which denote the monthly phases of the moon the horse with its streaming mane pointing to the moon at its full,
fearful.
Aitemis.
and the snake and the dog representing its waxing and waning, until it disappears from the sight of men. In some traditions Artemis is the twin sister of Phoibos,
with
she takes her place in the ranks of correlative others she is born so long before him that she can deities. In aid Leto her mother at the birth of Phoibos a myth which speaks of the dawn and the sun as alike sprung from the
whom
night.
is
ARTEMIS.
143
CHAP,
/
.
morning land, and her purity is that Over these three deities alone Aphrodite has no power. Love cannot touch the maiden whose delight is in the violet tints of dawn or in the arrows which she sends forth with never failing precision, and which seal the doom, while they are given to avenge the wrongs of Prokris. Like Phoibos, she has the power of life and death she can lessen or take away the miseries and plagues which she brings upon men, and those who honour her are rich in flocks and herds and reach a happy old age.
either case the bright
Prom
those
who
and the Kalydonian boar ravages the fields of Oineus only because he had forgotten to include her among the deities to whom he offered sacrifice. 2 In a word the colours may be paler, but her features and form generally are those of her With him she takes delight in song, 3 and glorious brother.
as Phoibos overcomes the Python, so
Tityos. 4
It seems unnecessary to draw any sharp distinction between the Arkadian and the Delian Artemis. If she is no longer the mere reflection of Phoibos, she still calls herself a child of Leto, 5 and appears as the glorious morning roving through the heaven before the birth of the sun. This broadspreading light is represented by her wanderings among the Like glens and along the mountain summits of Arkadia. Athene and Aphrodite, she belongs to or springs from the running waters, and she demands from Zeus an attendant troop of fifty Okeanid and twenty Amnisiad, or river, nymphs. 6 With these she chases her prey on the heights
1
is
The Ara
ian
i> e iia n
Artemis.
irapQeuos lox^atpa.
3ir.
(J
aprz[j.7}s,
rote
which follows
sometimes conher founded even with attendant nymphs, reappears in the form of Ataboar, Artemis,
is
who
lante.
The name of Hist. Gr. i. 76. Camilla, the counterpart of Atalante in the JEncid, is, according to M. Maury, that of a Gallic divinity, being the feminine form of Camulus (Camillus). Croyanccs et Legcndcs de V Ant ignite, 229, et. seq. 3 Hymn to Aphrodite, 19. Preller, Gr. Myth. i. 228, adopts the explanation which connects her name with the word
her physical vigour. Her kindly and indignant aspects are with him the varying, yet constantly recurring, effects produced by the moon on the phenomena of the seasons, and, as was supposed, of human life. Artemis, see p. 66.
4
Kallim.
lb.
Hymn
to Artemis, 110.
desires
yap iyw ArjTaias eifii. She be worshipped under many names, that she may not need to fear
5
nal
to
lb. 20,
&c.
144
BOOK
II.
Her
chariot
is
fashioned by the fiery Hephaistos, and Pan, the breeze whispering among the reeds, provides her with dogs, the
clouds which speed across the sky driven by the
summer
winds.
is
Alpheios,
Artemis
Orthia
who
and Tauropola.
But the cultus of the Spartan Artemis, whose epithet Orthia would seem to denote a phallic deity, is marked by features so repulsive, and so little involved in the myth of the Delian sister of Phoibos, that the inference of an earlier religion, into which Aryan mythical names were imported,, becomes not unwarrantable. Whether or not this Artemis be the same as the Artemis known by the epithets Taurica or Tauropola, she is a mere demon, glutted with the human sacrifices which seem to have formed a stage in the religious developement of every nation on the earth. We have here
malignant powers, and soothed by the smoke of the fat as it curls up heavenwards. But the prevalence of this earlier form of faith or practice would tend to prove only that the mythology of the Greeks was not necessarily their religion, and was certainly not commenmanifestly the belief that the gods are
all
human
victims,
The extent
to
superstitions prevailed
rical
Greeks as well
and tribes has been excellently traced by Mr. Paley in a paper on Chthonian Worship' {Journal of Philology, No. I.
June, 1868). His conclusion is that, as the propitiation of malignant powers rather than the adoration of a supreme good seems to have formed the basis of the early religions of the world,' so a large part of the early religious systems of the Greeks exhibits this character of devil-worship, in which streams of human blood wero the only effectual The unsatisfied shades or offerings. ghosts of heroes became hateful demons, going about with wido-stretched mouths for anything which might serve as a prey. These are the Latin Manduci and Lemures, the Greek Lamyroi, and Charon, the gaper, words all pointing to swallowing and devouring, as our goblin is supposed to do,' p. 7. The general proposition is indisputable, but
'
the English goblin seems to represent etymologically the Teutonic Kobold and the Greek Kobalos, beings doubtless of closely kindred character. If this be so, the idea of sacrifice is traced back to an utterly revolting source in the thoughts of the still savage man. To the question which asks how this conclusion can be reconciled with the Jewish doctrine of sacrifice and all its momentous consequences,' he answers, I think we may fairly reply, wo are not called upon to reconcile them. are not building up questionable theories, but expounding
' '
We
unquestionable matters of fact; and it is a perfectly open subject of discussion whether the pagan idea of sacrifice is a corruption of a revealed obligation of
(as
man to his Creator, or whether it was many will think more probable) in-
'
dependently derived and developed from the materialistic and sensuous notions of the untutored races of antiquity about the nature, condition, and wants of
beings, infernal
and supernal,'
p. 13.
145
Still,
.
although, there
.
is
not
much
.
in the
CHAP.
II
,
phenomena
of morning, or in the
myth
and maidens,
or scourging
them
angry demon, there are not wanting mythical phrases which, if translated into the conditions of human life, would point Adonis cannot rise to the life of to such revolting systems. The morning the blessed gods until he has been slain. cannot come until the E6s who closed the previous day has faded away and died in the black abyss of night. So it is also with Memnon and Sarpedon, with Endymion and Narkissos. But all these are the children of Zeus or Phoibos, or some other deity of the heaven or the sun and thus the
;
parents
may
is
sure,
is
deepening into
night, and
away.
journey
hours
Iphigeneia
in
other words,
she
dies
in
the
evening
that
mortal
strife,
the walls
of
Ilion have
But when Artemis, Helen, and Iphigeneia, had received each her own distinct personality, it was easy to say that the anger of Artemis, offended for some supposed neglect
VOL.
II.
146
BOOK
u.
Iphigeneia
martis.
of the death of
Iphigeneia.
and Britomartis is as which separates her from Iphigeneia. Whatever be the origin of the name, Britomartis is spoken of as a daughter of Leto, or of Zeus and Karme, and as flying from
The
slight as that
from that of Alpheios. 2 From this pursuit she escapes, like Arethousa and Daphne, only by throwing herself into the sea as some said, because she leaped from the heights of Diktynnaion, or, as others would have it, because she fell into the nets (SUrua) of the fishermen. Eescued from the water she goes to Aigina, and
the pursuit of Minos as Artemis
flies
is
name
of Aphaia.
The wanclearly
who
is
brother
Polydektes a mere reflection of Hades Polydegmon. When the name of Diktys is further compared with the myth of the Diktaian cave, we can no longer doubt that Artemis Diktynna is simply Artemis the light-giving, and that the nets were brought into the myths by an equivocation similar to that which converted Arkas and Kallisto into bears and Lykaon into a wolf. 3
as the first, faint areh of light is seen in the East. This arch is the Diktaian cave in which the infant Zens is nourished until he reaches his full strength in other words, until the day is fully come.
1 For the Ephesian or Asiatic Artemis, see p. 66. 2 Kallira. Hymn. Art. 192, &c. 3 As the dawn springs fully armed from the forehead of the cloven sky, so
the eye
first
147
CHAPTER
III.
Section
GOLDEN FLEECE.
chap
*
.
The
idea of wealth
and
of
is
Tantalos.
tolerable splendour,
home
of stolen treasure
So dazzling indeed
found
may
look
^ ^
e
r ra
upon
it
and
live.
beautiful wife of
nations.
Dawn
may
when high
in the heavens
and her
on being put into possession of all the glorious things which Ixion said should follow his union with Dia, the radiant morning, finds himself plunged into a gulf of fire. These treasures, in the myth of Prokris, Eos herself bestows on Kephalos that he may beguile the gentle daughter of the dew. They are the beautiful flowers which bloom in the Hyperborean gardens, the wonderful web wrought and unwrought by Penelope, the riches which
father Hesioneus
insists
who
which are fed by the glistening nymphs who rise from They are the light of day in all its varied With them is aspects and with all its wonderful powers. bound up the idea of life, health, and joy and hence when
cattle
must
follow,
What
men
is
bright being
sight?
in utter despair or
wait with feverish impatience until they see his kindly face
again
What
dreary Lours which pass between the setting of the sun and What must be the history of the silent time its rising ?
ending in the battle which precedes the defeat of the powers of darkness? That mighty conflict they might see every
would
new
now
sailing along in unsullied purity are especially the children of Helios, the offspring of the union of Ixion and the lovely
Nephele.
These then have sought him through the longhours of the night, and at length have rescued him from the gloomy prison house. There is thus the daily taking away
in the
life its value, of all on which must be taken away by robbers and it life itself depends Thus there is also the utterly malignant and hateful. a search which must be nightly search for these thieves, carried on in darkness amidst many dangers and against almost insurmountable obstacles and this search must end in a terrible battle, for how should the demons yield up their prey until their strength is utterly broken ? But even when the victory is won, the task is but half achieved. The beautiful light must be brought back to the Western home from which the plunderers had stolen it and there will be new foes to be encountered on the way, storm clouds and
West
of
all
that gives
down with
But
afc
length
done,
and the radiant maiden, freed from of guilt, gladdens her husband's house once more, before the magic drama of plunder, rescue, and return is acted over again and it is precisely this magic round which furnishes
all real
;
or fancied stains
all
may be
ail
If the
RECURRING CYCLES.
features are the
149
CHAP.
>.,
'
,
same in
all, if
there
is
absolutely no political
motive or interest in any one which may not be found more or less prominent in all the rest, if it is every where the same tale of treasure stolen, treasure searched for and
fought
story
for,
why
are
we
to suppose that
?
Why
are
we are dealing in each case with a different we to conjure up a hundred local conflicts
each from precisely the same causes, each with precisely the same incidents and the same results ? Why are we to think
that the treasures of Eos are not the treasures of Helen, that Helen's wealth is not the wealth of Brynhild, and that
after
myth
of the Hellenic
taken away and after fearful toils recovered, and after not less terrible labours brought back, are we to believe that the errand on which the Achaian chieftains depart from Hellas
is
If
it
ments are those of a squirrel in its cage, and that such movements, though they may be graceful, yet must be monotonous, the answer is that not only is the daily alternation of light and darkness proved to be monotonous, but all the incidents and the whole course of human life may be invested with the same dull colouring. Men are married, love and hate, get wealth or struggle in poverty, and die and the mono;
tony
broken only when we have distinguished the toils and acts of one man from those of another and learnt to see the points of interest which meet us every where on the boundless field of human life, as they meet us also in all the countless There is in short no dulaspects of the changing heavens.
is
and the story of charm because it is all Daphne and Echo does not told over again in the legends of Arethousa and Selene. The taking away of precious things, and the united search Repetition of armed hosts for their recovery come before us first in the myth
who bring
the charge
lose its
great
myth
The
tale is repeated
Jj^*
forms,
dlf-
Helen and her treasures, and is once more banishment of the Herakleidai and their efforts, These successful, to recover their lost inheritance.
150
myths
fall
of historical facts.
The
-Golden
Fleece.
or sagas
Into the Argonautic story, as into the mythical histories which follow it, a number of subordinate legends
many of which have been already noticed as belonging to the myths of the heavens and the light, clouds, waters, winds, and darkness ; and we have now
have been interwoven,
only to follow the main thread of the narrative from the moment when Phrixos, the child of the mist, has reached
1
home of king Aietes, a name in one of the many words denoting the breath or motion of the air. Helle, the warm and brillianttinted maiden, has died by the way, and the cold light only
the Kolchian land and the
which
Ave recognise
remains when the golden-fleeced ram, the offspring of Poseidon and Theophane, the lord of the air and the waters, and
the bright gleaming sky, reaches
its
journey's
end.
The
now
in the
town of
the
words of Mimnermos represented by a large fleece in the Aietes, where the rays of Helios rest in a golden chamber.' These treasures must be sought out so soon as
man destined to achieve the task is forthcoming. He is found by the same tokens which foretold the future greatness
of Oidipous, Perseus, Telephos, Romulus, or Cyrus.
Pelias,
driven away his brother Neleus, had been told that one of the children of Aiolos would be his
who had
Iason only
(a
many
same
(pfjlcraw,
our
freeze, the story of the spoiling of the corn being the result of a false etymology.
CHAP,
III.
warning to be on his guard against the oneand he discerns his enemy when Iason sandalled man appears with one foot only shod, having dropped the other slipper into the stream Anauros. There is nothing, however, that he can do beyond putting him to the perfermance of impossible tasks ; and thus as Eurystheus sent Herakles on hopeless errands, so Pelias thinks to be rid of Iason by bidding him bring the golden fleece back to lolkos. The journey is too long and across seas too stormy, and the toil is too great and as all the kinsfor any one man, be he ever so mighty folk of Helle are equally sufferers by the robbery, so all must From unite to avenge her wrongs and regain her wealth. all parts they come together, fifty in number, like the children of Danaos and Aigyptos, of Thestios and Asterodia, to the building of the great ship Argo, which Athene endows with the gift of speech and the power, possessed also by the Phaiakian barks, of understanding the thoughts of men. But before they could leave their own land there was need of yet farther help to enable them to tame the fury of savage beasts, and thus Iason betakes himself birds, and creeping things to the harper Orpheus, whose sweet tones no living thing can withstand. He alone can find his way to the utmost bounds of darkness and return in safety and the tidings that Orpheus would accompany them scattered the gloom which was gathering thickly on the hearts of the ArgoHis power is soon shown. In spite of all efforts to nautai. dislodge her, the Argo remains fast fixed to the spot on which she was built but at the sound of the harp of Orpheus it went down quickly and smoothly into the sea. Before she sets out on her perilous voyage, Cheiron gives them a feast, and a contest in music follows between the Kentaur, who sings of the wars with the Lapithai, and
1
It
is
many versions of this myth. In some we have the Enipeus or the Evenos instead of the Anauros
;
in others Iason
loses his sandal while carrying across the stream Here, who loves him and has
52
MYTHOLOGY
.OF
BOOK
;_
all things from Chaos downwards, of Eros and Kronos and the giants, like the song of the winds which seem to speak of things incomprehensible by man. Setting out from Iolkos, the confederate chiefs reach Lemnos, while the island is seemingly suffering from the plagues which produced the myths of the Danaides in Argos. Like them, the Lemnian women all kill their husbands, one only, Thoas, being saved, like Lynkeus, by his daughters and his wife Hypsipyle. These women yield themselves to the Argonautai, as the Danaides take other husbands when In the country of the they have slain the sons of Aigyptos. Doliones they are welcomed by the chief Kyzikos, who, however, is subsequently slain by them unwittingly and to their In Amykos, the king of the Bebrykes, or roaring regret. winds, they encounter Namuki, one of the Vedic adevas
who
In the Thrakian Salmydessos twin brother of Kastor. they receive further counsel from Phineus the seer, who
suffers
Bebrykes.
from the attacks of the Harpyiai, a foe akin to the In gratitude for his deliverance from these monsters, Phineus tells them that if they would avoid beir. crushed by the Symplegades, or floating rocks, which part asunder and close with a crash like thunder, they must mark the flight of a dove, and shape their course accordingly. The dove loses only the feathers of its tail and the Argo, urged
;
on by the power of Here, loses only some of its stern orna3 The ments, and henceforth the rocks remain fixed for ever.
That this incident is precisely the same as the story of the sojourn of
1
is
Odysseus in the land of the Lotophagoi, manifest from the phrase used in the
They all, we are told, Argonautics. forgot the duty set before them, nor would they have left the island, hut for the strains of Orpheus which recalled them to their sense of right and law. Thus this incident throws light 490. on the nature of the enjoyments signiSee fied by the eating of the lotos.
p. 120.
-
Max
It
ii.
has
been
supposed
in the ages during "which the myth was developed were seen in the Black Sea. and which melted away at the mouth oi In support of the posithe Bosporos. tion that the myth thus points to physical phenomena now no longer known in that sea, Mr. Paley remarks thai their name Kyaneai is very significant, and that they are described as rolling and plunging precisely as icebergs are 'When the Pontus often seen to do.' was a closed lake, as even human tradition distinctly states that it once was (Diod. S. v. 4*7), it was very likely indeed, especially towards the close of a glacial period, that a great accumulation.
'
CHAi
in.
the
myth
to Poseidon
But Absyrtos is as clear to Aietes as Polyphemos and as he stops to gather up the limbs, the Argo makes her way onward, and the Kolchian chief has
;
of ice should have been formed in so vast a "basin, borne down from the
its barriers,
When the lake burst they would be carried by the current towards the entrance of the
Northern
rivers.
straits,
the Phenieian Moloch. The iniquities attributed to him are the horrid holocausts which defiled the temples of Carthage and the valley of Hinnom.
His name
is
the story says that in fact they did.' introd. xxiv. Among other myths pointing to physical facts of a past age Mr. Paley cites the story of the rising of Rhodos from the sea, comparing with it the fact of the recent uphcaval of part of Santorin, the ancient Thera, and the old legend of the upheaving of Delos, as all showing tk* these islands lie within an area of known volcanic disturbance.' 1 Of any historical Phalaris we know absolutely nothing; and the tradition simply assigns to him the character of
Pindar,
Pales, Palikoi, Pallas, Palatini)], and Phallos, and would thus point to the cruel forms which the worship of Aphrodite, Artemis, and the Light deities generally, often assumed, 2 The same fate is allotted to Myrtilos, whom Pelops throws into that portion of
'
Egean sea which was supposed to bear his name. It is, in fact, half the myth of Pelops himself, the difference being that while all are thrown into the water.
the
Pelops
is
brought
to life again
the
dif-
between Sarped6n in the common version and Memnon, between Asklepios and Osiris and Baldur.
ference, in other words,
154
BOOK
II.
home
discomfited.
The Achaians
is
are
now
pos-
wroth at the death of Absyrtos, and raises a storm, of which the results are similar to those of the tempest raised by Poseidon to avenge the mutilation of Polyphemos. In fact, the chief
sessed of the golden fleece, but Zeus also
incidents in the return of Odysseus
we
the magic songs of the Seirens, and the wisdom of Kirke, From in Skylla and Charybdis and the Phaiakian people. the Seirens they are saved by the strains of Orpheus, strains
even sweeter than theirs, which make the stuffing of the It is usesailors' ears with wax a work of supererogation.
go into further detail. The accounts given of the course of the voyage vary indefinitely in the different mythographers, each of whom sought to describe a journey through
less to
known
to himself,
and there-
most mysterious. The geography, in short, of the Argonautic voyage is as much and as little worth investigating as the geography of the travels of 16 and the sons and daughters of her descendants Danaos and Aigyptos. The prophecy uttered long ago to Pelias remained yet unfulfilled and when Iason returned to Iolkos, he found, like Odysseus on his return to Ithaka, according to some versions, that his father Aison was still living, although worn out with The wise woman Medeia is endowed with the powers of age. Asklepios by virtue of the magic robe bestowed on her by Helios himself, and these powers are exercised in making
;
Aison young again. Pelias too, she says, shall recover all his ancient strength and vigour, if his daughters will cut up his limbs and boil them in a caldron but when they do her
;
Thus is Iason, like Romulus, one of the fatal children whose doom it is to slay The sequel of the myth of Iason has few, if any, their sires. Iason can no more be constant to features peculiar to itself. Medeia than Theseus to Ariadne or Phoibos to Koronis. At
Corinth he sees the beautiful Glauke, another of the bright beings whose dwelling is in the morning or evening sky but
;
and Herakles.
155
The robe
Section
IIHELEK
There was, however, no need to carry Iason and Medeia The with her golden robe back again to the eastern land. The treasure brought back from that distant shore could not remain long in the west and in the stealing away of Helen and her wealth we have an incident which, from the magni;
^^
of
ficent series of
myths
to
which
it
which
it is
Aryan
nations.
The
;
has received a plausible colouring from the introduction of accurate geographical details, of portraits which may be
true to national character, of accounts of laws, customs,
and
Yet
in spite of epithets
which may
be applied
bear the names of Achilleus or of Aias on the shores of is simply the radiant
As Sarama, whether of the morning or the evening. about in search of the bright cows the dawn which peers which the Panis have stolen from Indra, we have seen her already listening, though but for a moment, to the evil words These evil words are reproduced in the of the robbers.
1
light,
sophistry of the Trojan Paris, who is only a little more successful than the thief of the Vedic hymns, and the mo-
mentary unfaithfulness of the one becomes the long-continued But it is a faithlessness more in faithlessness of the other. seeming than in fact. Helen is soon awakened from her Argos, evil dream, and her heart remains always in beautiful anything in the house of her husband who never showed her
but kindness and love. Though Paris is beautiful, yet she and thus feels that she has nothing in common with him, chastened joy to the home from which she returns with a
she had been taken away. But to be stolen or persecuted for her beauty was the lot
In the myth of Theseus of Helen almost from her cradle. she is brought into Attica, and guarded in early youth by Aithra in the stronghold of Aphidnai until she is delivered
by her brothers, the Dioskouroi; and when she had been she is stolen by Paris, and spent ten weary years in Troy, the wife of Deiphobos, said in some versions to have become another son of Priam, and another representative of the
dark beings who own kinship with the Vedic Yritra. Paris is slain, the brother of the seducer will not
When
suffer
Helen to be given up to the Achaians ; and thus, on the fall of Ilion, his house is the first to be set on fire. Even after her death the fate of Helen is not changed. In Leuke, the
white island of the dawn, she is wedded to Achilleus, and becomes the mother of Euphorion, the winged child who is thunderbolts of Zeus in first loved and then smitten by the 2 Throughout she is a being not belonging to the Melos. land of mortal men. She is sprung from the egg of Leda, the being to whom Zeus comes in the form of a swan, and
This is fully recognised by Preller, who compares her, as such, with the Mater Matuta of the Latins. Or. Myth.
1
Medeia also as his brides in this bright and these are simply other island names for the dawn or the evening
:
ii.
-
108.
light.
HELENE DENDRITIS.
her brothers are the Dioskonroi, or Asvins. When the time for her marriage draws nigh, suitors come thronging from all
157
CHAP.
....
-
numbers being one for each day of the lunar month a myth which simply tells us that every day In the Iliad she is never spoken of the sun woos the dawn. and Isokrates notices the except as the daughter of Zeus sacrifices offered in Therapnai to her and to Menelaos, not She is worshipped by the women of as heroes but as gods. as the source of all fruitfulness, and in Argos as the Sparta mother of Iphigeneia, the child of Theseus, and as having dedicated a temple to Eileithyia. 2 In Rhodes she is Helene Dendritis, and a wild legend was invented to account for the name. 3 Lastly, the myth of her journey to Ilion and her return is in its framework simply the myth of Auge, the mother of Telephos, like her, taken away to the same land, and, like her, brought back again when all enemies have
parts of Hellas, their
been overcome. 4 This is, practically, the Gaelic story of Conall Gulban, The story 11 which may be fairly regarded as embodying a whole cycle of (f^
mythical tradition.
carry us to a vast
The materials of which it is made up number of legends in Aryan mythology, is that of Herakles, Achilleus, and Helen.
first for
his
homely appearance and seeming weakness, but triumphant Nay, as he becomes an in the end over all his enemies. idiot in the Lay of the Great Fool, so here he is emphatically Analkis, the coward. But he is resolved nevertheless to
1
Preller, Gr.
Myth.
ii.
:
109-110;
Isokr.
II.
iii.
426; Od.
63.
ii.
-
iv.
184, &c.
Hdm.
Knkom.
8
the Erinyes as dawn-goddes^s, while it mingles with it the hitcr notion which represented them as Furies. The tree
Pans.
Id.
ii.
22, 7.
10.
19,
by Mega-
penthes and Nikostratos after the death of -Menelaos, took refuge at Rhodes in the house of Polyxo, who, being angry with Helen as the cause of the Trojan war and thus of the death of her husband Tlepolemos whom Sarpedon slew, sent some maidens, disguised as Erinyes, who surprised Helen while bathing, and hung her up to a tree, This myth is simply a picture of the dawn rising like Aphrodite from the
sea
;
points probably to her connexion with the sun, and thus carries us back to the special form of worship paid to her at Sparta, as well as to the myth of Wuotan. See vol. i. p. 371, 430. 4 inThis myth is to Preller Vorstellung welche urspriinglich hochst wahrscheinliehauch mit ihrer Bedeutung im Naturleben zusammenhing.' Gr. Myth. ii. 110: and he draws betweei
'
<
the stories of Helen and Auge a parallel which may be exhibited in the following equation:
Auge
Tegea
Teuthras
:
Helene
:
Paris,
and
it
Mysia
Sparta
Ilion.
58
BOOK
_
make
,
King
'
although, like Brynhild and Briar Rose and Surya Bai, she is guarded within barriers which the knight who would win
her must pass at the cost of his life if he fails. The fortress had a great wall, with iron spikes within a foot of each other, and a man's head upon every spike but the one spike which had been left for his own, although it was never to be graced by it. It is the hedge of spears of the modern Hindu legends, the fiery circle which Sigurd must enter to waken the maiden who sleeps within it. As he draws nigh to the
one of the soldiers says, I perceive that thou art a beggar who was in the land of Eirinn what wrath would the king of Laidheann have if he should come and find his At a daughter shamed by any one coward of Eirinn?
barrier,
'
;
window
in this
Helen of the tale. ' Conall stood a little while gazing at her, but at last he put his palm on the point of his spear, he gave his rounded spring, and he was in at the window beside the Breast of Light,' a name which recalls the Europe, Euryganeia, and Euryphassa of Hellenic myths.
The maiden
in his death,
'
bids
Was not that but he leaps over the heads of the guards. the hero and the worthy wooer, that his like is not to be Yet she is not altogether pleased that it is found to-day ?
'
'
away The
but Conall
insult is
Odysseus, and
fidelity to
made
Light 'that he had a failing, every time that he did any deed of valour he must sleep before he could do brave deeds again.' The sun must sleep through the night before he can
again do battle with his
the Great Fool.
foes.
The sequel
is
as in the
Lay of
He has a mirror in his ship none but the daughter of the king of Laidheann, and as it rises for her, he knows that he has found the fated sister of the Dioskouroi, and with her he
heeds him not, or
absent.
which
will rise
up
for
sails
straightway to his
home
lOi:
and
CHAP.
,1
Conall has so
much courage
as to
come
in pursuit
;
of her. Like Helen, she is shut up in the robber's stronghold, ' sorrowful that so much blood was being spilt for her but Conall conquers in the struggle and rescues her ' out of
the dark place in which she was,' the gloomy cave of the Panis. Then follow more wanderings answering to the Nostoi,
and, like Odysseus, Conall appears in worn-out clothes in order to make his way into the king's fortress, and again a
scene of blood ensues, as in the hall of slaughter in the courts of the Ithakan and Burgundian chieftains. The story
now
ter
repeats
itself.
who,
like
Danae,
The king of the Green Isle has a daughis shut up in a tower, and the other
till
Conall
'
struck a kick
on one of the posts that was keeping the turret aloft, and the post broke and the turret fell, but Conall caught it between his hands before it reached the ground. A door opened and Sunbeam came out, the daughter of the king of the Green Isle, and she clasped her two arms about the neck of Conall, and Conall put his two arms about Sunbeam, and he bore her into the great house, and he said to the king of the Green SunIsle, Thy daughter is won.' The myth is transparent. beam would marry Conall, but he tells her that he is already wedded to Breast of Light, and she becomes the wife of Maca-Moir, the Great Hero, the son of the king of Light. The stealing away of Helen and all her treasures is the
Argonautai, brings together
;
The voy-
cause of another expedition which, like the mission of the Alans' and to Hion. all the Achaian chieftains
the mythical history of these princes, interwoven with the old tale of the death or the taking away of the day, has
grown up
and the struggle which end it represent the course of the night, they must last for something like ten hours, and thus we get the ten years of the war. The journey is accomplished
during the dark hours but it cannot begin until the evening is ended, or in other words, until the twilight has completely faded away. Hence the calm which stays the Achaian fleet
:
victim to the offended Artemis, the goddess of the moon or the night. It is vain to resist. The sin of Agamemnon is
brought bach to his mind, as he remembers how he promised before the birth of his child that he would offer up the most beautiful thing which that year might produce, and how he
had failed
if
But now the evening must die and Iphigeneia is But although slain that Helen may come back to Sparta. blood flows to the grief and agony of her father and her her kinsfolk, the war must still last for ten years, for so it had been decreed by Zeus, who sent the snake to eat up the and thus room was given for the sparrow and her young introduction of any number of episodes, to account for, or to explain the lengthening out of the struggle and the machinery of a thousand myths was obviously available for the Like Hippodameia or Atalante, Helen was beaupurpose. tiful, but many must fail while one alone could win her. Sigurd only can waken Brynhild and the dead bodies of the unsuccessful knights lie before the hedge or wall of Thus with the introduction spears in the Hindu folk-lore. of Achilleus, as the great hero without whom the war can never be brought to an end, the whole framework of the epic poem was complete. It only remained to show what the others vainly attempted, and what Achilleus alone succeeded That the life of Achilleus should run in the same in doing.
to
fulfil
his vow.
is
to be seen again
magic groove with the lives of other heroes, mattered nothing. The story which most resembled that of Achilleus is indeed chosen by the poet to point to him the moral which he needed most of all to take to heart. This story is the life of Meleagros, and it is recited to
Achilleus by Phoinix,
dweller in that purple land of the east from which Europe was taken to her western home. It is the picture of the
short-lived sun,
whose existence
is
light
who
is
This incident, 77. ii. 300, is related simply as a sign of the number of years which must precede the fall of Ilion,
161
CHAP,
'
>
He is a son of Oineus or Ares, and Althaia the nourishing Demeter and he proves his skill in the use of the javelin by bringing down the monstrous boar which the chieftains assembled at Kalydon had failed But the interest of his life lies in the burning torch to kill. and the prophecy of the Moirai, that with its extinction his own life must come to an end. His mother therefore snatches it from the fire, and carefully guards it from harm. But the doom must be accomplished. Artemis stirs up strife between the men of Kalydon and the Kouretes for the spoils of the boar, and a war follows in which the former are always conquerors whenever Meleagros is among them. But the Kouretes are, like the Korybantes and the Idaian Daktyloi, the mystic dancers who can change their forms at will, and thus their defeat is the victory of the sun who scatters the clouds as they wheel in their airy movements These clouds reappear in the brothers of round him. Althaia, and when they are slain her wrath is roused, like the anger of Poseidon when Polyphemos is blinded, or the rage of Zeus when the Kyklopes are slain. The curse now His voice is no more heard in the lies heavy on Meleagros. council his spear is seen no more in the fight. He lies idle in his golden chambers with the beautiful Kleopatra; Kephalos is taking his rest with Eos behind the clouds which hide his face from mortal men, and he will not come forth. Wearied out at last, his mother brings forth the fatal brand and throws it into the fire, and as its last spark nickers out, Meleagros dies. With him die his wife and his mother; Deianeira and Oinone cannot live when Herakles and Paris are gone. So passes away the hero who can only thus be slain, and his sisters who are changed into guineahens weep for his death, as the sisters of Phaethon, the bright fleecy clouds, shed tears of amber over their brother's
;
; 1
grave.
In the Iliad Meleagros does not return home from the tight with the Kouretes, for the Erinyes who have
1
heard the curse of Althaia overtake him. This is only another form of the myth of Helene Dendritis.
VOL.
II.
162
BOOK
-,'
Thetis and
leus.
"
the
life
number
The
tale of his
of
Bellerophon and
Anteia; and as Proitos sends Bellerophon that he may be put to death by other hands than his own, so Akastos, the
husband who thinks himself injured, leaves Peleus without arms on the heights of Pelion, that the wild beasts may devour him. He is here attacked by Kentaurs, but saved by Cheiron, who gives him back his sword. Here also he becomes the husband of Thetis, at whose wedding-feast the seeds of the strife are sown which produce their baleful fruits in the stealing away of Helen and all its wretched consequences. But the feast itself is made the occasion for the investiture His of Peleus with all the insignia of Helios or Phoibos. lance is the gift of Cheiron from Poseidon, the god of the air and the waters, come the immortal horses Xanthos and Balios, the golden and speckled steeds which draw the chariot of the sun through the sky, or the car of Acliilleus on the For her child Thetis desires, as she herplains of Ilion. self possesses, the gift of immortality, and the legend, as given by Apollodoros, here introduces almost unchanged the story of Demeter and Triptolemos. Like the Eleusinian goddess, Thetis bathes her babe by night in fire, Peleus, to destroy the mortality inherited from his father. one day to see the act, cries out in terror, and chancing Of the many stories told Thetis leaves his house for ever. of his later years, the myth of the siege of Iolkos and the death of Astydameia repeats that of Absyrtos and has probably the same meaning. The involuntary slaughter of Eurytion finds a parallel in the death of Eunomos, who is unwittingly killed by Herakles; and the flocks which he offers in atonement to Iros the father, are the flocks which
:
Apollod.
iii.
13, 6.
163
Iros re.
CHAP,
and Pelens suffers them to wander . unt ended until they are devoured by a wolf, a phrase which betrays the nature both of the herds and their destroyer, and carries ns to the death of the gentle Prokris. When Thetis had vanished away, Pelens carried the child The woto the wise Kentaur Cheiron, who taught him how to ride Xueus and shoot, a myth which at once explains itself when we remember that the Kentaurs are the offspring of Ixion and
fuses to receive them,
JSTephele.
and Phoibos, in the womanly appeargentler aspect of the new risen sun when the nymphs wash him in pure water and wrap him in robes of spotless white. But while his limbs yet showed only the rounded outlines of youth, Kalchas the prophet
ance of his form,
the
could
still
hold of the seducer of Helen be taken, and that none but Achilleus could conquer Hektor. Only the death of his
follow the blazing sunset in which the clouds pour out their
To
it
be
now
nine years
raiment and placed him in Skyros among the daughters of Lykomedes 9 where from his golden locks he
received the
hid
name of Pyrrha. But he could not long be and the young boy who had in his infancy been called Ligyron, the whining, was recognised by Odysseus the chieftain of Ithaka as the great champion of the Achaian
:
armies.
his
Thus was Achilleus engaged in a quarrel which was not own; and on this fact we can scarcely lay a greater stress than he does himself. The task is laid upon him, as it was on Herakles or on Perseus and the sons of Atreus are to him what Polydektes and Eurystheus had been to the The men of Ilion had never sons of Danae and Alkmene. fields or hurt his cattle and not only were his ravaged his
; ;
The career
01111 "
J^
exploits
made
for a tool,
upon
04
BOOK
_
all
:
It is
the
but the despot is here a harsher master than Admetos, and the grief which Achilleus is made to suffer is deeper than that of Apollon when Daphne vanishes from his sight, or of Herakles when Eurytos refuses to perform the compact which pledged him to make lole the
bride
of the hero.
servitude
of Phoibos
is
visited with a
men, and the smoke of funeral pyres ascends up everywhere to heaven. At length they learn from Kalchas that the wrath of Phoibos has been roused by the wrong done to the priest Chryses who had in vain offered to Agamemnon a splendid ransom for his daughter, and that not until the maiden is given up will the hand of the god cease to lie heavy on the people.
terrible plague.
brought to submit to the will of the but he declares that in place of the daughter of
is
tents of Achilleus,
whom Achilleus had lavished all his love passes away into the hands of the man whom he utterly despises for his cowardice
and his greed.
fair
is
is gone when the hues of morning give way before the more monotonous
tints
place.
be solitary, but he can take that vengeance on his persecutor which the sun may exact of those who have deprived him of
his treasure.
sit
He may
behind the clouds, while the battle of the winds goes on beneath them. Then, in the sudden outburst of his grief, he makes a solemn vow that when the Achaians are smitten down by their enemies his sword shall not be unsheathed in their behalf; and when his mother comes from her coral caves to comfort him, he beseeches her to go to Zeus and pray him to turn the scale of victory on the Trojan side, that the Argives may see what sort of a king they have, and Agamemnon may rue the folly which dishonoured the best and bravest of all the Achaian chieftains. So Thetis hastens to Olympos, and Zeus swears to her that Ilion shall not fall until the insult done to her
on
may
16
will
But
to this
Agamemnon
CHAP
IIL
His chieftains stand around him in unimpaired strength, and the men whom they lead are eager for
It was obviously the point at which the poet might pass from the story of Achilleus to the exploits of other chieftains, and accordingly many books of the Iliad are taken up with narratives showing what those chiefs could and could not do without Achilleus. Whether these narratives formed part of the Iliad in its earliest form, is a point which has been examined elsewhere; but they are so
the conflict.
arranged as to lead to the humiliating confession of Agamemnon that he has lost too many men to be able to con-
tinue the struggle with any hope of success a confession in other words that the conqneror of
not
now
in their assembly.
Briseis
must be
restored,
sorrow for
The answer is obvious. and Agamemnon must express his words and evil deeds. If then any
to appease the wrath of Achilleus before the final reparation which he accepted, it follows that those attempts did not fulfil the conditions on which he insisted, and hence that the ninth of the books of the Iliad, as it now stands, could not possibly have formed part of the original
Achilleis or Ilias.
attempts were
made
word
klos
for
suffice,
is
The apology which is here rejected is word the same as that which is afterwards held to and the reparation offered after the death of Patroin no way larger than that which had been offered
before.
The rejection of a less complete submission is, howthorough accordance with the spirit of the old myth, and the mediation of Phoinix serves well to exhibit Achilleus
ever, in
to himself in the mirror of the character of Meleagros. But taking the story as it now stands, we may well stand amazed at the unbounded savagery of the picture. There is not only no pausing on the part of Achilleus to reflect that Agamemnon has a heart to feel as well as himself, and that
the loss of Chryseis might at least weigh something against is not the slightest heed to the sufferings of his countrymen and the hopeless
fea-
redeem a cha-
66
BOOK
IL
he
is
his friend,
is
own selfish and personal concern ; and thus when that friend prays him, if he will not go forth himself, to let him have his horses, his armour, and his Myrmidons, Achilleus tells
him that him the
taken from prize of his bow and spear, and that even now he would not have yielded a jot of his vow, if the war had not 2 When, further, his friend at length touched his own ships. hand of Hektor, and Achilleus makes his has fallen by the deadly oath that the funeral rites shall not be performed over his body until the head and the arms of Hektor can be
all his
rage
is
because
Agamemnon had
placed by
submission of the Argive chiefs is accepted not from any notion that his inaction has sprung from an exorbitant selfishness, but because his own grief and unbounded fury for the loss of his friend drive him to do the
its
side, the
things to which the chiefs would urge him by the less exciting arguments of a cooler patriotism. Now that his wrath in the blood is thus kindled, the strife shall indeed be ended Hektor shall die, though the death of of his enemies.
Achilleus
of twelve
may follow ever so closely upon it, and the blood human victims, deliberately reserved for the fright-
stream on the pyre of Patroklos. As the portrait of a human being, the picture is from first to last inexpressibly revolting; and it is only when we take the
ful sacrifice, shall
story to pieces
and trace the origin of its several portions, how there lay on the poet a necessity constraining than that which forced Achilleus to his not less fitful fury and his early doom, a necessity which compelled
him
under the guise of human warriors the actions of the hosts which meet for their great battle every morning in the heavens. Eegarded thus, there is scarcely a single feature, utterly perplexing though it may be on the supposition that we are dealing with a human portrait, which is not seen to be full of life and meaning. We are no
to describe
'
II.
xvi. 34.
10
CHAP,
know why
Patroklos,
^-_T the armour of Achilleus, yet cannot wield to Peleus are the offspring of the horses which Zeus gave
west-wind and the harpy Podarge, and why their mother All is feeds in a meadow by the side of the ocean stream. with the now plain. The Myrmidons must be compared
1
wolves which appear almost everywhere in the myths of Phoibos Apollon their tongues and their cheeks must be red as with blood. We see at once why Patroklos can re;
turn safe from the fight only if he does strictly the bidding of Achilleus, for Patroklos is but the son of Klymene, who
whip the horses of Helios. When at length Patroklos goes forth and encounters Sarpedon, it is curious to trace the inconsistencies which are forced upon On the poet as he interweaves several solar myths together. Zeus who has sworn to Thetis that he the one side is the a promise which will avenge the wrongs done to Achilleus, cannot be fulfilled by allowing his friend to be slaughtered, on the other the Zeus whose heart is grieved for the death His vow to Thetis binds him to of his own child Sarpedon. shield Patroklos from harm; his relation to the brave Lykian chieftain makes him look upon the son of Menoitios as he looked on Phaethon while doing deadly mischief in So here Zeus takes counsel whether the chariot of Helios. he shall smite him at once or suffer him to go on a little But each story remains longer in his headlong course. Sarpedon falls by the same doom which perfectly clear. presses not only on the man who slays him, but on Achilleus, on Bellerophon, on Kephalos and a hundred others. The Lykian chief dies, like his enemy, in the prime of golden youth and in the far west, for his Lykia lay far away to the east of Ilion, where the sun comes up, and the Dawn is greeting the earth when the powers of sleep and death bear By their beautiful burden to the doors of his golden home.
to
the same inconsistency the eastern tradition made Apollon the enemy of Patroklos, as it afterwards associates him with
Paris in the death of Achilleus
;
employed by
77.
xvi. 150.
bb
BOOK
smitten, as
it is
fought out by the clouds which do battle From this point all is
The grief of Achilleus when he learns that dead is the darkening of the sky when the sun which had been shining through the cloud-rifts withdraws his light and in the tearing of his hair, in the defilement of his beautiful robe and the tossing of the sand over his head and face, we see the torn vapours hurrying hither and thither in a thousand shapeless forms. Henceforth the one thought which fills his heart is that of vengeance, nor is his burning desire weakened when Thetis tells him that the death of Hektor must soon be followed by his own, as the
;
sunset
is
and Achilleus
content to die,
if
only
he
may
first
Then
tale.
The arms
Hektor but
;
when
At what
new armour which is which he had been robbed by the powers of darkness ? We can scarcely lay too much stress on these points of detail in which the poet manifestly follows a tradition too strong to be resisted.
angrily and betokening on the morrow. When to the bidding of Iris, that he should go forth to avenge his friend, he replies that he has no arms, the goddess bids him Like the show himself in the trenches without them. sudden flash of the sun, when as he approaches the horizon his light breaks from behind the dense veil of vapours, is the shout of Achilleus ringing through the air. It is absurd to think of any human warrior, or to suppose that any hyperbole could suggest or justify the poet's words, as
his appearance in fiercer strength
down
10
his face
us
how the
thrown from
CFAP.
HI.
reached up to the high ether of Zeus, and how the horses of the Trojans felt the woes that were coming, and their
drivers were astonished, as they beheld the awful fire kindled on the head of the great-hearted son of Peleus by the dawngoddess Pallas Athene. But for the present there is the blaze of light, and nothing more. At the bidding of Here the sun goes down, and the strife is stayed. But as the hours of the night wear on, the fire-god toils on the task which Thetis prays him to undertake and when the mighty disk of the shield and the breast-plate more dazzling than
;
the fiercest
like a
fire
hawk winging
him the
The hour
of vengeance
flies with them to her son way from the snow-clad Olympos. now indeed come. As his mother
lays before
gifts of
that while he
is
fighting,
But Thetis bids him be of good cheer. No unseemly thing shall come near to mar that beautiful form, though it should lie unheeded the whole year round. There can be now no delay, and no pause in the conflict. The black clouds have hidden the face of Achilleus long enough but now he will not eat before his deadly task is done. He is braced for the final struggle by a sight which he had scarcely hoped to see again. The
decay.
;
may
Achaian chiefs appear to make the submission of Agamemnon, and like Iole coming to Herakles, or Antigone to the dying Oidipous, Briseis is restored to him unscathed as when she was torn away from his tent. In her grief for
left full of life, we have the grief death of the sun in his gentler aspect. In him there had been no fierceness, and if his gentler temper went along with a lack of strength, like that of
Patroklos,
whom
she had
of the
dawn
for the
Phaethon in the chariot of Helios, he was none the less deserving of her love. In the arming which follows we have, as plainly as words can paint it, the conflagration of the heavens and the phrases used by the poet, if regarded as a description of any earthly hero and any earthly army, might be pronounced a series of monstrous hyperboles with far greater justice than the hundred-headed narcissus to which Colonel Mure applies the term when speaking of the myth
:
70
BOOK
IL
-
can wield, filled with the strength of Athene herself, fighting with enemies who almost overpower him just when he seems to be on the point of winning the victory, the struggle in which the powers of heaven and hell take part, the utter discomfiture of a host by the might of one in-
vincible warrior,
the time of placid repose which follows the awful turmoil, the doom which in spite of the present
form a picture, the lines of which are in each case the same, and in which we see
glory
still
all
reflected
Oidipous,
Belleropbon,
and all the crowd of heroes who have each their Hektor to vanquish and their Ilion to overthrow, whether in the den
of Chimaira, the labyrinth
of
Cacus, the frowning rock of the Sphinx, or the stronghold of the Panis. Nor is the meaning of the tale materially altered
whether we take the myth that he fell in the western gates by the sword of Paris aided by the might of Phoibos, or the version of Diktys of Crete, that in his love for Polyxena the daughter of Priam he promised to join the Trojans, and going unarmed into the temple of Apollon at Thymbra, was there slain by the seducer of Helen. As the sun is the child
of the night, so, as the evening draws on, he may be said to his ally himself with the kindred of the night again ; and
doom
is
whom
he
is
said
is
to love represent
the dawn
coming. With all the ferocity which he shows on the loss of but the Briseis, Achilleus none the less resembles Herakles
;
pity
which he
feels
for
the
amazon
Penthesileia,
when
make
him
Diomede and Polyxena, and the husband of Medeia, or Iphigeneia, or of Helen herself on the
the
lover of
dazzlingisle
of Leuke.
We
loves
of the sun for the dawn, the twilight, and the violet-tinted
clouds.
is, as Phoinix himself is made The Nostoi. form of the tale of Meleagros, the story of to say, only another the sun doomed to go down in the full brightness of his splen-
dour after a career as brief as it is brilliant if for him the slaughter of Hektor marks the approaching end of his own life, the myth of Helen carries us back to another aspect of the great drama. She is the treasure stolen from the gleaming west, and with her wealth she is again the prize of the Achaians when Paris falls by the poisoned arrows of PhiloThis rescue of the Spartan queen from the sektetes.
ducer
whom
is
rama from the loathsome Panis but the long hours of the day must pass before her eyes can be gladdened by the sight Thus the ten hours' cycle is once more reof her home.
peated in the Nostoi, or return of the heroes, for in the Mediterranean latitudes, where the night and day may be roughly taken as dividing the twenty-four hours into two
equal portions, two periods of ten hours each would represent the time not taken up with the phenomena of daybreak
and twilight. Thus although the whole hidden struggle with the powers of darkness, the night is a decisive exploits of Achilleus, and indeed the active operations of the war are reserved for the tenth year and furnish the materials for the Iliad, while in the Odyssey the ten years' wanderings are followed by the few hours in which the beggar throws off his rags and takes dire vengeance on
and
sunrise, sunset
his enemies.
griefs
Hence it is that Odysseus returns, a man of and much bowed with toil, in the twentieth year many from the time when the Achaian fleet set sail from Aulis. The interest of the homeward voyage of the treasure-seekers is centered in the fortunes of Odysseus, the brave
odysseua
an(*
it
is
to see his
Aut0 "
more before he
dies.
He
and now his history must be that of the lord of day as he goes on his journey through the sky in storm and calm, in peace or in strife. This transparence of meaning marks
not only the
reflects his
myth
of Odysseus;
it
is
seen in
all
that
is
The character of
is
own.
His grandfather
is
Autolykos,
who
from Helios passes into a craft like that of Medeia, is a child of Hermes, the morning breeze, and Telauge the far-shining. His bride is Neaira, the early dawn, whose daughters feed His child is Antikleia, a the cattle of Helios in Thrinakia. name which suggests a comparison with Antigone and Antiope and Antikleia is the wife of Laertes, a being akin to the Laios of Theban tradition, or of Sisyphos, whose story
;
is
down again
to
From
grandsire Autolykos, but which through the form Olyseus, the Latin Ulyxes or Ulysses, may perhaps rather represent the
With the abode of Autolykos on Parnassos is connected the story of the boar's bite, by whose mark Eurykleia the old nurse recognises Odysseus on his return from nor can we doubt that this boar is the beast whose Ilion
;
tusk wrought the death of Adonis. It is true indeed that in Autolykos the idea suggested by the penetrating powers
of sunlight has produced a character far lower than that of
Odysseus
lie,
but
it
latter
can
when
it
suits his
purpose to do
If the splendour of the sun is in one sense an image of absolute openness and sincerity, the rays which peer into dark crannies or into the depths of the sea may as naturally
so.
He
is
round
the heaven.
PENELOPE.
17
CHAP.
_
,
and Sisyphos.
The process
is
suitor of Helen,
Odysseus
web of cirri clouds which is undone again during the night and it is as the weaver that she defeats the schemes of the suitors in that long contest which runs parallel to the great
conflict at Ilion.
Peue ~
tains at
For the departure of the Achaian chiefTroy is the departure of the light after sundown and the powers of darkness as necessarily assail Penelope as they fight to retain Helen in the city of Priam and Paris. How then could she withstand their importunities except by devising some such condition as that of the finishing of a web which cannot be seen completed except by the light of the sun, in other words, until Odysseus should have come back ? Regarded thus, Penelope is the faithful bride of the sun, pure and unsullied in her truthfulness as Athene herself, and cherishing the memory of Odysseus through weary years of sorrow and suffering. As such, the poet of the Odyssey has chosen to exhibit her but there were legends which spoke of Pan as the offspring of Penelope and Hermes, or of Penelope and all the suitors together. Of this myth, which simply exhibits the evening twilight and the darkness as the parents of the breeze which murmurs softly in the night, it is enough to say that we have no right to put it down as necessarily of later growth than the myth which forms the subject of the Odyssey. There is nothing to be urged against, there is much to be urged for, the priority of such myths as Kephalos and Prokris, Demeter and Persephone, over by far the larger number of legends noticed or narrated in our Homeric poems; and if one story is to be pronounced of later growth than another, the verdict must be based on other and more conclusive evidence than the mere fact that it happens not to be mentioned in our Iliad or Odyssey.
Penelope indeed
Aphrodite
nelope
is
is only the dawn or the evening light and but another aspect of Athene. As such, Pethrown by her parents into the sea at her birth,
:
is
sea-birds,
from
.74
BOOK
also said to
_J
have her name, raise her tip on As snch also, when Odysseus has
been
by Telegonos, she becomes the wife of his murderer, either in Aiaia or in Leuke where Helen is also wedded to Achilleus. To the success of the Trojan expedition Odysseus is only and hence less necessary than the great chieftain of Phthia the same story of his unwillingness to engage in it we have which we find in the story of Achilleus. In this case as in the other it is a work to be done for the profit of others, not It is in short a task undertaken against his will his own. and it answers strictly to the servitude of Phoibos in the house of Admetos, or the subjection of Herakles to the bidding of Eurystheus. With the idea of the yoke thus laid upon them is closely connected that notion of weakness to
slain
1 ;
which the Homeric hymn points when it speaks of the nymphs as wrapping Phoibos in the white swaddling-clothes This raiment becomes a disbefore he became Chrysaor. guise, and thus the workmen jeer at Theseus for his girlish appearance, and Achilleus is found in woman's garb by those who come to take him to Ilion. The idea of disguise, however, readily suggests that of feigned madness, and as such
it
comes before us in the story of Odysseus, who is described drawn by an ox and an ass. The trick is found out by Palamedes, who, placing the infant Telemachos in his way, makes Odysseus turn the plough He is now bound to attempt the aside and avoid him. rescue of Helen, as he and all her suitors had sworn to do when they sought her hand. At Troy, however, he is but one of many Achaian chieftains, although he is second only and thus he goes with Menelaos to Ilion to to Achilleus
as sowing salt behind a plough
;
is
formally
In the long contest which follows he is renowned In the council chiefly for his wisdom and his eloquence.
This name, like Telemachos, Telephos and TMephassa, denotes the farpeaching spears (rays) of the sun: and as Helios and Phoibos became the lords of lit'r and death, of the light and darkness which depends on the orb of
1
follows thai all who die are Hence Odysseus gods. not Less than his enemies musl he slain by Phoibos or somebody who represents
the sun,
slain
it
by these
him.
175
CHAP,
and
stands ont in singular contrast with the fierce impetuosity of He can also serve, if need be, as a spy, and in
J-
ambush none
are
more formidable.
to
one tradition, originated that device of the wooden horse which simply reproduces the Argo on dry land. As the ship bears the confederated Achaians who contrive to win a
welcome from the Kolchian king, so the wooden horse carries all the bravest of the Argives on their errand of death to the Trojans and of rescue to Helen, whose wealth
is
With
aspect.
the
fall
is
He
now
the
man who
is,
who ^ er way
an"
may oppose him or seek to homewards in spite of weaken the memory of her beauty and her love. On this
all
thread the poet of the Odyssey has strung together the series of adventures, most of which we have already sufficiently
examined in the myths under which each naturally falls. These adventures are interwoven with wonderful skill but they may each be traced to some simple phrase denoting
;
originally the
phenomena
through the heaven. Among the most remarkable features of the story are the changes in the companions of Odysseus. He sets out from Ilion with a gallant fleet and a goodly company he lands in Ithaka from a beautiful bark with a noble crew but of those who had left Troy with him not one remained a vivid image of the sun setting among clouds, but the clouds are not the same as those which surrounded him
: :
at his birth.
These must vanish away and die continually, and a stock of stories to account for each disaster was the The means by which the misfortunes were inevitable result. brought about would also be readily suggested by the daily appearances of the sky. Of all the clouds which are seen in
the heavens the delicate vapours which float like islets through the blue seas of air would be the friends of the sun the black clouds which rudely thrust these aside, or blot
them out of sight, would be the enemies who devour his men. The same phenomena would suggest their features
76
BOOK and their raiment, the rough shaggy locks and uncouth _J^_ faces of the beings who represent the dark vapours, the pure white robes and heavenly countenances of the maidens who
dwell in the fair Phaiakian land.
friends of the sun attend him throughout his journey, and the times of peace may at any moment be followed by a time
But these gloomy storm-clouds, which move like giants with clubs as high as a ship's mast, all rise from the In other words they are sons of Poseidon, and thus is sea. explained that enmity of Poseidon for Odysseus which is Hence partially counteracted by the dawn-goddess Athene. beings whom he encounters are only old also many of the There is really friends or enemies in a new form or dress. no difference in kind between the Kikones, the Laistrygonians, and the Kyklopes, between the Lotos-eaters, Kirke, and the Seirens. It is but a question of the degree of risk and extent of loss in each case. Thus the Kikones gather together, like the leaves of the trees in number, and they gain
of war.
their victory as
the
These
beings reappear in more formidable shape on the island where the Kyklopes feed their shaggy flocks, the vapours
Necessarily lie low and seem to browse upon the hills. they can but pasture their herds, for vines or cornfields they can have none. It is hard to say how far the details of the Certain story may not be strictly mythical in their origin.
which
it
left
home
one, we see the sun drawing near to the huge storm-cloud with but a single Phaiakian bark by his side. As his orb passes behind the mass of vapour the giant becomes the one-eyed or round-faced Kyklops, who devours one by one the comrades of Odysseus, as the beautiful clouds vanish one As the vapours after the other behind this sombre veil.
thicken
still
in other words,
is
more, the face of the sun can no longer be seen Polypkemos has been blinded, and his rage
;
seen in the convulsive movements of the vapours, from beneath which, as from beneath the shaggy -fleeced rams,
the white clouds which belong to the Phaiakian regions are seen stealing away, until at last from under the hugest beast
177
draw down on
CHAP.
III.
himself another savage attack from the madly rushing stormPolyphemos has been smitten, and as on the discloud.
comfiture of Vritra, or the Sphinx, or the Pythian dragon,
is
The incidents which follow the departure of Odysseus from the island of Aiolos are a picture of a violent gale followed by profound calm. Aiolos himself gives to Odysseus a bag containing all the winds, from which he might let out the Zephyr to waft him on his way. As he sleeps, his comrades bewail the evil fate which sends them home emptyhanded while Odysseus has received from the king of the winds vast treasures which would enrich them all. This notion impels them to open the bag, and all the winds of heaven burst forth in wild fury, and carry them back to Aiolia, whence the king drives them away as being under the curse of the gods, and says that henceforth he will not help them more. At once Odysseus is made to relate how his men were now tired out with rowing day and night, because there was not a breath of air to speed them on their
voyage.
Odysseus
\ 0f
In the city of the Laistrygonians, Lamos, a name con- The nected with the Greek Lamuroi and the Latin Lemures, we ^1^"
see simply the awful caves in
which the Vritra hides away hard by the confines of Day and Night, and round it rise the rocks sheer and smooth from the sea, while two promontories leave a narrow entrance Within it there is neither wave nor wind, but an for ships. awful stillness broken only by the dull sound when
It is
The
Shepherd callsHo shepherd, entering through portals, and the other makes answer due,
1
No cheering sight, however, meets the eye and when the men of Odysseus are led by the daughter of
voices.
Antiphates the chief into his palace, they gaze with horror
at his wife,
who
stands before
1
them huge
as a rock.
By
VOL.
II.
178
BOOK
II.
The LotosKirk^!
comrades in the Kyklops' island, and Odysseus escapes after many of his men only by cutting the mooring-ropes of his ship and hastening out to sea. In the land of the Lotos-eaters Odysseus encounters dan-
g ers f another kind. The myth carries us to the many emblems of the reproductive powers of nature, of which the Lotos is ore of the most prominent. It here becomes the forbidden fruit, and the eating of it so poisons the blood as to take away all memory and care for home and kinsfolk, for The sensual inducements held out by law, right, and duty. the Lotophagoi are, in short, those by which Venus tempts Tanhauser into her home in the Horselberg and the degradation of the bard answers to the dreamy indolence of
;
the groups
land.
who make
life
The Venus
is
From
who has received from Hermes which deprives the charms of Kirke of all power an antidote
The Herakles of Prodikos is after all the Herakles whom, we see in the myths of Echidna or of the daughters of Thestios, and thus Odysseus dallies with Kirke True, he has as he listens also to the song of the Seirens.
not forgotten his home or his wife, but he is ready to avail himself of all enjoyments which will not hinder him from
reaching
Kirke and
So he tarries with Kirke and with the fairer Kalypso, whose beautiful abode is the palace of Tara Bai in the Hindu legend, while she herself is Ursula, the moon, wandering, like Asterodia, among the myriad the lovety being who throws a veil over the Sun stars, while he sojourns in her peaceful home. From the abode of Kirke Odysseus betakes himself to the
at last.
home
aypso
'
may
if
he and his
ODYSSEUS IN ITHAKA.
comrades will but abstain from hurting the cattle of Helios or in other words, as we have in the island of Thrinakia Coming back seen, if they will not waste time by the way.
179
CHAP,
'
.
t
<*
is further warned against other foes in the air and the waters in the Seirens and Skylla and Charybdis. Worse than all, however, is the fate which awaits him in Thrinakia. The storm which is sent after the death of the oxen of Helios destroys all his ships and all his comrades, and Odysseus alone reaches the island of Kalypso, who, like Eos, promises him immortality if he will but tarry with her for ever. But it may not be. The yearning for his home and his wife may be repressed for a time, but it cannot be extinguished and Athene has exacted from Zeus an oath that Odysseus shall assuredly be avenged of all who have wronged him. So at the bidding of Hermes Kalypso helps Odysseus to build a raft, which bears him towards Scheria, until Poseidon again hurls him from it. But Ino Leukothea is at hand to save him, and he is at last thrown up almost dead on the shore of the Phaiakian ]and, where Athene brings Nausikaa to his rescue. He is now in the true cloudland of his friends, where everything is beautiful and radiant and in one of the magic ships of Alkinoos he is wafted to Ithaka, and landed on his native soil, buried in a profound slumber. Here the wanderer of twenty years, who finds himself an outcast from his own home, where the suitors have been
to Kirke he
which answers and Hektor. He is himself but just returned from the search and the recovery of a stolen treasure but before he can rest in peace, there remains yet another woman whom he must rescue, and another treasure on which he must lay his hands. Of the incidents of this struggle it is unnecessary here to say more
for a battle
;
than that they exhibit the victory of the poor despised outcast, whether it be Boots, or Cinderella, or Jack the Giant Killer, over those who pride themselves on their grandeur and their strength. He stands a beggar in his own hall. Athene herself has taken all beauty from his face, all colour from his golden hair but there remains yet the bow which
;
N 2
180
BOOK
II.
human
character,
it is
of Achilleus. There is the same complete disproportion between the offence committed and the vengeance taken, the same frightful delight in blood and torture the mutilation of Melanthios and the deliberate slaughter of the handmaidens answering to the insults offered by Achilleus to the body of Hektor, and the cold-blooded murder of the twelve Trojan youths on the funeral pyre of Patroklos. How completely the incidents of the decisive conflict answer to those
of the battle of Achilleus, we have seen already. All that we need now say is that Odysseus is united with his wife, to whom Athene imparts all the radiant beauty of youth in which she shone when Odysseus had left her twenty years The splendid scene with which the narrative ends ago. answers to the benignant aspect in which Achilleus appears
when Hektor
is
toil
against Ilion
is
over.
second return of the treasureIn each case the work to which they had devoted seekers. themselves is accomplished. The golden fleece and Helen are each brought back to the land from which they had been taken and though Odysseus may have suffered many and grievous disasters on the way, still even with him the de;
season of serene
But the poet who here leaves him with the bride of
his youth restored to all her ancient beauty, tells us nevertheless that the chieftain and his wife must again be parted
and myths might be framed from this point of view as readily It was as natural to speak of the sun as as from the other. conquered in the evening by the powers of darkness as it was to speak of him as victorious over these same foes in the mornino- as natural to describe the approach of night under the guise of an expulsion of the children of Helios or Hera-
181
CHAP.
.
myth
rJ
which an element of actual history may be traced in these mythical narratives is a question on which something has been said already, and probably it will not be disputed that even if many of the names may be those of real local chieftains (and some of the incidents may possibly be traditions of real local events), yet the narratives in their main features closely resemble the other epical myths with which they are connected. These stories were altered at will by later poets
to
dices or fancies,
and mythographers in accordance with local or tribal prejuand forced into arrangements which were regarded as chronological. Thus, some speak of the Trojan war as taking place in the interval between the death of
Hyllos and the return of his son Kleodaios ; but the historical character of all these events has been swept away, and we are left free to reduce the narratives to the simple elements of which they are composed. Thus the story ran
when Herakles died, his tyrant and tormentor Eurystheus insisted on the surrender of his sons, and that Hyllos,
that
the son of Deianeira, with his brothers, hastily fled, and after wandering to many other places at last found a refuge in
Athens.
This was only saying in other words that on the death of the sun the golden hues of evening were soon banished from the western sky, but that after many weary
hours they are seen again in the country of the Dawn, as indeed they could be seen nowhere else. Athens is the only possible refuge for the children of Herakles ; but their enemies will not allow them to slip from their hands without a
The Gorgon sisters almost seize Perseus as he hurries away after the slaughter of Medousa; and thus Eurystheus marches with his hosts against Athens. But the dawn must discomfit the dark beings. The Athenians are led on by Theseus, the great solar hero of the land, by Iolaos, the son of Iphikles, the twin brother of Herakles, and by the banished Hyllos. Eurystheus is slain, and Hyllos carstruggle.
ries his
head to Alkmene.
we choose now to follow the ordinary arrangement of we shall see in them a series which might be indefinitely extended, but of whose mythical origin we can
If
these stories,
we find that they cannot maintain their footing there for more than a year, and that then by an irresistible necessity they find their
Herakleids return to the Peloponnesos,
and these alternations, which represent ; simply the succession of day and night, might and would have been repeated any number of times, if the myths had
not at length become mixed up with traditions of the local settlement of the country in other words, if certain names
To follow all the and variations of these legends is a task perhaps not much more profitable than threading the mazes of a labyrinth but we may trace in some, probably in most of them, the working of the same ideas. Thus the version which after the death of Eurystheus takes Hyllos to Thebes makes him dwell by the Elektrian or amber-gates. The
spots or districts in the Peloponnesos.
versions
is another return of the children of Herakles, which ends in the slaughter of Hyllos in single
that
more
victorious,
goddess give them shelter in Trikorythos, a region answering to the Hypereia or upper land, in which the Phaiakians
dwelt before they were driven from
it by the Kyklopes. The subsequent fortunes of KLeodaios and Aristomachos the son and grandson of Herakles simply repeat those of Hyllos
but at length in the next generation the myth pauses, as in the case of Odysseus and Achilleus in the Iliad and the Odyssey, at the moment of victory, and the repetition of the
old
drama
is
For
10
ns in some
>
may remind
CHAP
degree of the brilliant gathering of the Achaian chieftains with their hosts in Anlis. A fleet is built at the entrance of
the Corinthian gulf, at a spot which hence bore the
,_
name
of
]STaupaktos, and the three sons of Aristomachos, Aristodemos, Temenos and Kresphontes, make ready for the last great But Aristodemos is smitten by lightning before enterprise. he can pass over into the heritage of his fathers, and his place is taken by his twin sons Eurysthenes and Prokles, in whose fortunes we see that rivalry and animosity which,
appearing in
its
germ
in the
myth
of the Dioskouroi,
is
The sequel
The sooth-
by the hand of Hippotes answers to the insults offered to In either case the wrath of Chryses by Agamemnon. Apollon is roused, and a plague is the consequence. The people die of famine, nor is the hand of the god lifted from off them, until, as for Chryses, a full atonement and recompense is made. Hippotes is banished, and the chiefs are then told to take as their guide the three-eyed man, who is found in the Aitolian Oxylos who rides on a one-eyed horse. But as the local myth exhibited Tisamenos the son of
Orestes as
prince
at this
must be brought forward as the antagonist of the returning Herakleids and a great battle follows in which he is slain, while, according to one version, Pamphylos and Dymas, the sons of the Dorian Aigimios, fall on the side of
;
the invaders.
With
among
an end. Argos falls to the lot of Temenos, while Sparta becomes the portion of the sons of Aristodemos, and Messene that of Kresphontes. A sacrifice is offered by way of thanksgiving by these chiefs on their respective altars and as they drew near to complete the rite, on the altar of Sparta was seen a serpent, on that of Argos a toad, on that of Messene a fox. The soothsayers were, of course, ready with their interpretations. The slow and sluggish toad denoted the dull and unenterprising disthe conquerors the
to
;
myth comes
As
been found
in the
but
it
may
reappears in the
Hindu legend
and
German
meet
in
1
and that the Mesan animal closely akin to the wolf which we the myths of the Lykian Apollon and the Arkadian
Lykaon.
Section
In spite of
all differences
In each case there wars and two sieges and if the Argive chiefs under are two Adrastos are not so successful as Herakles with his six ships at Ilion, still the Trojan power was no more destroyed by the latter than that of Eteokles was crushed by Polyneikes and In either case also there is a hero whose presence his allies. In the is indispensable to the success of the enterprise. Theban story this hero is Amphiaraos, the Achilleus of the Trojan legend in this its most important feature and as
:
it,
so the
Argives cannot hope to take Thebes unless Amphiaraos goes with thenio But as neither Achilleus nor Odysseus wished
to fight in a quarrel
prophetic
mind inherited by him from his ancestor Melampous tells him that all the chiefs engaged in it must die
Aristodemos, sons, three, The Temenos and Kresphontes, who in this stage of the myth represent the line of
1
and Irmin.
trace
To
Herakles, are seen again in the three sons of the German Mann, the Mannus but the names in the of Tacitus Teutonic story are more significant. The names of the three great tribes, Herminones. Iscsevones, Ingsevones,
:
the English name in see the ashborn man, the race of which the Greek spoke as sprung in fxeXiav: Irmin is the old Saxon god, whose name is familiar to us under its later form Herman, the Arrainius of Tacitus. Max Muller, Lectures, second series, 458.
may Askr we
185
CHAP,
.
as strong as the consciousness of Achilleus that his career must be brief; but before he sets out, he charges his
sons Amphilochos and Alkmaion to
slay their mother, so
soon as they hear of his death, and to inarch against the hated city of Thebes; and thus the starting point was
furnished not only for the Theban war, but for a
to be
new
series
wrought by the Erinyes of Eriphyle. of woes The germs of the rivalry, which in the case of the sons of Oidipous grew into a deadly hatred, are seen in the points of contrast afforded by almost all the correlative deities of Greek and Yedic mythology, and the twin heroes whether Thus there is a close parallel of the east or the west. The between the Dioskouroi and the sons of Oidipous.
1
The sod
1_
former may not be seen together; the latter agree to reign over Thebes in turn ; and it was a ready device to account for the subsequent feud by saying that the brother whose time was over refused to abide by his compact. Hence
Polyneikes became an exile
precisely to
;
but
it is
what degree a purely moral element has forced its way into this series of legends from the horror which a union like that of Iokaste and Oidipous, when regarded as a fact in the lives of two human beings, could not fail to inHere also the Erinys might exercise her fatal office, spire. for the blood of Iokaste must cry for vengeance as loudly as that of Iphigeneia or Amphiaraos; and the same feeling which suggested the curse of Amphiaraos on Eriphyle would
also suggest the curse of Oidipous
1 They are, in short, the rival brothers not only of the royal houses of Sparta, but in a vast number of stories in Aryan folk-lore, and are represented by Ferdinand the Faithful and Ferdinand the Unfaithful in Grimm's collection, by
on his children.
In the
True and Untrue, by Big Peter and Peter in Dasent's Xorse Tales. In the story of the Widow's Son (Dasent) we have a closer adherence to the type of the Dioskouroi in the two princes, one of whom is turned into a horse.
Little
SO
UOOK
His sons had been accustomed to bring him the shoulders of victims offered in sacrifice, and they once brought him a thigh. At another time they put before him the table and the wine-cup of Kadinos, although he had*
charged them never to do
so.
point of view.
Zeus when giving him the choice of the portion for the gods; and the latter made him think of the golden days when he sat down with Iokaste to banquets as brilliant as
those of the long-lived Aithiopians and drank purple wine from the inexhaustible horn of Amaltheia. But to Sophokles,
who looked at the matter simply as a moralist, these causes were so inadequate that he at once charged the sons
with cruel treatment of their father, whom they drove slw&j from his home to fight with poverty as well as blindness,
ydeus.
Polyneikes, when in his turn an exile, betook himself to Argos where he fell in with Tydeus, with whom he quarrels. But it had been shown long ago to Adrastos that he should wed his two daughters to a lion and a boar and when he found these two men lighting, with shields which had severally the sign of the boar and the lion, he came to the conclusion that these were the destined husbands of Argeia and Deipyle. Hence also he readify agreed to avenge the alleged wrongs of Polyneikes, and the league was soon formed, which in the later Attic legend carried the Seven Argive Chiefs to the walls of Thebes, but which for the poets of
1
who assembled
to
How far these poets may have succeeded in imparting to their subject the charm of our
poem which
alone
we
possess
make
it
impossible to say
more than one incident in the struggle which might be so treated as fairly to win for the poem a title to the high
1
is
thus precisely
means apparently the hammerer. The two forms may be compared with the Latin tundo, tutudi, to beat. The idea
1ST
CHAP,
^_
Thus the story told by Pausanias. by Diomedes of his father Tydeus when sent to Thebes to upon
it
1
,__
demand
the restoration of Polyneikes reproduces in part the 2 Yictorious in the strife of boxing or story of Bellerophon.
wrestling to which he had challenged the Kadmeians, he is assailed on his way back to the Argive host by an ambus-
he slays except Maion, So who is should be too the prophecy of Teiresias that the Thebans conquerors in the war if Ares received the youthful Menoikeus as a victim, must be compared with those utterances of Kalchas which sealed the doom of Iphigeneia and Polyxena and finally when the Argives are routed and Periklymenos is about to slay Amphiaraos, we see in his rescue by
cade of
fifty
Thebans,
all
of
whom
the earth which receives him with his chariot and horses another form of the plunge of Endymion into the sea or of
the leap of Kephalos from the Leukadian cape. It is the vanishing from mortal sight of the sun which can never die,
went that Zeus thus took away Amphiaraos might make him immortal. that he This first assault of the Argives against Thebes answers
and
so the story
The war
pi "
of
to the ineffectual attempts of the Herakleidai to recover g^]oi> It was therefore followed by a their paternal inheritance.
second attack in the struggle known as the war of the Epigonoi, or the children of the discomfited chiefs of the former expedition. But it must be noted that as the Herakleids find a refuge in
Athens
by Echemos, so Adrastos, who carnage by the speed of his horse Areion, betakes himself to the Attic Eleusis, whence Theseus marches against the Thebans to insist on the surrender and the burial of the dead, an incident in which the historical Athenians took The doom of pride as an actual event in their annals. now come, and the Epigonoi approach like the Thebes was Herakleidai when their period of inforced idleness is at an The Thebans are utterly routed by the Argives under end. Alkmaion, the son of Amphiaraos and Teiresias declares
ix. 0, 3.
11. iv.
i.
3G4.
384,
no longer any hope, as the gods have abandoned and Thersandros, the son of Polyneikes, is seated on the throne of Kadmos. Of the remaining incidents connected with these two great struggles the most remarkable is the doom of Antigone, who is condemned by Kreon to be buried alive because she had performed the funeral rites over the body of Polyneikes, which had been cast forth to the birds and dogs. Of the sentiments which Sophokles puts into her mouth as explaining her motives and justifying her actions all that we need to say here is that they belong seemingly rather to
is
that there
them.
The
the Eastern than the Western world, and may be a genuine portion of the Persian myth which Herodotos has clothed in a Greek garb in the story of the Seven Conspirators. But
the dismal cave in which she is left to die seems but the horrid den into which the Panis sought to entice Sarama,
and in which they shut up the beautiful cattle of the dawn. which the evening must sink and where she must die before the day can again dawn in the
It is the cave of night into
east.
Nor can we
many
instances in
which those who mourn for mythical heroes taken away put an end to their own lives by hanging. It is thus that Haiends his misery when he finds himself too late to save Antigone it is thus that Iokaste hides her shame from the
;
mon
it is thus that Althaia and Kleopatra hasten away from life which without Meleagros is not worth the living for. The death of these beings is the victory of Echidna and Ahi, the throttling or strangling snake ; and the tradition unconsciously preserved may have determined
;
the
mode in which these luckless beings must die. Nor may we forget that after the death of Amphiaraos
house of
obedience
Agamemnon
to
his
after
his
return
from
Ilion.
In
his
father's
command Alkmaion
slays
pertinacity of the
Go where he
scare
she
is
there to torture
until
night;
and not
IS
CHAP.
^
'
Kadmos, and found out a had never looked at the time when Eriphyle met her doom, can Alkmaion have any rest. Such a refuge was furnished by the Oiniadai, islands which had grown up at the mouth of the river
precious necklace of
Harmonia
or
Acheloos from the deposits brought down by the stream to the sea. Here he marries Kallirhoe the daughter of the river god, who causes his death at the hands of the sons of Phegeus by insisting on his fetching her the necklace of
Euriphyle.
But Kallirhoe
is,
like
mature manhood and become the avengers of their father, as Hyllos is avenged by the Herakleids of a later generation.
This is substantially the story of Orestes, who slays Orestes ^ndKlyKlytaimnestra for murdering her husband Agamemnon as Euriphyle had brought about the death of Amphiaraos, and tra. who is therefore chased, like Alkmaion, from land to land by
the Erinyes of his mother, until at last he comes to Athens, the dawn city, and is there by the casting vote of Athene
herself acquitted in the court of Areiopagos.
Of
this
:
myth
and
there
were,
these
as
we might
expect,
many
variations
among
we may
him
and his friend Pylades as slaying Helen when Menelaos refused to rescue them from the angry Argives, and lastly, the legend that Orestes himself, like Eurydike, died from the bite of a snake, doubtless the Ahi or throttling serpent of
Yedic mythology.
CHAPTER
IV.
THE FIRE.
Section
I.
AGNI.
Agni
still
HOOK
II.
When
it
remained, as
first,
name
vading
In the Satapatha-Brahmana, Svetaketu tells king Janaka that he sacrifices to two heats in one another which are ever shining and filling the world with their splendonr. When
the king asks
snn)
is
:
(Agni).
in the
how this may be, the answer is Aditya (the heat to him do I sacrifice in the evening in the fire Agni is heat: to him do I sacrifice in the morning snn (Aditya). When to Somasushma, who says
'
Brahman
replies,
Aditya
1
is
is
light
to
;
do I
sacrifice in the
light
to
him him
do I
sacrifice in
Thus Agni,
great god
fills
like Indra, is
all
who makes
which
appli-
fire.
word
many
objects.
deities. 2
is
There
no rivalry
greatest,
Agni
;
greatest
Max
has never been taken into consideration by those who have written on the history of ancient polytheism.' Sanskr. Lit.
546.
19;
CHAP,
Thus Agni
1
is
said
*J'
comprehend all other gods within himself, as the circumference of a wheel embraces its spokes; and not unfrequently Indra is said to be Agni, and Agni is said to be Indra, while both alike are Skambha, the supporter of
the universe.
Hence the character of the god, as we might expect, is The blessings which his worshippers pray for are commonly temporal, and very rarely is he asked, like Yaruna, to forgive sin. In the earlier hymns, he is generally addressed as the fire which to mortal men is an indispensable boon: in the more developed ceremonialism of later times he
ordering of the
flames which
sacrifice.
is
Physical
attributes
of Agni.
chiefly
As bearing up the
on the
mount
Hermes
as the messenger between gods and men. Like and Indra, he is full of a secret wisdom. He is the Phoibos tongue (of fire) through which gods and men receive each
Nay, so
that,
his
is
mythical
character
still
understood,
although he
sometimes the originator of all things, at others he is said to have been kindled by Manu (man), and the expression at once carries us to the legends of Prometheus, Hermes, and Phoroneus, who is himself the Vedic god of fire Bhuranyu. The very sticks which Manu rubbed
together are called the parents of Agni,
who
is
said to have
destroyed them, as Oidipous and Perseus, Cyrus and lus are said to have destroyed their fathers. The
describe simply the
'
Eomuhymns
phenomena of fire.
Agni, thou from whom, as a new-bom male, undying flames proceed, the brilliant smoke-god goes towards the
sky, for as messenger thou art sent to the gods.
Thou, whose power spreads over the earth in a moment when thou hast grasped food with thy jaws like a dashing army thy blast goes forth; with thy lambent flame thou
6
seemest to tear up the grass. Him alone, the ever youthful Agni,
'
1
men groom,
like a
192
BOOK
._
dawn
IL
Thy appearance is fair to behold, thon bright-faced Agni, when like gold thon shinest at hand thy brightness comes
;
heaven
ful
'
and
not to be trusted
phrases which bring before us at once the capriciousness and sullenness of Meleagros and Achilleus. Like Indra,
A^ni
'
is
also Yritrahan.
whom men
3 the stealer of the waters.' and the later Krishna, he Like Indra, again,
is
'
the lover
' c
backed
is
'
whom
c
blackHe husband of the wives.' his hair is flame,' and he it and many-limbed the two sticks have engendered, like a new-born
4
is
'
'
'
babe.'
Thou
like the }r oung of tortuously twining snakes, thou consumer of many forests as a beast is of fodder.'
'
<r
who
art a
'
The
fant
in-
As the
infant
Agm.
by
to
But Agni consumes that which Hermes is constrained leave untasted, and scathes the forest with his tongue,
shearing off the hair of the earth as with a razor. As the special guardian and regulator of sacrifices, Agni
assumes the character of the Hellenic Hestia, and almost He is the lord and attains the majesty of the Latin Vesta. protector of every house, and the father, mother, brother, and son of every one of the worshippers. 6 He is the keeper
1
R. V.
II.
vii.
Max
Miiller, Sanskr.
S. vol.
3 4
II.
S.
ii.
158.
Lit. 567.
2
i.
6
6
pp. 102-104.
193
and
all
him
as
,
CHAP,
[_
,
During life he Yasu, the lord of light. shields men from harm, and at death he becomes the Psychopompos, as conveying the unborn part of the dead to
the giver.
is
' '
He
But
his
name remains
all
discernible
is
assertions that
Agni
but one of
many
titles for
the
One
is
Great Cause of
'
things.
They
call (him)
Agni
then he
the well-winged heavenly Garutmat that which is One, the wise call it many ways: they call it Agni, Yama, Matarisvan.' 2
In India, however, as in the western world, there was a constant tendency to convert names into persons, and then to frame for them a mythical history in accordance with
their meaning.
ever-flickering tongues of
and these became names of Durga, the wife of Siva, who was developed out of Agni and a bloody 3 sacrificial worship was the result.
Karali, the terrific
;
1 Of the existence of the root vas, to shine, there can be, of course, no doubt, It is sufficiently shown by its derivatives
Skr.
(pdos, (paivu),
<pT)tii,
4>^ut?, for,
Hence Professor
Lat.
cap,
Max
ver
?ip,
'
'
samvat, as well as in vatsa, vatsara, and samvatsara, and in the Greek, eros, Fctos, the year; thus too the Sanskrit parat for para-vat, in the previous year, explains the Greek irepvrr-i for ireo-vr-i. This form vat or ut he traces back to a time preceding the dispersion of the Aryan tribes; the term iviavrbs answering to samvat, may, he thinks, be later. In all this the idea certainly seems to be that of brilliance, and so of freshness, passing into that of youth and thus, Professor Muller adds, we have the Greek Fira\6?, the Latin vitulus, meaning literally a yearling, as bimus and trimus would denote creatures two or three years old. Hence
:
vitulus
would
answer
precisely
to
'
x'Va'P" as il winterling, i.e. one winter old. Lastly, he remarks, ' der Sawivatsara, das Jahr oder die Jahres-sonne, aus dem Schoosse der Wasser geboren wird.' a myth which only repeats the story of the birth of Aphrodite and every other
dawn-goddess. - B. V. i. 164,
46;
Max
iv. p.
Muller,
36.5,425.
VOL.
II.
194
BOOK
II.
Agni and
alS "
to?
name Yavishtha, which is never given to any other Yedic god, we may recognise the Hellenic Hephaistos. But the name Agni is nowhere found in the west as the name of any deity. In the Greek dialects the word itself
"this
seems to have been lost, while the Latin ignis, with which nor are any myths it is identical, is merely a name for fire associated with the Lithuanian Agni.
;
Section II.
The Wind
and the
Fire.
The myth of Hermes brings before us one of the many men were supposed to have become first But although Hermes is there possessed of the boon of fire. said to have been the first to bestow this gift upon mankind,
rnodes in which
it
is
The hymn-writer
is
careful to dis-
He
is
they burst
which
flames.
but the wood thus kindled and the meat roasted are devoured not by himself but by the Hermes remains hungry, although he is reprefills
his nostrils.
Nothing can show more clearly that we are dealing simply with the wind or with air in motion, in other words, with the bellows not with the fire. Hence with a keen sense of the meaning of the myth, Shelley, in his translation of the
1
Professor
Max
this identification
must be regarded as The name scarcely open to doubt. Hephaistos, he says, became the subject of myths in the West, precisely because
it
strict analogy with the is not in Sanskrit yavishtha, the superlative; of yuvah, Lat. juvenis, young. The kindred form yavan, found also in Zend, yields yavya, the name of the Greek Hebe, The only difficulty is presented by the change of the Sanskrit v into the Greek 8 but this change is seen in the Greek acpbs for the Sanskrit svas. To the objection that the Sanskrit yavishtha
;
ought to be represented by the Greek Hephistos, he replies that the Zend form stavaesta represents the Sanskrit sthavistha, and thus from the analogous yavaesta we should reach Hephaistos. Thus, with the exception of Agni, all the names of the fire and the fire-
god "were carried away by the Western Aryans and we have Prometheus answering to Pramantha, Phoroneus to Bhuranyu, and the Latin Vulcanus to the Skr. ulkah, a firebrand, a word used
:
in connection
of Agni.
195
e
speaks of
Hermes
'
as supplying to
men
matches, tin
CHAP.
derbox and steel for the kindling of the flame. Another discoverer or bestower of fire is the Argive Phoroneus, who represents the Yedic fire-god Bhuranyu, and whose name is thus seen to be another form of the Greek Pur, the Teutonic feuer and fire. Phoroneus is thus the fire itself, and as such he dwelt on the Astu Phoronikon of Argos, in other words he is the Argive Hestia with its holy In this aspect he was naturally flame of everlasting fire. of men and the father of all who are represented as the first subject to death and as such, he is also described, in accordance with the myth of the Askingas, as springing from an ash-tree. 2 To Phoroneus himself more than one wife is In one version he is the husband of Kerdo, the assigned.
^
e
The Ar-
^^
e
ho "
clever or winsome, a
name
fire
on the comfort and the arts of life " in another of Telodike, a word which indicates the judicial powers of the Greek
Hestia and the Latin Vesta.
also
is
wedded
to Peitho, persuasion.
He
father of the Pelasgic race, in contrast with Deukalion, who But it is unnecesis the progenitor of the Hellenic tribes.
it
seems
It
is
enough
myth,
a
is
her father, and that Argos and Phoinikia are alike the The phrase that glistening regions of the purple dawn.
Europe, the broad- spreading morning light, is the daughter of Phoroneus, corresponds precisely with the myth which
makes Hephaistos
dawn
comes
But from
is
fire
who weeps
herself to death on
Mount
Preller, Gr.
lb.
Myth.
ii.
37.
chos,
the father of
Melia,
is
nymph, and
Phoroneus.
o2
As gathering
who had
thus far
dwelt scattered without a notion of social order and law, Phoroneus discharges the functions of Hestia. Nay, his
Astu is Hestia, the inviolable fire on the sacred hearth But no which may not be moved but stands fast for ever. great accretion of myths was possible in the case either of
1
Phoroneus or of Hestia.
Memnon
in-
among
and the
beneficial
almost complete absence of folk-lore in connexion with her name. She is so clearly the fire on the hearth, the symbol and the pledge of kindliness and good faith, of law and order, of wealth and fair dealing, that it was impossible to lose sight of her attributes or to forget their origin; and except under these conditions there can be no full developement of mythology. Of no other deity perhaps was the worship so nearly an unmixed blessing. Falsehood and treachery, fickleness and insincerity, were to her things Her purity could brook no uncleanness utterly hateful. her youth could know no decay, and thus her sacred dwelling: became the centre of influences which breathed some life into a society prone to become more and more heartless and From the horrible devil-worship of Artemis Orthia, selfish. or Tauropola, we may turn to the redeeming cultus of Hestia and Asklepios, the shrines of the one being the stronghold of generosity and sympathy, the temples of the other being devoted to those works of mercy, which we are dis-
The sacred
fire.
posed to regard as the exclusive products of Christianity. 2 Hestia in the common legend is the eldest daughter of
The names Astn and Hestia are both referred by Preller to the Sanskrit vas, to dwell, the cognate Greek forms being eC.o' and 7, thus connecting together the Latin Vesta and sedes, a But on the permanent habitation. other hand it is urged that the name Hestia may more reasonably be referred to the root vas, to shine, which has yielded Vasu as a name for Agni, as
1
thus denote the glistening flame, and would be akin to the names for the hot wind, Euros and Auster, avarr]p6s. Peile, Introduction to Greek and Latin Etymology, 77. 2 The temples of Asklepios were practically large hospitals,
where something
(See well as many names for the year. note ', p. 193). Hestia and Vesta would
Christian charity was extended to the sick and afflicted by physicians whose knowledge raised them far above the empirics and spcll-mutlike the aid of
terers of the
Middle
Acres.
1\)
Kronos and Kheia, and is wooed both by Phoibos and CHAP. Poseidon; but their suit is vain. Hestia makes a solemn ^__ _L_ vow that she will never be a bride, and as her reward she receives honour and glory both among gods and among men.
r
is
to have her
home
in the inmost
and the other deities she is to preside and to receive the first invocation and the first share. As apart from her there can be no security for truth, peace, and justice, each town, city, and state must have its own Prytaneion, with its central hearth, uniting the citizens in a common faith and in
common
least
interests.
at the
the boon of a fair trial, whether between states or private men, receive their most solemn sanction and when it became necessary to lighten the pressure of population at home by sending forth some of the citizens into new countries, from this hearth should the sacred fire be taken as the link which was to bind together
;
compacts,
the
old.
This
fire
by chance such calamity should befall, it was to be lit again, not from common flame but as Hermes kindled fire, by friction, or drawn by burning-glasses from the sun itself. Hands impure might not touch her altar, and the guardians of her sacred fire should be pure and
tinguished; but
chaste as herself.
All this
is
so transparent that
we cannot
be said to have entered here on the domain of mythology and even the great hearth of the Universe is but an extension to the whole
Kosmos
human
society.
AND
LOKI.
In Hephaistos, the ever-young, we see an image of fire, T he not as the symbol and pledge of faith and honour, of law ai ed and equity, but like Agni, dark and stunted in its first tos. beginnings but able to do wonders in its power over earths and metals. He is the mighty workman who, at the prayer
of Thetis, forges for Achilleus the irresistible
1
armour in
See note
p. 194.
198
BOOK
II
But in spite of all his power he himself is subject to great weakness, the result, according to one version, of his mother's harshness, in another, of the cruelty of Zeus. The former
relates that
Here was
so horrified
by
his deformity
and limp-
him
him
The other
tells
Ocean nymphs Thetis and Eurynome. how when once he was taking his mother's
Throughout the livelong day he and as the sun went down he lay stunned on the soil of Lemnos, where the Sintians took him up and tended him in his weakness. The myth also ran that he had no father, as Athene has no mother, and that he was the child of Here alone, who in like manner is called the solitary parent of Typhon. The mystery of his birth perplexed Hephaistos and the stratagem in which he discovered it reappears in the Norse story of the Master Smith, who, like Hephaistos, possesses a chair from which none can rise against the owner's will. In the one case it is Here, in
continued to
fall,
1
:
it is
is
the devil
who
is
successful.
is
At his huge mighty bellows keep up a stream of air of their own accord; and giant forms, Brontes, Steropes, Pyrakmon (the thunders, lightnings and flames) aid him in his labours. With him dwells his wife, who in the Iliad, as we have seen, is Charis, in the Odyssey Aphrodite. In its reference to Hephaistos the lay of Demodokos which relates the faithstars.
1
The
tradition
which assigns
this in-
probably to the weakened powers of lire when i-it her materials or draught fail it. The Vedic hymn speaks of Agni as clothed or hindered by smoke only at his birth; but with a feeling not less
true to the phenomena of fire, the poets of the Iliad represent him as always
halting, and so furnishing the gods with a source of inextinguishable laughter, as they see him puffing and panting in
his
ministrations
as
the
cup-bearer.
199
it
attributes
CHAP.
'
,
to
of Daidalos.
catch-
ing the eye scarcely more than spiders' webs, entrap Ares
and Aphrodite in a network from which there is no escape, at once suggest a comparison with the tortuous labyrinth
made
for
In Apollodoros we have the strange story which ^h*n6 makes him and Athene the parents of Erichthonios, and the legend which represents him as the father of the robber Periphetes, who is slain by Theseus myths transparent enough to render any detailed explanation superfluous. The Christian missionaries converted Hephaistos into a demon, and thus he became the limping devil known in Warwickshire tradition as Way land the Smith.
he too
Of the Latin Vulcan little more needs to be said than that is a god of fire, whose name also denotes his office, for it points to the Sanskrit ulka, a firebrand, and to the kindred words fulgur and fulmen, names for the flashing Like most other Latin gods, he has in strictness lightning. of speech no mythology; but it pleased the later Eoman taste to attribute to him all that Greek legends related of
1
The Latin
Vulcan
-
Hephaistos.
fire-
and in such phrases as Locke dricker water, described the phenomena of the sun vancl, Loki drinks drinking when its light streams in shafts from the cloud rifts The word thus carries to the earth or the waters beneath. us to the old verb liuhan, the Latin lucere, to shine, and to Logi as its earlier form, the modern German lohe, glow; but as the Greek tradition referred the name Oidipous to the two words ol&a and olSsco, to know and to swell, so a
the light or blaze of
god Lokl
supposed connexion with the verb lukan, to shut or lock, substituted the name Loki for Logi, and modified his character accordingly. 2 He thus becomes the being who holds
1 In the Gaelic Lay of Magnus, the smith or forging god appears under the name Balcan, his son being the sailor. This looks as if the Latin name had been borrowed. In this story the twelve
ruddy daughters of the King of Light marry the twelve foster-brothers of Manus the hero the months of the Campbell, iii. 347. year.
Grimm. D. M.,
221.
IUU
by Ger-
vase of Tilbury, a
a grating,
name connected with the Old Norse grind, and the modern German grenz, a boundary. At
no time, however, did Loki exhibit the features of the Semitic devil or the Iranian Ahriman. Like Hephaistos, a god of the fire, he resembles him also in his halting gait and in the uncouth figure which provokes the laughter of the gods and if we are not told that like him Loki was hurled out of heaven, yet we see him bound for his evil deeds, and, like Prometheus, he shall be set free, we are told, at the end of the world, and shall hurry in the form of a wolf to swallow the moon, as the deliverance of Prometheus is to be followed by the overthrow of his tormentor. Hence the Norse phrase, Loki er or bondum,' answering to the expression, Der
;
' 6
Teufel
old the
the devil
is loose.
day of the week bore, in Grimm's opinion, the name of this deity. 2 In place of our Saturday we have the Old Norse laugardagr, the Swedish logerdag, the Danish loverdag, a word which at a later period was held to mean the day appointed for bathing or washing, but which was
last
The
When, however,
this
mean-
way
verb lukan, to shut or imprison, Loki became known as Ssetere, the thief who sits in ambush. The Christian missionaries were not slow to point out the resemblance of this
word
and the Latin Saturnus, who were demons and thus the notions grew up that the name of the last day of the week was imported from the old mythology of Italy, or that the Teutonic god was also the agricultural deity of the Latin tribes.
to the Semitic Satan
The
root of the
is
family of
the
thus precisely the same. In each case the benefactor of man is a being as subtle as he is wise, and as such he is expelled from the
and Prometheus
Prometheus is placed by a
trickles
2
in the
227.
201
Section
IV. PROMETHEUS.
CHAP.
IV.
Another and in some versions a very different account of given in the myths of Prometheus. In the Hesiodic Theogony Prometheus is a son of the Titan Iapetos, his broBut even of thers being Epimetheus, Atlas, and Menoitios.
fire is
The
In the
latter,
pillars
all
In
is condemned by Zeus to support the heaven on his head and hands, 2 while Menoitios undergoes a punishment corresponding to that of Sisyphos or Ixion, and with
is
In
some way or other Prometheus was a giver of the boon of fire to men, the
aside the assertion that in
story
is
we put
Nothing can be more clear and emphatic than the narrative in which iEschylos asserts the utter and hopeless savagery of mankind before Prometheus came to their aid. They had no settled homes, no notion of marriage or of the duties which bind the members of a family together they burrowed in the ground like the digger Indians, and contented themselves with food not much better than that of the insect-eating Bushmen, because they knew nothing about fire, and how far it might raise them above the beasts of the field. This wretched state was their original condition, not one to which they had fallen from a higher and a better one, and it was from mere compassion to their utter helplessness that Prometheus stole fire from the house of Zeus, and hiding it in a ferule, imparted it to men, teaching them at the same time how to cook their food and build houses. With this notion the narrative of the Hesiodic Theogony is in cou^lete antagonism. In this legend the existence of man upon earth began with a golden age, during which the earth yielded her fruits of her own accord, and in which plagues and sicknesses were unknown. They were subject indeed to the
;
1
Odyss.
i.
52.
i.
101.
of death but they died as though they were merely going to sleep, and became the righteous demons who, wandering like the Erinyes everywhere through the air, watch the ways and works of men, to uphold the righteous and
;
doom
The second
is
men
and had hearts of adamant, These men had not yet needed or and their weapons were used Like the men sprung from the to their own destruction. dragon's teeth in the Theban and Argonautic myths, they fought with and slaughtered each other, and went down without a name to the gloomy underworld of Hades. But it must not be forgotten that the Hesiodic poet knows of no The old age does not fade away insentransitional periods. It is completely swept off, and the new sibly into the new. takes its place as virtually a new creation. Thus the earth becomes the possession of a series of degenerating inhabitants, the race of the poet's own day being the worst of all. These
race of
their vast shoulders.
1 The portions thus allotted to the departed of the golden and silver races tended to foster and develope that idea of a moral conflict between good and evil which first took distinct shape on The evil spirits are there Iranian soil. the malignant powers of darkness who represent both in name and in attributes the gloomy antagonist of the sun-god The Hesiodic myth coincides Indra. completely with this sentiment, while it extends it. Here the spirits of the men belonging to the golden age are the good demons, these demons being generically different from the blessed gods ofOlympos: but it was easy to assign to the departed souls of the silver age a lower, or even a positively malignant, They are not called Daicharacter. mones by the Hesiodic poet, but they have a recognised position and dignity There was no in the realm of the air.
men who ate no corn and whose hands sprung from were the workers in brass (for come to know the use of iron),
reason, therefore, why they should not be represented by others as evil demons and this step which, as Mr. Grote remarks, was taken by Empedokles and Xenokratcs, led to that systematic distinction of which the Christian teachers availed themselves for the overthrow
;
transformation of the It only remained for them to insist on the reality of the evil demons thus brought into existence, and then, as the gods themselves are in the Iliad and Odyssey and elsewhere called demons, to include all together in the one class of malignant devils and at once the victory of the new creed was insured. The old mythology was not killed, but it took a different shape, and, losing all its ancient beauty, acquired new powers of mischief and corruption, Grote, Hist. Greece, i. 96, &e.
or
rather
the
system
itself.
203
CHAP.
men
who know no peace by day and whom, although some good may yet be
the poet anticipates nothing but an
evil,
increasing misery which at the last will become unbearable. Good faith and kindly dealing will in the end vanish from
the face of the earth, until Aidos and Nemesis (reverence and righteousness) will wrap their shining garments around
their radiant forms,
and soar away into the heights never pierced by the eye of man. Such is the purely ethical legend by which the Hesiodic poet accounts for the present condition of mankind a state not only opposed to the legends of Hermes, Prometheus, and Phoroneus, but also to all the associations which had taken the strongest hold on the popular mind. The stories recited
The
e 10ic e
by bards or rhapsodists told them of a time when men walked the earth who were the children of immortal mothers, whose joys and sorrows were alike beyond those of men now living, who had done great deeds and committed great crimes, but who nevertheless held open converse with the flashing-eyed goddess of the dawn, and for whom the firegod forged irresistible weapons and impenetrable armour. In the conviction of the Hesiodic as of our Homeric poets, the heroes of this magnificent but chequered age were utterly different from the miserable race which had followed them,
nor could they be identified with the beings of the three It was, however, imposraces who had gone before them. probably preferred his ethical sible even for a poet, who maxims to the story of the wrath of Achilleus or the avenging of Helen, to pass them by in contemptuous silence. They must therefore be placed by themselves in a position and which breaks the ethical order of the primeval ages
!
thus the poet contents himself with saying that many of them slew each other at Thebes fighting for the apples or the cows of Oidipous, while others met their doom at Troy.
All these were placed by Zeus in a region far away from the undying gods and beyond the bounds of the earth, where
Kronos
is
their king,
soil
produces
204
BOOK
T -
yearly
'
its triple
The Pro-Skchylos!
belief, the Promethean mankind in a scale ascending from the savage state in which they knew the nse neither of fire nor of metals to that high civilisation in which Zens fears that men may become like the gods in wisdom and thus share their power. Tor this myth, as related by JEschylos, knows nothing of a
m} th exhibits
previous knowledge of
version, Zeus took
fire,
which
as the j)orThis explanation, which is not altogether consistent with other passages in the Hesiodic Theogony,
left
away from men in revenge only the fat and bones of victims
completely excludes the idea which lies at the very root of the iEschylean tradition, for Prometheus expressly speaks
of men not as having lost high powers and the fruits of great results achieved by those powers, but as never having been awakened to the consciousness of the senses with
Prom
the
first,
whom
sight
wholly useless, and for whom life presented only the confused shapes of a dream. The sunless caves, in which they lived
were not wrought into shape by their hands. Por distinctions of seasons, no knowledge of the rising and setting of the stars. For this state of unspeakable misery there was no remedy until men could be roused to a knowledge of their own powers and be placed in
like ants,
the conditions indispensable for their exercise a result to be achieved only by bestowing on them the boon of fire. But this very idea involves the fact that till then fire was a
thing
unknown
to
men upon
the earth.
They might
see
it
fire
hurled into the air from the heaving volcano, but to them was at the least a thing which they dared not approach
form which
to use. to
it
man. That being is Prometheus, who, ascending to the palace of Zeus, fills a ferule with fire,
servant, not the destroyer of
THE GIFT OF
FIEE.
205
chap.
IA
and thus brings down the precious boon to the woe-begone Henceforth the task of raising them was children of men. practically strij>ped of its difficulty, and Prometheus was enabled to teach men how to cook and build, and where to
find the riches stored
up within the earth. From him came movements of the heavens, and the
;
changes of the seasons by him men were taught to plough and reap, and to launch themselves in ships on the waters and spread their white wings to the breeze. From him they received skill in the discernment of herbs and roots for the healing of diseases under which they had groaned in hopeless suffering and from him they learnt to understand the signs of the calm and the troubled heavens, and the meanings of the muscular movements of victims slain in
;
sacrifice.
was impossible for the poet to show more clearly that The Prometheus was the friend who bestowed on man, originally J^tcf a creature more feeble and helpless than any of the brute Promebeasts, all that can make life valuable. Of any earlier condition in which men lived, as in the golden or silver ages, or of any state better in any respect than the one in which he found them, the Prometheus of the great tragic poet knows nothing. ISTor can we well lay too great a stress on this fact, because the version given by iEschylos not only makes
It
myth self-consistent, but it is clearly the earlier form of the legend into which the Hesiodic poet introduced the vengeance taken by Zeus for the cheat put upon him. This story is really a mere patchwork for according to it men, deprived of fire as a punishment, lose a thing on which
the whole
;
much
of their comfort
may
wisdom in which Prometheus had been their In short, they are as far as ever from that state of unawakened powers which is of the very essence of the story
of the crafty
teacher.
in the tragedy of iEschylos.
iEschylos
felt it
needful to explain.
But there were two things which The very mode in which
Prometheus became possessed of the priceless treasure implied that he was acting in opposition to the will of Zeus, or at the least without his knowledge, while it showed that he had access to the gleaming palace of the father of the gods.
206
BOOK
>
How
'
then came
it
why
This friend of
man was
;
himself
his
arid
when
Finding that
all
away on the brutal partisans of Kronos, Prometheus throws in the weight of his wisdom, on the side of Zeus, and the result is that Kronos with his adherents is hurled, like
hell.
Satan with the revolted angels, into the abyss of Tartaros or Thus far Prometheus was a benefactor to Zeus without awakening either his jealousy or his wrath. Henceforth he
might have remained for ever in the bright homes of Olympos had it not been for the injustice of which Zeus became guilty as soon as he found himself securely seated on the throne of heaven. To each of the deathless gods he assigned a place and function of men alone he took no count, his heart's desire being to sweep the whole race from the earth and to But it is clear that this resolution was create another. formed not because men were already becoming too wise and too powerful, as the Hesiodic version would represent it, but because man was too mean and wretched a thing to be Here Zeus expresses no fear, suffered to cumber the earth. and Prometheus is opposed to him not because he is too severe upon enemies whom he dreads, but because he feels no pity for creatures whose wretchedness calls only for comThe mercy refused by Zeus is extended to them by passion. Prometheus, who determines to raise them from their abject misery and by stealing the fire converts the opposition of Zeus into a fierce longing for vengeance against the mighty being who had dared to thwart his will. The great heart whose pulses had beaten in sympathy with the griefs and wants of men shall itself be torn with an agony far surpassing their puny woes. In the sentence thus passed upon
;
him it seems
difficult
in
THE TORTURING OF PROMETHEUS. The awful being, who with sleepless eye wanders air to watch the deeds of men and exact a righteous penalty for the shedding of innocent blood, had
or Ate.
207
CHAP,
.
through the
^'
been, or was, in the land of the Five Streams only the beautiful
Saranyu or morning.
dawn
necessary only to give a physical meaning to the phrase that the hearts of the enemies of Zeus shall be racked with pain,
to furnish a starting-point for the
myth which
told
how
the
vulture
of Prometheus as he lay
its horrid task the heart, therefore, must constantly grow, and thus the
storm was chosen as the place of torture presenting the most awful contrast with the sunlit halls of Olympos.
The
zeal of
fat,
men.
This practice
while the meat and the entrails belong- to is ascribed strictly to the craft of Pro-
metheus, who, in the great contest between gods and men in Mekone, divided an ox, and placing the meat under the
stomach and the bones under the more inviting and auspicious fat, called on Zeus to make his choice. The god with great eagerness placed both hands on the fat, and was enraged on finding that it concealed only a heap of bones. This
1
1
story
The Hcsiodic poet in relating this makes use of one or two expres-
duced simply to save the majesty of Zeus at the cost of complete inconsistency with the story. Had he thus seen through the trick, he would have de-
sions which imply or assert that Zeus saw through the trick from the first, and that thus it was in fact no trick at When Zeus saw the two heaps all. laid out for his choice, he is made to
say that the division is not fair. The poet adds that this was a sarcasm from a god whose wisdom was boundless and in the same way, when he is summoned to choose, the poet says that he did so with his eyes open, yvia p ov$'
7?7vo;y;cre
and would certainly have feverish eagerness to lay his hands on the tempting heap of fat. But Prometheus succeeds in his scheme in other words, Zeus is really outwitted. Mr. Grote sees clearly that the poet's
feated
it,
shown no
Hist.
86.
<56\oy.
The words
are intro-
208 BOOK
II.
depriving
Prometheus and
Pandora.
men
of
fire
myth
1
as related
by JEschylos.
It came, in short, to
mean Forethought
its antithesis Epimetheus, Afterthought, and to exalt the one by framing a story to illustrate the vanity of the other. This is as mani-
festly implied
of Zeus
is
myth
of the sacrifices.
whose an evil or prevent a catastrophe. As such, he had bidden men, and more especially his brother Epimetheus, to be on their guard against any gifts which might be offered to them by Zeus, as their acceptance would be followed only by pain and misery. But it was impossible thus to defeat the schemes of Zeus or avert the doom of man. No sooner had Zeus been tricked in the matter of the sacrificial victims than he bade the fire-god Hephaistos mould of clay the figure of a maiden, 2 into which Athene the dawn-goddess breathed the
counsellor,
Prometheus
breath
of
life,
clothing
raiment, while
is with the Hesiodic myth. These children of men, who are described as being unable either to see or hear, and as
clustering together like ants in their sunless cares until they receive the boon of fire and the blessings which follow that gift, yet possess a knowledge of things to come, and see most clearly what is to be the course and the close of their lives, 7rpo5ep/c0-0cu fiopuv, before Prometheus brings down for them the heavenly fire. This power he takes away from them, substituting blind hopes or dreams in its place and when he has added to this benefit the gift of the fire, he then instructs them in divination, thus supplying in a measure the
;
not to his wisdom but to his giving of the fire and it was in this case a mere resemblance of sound which led the Greeks to explain the name as denoting
;
forethought. Hence Epimetheus is strictly the result of a false etymology and the process which brought him into existence is illustrated by the language of Pindar, Tyth. v. 25, who assigns to Epimetheus a daughter Prophasis, Excuse, the offspring of after-thought. Grote, Hist. Gr. i. 102. 2 In the Finnish epic of Wainamoinen, the smith is Ilmarinen, who makes, not for others, but for himself, a wife of gold and silver whom he brings to life after
vast (rouble, He finds however, that that side of his body which has touched the golden Bride is very cold in the
very knowledge which he had wished to take away, and of which he had in fact deprived them. The contradiction could not be more complete. It has been connected by Dr. Kuhn with the Sanskrit Pramantha or churn xised for kindling fire with dried pieces of wood. The wood thus has reference
1
is willing to turn AVainiimoinen, who, not much relishing the gift, advises him to take it to some place where gold is
Hence he
to
in
more
request.
209
and
CHAP,
IV
.
Hermes gave
lier
the
mind
is
whom
The
'
brought to Epimetheus, and presented to him under the name Pandora, the gift of all the Thus was woman brought to man; and the poet of gods. the Theogony only adds that through woman man was The author of the speedily plunged into woe irremediable. Works and Days gives the reasons in detail. In the keeping of Epimetheus was a fatal jar, whose cover could not be lifted without grievous consequences to mankind. Pandora of course raises the lid, and a thousand evils are Thus far men had been plagued by no diseases let loose. now the air was filled with the seeds of sickness which every where produced their baneful fruit and the only possible alleviation of their woe was rendered impossible by the shutting up of Hope, which alone remained a prisoner within
maiden, thus arrayed,
1
:
when Pandora in her terror hastily replaced the Here manifestly we have an account of the origin of evil which is altogether at variance with the true ProThe disaster thus caused by Pandora methean legend. occurs long after the theft of the fire from Olympos, and at a time when Prometheus was paying the penalty for his But in the version given by iEschylos Prometheus offence. mentions, as one of his reasons for wishing to bestow on men the boon of fire, the crowd of diseases and j)lagues which they were unable either to mitigate or to cure. The reconciliation of these two myths, thus sprung from two different lines of thought, is an impossibility. But the Hesiodic legend is indeed inconsistent throughout. The
the cask
cover. 2
In another and a more probable Pandora is an epithet of Graia, the bountiful earth, lavish of her gifts it would thus to all her children answer to the phrase ScoTwp 4da>v.
1
tradition
2 The opinion that Hope was left a prisoner out of mercy to men seems unThe genuineness of the line tenable. in which Zeus bids Pandora replace the lid is very doubtful, while the whole legend assuredly represents Zeus as inexorably hostile to men, and hence as most unlikely to interfere in their behalf. In Mr. Grote's opinion the point is one which does not admit of question.
Pandora, he says, does not in Hesiod bring with her the cask .... The case is analogous to that of the closed bag of unfavourable winds which iEolus gives into the hands of Odysseus, and which the guilty companions of the
'
his
evils
hopes
....
The
are inoperative so long as they remain shut up in the cask the same mischief-making which lets them out to
:
their calamitous work takes care that Hope shall still continue a powerless
Hist.
Gr.
i.
VOL.
II.
210
BOOK,
IL
.,_
.
Prometheus and
Deukalion
them. Putting aside these myths as the result of a mistaken etymology, we see in Prometheus simply another Phoroneus, the giver of fire, and, by consequence, of the blessings which
spring from the knowledge of
of men, as providing
as teaching
fire.
As wakening the
senses
of
life,
them with the appliances and comforts them how to plough and build, to cross
is
and the creative function thus assigned to him is brought out still more in the story of his son Deukalion, in whose days the great flood of waters overwhelms the whole of Hellas. By his father's advice Deukalion builds an ark, in which with his wife Pyrrha he floats for nine days and nights until the vessel When descending rested on the summits of Parnassos. from the ark with Pyrrha (a name denoting redness, whether of the soil, or, as other names in the myth render far more probable, of the early morning), he offers his first sacrifice. Hermes is sent to grant them any one thing which they may choose. The prayer of Deukalion reflects the spirit of Prometheus; and he beseeches Zeus to restore mankind, now that the race has been swept away, as his father had entreated him to stay his hand when first he resolved to destroy them. The answer, whether given by
;
1
1
men
page
For other versions of this Flood see 87, and vol. i. page 414. In all these
deluges only the righteous, or those who have a consecrated character, are saved, The men of Delphoiare the ministers of the light-god Phoibos hence wolves, by the same equivocation which led to the confounding of the tail of light, Lykosoura (Lykabas), with that of the wolf,
:
them to the heights of Parnassos, where, of course, the city of Lykoreia, or Mountain of Light, is founded. Mogaros, again, who is saved by following the high-soaring cranes, is a son of Zeus and a Sithnian nymph, or, in other words, a child of the waters, akin to the morning deities Athene, Artemis, and Aphrodite. Pans. i. 40, 1.
led
211
CHAP,
-
coming* deluge, now teaches them that their common parent must be the Earth, and that her bones were to be seen in the rocks and stones strewn around them. These, accordingly, they cast backwards over their heads and from those which Deukalion hurls spring up men, from those cast by Pyrrha women. But Prometheus is one of those beings over whom tortures and death have no lasting hold. Memnon, Sarpedon, and Adonis may all die, but they must rise again to more than their ancient splendour and thus Prometheus must be delivered from his long torments by one of those bright heroes whose nature he shares. The Promethean legend thus becomes
;
1
Promeib.
may achieve
such deliverances. Since, again, the sufferings of Prometheus have been caused by his resisting the will of Zeus, it
follows that his rescue
and thus the indomitable son of Iapetos is represented as using language which seems to point distinctly to the Norse belief in the Twilight of the gods, when the long day of the 2 Nor deities of Asgard shall be quenched in endless night. are 16 and Herakles the only names denoting the brilliance of the morning or the sun, which are associated with the name of Prometheus. The whole legend teems with a transparent mythical history in its very names, if we confine Deukalion and Pyrrha are the ourselves to these alone. parents of Protogeneia, who, being wedded to Zeus, becomes
1
This
myth,
'
in
Professor
its
Max
Miillers opinion,
owes
mere pun on Aabsand \aas.' Sfc. The temptation so to assign it ii. 12.
is
Chips,
origin to a
kernels sprang
-
It
but it seems unlikely that the great same equivocation should run through
;
the language of other tribes, among whom the story is found, as among the Macusi Indians of South America, who believe that the stones were changed into men, and the Tarnanaks of Orinoko, who hold that a pair of human beings cast behind them the
idea is conceived by the mind of iEschylos for no other mention of the downfall of the Olympian hierarchy seems to be found in any other Greek writer. The notion, which agrees well with the gloomy climate of the North, was not likely to fasten on the imagination of Hellenic tribes in their sunnier home,
;
212
BOOK
IL
,
whose union with the earth springs the wearied sun of evenwedded to ing, who, plunging into the western waters, is are her the tranquil night moving among the stars who
children.
Section
The
Titans.
V.THE LIGHTNING.
Prometheus imparted to man the the fiery lightnings which flash across p 0wer of interpreting to pierce the very bowels of the earth. the sky and seem These lightnings are the mighty fires in which the invincible
With
the gift of
fire
weapons and arms are welded for beings like Phoibos, Herakles, or Achilleus; or they are themselves the awful thunderbolts forged by Hephaistos, the fire-god, and his ministers for Zeus himself. These ministers are the gigantic
Titans,
some of
the god against Typhoeus and Enkelados, are bound on fiery couches beneath huge mountains, through which they vomit forth streams of molten fire. Thus, among the myths related of these beings,
refer to the manifestations of fire in the while others exhibit the working of the same forces heaven, upon the earth or under it. When we reach the Hesiodic modified and or Orphic theogonies, these myths have been
whom whom
we
find
some which
woven together in a highly elaborate system. It is true that even here we find the poets, or mythographers, working more
mythical phrases, or less in unconscious fidelity to the old had mainly furnished them with their materials. which
Thus when the Orphic poet desired to go further back than the point to which the Hesiodic theogony traces the generation of the Kosmos, he traced the universe to the great mundane egg produced by Chronos, time, out of Chaos and Aither, a symbol answering to the mighty mixing-bowl of the Platonic demiourgos, and akin to all the circular, oval,
POLYPHEMOS.
which have been assoBut the artificial character of these theogonies can neither be ignored nor explained away nor can it be denied, that the deliberate process of manufacture which they have undergone deprives them in great part of any mythological value, while it frees us from the necessity of going through their
or boat-shaped
fertility
213
CHAP,
. ,.
, '
emblems of
Thus,
if
we take the
story,
mos
or of the Kyklopes
among whom he
reckoned,
we
are
overloaded.
and Gigantes with which the theogonies are It is enough to say that when Arges, Steropes,
storm-clad heavens.
the poets of the Iliad
But although
it
is
possible to trace
whom
and the Odyssey give the same name, the latter exhibit nevertheless features very different from the former. The Kyklops of the Odyssey has nothing to do with fire he is the son of Poseidon and the nymph Thoosa in other words, he is emphatically the child of the waters, and of the waters only the huge mists which wrap the
;
and goats on the rough hill-side. These herds answer to the cattle of Helios in every respect except their brilliance. The flocks of the Kyklops are the rough and misshapen vapours on which no sunshine sheds its glory, while the Kyklops himself is the oppressive and
blackening mist, through which glares the ghastly eye of
the shrouded sun.
may
be seen drawn
with wonderful
fidelity to
myth
in
Libyan Amnion and they who monster glaring down on the devoted army, where the painter was probably utterly unconscious that he was doing more than representing the simoom of the desert, will recognise at once the unconscious accuracy with which
Cambyses
214
BOOK
/
Polyphemos.
who
Polyphemos devoured the comrades of Odysseus. The blinding of this monster is the natural sequel when his mere brute force is pitted against the craft of his adversary. 2 In his seeming insignificance and his despised estate, in his wayworn mien and his many sorrows, Odysseus takes the place of the Boots or Cinderella of Teutonic folk-lore and as the giant is manifestly the enemy of the bright being whose splendours are for the time hidden beneath a veil, so it is
;
who
alike
and thus Odysseus, Boots, and Jack the Giant Killer overcome and escape from the eneriry, although they
may
The Kyklopes.
each be said to escape with the skin of their teeth. Polyphemos then is the Kyklops, in his aspect as a shepherd feeding his vast flocks on the mountain sides but from the mighty vapours through which his great eye glares
;
dart at any moment the forked streams of lightning and thus the Kyklopes are connected with the fire-convulsed heaven, and with Hephaistos the lord of the awful flames. These, with the Hekatoncheires, or hundred-handed monsters,
;
may
whom
up fires of a volcano. But the Titans still remained free. Whatever may be the names of these beings, they are clearly the mighty forces which carry on the stupendous changes
1 The sun, thus glaring through the storm cloud, may be regarded not merely as the eye but as the whole face of some horrible monster and the name Kyklops agrees etymological ly with the latter meaningbetter than with the other, The word no more means of necessity a being with one eye in the middle of his forehead, than Gla;ikopis, as an epithet of Athene, implies that she hail only a -ny eye. This name really denotes the blinding splendour of her countenance and thus the Kyklops became a being not with an eye in the middle of his head, but with a round face. In this case, as it so happens, either description
;
true to the phenomena of Even if the notion of th< round face was suggested before the
is
equally
nature.
we can
its
'-'
mysterious shadows.
The story and attributes of Polyphemos with a thousand other.- were transferred to the devil, when the Christian missionaries had converted all
the ancient gods into demons. eh. x. of this book, section 8.
See
215
CHAP,
>_,
'
.^
human
heart.
It
is,
in fact,
regarded from a point of view which removes it altogether from the region of human sympathies. Thus, then, the myth of the Kyklops brings before ns in close connexion the two images of the cloud and the lightning. This connexion may be traced through a vast number of stories, in many cases but slightly resembling each
1
and
fire.
In these the lightning becomes an arrow capable of piercing the mountain side or the huge storm-cloud, and displaying for a moment marvellous treasures of jewels and gold. The effects produced by this arrow or spear are sometimes good, sometimes disastrous. It may scorch and paralyse, or in times of drought, when the waters are pent up in the cloud,
it
may cleave the vapours and call the dead earth to life again with the streams let loose upon her parched surface. But the cloud might assume the form not only of sheep and
cattle, as in the Vedic hymns and in the Thrinakian legend, but of birds, as of swans or eagles ; and as the clouds carry the lightning with them until the time comes for using the
mighty weapons,
Finally the stone becomes a worm, and thus we have the framework of a large family of stories which, if they have their origin among Aryan tribes, have been extended far beyond the limits of that race. These myths have been so fully traced by Mr. Baring Gould, 2
that nothing
is left for
In the
many
is
versions devised by
Hebrew
tradition for
a legend
gained through their contact with Iranian tribes, the cloud in each case a bird, the lightning being either a stone or a worm. Thus Benaiah, the son of Jehoiada, discovers the
wonder-working pebble Schamir, by watching a moor-hen, which, finding a piece of glass laid over her nest, flies away, and fetching a worm, splits the cover or Solomon obtains it in the form of a stone from the raven, of whom he has been informed by the demon Sackar. In similar stories told
;
1
result,
which
myths, which might be carried out in any way most congenial to the worker, * Curious Myths, second series,
'Schamir.'
mundane
systematic
and,
in
part,
rearrangement
of
of that current
ROCK-SPLITTING PLANTS.
217
CHAP
by iElian and Pliny of the woodpecker or the hoopoe, the instrument by which the bird gets at her young is a grass and thus we reach the family of plants whose power of splitting
;
_.
rocks has
won for them the name of Saxifrage, or Sassafras. This grass or plant will either reveal treasures, as in the
life,
as in
setting free
the waters on a
parched-up soil. Thus the story of Glaukos and Polyidos, of the Three Snake Leaves, and of Rama and Luxman, is repeated in Fouque's Sir Elidoc, where the young Amyot is watching the corpse of a woman as Glaukos watches that of
Polyidos.
which
is
enabled to go
fill
the glittering treasures of which the beautiful queen of this hidden palace bids him take his fill, warning him only not
to forget the best.
This warning
is,
of course, understood
by the peasant as a charge to select the most precious stones, and leaving the flower behind him, he finds, as the rocks close with a crash, that the mountain is closed to him This flower is sometimes inclosed in a staff, which for ever. is obviously only another form of the lighning-spear, as in the tale of the luckless shepherd of Ilsenstein, who, forgetting to take the staff as he leaves the cave, is himself cloven by the closing rocks. In all these cases the flower or plant, as the talismanic spell, is more precious than the hid treasures and unless the treasure-seeker keeps it by him he It is, in short, the flower, sometimes blue, someis lost. times yellow or red (as the hues vary of the lightning flashes), which, in Mr. Gould's words, exclaims in feeble
;
Forget me not,' but its little cry is unheeded. In the story of Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves the flower Ahmed n itself has disappeared, but the spell still lies in its name hau Se]? for, as Mr. Gould remarks, ' sesame is the name of a well
piteous tone,
' ;
"
known Eastern
so that probably,
Arabian Nights, a flower was employed to give admission to the mountain.' In the story of Allah-ud-deen, the same verbal talisman is employed by the African magician, when
ZlO
BOOK
.
,_
he has kindled a fire from which rises a dense smoke and vapour, and the instantaneous effect, as of the lightning, is
the discoverj- of a
tale of
fras is again
way
In the
Ahmed and
become invisible, as the lightnings shine from the east and give light to the uttermost west. Following its course, he comes to a great mountain, and finds the arrow just where an opening in the rocks shows
him
aginable splendour.
Here he
is
who calls him by his name, and having convinced him of her knowledge of all his actions by recounting incidents of his past life, offers herself to him as his bride. With her he dwells in happiness and luxury, until, driven
magnificent domain,
him
to go,
he and at
length obtains his wish after promising, like true Thomas in the myth of Ercildoune, that he will soon return. This
beautiful Peri with her vast treasures
and her marvellous wisdom is but a reflection of the wise Kirke and Medeia, or of the more tender Kalypso, who woos the brave Odysseus
in her glistening cave, until she
is
compelled to
let
the
man
of
in short, the
The greedy
She is, Venus of the Horselberg or Ercildoune (the hill of Ursula and her eleven thousand Virgins), for the names are the same, and the prince Ahmed is Tanhauser, or Thomas the Rhymer, wooed and won by the Elfland queen. It is obvious that for the name of the flower which is to open the cave or the treasure-house might be substituted any magical formula, while the lightning flash might be represented by the lighting of a miraculous taper, the extinguishing of which is followed by a loud crashing noise.
to his wife Penelope.
many
sorrows go on his
way
With
these modifications, the myth at once assumes the form of the Spanish legend of the Moor's Legacy, as related by Washington Irving. In this delightful tale we have all
the buried treasures the such virtue that the strongest bolts and bars, nay, the adamantine rock itself, will yield before
THE LIGHTNING.
it'
219
light
the
alone the
in.
CHAP.
the earth while the taper continues to burn which the gates close when the light is gone.
features are so skilfully fitted into the
modem Alhambra
legend, as fairly to hide the origin of the story, until we No sooner is this done apply the right key to the lock.
than the myth is as clearly revealed as the treasure of the Of the robbers' cave on pronouncing the word Sesame.' nothing real meaning of the tale, Irving doubtless knew but he has preserved it as faithfully as the hymn-writer
'
;
adhered to the
spirit of
the
myth
of Hermes.
'
The
scroll
was produced'
taper lighted
'
waxen
trembled and the pavement opened with a thundering sound.' While the taper burns, the Moor and the water-carrier load
the panniers of their ass with costly treasures ; but when they have satisfied themselves, the costliest still remain
untouched, and the greedy Alcalde, having in vain prayed them to bring up these also, descends with his griping 'No sooner did the retainers still lower into the vault.
fairly earthed,
pavement closed with the usual crash, and the Doubtless, three worthies remained buried in its womb.'
when reduced
may
but the marvellous seem poor and monotonous enough growth which these germs possess have seldom powers of been more clearly exhibited than in the folklore which has yielded the legends of the Forty Thieves, the Peri Banou, Allah-ud-deen, and the Legacy of the Moor, with the German stories of Simeli Mountain and the Glass Coffin. Once more, the light flashing from the dim and dusky storm-cloud becomes the Hand of Glory, which, formed of a
1
Mediaeval
spells
'
is
lightning, i<- splits the rocks open and the Tailor descends through the opening into the hidden chamber, where the maiden sleeps in the Glass Coffin,
220
transformation.
Jupiter, with
The hand of glory is the red light of which he smites the sacred citadels and we may compare the myth of the golden hand of
l
1
Horace, Od.
i.
2.
221
CHAPTER
V.
THE WINDS.
Section
I.VAYU
The god
and Agni,
also called
,1
which are Va y u expressed by the sweet pipings of the Greek Pan and the As snch, he comes soft breathings of the Latin Favonius. early in the morning to chase away the demons, and the Dawns weave for him golden raiment. He is drawn by the Nirjuts, and has Indra for his charioteer. 2 With some he was, along with Agni and Sivrya, supreme among the deities. There are only three deities, according to the Nairuktas (etymologists) Agni whose place is on earth Vayu or Indra whose place is in the atmosphere, and Surya whose place is
seem, simply the gentler movements of the
1
? ncl
in the sky.'
The blustering rage of the Greek Boreas and the more violent moods of Hermes are represented by the crowd of Maruts, or storm- winds, who attend on Indra. and aid him in his struggle with his great enemy Vritra. Of these beings it is enough to say, that the language used in describing their functions is, if possible, more transparent than that of the poem known as the Homeric Hymn to Hermes. They overturn trees and destroy forests, they roar like lions and are as swift as thought, they shake the mountains and are clothed with rain. They are borne on tawny-coloured
horses
;
Boreas
6
Marut?
of
whom
no one
is
the elder, no
They
part
iii.
Muir,
Sanskrit
JR.
Texts,
p. 337.
2
7. iv. p.
57.
H. H. Wilson,
V. S.
209
222
BOOK
II.
ments.
who
play
flocks of Admetos. 2 The worshipper hears the cracking of their whips in their hands as they go npon their way. After their mightiest exploits they assume again, according to their wont, the form of new-born babes,' 3 a phrase which exhibits the germ, and more than the germ, of the myth of Hermes returning like a child to his cradle after tearing up the forests. Their voice is louder than that of Stentor.
Whither now ? asks the poet. On what errand of yours are you going, in heaven not on earth? Where are your cows sporting ? From the shout of the Maruts over
'
'
'
men
reeled forward.'
;
They make the rocks to tremble they tear asunder the kings of the forest,' like Hermes in his rage. Lances gleam, Maruts, upon your shoulders, anklets on your feet, golden cuirasses on your breasts, and pure (waters
4
shine) on }^our chariots lightnings blazing with fire glow in your hands, and golden tiaras are towering on your heads.' 5 In the traditions of Northern Europe these furious Maruts
:
become the
fearful Ogres,
who come
them, and who, after desperate conflicts, are vanquished by Shortshanks in the Norse tale. The ogre of this story carries with him a great thick iron club,' which sends the
'
five
But pre-eminently,
deadly
strife
as the
;
name
or
Grinders
and thus, as made to share in the between Indra and Yritra, they assume an exclusively warlike character. The history of the root which furnishes this name has been already traced, 6 and has linked together the Greek war-god Ares, the gigantic Aloadai and Moliones, the Latin Mars and Mors, and the Teutonic Thor Miolnir. They are the children of Rudra, worshipped as the
1
Max Max
Miiller,
i.
lb. 6o.
59.
2
3
H. H. Wilson, R.
i.
V.
S.
vol.
ii.
Enrip.
AlJe.
579.
p.
Miiller,
R. V.
S.
i.
3.
333. 6 Vol.
p. 34.
RUDRA.
destroyer and reproducer, for these functions were blended by the same association of ideas which gave birth to the
ZZ
CHAP.
;
long series of correlative deities in 'Adorned with armlets, the Maruts have shone like the they have glittered like showers from skies with their stars
;
Aryan mythology.
when the
prolific
Eudra generated
udder of
Prisni.'
The
several phases
this
god
as- Eudra.
sumes in the later Hindu Dr. Muir 2 but among the monstrous overgrowths of wild fancies we find some of the more prominent attributes of the connate Greek deitv ascribed to Eudra in his character as Like the Asvins and Agni, like Father of the Winds. Proteus, Phoibos, and the other fish-gods, Eudra can change
his form at will.
Father of the Maruts, may thy felicity extend to us exclude us not from the light of the sun. ' Thou, Eudra, art the chiefest of beings in glory. Thou, wielder of the thunderbolt, art the mightiest of the mighty.
'
:
'
Where, Eudra,
3
is
thy joy-dispensing hand ? Firm with many forms, he shines with golden
is
ornaments.'
worshipped as the robber, the 4 The mocking laughcheat, the deceiver, the Master Thief. ter of the wind as it passes on after wreaking its fury could
not
fail to
As we might expect, Eudra, like Siva, whose gracious name was a mere euphemism to deprecate his deadly wrath, at length eclipses Indra, as Indra had put Dyaus and Yaruna
into the background,
and he becomes associated most closely worship which seemingly found but little
B.
V.
ii.
Texts.
part
2 3 4
H. H. Wilson, R.
Muir,
S/cr.
V. S.
ii.
289.
341.
See also vol. i. 3 Dr. Muir fully admits the scantiness of the evidence on which the negative Skr. Texts, iv. p. 348. conclusion rests.
Texts, part
iv. p.
224
BOOK
II.
gentle Vayu,
Hindu and of
Greek myths of
the wind.
and we have to see how the phrases which myth in the East grew up in the West into stories enriched by an exquisite fancy, while they remained free from the cumbrous and repulsive extravagances of later Hindu mythology, and how true to the spirit of the old mythical speech and thought is the legend of that son of Zeus, who was born early in the morning in a cave of the Kyllenian hill, who at noon played softly and sweetly on his harp, and who at eventide stole away the
;
Hermes
cattle of Phoibos. 1
(so
tortoise feeding on the Joyously seizing his prize, he pierced oat its life
and found a
shell, framed a lyre and seven sheep-gut cords. Then striking the strings he called forth sounds of wonderful sweetness, as he sang of the loves of Zeus in the beautiful home of his mother Maia, the daughter of Atlas. But soon he laid down his harp in his cradle, for the craving of hunger was upon him, and as the sun went down with his chariot and horses to the stream of Ocean, 2 the child hastened to the shadowy mountains of Pieria, where the cattle of the gods feed in their large pastures. Taking fifty of the herd, he drove them away, sending them hither and thither, so that none could tell by what path they had really gone, and on his own feet he bound branches of tamarisk and Passing along the plains of Onchestos, he charged myrtle.
Hymn to Hermes, 17, IS- The sudden growth of Hermes, followed by an equally rapid return to his infantile shape and strength, explains the story of the Fisherman and the Jin in the Arabian Nights. This tale is substantially the same as Grimm's story of the
1
after striding like a giant over heaths and hills, as well as the cave of Aiolos
and the bag of winds which he places in the hands of Odysseus. - Hymn to Hermes, 67. I have
striven to adhere with scrupulous care
The bottle in the Spirit in the Bottle. one ease, the jar in the other, represents
the cradle to which
imagery of the hymn, avoiding the introduction of any notions not warranted by actual expressions in the
to the
poem.
225
CHAP.
'
an old
things which
The
theft
cattle.
all night long beneath the bright light of the moon. Early in the morning he reached Kyllene, neither god nor man having spied him on the road and passing through the bolt-hole of the cave like a mist or a soft autumn breeze, 2 he lay down in his cradle, playing among the clothes with one hand, while he held his lyre in the other. To the warning of his mother, who told him that Phoibos would take a fearful vengeance, and bade him begone as born to be the plague of gods and men, 3 Hermes simply answered that he meant to be the equal of Phoibos, and that if this right were refused to him, he would go and sack his wealthy house at Pytho. Meanwhile, Phoibos, hastening to Onchestos in search of The covent ot his cattle, had asked the old vinedresser to sav who had Hermes j} taken them. But the words of Hermes still rang: in the old and Phoiman's ears, and he could remember only that he had seen cows and a babe following them with a staff in his hand. Knowing now who had stolen them, 4 Phoibos hastened on to
the ashes
1 Hermes is thus especially connected with the ordering of burnt sacrifices, But this we have seen to be the especial attribute or function of Agni. 2 In other words the great giant has reduced himself almost to nothing, This is the story of the Fisherman and the Jin in the Arabian Nights, of the
Spirit in the Bottle in Grimm's German stories, of the devil in the purse of the
Master Smith, and again in the story of the Lad and the Devil (Dasent), and the Gaelic tale of The Soldier. Campbell, ii. 279. 3 With this we may compare the prognostications of the mother of the
Shifty Lad, in the Scottish version of the myth. 4 Hymn to Hermes, 214-5. Nothing could show more clearly than these words that the myth pointed to a phenomenon with physical which Phoibos was already familiar. Had the story been told by one who meant to speak of any human child, he would never have represented Apollon as knowing who the thief was before his name was mentioned or the clue to his The poet might hiding-place furnished. indeed have said that the child had stolen the cows many times already: but the statement would not have agreed
VOL.
II.
226
BOOK
IL
,
the beasts
'
'
and I know nothing of cows but their he spoke he winked slily with his eyes, and name.' a long low whistle came from his lips. Smiling in spite of his anger, Phoibos saw that the craft of Hermes would set many a herdsman grieving, and that he had won the right to be called the prince of robbers and the Master Thief for
cattle,
But
as
ever.
Then
a loud noise
made him
let
go his hold
appeared before the judgment- seat of Zeus, and the babe, who spoke of himself as a most truthful person, said that he
must be
cows were.
he knew not even what sort of things The plea was not admitted, and the nod of Zeus warned Hermes that his command to restore the oxen was
guiltless, as
not to be disobeyed. So on the banks of Alpheios he showed the lost cattle to Phoibos, who, dismayed at the signs of In recent slaughter, again seized the babe in his anger.
great fear
its
chords wakened sounds most soft and soothing as he sang of the old time when the gods were born and the world was young. As he listened to the beautiful harmony, Phoibos,
anory no more, longed only to learn whence the child had this wondrous power, and to gain for himself this marvellous At once Hermes granted his prayer, Take my gift of song. lvre,' he said, which to those who can use it deftly will discourse of all sweet things, but will babble nonsense and moan stranoely to all who know not how to draw forth its speech.' So the strife between them was ended, and Phoibos placed in the hand of Hermes his three-leafed rod of wealth and happiness, and gave him charge over all his cattle.
' '
1
well with his special object in relating viz. to account for the alliance the myth between Phoibos and Jlrrmes. Thus Hermes becomes in the
1
German story the Little Farmer who cheats the greedy townsmen with the sight of his flocks in the water. 'There happened to be a fine blue sky with
227
its
tortoise-lyre,
CHAP,
sweet music, and Hermes, taking courage, prayed that to him also might be granted the secret wisdom of Phoibos
'
This alone
may
not be.
;
may know
men may never learn, and these teach thee, who dwell far down in the
Other honours too are in store for thee. and herds, the messenger of the gods, and the guide of the dead to the dark land of Hades.' Thus was the compact between them made, and Phoibos became the lord of the sweet-voiced lyre, and Hermes for his part sware that no harm should come to the holy home of Apollon at Delphoi. But to men Hermes brings no great help, for he has a way of cheating them
of Parnassos.
Thou
fire
de-
lie
sudden blasts. The mystery is certainly not solved if with Mr. Grote 2 we hold that 'the general types of Hermes and Apollon, coupled with the present fact that no thief ever approached the rich and seemingly accessible treasures of Delphi, engender a
his
and detailing how it happened that Hermes had bound himself by especial convention to respect the Delphian temple.' Mr. Grote cannot mean that the immunity of the Pythian shrine from theft and plunder originated the general types of the two gods, and it is precisely with
form,
plentv of fleecy clouds over it, which were mirrored in the water and looked The farmers called like little lambs. one to another, " Look there, we can see the sheep already on the ground below
the water."
'
contains, perhaps, the only really coarse expression in the whole poem; and the reference to the action of wind in its sudden outbursts at once makes it both innocent and graphic. 2 History of Greece, part i. eh. i.
Hymn
to
Hermes, 296.
This line
Q2
22S
BOOK
II.
types that
tion should be
we made
are
at
all,
be answered that
of thieves,
we have then
why
this
The mere pointing out of a contrast does not explain the origin of that contrast and Mr. Gladstone lays clown a principle of universal application when he says that invention cannot absolutely create it can only work on The criticisms what it finds already provided to hand.' of Colonel Mure 2 might have some force if we could suppose
notion came.
; ' ;
1
own
materials
but
it is
manifestly
useless to explain as a jest the relations between Hermes and Apollon, until we have shown why these particular
It
that he had
'
poet, who evidently writes in all possible But with Colonel Mure seriousness. almost all mythical incidents resolve
the poet chose the narcissus because its name denotes the deadly languor and lethargy which comes over the earth in autumn, and which is expressed more fully in the myth of Narkissos, the. counterpart of Endymion. (See page 33.) It is not, however, accurate to speak of the baby habits of Hermes. His childish ways are confined to the time which he spends in his cradle. As soon as he leaves it, he begins to move with giant strides, and nothing of the child remains about him. Colonel Mure adds that as the patron deity of cunning and intrigue, he is at once qualified to compete with and to surpass even Apollo, hitherto considered as unrivalled in these arts.' Thei'e is not the slightest ground for thinking that Apollon was at any time connected with the notion of cunning and intrigue, and still less for supposing that he was regarded as the embodiment or ideal of those qualities until the questionable honour was transferred to Hermes. It is, in fact, impossible to determine whether the myth of Phoibos has the priority of time over that of Hermes, and therefore we cannot say how the former was regarded before the latter furnished the notion of the Master
'
'
'
Thief.
229
CHAP,
party
'
V
.
'
'
_.
this instrument,' which could not fail to lay Apollon under a heavy debt of gratitude to the donor. This leaves altogether out of sight the fact that Phoibos imparted to Hermes such secrets as it was lawful for him to disclose,
1
and in no way explains why Hermes should invent the lyre and Phoibos be possessed of a hidden wisdom. To say that Hermes in his capacity of god is gifted from the first moment of his existence with divine power and energy,' and that as a member of the Hellenic pantheon he is subjected to the natural drawbacks of humanity, and hence at his
'
'
is
myth
and partly to say of him that which may be said just as well of Apollon, or Dionysos, or Aphrodite. Hermes, it is true, is represented as a babe at his birth in the morning but it is ludicrous to speak of natural human drawbacks for a child who can leave his cradle when a few hours old, and
exert the strength of a giant at his will.
at his birth
If,
again, Apollon
was bathed by the nymphs in pure water and wrapped in a soft and spotless robe, he yet became very soon the Chrysaor whose invincible sword must win him the
victory over all Ids enemies.
We
we
work or source of the ideas which led to the notion of con- " vallT between trast and rivalry between the two gods. Far from concern- Hermes
ing ourselves in the
their reconciliation,
for
first
mode
devised for
and
Phoibos.
it is this very rivalry and antagonism which we have to account. If the legend in its Greek form fails to carry us to the source of the idea, we must necessarily look elsewhere and we shall not search the hymns of the Yeda in vain. The divine greyhound
:
'
Mommsen,
who guards
and sunbeams, and for him collects the nourishing rainclouds of heaven for the milking, and who moreover faithfully conducts the pious dead into the world of the blessed, becomes in the hands of the Greeks
heaven the golden herd of
stars
1
ii.
34-1.
"
History of Borne,
i.
IS.
!oi>
r-
BOOK
In the Vedic
Sarama Dr. Kuhn finds a name identical with the Teutonic storm and the Greek Horme. Although neither of these statements accords strictly with the Vedic passages which speak of Sarama and Sarameya, the controversy which has turned upon these names may perhaps be compared to the battle of the knisrlits for the sides of the silvered and
brazened shield in the old
tale.
greyhound Sarama. The beautiful being known by this name is the Greek Helene, the words being phonetically identical, not only in every consonant and vowel, but even in their accent and both are traced to the root Sar, to go or to creep. When the cows of Indra are stolen by the Panis, Sarama is the first to spy out the clift in which they were hidden, and the first to hear their lowings. The cows which she thus recovers Indra reconquers from the Panis, who have striven with all their powers to corrupt the fidelity of Sarama. What kind of man is Indra ? they ask, c he as whose messenger thou contest from afar ? Let us make thee our sister, do not go away again we will give thee part of the
'
;
l
'
'
cows,
darling.'
is
Sarama, then, as going, like Ushas, before Indra, or Hermeias is the Dawn-child.
the
Into
Max
Miiller rightly
;
and the pasmention is made of Sarameya lead him also sages in which With to exclude this notion from the character of Hermes. him, then, Hermes is the god of twilight, who betrays his equivocal nature by stealing, though only in fun, the herds of Apollon, bat restoring them without the violent combat that is waged for the same herds in India between Indra the bright god and Vala the robber. In India the dawn brings the light, in Greece the twilight is itself supposed to have stolen it, or to hold back the light, and Hermes the twilight surrenders the booty when challenged by the sun-god Apollo.' 2 This view explains at most only two or three of the traits
asserts that the idea of storm never entered
'
1
Max
Miiller, Lectures
lb. 475.
231
;
make up the character of the Hellenic Hermes it how the functions of the twilight could be
l
CHAP,
>,'
still
less
does
it
which is the chief characteristic Yet Professor Max Muller himself supplies the clue which may lead us through the labyrinth when he tells us that Hermes is born in the morning, as Sarameya would
as contrasted with the light
of Apollon.
'
or, it
may
The idea which lies at the root of the Vedic Sarama and Sarameya is that of brightness the idea which furnishes the groundwork for the myth of Hermes is essen;
sound. There is nothing to bewilder us in this Both ideas are equally involved in the root Sar, which expressed only motion and the degree of difference discernible between the Vedic Sarama and the Greek Hermes is at the worst precisely that which we should expect from the disintegrating process brought about by a partial or complete forgetfulness of the original meaning of words. That the tales of one nation are not borrowed directly from the legends of another, the whole course of philological science tends, as we have seen, more and more to prove. Names which are mere attributes in one mythology are attached to distinct persons in another. The title Arjuni, which in the Yeda is a transparent epithet of the dawn, becomes in the West Argennos, known only as a favourite of Agamemnon and the mysterious Varuna of the Hindu is very inadequately represented by the Hellenic Ouranos. The Greek Oharites and the Latin Gratise are in name identical with the Sanskrit Harits Erinys is Saranyu, and Helen is Sarama. But the Greek did not get his Charis from the Harit of the Brahman the western poets did not receive their Helen from Vedic bards the Hellenic Hermes does not owe his parentage to Sarameya. Carrying with them an earlier form of those names from the common home of the race, the Greek developed his own myths as the Vedic rishis developed The common element insured resemblance, while it theirs. rendered absolute agreement impossible, and an indefinite
tially that of
fact.
;
;
:
Hymn
to
Hermes,
1-41.
Lcct. on
Lang, second
series, 473.
132
BOOK
II
myth
so developed
less
is
developed
no such contrariety.
much
as with
it
in
hymn
mere reference
is,
to storms
is
unmistakably the
Dawn who
bright cowT s which have been stolen by the night and hidden
in its secret caves.
With
Hermes
retains
all
We
Comparative Mythology we should expect him to exhibit. may with Professor Max Miiller lay stress on the facts that he loves Herse, the dew, and Aglauros, her sister among his sons is Kephalos, the head of the day. He is the herald of the gods so is the twilight so was Sarama the messenger of Indra. He is the spy of the night, vvktos 6ira)7rr)Ti]p he sends sleep and dreams the bird of the morning, the cock, stands by his side. Lastly, he is the guide of travellers, and particularly of the souls who travel And yet on their last journey he is the Psychopompos.' the single idea of light fails utterly to explain or to account
' ;
:
for
Homeric hymn.
the leading idea
Throughout
is
poem
summer
His silence in the morning, his soft harping at midday, the huge strides with which in the evening he hurries after the cattle of Phoibos, the crashing
of the forest branches until they burst into flame, the sacrifice
which Hermes prepares, but of which he cannot taste though grievously pressed by hunger, the wearied steps with which he returns to sleep in his cradle, the long low whistle with which he slily closes his reply to the charge of theft, the loud blast which makes Apollon let go his hold, the soft
1
series, 476.
AIR.
233
Hermes
traits
are all
meaning if applied to the light or the dawn. Analysed with reference to the idea of air in motion, the whole story becomes self-luminous. Like the fire which at its first kindling steps out with the strength of a horse from its prison, the wind may freshen to a gale before it be an hour old, and sweep before it the mighty clouds big with
absolutely no
is to refresh the earth. Where it cannot throw down it can penetrate. It pries unseen into holes and crannies, it sweeps round dark corners, it plunges into glens and caves; and when the folk come out to see the mischief that it has done, they hear its mocking laughter as it hastens on its way. These few phrases lay bare the whole framework of the Homeric legend, and account for the not ill-natured slyness and love of practical jokes which enter into the character of Hermes. The babe leaves the cradle before he is an hour old. The breath of the breeze is at first soft and harmonious as the sounds which he summons from his tortoise -lyre. But his strength grows rapidly, and he lays aside his harp to set out on a plundering expedition. With mighty strides he hastens from the heights of Kyllene until he drives from their pastures the cattle of Apollon, obliterating the foot-tracks after the fashion of the autumnwinds, which cover the roads with leaves and mire. 2 In his course he sees an old man working in his vineyard, and, like a catspaw on the surface of the sea, he whispers in his ear a warning of which but half the sound is caught before the breeze has passed away. All the night long the wind roared,
Transpa-
^Jt\\e
myth,
the poet says, Hermes toiled till the branches of the rubbing against each other, burst into a flame and so men praise Hermes, like Prometheus, Phoroneus, and Bhuranyu, as the giver of the kindliest boon fire. 3 The flames, fanned by the wind, consume the sacrifice but the 4 wind, though hungry, cannot eat of it, and when the
or, as
trees,
Hor. Od.
i.
10.
Hymn
to
Hermes, 110.
Hymn
to
Hermes, 75.
lb, 131.
:o4
<L
BOOK
or, in
which he had
sees the
left
Hermes patter almost noisedown to sleep in his cradle but a few hours ago. The sun rises and
he
lies
He
too
hedger of Onchestos, who thinks, but is not sure, 3 that he had seen a babe driving cows before him. The sun hastens on his way, sorely perplexed at the confused foottracks covered with mud and strewn with leaves, just as if the oaks had taken to walking on their heads. 4 But when he charges the child with the theft, the defence is grounded on his tender age. Can the breeze of a day old, breathing
as softly as a babe
Its proper
new
the
born, be guilty of so
much
?
mischief ?
it
home
is
summer land
Hermes
is
why
should
stride
hills
But, with an
much
like
mockery and tends perhaps to heighten the scepticism of Apollon. The latter seizes the child, who with a loud blast makes him suddenly let go, and then appeals against his unkind treatment to his father (the sky). 7 Zeus refuses to
but when Hermes brings back the cows, the suspicions of Apollon are again roused, and, dreading his angry looks, the child strikes his tortoise-lyre
accept his plea of infancy
;
and tender 8 that the hardesthearted man cannot choose but listen. Never on the heights of Olympos, where winds perhaps blow strong as they commonly do on mountain summits, had Phoibos heard a strain
so soft
Like the pleasant murmur of a breeze in the palm-groves of the south, it filled his heart with a strange yearning, 10 carrying him back to the days when the world was young and all the bright gods kept holiday, and he
so soothing. 9
music which made the life of Hermes a joy on the earth. His prayer is at once granted, the wind grudges not his music to the sun he seeks only to
longed for the glorious
gift of
1
Hymn
lb.
to
Hermes, 147.
3 6
7
4
Hymn
to
Hermes, 312.
9
2
5
lb. 149.
267-8.
lb. 349.
8 '"
lb. 419.
lb. 422.
.
lb.
lb.
235
1
know
own
CHAP
V.
Phoibos
the inmost mind of his father, and his keen glance can pierce the depths of the green sea. This wisdom the sun may not
impart.
or break in
upon the eternal repose of the ocean depths. Still there are other honours in store for him, many and great. He shall
be the guardian of the bright clouds the sons of men and lessen the sum of
wills
;
human
suffering; his
when he
he
in the clifts of Parnassos, as the wind may be heard mysteriously whispering in hidden glens and unfathomable caves. The compact is ratified by the oath that
sisters far
may down
home
of the sun,
who
True to the
man
is
not
men
The idea which has explained every incident of the hymn Humour of the humour which runs through it. It is myth. a humour depending not upon the contrast between the puny form and the mighty exploits of Hermes or on the supernatural element which in Colonel Mure's belief alone gives It point to what would otherwise be mere extravagance.
accounts also for the
the result of an exquisitely faithful noting of outward phenomena, and, as such, it was not the invention of the Homeric or post-Homeric poets, but a part of the rich inheritance which gave them likewise the chief features in the characters of Achilleus, Meleagros, Od}^ssens, and other mythical heroes. For those who have eyes to see it, nature has her comedy not less than her sad and mournful tragedy. If some have seen in the death of the ambitious or grasping man, cut off in the midst of his schemes, an irony which would excite a smile if the subject were less awful, we may enter into the laughter of Hermes, as he pries into nooks and crannies, or uproots forests, or tears down, as the pasis
1
Hymn
to
lb.
525.
236
BOOK
<
the notion
burlesque.
1
On
to
these grounds
we should expect
Hermes
as re-
presenting the sky, the sun, and the wind; but in each case the humour, whether coarse or refined, was involved in the very truthfulness of the conception, although this
which
conception was worked out with an unconscious fidelity is indeed astonishing. The burlesque with which the
may easily be invested, arose from no intention of disparaging the hero's greatness; and we are scarcely justified in saying with Mr. Grote that the hymnographer concludes the song to Hermes with frankness unusual in speaking of a god.' 2 The Greek spoke as the needs of his subject required him to speak and the sly humour which marks the theft of Hermes in Pieria no more detracts from the dignity of Hermes, than the 'frolicsome and irregular 3 exploits of Samson degraded the Jewish hero in the estimation of his countrymen. Even if the hymnwriter had failed to identify Hermes with the winds of heaven as confidently as, when he spoke of Selene watching over Endymion, he must have felt that he was speaking really of the moon and the sun, this would prove only that
adventures of Herakles
'
myth
led
him unconsciously
to
handle
all his
ing idea.
ceded.
Hermes,
the mes-
The idea of sound, which underlies all the incidents of the Homeric hymn, explains most of the attributes and inveny J tions ascribed to Hermes. The soft music of the breeze would at once make him the author of the harp or lyre.
m
is a poodthe Alkt-stis of Euripides, he becomes the Valiant Little Tailor of the German story, who succeeds in all his exploits by sheer force of
boasting,
-
humoured glutton
on
tlie
Jewish
Church.
237
CHAP.
V.
would be the messenger of Apollon, and this office would soon be merged in that of the herald of Zeus and all the As such again, he would be skilled in the use of gods. words, and he would be employed in tasks where eloquence was needed. Thus he appears before Priam in the time of his ang*uish, not in his divine character, but as one of the servants of Achilleus, and, by the force of his words alone, persuades the old man to go and beg the body of Hektor. So too he wins the assent of Hades to the return of Persephone from the underworld. 2 Hermes thus became associated with all that calls for wisdom, tact, and skill in the intercourse between man and man, and thus he is exhibited at once as a cunning thief, and as the presiding god of
1
wealth. 3
It
is
possible,
Hermes were
myths.
and
sp/jbrjvsvsiv,
to interpret,
name Hermes,
heaps of stones, sppuaTiQiv, to ballast a have nothing to do with it. Yet on the strength of these words Hermes becomes a god of boundaries, the guardian of gymnasia, and lastly the patron of gymnastic games ; and his statues were thus placed at the entrance of the Agora. 4 The cause of this confusion
a prop,
sp/na/css,
ship,
which
clearly can
M. Breal
1
finds in the
word
sp/nlSiov
or sp/adSiov,
commonly
11.
xxiv. 400.
to
2
3
Hymn
Demeter, 335.
for all who wish to determine the character of the god: and it is, to say
7T/\.outo5uti7s
iraAiyKairriXos.
Orph.
so called Orphic hymns, as we have seen, string together all the epithets which the conceptions or inferences of poets and mythographers
xxviii.
The
series of Among these the epithet Trisages. megistos, the ter maximus Hermes' of
We are thus brought to the later developements which connected him in some degree with Of this notion traffic and merchandise. not a trace can be found in the so-called Homeric Hymn to Hermes, which must be regarded as of the first importance
the least, extremely difficult to discern even the germ of this idea in the Iliad or Odyssey. The Latin god Mercurius is, it is true, simply a god of traffickers, (merx, mercari) but he possessed not a single attribute in common with the Hellenic Hermes and the Fetiales persistently refused to admit th^ir identity, in spite of the fashion which attached the Greek myths to Latin deities with which they had nothing to do. The Hellenic Hermes is a harper, a thief, a guide, or a messenger but not a merchant. Whatever honours he may have apart from his inherent powers of song and mischief are bestowed on him by Phoibos.
:
238
BOOK
II.
mean
connects
may belong
to either
The
office
of
necessarily with
many
and especially with those of Prometheus, 16, Paris, and Deukalion but it is more noteworthy that as the Dawn in the Yeda is brought by the bright Harits, so Hermes is called the leader of the Charites.' 2 His worship, we are told, was instituted first in Arkadia, and thence transferred to Athens. 3 That it may have been so is possible,
legends,
'
all historical
evidence,
we cannot
affirm
as fact and no argument can be based on traditions concerned with such names as Athens, Arkadia, Ortygia or
Eleusis.
If
first
Arkadia
temple be built by Lykaon (the gleaming), as the worship of Phoibos would spring up in the brilliant Delos, or by the banks of the golden Xanthos in the far-off Lykia or land of light, whence Sarpedon came to the
help of Hektor.
given, 4
which seem to warrant the conclusion that historical inferences based on names which, although applied afterwards to real cities or countries, come from the mythical cloudland,
Hermes
the herald.
can be likened only to castles built in the air. The staff or rod which Hermes received from Phoibos, and which connects this myth with the special emblem of Vishnu, 5
as denoting his heraldic office. It was, howalways endowed with magic properties, and had the power even of raising the dead. 6 The fillets of this staff
ever,
1 See M. Breal's letter on this subject, inserted in Prof. Max Miiller's Led. on
was regarded
4 5
Lang.
-
s<-eor,d series,
474.
r,y(ixuv
XapLTcvv,
Max
Miiller,
ib.
Mn.
\\.
242.
473.
239
CHAP.
.
and the Orphic hymn-writer salutes him accordingly as the god of the winged sandals. In the legend of Medonsa these sandals bear Perseus away from the pursuit of the angry Gorgons into the Hyperborean gardens and thence to the
1
shores of Libya.
it
may
it
brings
which belong to before us a being, in whom some the light or the sun are blended with others which point as clearly to the wind. The charm of the harping of Hermes is fully admitted in the Homeric hymn, but its effect is simply the effect of exquisite music on those who have ears to hear and hearts to feel it. In the story of Orpheus the action becomes almost wholly mechanical. If his lyre has power over living beings, it has power also over stones, rocks, and What then is Orpheus? Is he, like Hermes, the trees.
attributes
^^
between *P heus
Hermes.
is
little
he the sun-god himself joined for whom he is to recover There can be no doubt that this
its
Orpheus, even
The
name
one of the
denote the wide-spreading flush of the being is stung by the serpent of night as she wanders close by the water which is fatal alike to Melusina and Undine,
;
to the
frog-sun.
Lady of Geierstein and to the more ancient Bheki or But if his Helen is thus stolen away by the dark Orpheus must seek her as pertinaciously as the power,
Helen or the Argonauts for that of the Golden Eleece. All night long he will wander through the regions of night, fearing no danger and daunted by no obstacles, if only his eyes may rest once more on her
Achaians
strive for the recovery of
1
Hymn XXVIII.
240
BOOK
II
s
who was
.
.
the delight of
liis
life.
At
last lie
comes to the
at length obtains
may
follow
him
is
The promise
not kept
and when Orpheus, overcome by an irresistible yearning, turns round to gaze on the beautiful face of his bride, he sees her form vanish away like mist at the rising of the sun. This, it is obvious, is but another form of the myth which is seen in the stories of Phoibos and Daphne, of Indra and Dahana, of Arethousa and Alpheios and as such, it would be purely solar. But the legend as thus related is shorn of
;
Orpheus is never without his harp. It is with this that he charms all things conscious or unconscious. With this he gathers together the bright herds of Helios and all the beasts As he draws forth its sweet sounds, the trees, of the field. the rocks, the streams, all hasten to hear him, or to follow him as he moves onwards on his journey. Only when Eurydike is dead, are its delicious sounds silenced but when at the gates of the palace of Hades the three-headed hound Kerberos growls savagely at him, its soft tones charm away his fury, and the same spell subdues the heart of the rugged king himself. It is thus only that he wins the desire of his heart, and when Eurydike is torn from her the second time, the heavenly music is heard again It is impossible to regard this part of the no more. story as a solar myth, except on the supposition that Orpheus is but another form of Phoibos after he has become possessed of the lyre of Hermes. But the truth is that the myth of the Hellenic Hermes is not more essentially connected with the idea of sound than is that of Orpheus together with the long series of myths based on the same notion which are found scattered over almost all the world. In the opinion of Professor Max Miiller Orpheus is the same word as the Sanskrit Eibhu or Arbhu, which though it is best known as the name of the three Ribhus, was used in the Yeda as an epithet of Indra, and a name for the Sun.'
; *
1
Chips, $c.
ii,
127.
241
CHAP,
v
,
journey to the west a modification similar to that of the name Hermes. It must, however, be noted that Orpheus
by means of his harp, which always rouses to moThe action of Hermes is twofold, and when he is tion. going forth on his plundering expedition he lays aside his lyre, which he resumes only when he comes back to lie down
acts only
like a child in his cradle.
Hence the
lyre of
Hermes only
Its sweet tones conquer the angry charms and soothes. sun-god, and lull to sleep the all-seeing Argos of the hundred eyes, when Hermes seeks to deliver 16 from his ceaseBut among the Greek poets the idea which less scrutiny. would connect Orpheus with the sun was wholly lost. In Pindar he is sent indeed by Apollon to the gathering of the Argonauts, but this would point simply to a phrase which spoke of the sun as sending or bringing the morning breeze and with the poet he is simply the harper and the father of songs. 2 In iEschylos he leads everything after him by the gladness with which his strain inspires them. 3 In Euripides
he
who compels the rocks to follow him, 4 while in speaking of him as the originator of sacred mysteries the poet transfers to him the idea which represents Hermes as
is
the harper
obtaining mysterious wisdom in the hidden caves of the In the so-called Orphic Argonautika the harper is Thriai. 5
the son of Oiagros and Kalliope, the latter name denoting simply the beauty of sound, even if the former be not a
result of the onomatopoeia
which has produced such Greek words as evxv> 700*9 and olfiwyr). No sooner does he call on the divine ship which the heroes had vainly tried to move, than the Argo, charmed by the tones, glides gently into the The same tones wake the voyagers in Lemnos from sea. 6 sensuous spell which makes Odysseus dread the land of the
1
Curiosities
17.
of Indo-European Folk-
l ore ^
2 3
IpMg. in Aid. 1213. Bhes. 943 Hymn to Hermes, 552. Argonaut. 262.
;
VOL.
IT.
242
BOOK
IL
*
parted asunder to
At the magic sound the Kyanean rocks make room for the speaking ship, and the
Symplegades which had been dashed together in the fury of 2 But it is singular ages remained steadfast for evermore. that when it becomes needful to stupify the dragon which guards the golden fleece, the work is done not by the harp
of Orpheus, but by the sleep-god
Hypnos
himself,
whom
The
rens
'
Sei-
Orpheus summons to lull the Yritra to slumber. 3 The same irresistible spell belongs to the music of the Seirens, who are represented as meeting their doom, in one legend, by means of Orpheus, in another, through Odysseus.
Whether
the
whether
found again in the Syrinx or pipe of the and in the Latin susurrus, 4 the whisper of the god Pan, breeze, is a point of no great importance, so long as we note the fact that none who listened to their song could be with-
name
itself is
its
influence to their
own
destruc-
In the story of the Odyssey, Odysseus breaks the spell by filling his sailors' ears with wax, while he has himself In the Orphic myth stoutly tied to the mast of his ship.
the divine harper counteracts their witchery by his own strain, and the Seirans throw themselves into the sea and are
them
The Piper of Hameln.
changed into rocks according to the doom which granted life only until some one should sing more sweetly and powerfully than they. This mysterious spell is the burden of a vast number of f which have been gathered together by Mr. s or i eS) manv Baring Gould in his chapter on the Piper of Hameln, who, wroth at being cheated of his promised recompense for piping away into the Weser the rats which had plagued the 5 city, returns to take an unlooked-for vengeance. No sooner
1
Argonaut. 480.
lb.
2 s
4
740. 1008.
is more probably connected with the Latin Silanus,see p. 318. 5 Tli is tale at once carries us to the Sminthian worship of Apollon. Sminthos, it is said, was a Cretan word for a mouse, and certain it is that a mouse was placed at the foot of the statues of the
The name
sun-god in tile temples where he was worshipped under this name. But the story accounted for this by saying that the mouse was endowed with the gift of prophecy, and was therefore put by the
who was possessed of the profound wisdom of Zeus himself, This in tho opinion of Welcker is a mere inversion, which assigned to the mouse an attribute which had belonged exside of the deity
243
throughout the
r-
CHAP,
All the little boys and girls With rosy cheeks and flaxen curls And sparkling eyes and teeth like pearls Tripping, skipping, ran merrily after The wonderful music with shouting and laughter.
them to a hill rising above the Weser, and as they follow him into a cavern, the door in the mountain-side shuts fast, and their happy voices are heard
before
no more. According to one version none were saved but a lame boy, who remained sad and cheerless because he could not see the beautiful land to which the piper had said that
he was leading
them a
land
fruit trees
grew,
And flowers put forth a fairer hue, And everything was strange and new, And sparrows were brighter than peacocks And their dogs outran our fallow deer, And honey bees had lost their stings, And horses were born with eagles' wings.
1
here,
The temptation
tales is
to follow
series of
We
almost as powerful as the spell of the piper himself. may yield to it only so far as we must do so to prove the
wide range of these stories in the North, the East, and the West. At Brandenburg the plague from which the piper delivers the people is a host of ants, whom he charms into the water. The promised payment is not made, and when
he came again, all the pigs followed him into the lake touch borrowed probably from the narrative of the miracle at Gadara. In this myth there is a triple series of incidents. Failing to receive his recompense the second year for sweeping away a cloud of crickets, the piper takes away all their In the third year all the children vanish as from ships. Hameln, the unpaid toil of the piper having been this time
god near
whom
it
was
placed; accordingly he refers the myth without hesitation to Apollon as the deliverer from those plagues of mice which have been dreaded or hated as a terrible scourge, and which even now draw German peasants in crowds to the
churches to fall on their knees and pray God to destroy the mice. Grriechische
Gotterlehre,
l
i.
482.
These lines are quoted from 3Ir. Browning by Mr. Gould, who does not mention the poet's name.
e2
244
common
charming away souls from earth is and this notion is brought out
more fully not only in Gothe's ballad of the Erlking, who charms the child to death in his father's arms, but also, in
Mr. Gould's opinion, in superstitions
still
prevalent
among
them
who
believe that
trees as
In some myths, dance at his wiU is endowed with the thievish ways of Hermes, although these again are attributed to an honest servant who at the end of three years receives three farthings as his recompense. In the
of Orpheus has run out into strange forms.
who compels
all to
Jew among the Thorns the servant gives who grants him three wishes in The first two wishes are, of course, for a weapon return. that shall strike down all it aims at, and a fiddle that shall make every one dance, while by the third he obtains the
German
story of the
power of forcing every one to comply with any request that he may make. From this point the story turns more on Strangely enough, the Homeric than on the Orphic myth. Phoibos is here metamorphosed into the Jew, who is robbed not of cows but of a bird, and made to dance until his clothes The appeal to a judge and the trial, are all torn to shreds. with the shifty excuses, the dismissal of the plea, and the But just as Hermes sentence, follow in their due order. delivers himself by waking the sweet music of his lyre when
Phoibos on discovering the skins of the slaughtered cattle is about to slay him, so the servant at the gallows makes his request to be allowed to play one more tune, when judge,
hangman, accuser, and spectators, all join in the magic dance. Another modern turn is given to the legend when the Jew is made to confess that he had stolen the money which he gave the honest servant, and is himself hanged in
2 the servant's stead.
1
Grimm's
Musician,
of
witch dance against her will to a bewitched tune, and of the Valiant Tailor who thus conquers the Bear as Orpheus masters Kerberos.
245
the same as the
.
is
CHAP,
.
;'
story
win his
at the
hands of the men who grudge him his wealth, but power which they are not
ship a dolphin
who
In
the trial which follows, the tables are turned on the sailors
much as they are on the Jew in the German story, and Arion recovers his harp which was to play an important part in many another Aryan myth.
The German form
chairs
of the
Inchanted and
and tables, king and courtiers, leap and reel, until all fall down from sheer weariness and Bosi makes off with his bride who was about to be given to some one else. The horn of Oberon in the romance of Huon of Bordeaux has the same powers, while it further becomes, like the Sangreal, a test of good and evil, for only those of blameless character dance when its strains are heard. Still more marvellous are the properties of the lyre of Glenkundie
:
He'd harpit a fish out o' saut water, Or water out o' a stane, Or milk out o' a maiden's breast That bairn had never nane. 1
The instrument reappears in the pipe of the Irish Maurice Connor, which could waken the dead as well as stir the
but Maurice is himself enticed by a mermaid, and vanishes with her beneath the waters. It is seen a^ain iii the magic lyre which the ghost of Zorayhayda gives to the Eose of the Alhambra in the charming legend related by
living
;
The harp
of Waina-
moinen.
Irving, and which rouses the mad Philip V. from his would-be coffin to a sudden outburst of martial vehemence. In Sclavonic stories the harp exhibits only the lulling qualities of the lyre of Hermes, and in this Mr. Gould perceives the deadening influence of the autumn winds
1
Washington
Jamieson's
Scottish Ballads,
i.
98;
Price,
Introd.
to
Poetry, lxiv.
246
BOOK
,J
which chill all vegetation into the sleep of winter, until the sun comes back to rouse it from slumber in the spring. It comes before us again in the story of Jack the Giant-killer, in which the Giant, who in the unchristianised myth was Wuotan himself, possessed an inchanting harp, bags of gold and diamonds, and a hen which daily laid a golden egg, The harp,' says Mr. Gould, is the wind, the bags are the clouds dropping the sparkling rain, and the golden egg, laid every morning by the red hen, is the dawn-produced Sun.' This magic lyre is further found where perhaps we should little look for it, in the grotesque myths of the Quiches of Guatemala. It is seen in its full might in the song of the Finnish Wainaraoinen, and in the wonderful effects produced by the chanting of the sons of Kalew on the woods, which burst instantly into flowers and fruit, before the song The close parallelism between the myth of is ended. Wainamoinen and the legends of Hermes and Orpheus cannot be better given than in the words of Mr. Gould. 'Wainamoinen went to a waterfall and killed a pike which swam below it. Of the bones of this fish he con' '
l
Hermes made his lyre of the torBut he dropped this instrument into the sea, and thus it fell into the power of the sea-gods, which accounts for the music of the ocean on the beach. The hero then made another from the forest wood, and with it
structed a harp, just as
toiseshell.
descended to Pohjola, the realm of darkness, in quest of the mystic Sampo, just as in the classic myth Orpheus went down to Hades to bring thence Eurydice. When in the
realm of gloom perpetual, the Finn demigod struck his kantele and sent all the inhabitants of Pohjola to sleep, as
made the eyes of Argus close Then he ran off with the Sampo, and had nearly got it to the land of light when the dwellers in Pohjola awoke, and pursued and fought him for the
Hermes when about
to steal 16 at the sound of his lyre.
fell
and was
Gal drier
the Singer.
lost;
Orpheus.' 2
Wuotan again
1
mythology
2
is
Galdner the
Curiotcs
160.
lb.
ii.
177.
SIBYLS.
it
24'
and
in
the
would
while
moment
any one listened to the singing of Hjarrandi. The christianised form of this myth, as the Legend of the Monk and the Bird, is well known to the readers of Longfellow and Archnoteworthy chiefly as inverting the parts, and making the bird charm the wearied and doubting man. Still more remarkable is the connexion of this mystic The harp in the legend of Gunadhya with a myth which reproduces that of the Sibylline books offered in diminished quantities, but always at the same price, to the Roman king
bishop Trench, and
is
Sibyl.
In the Eastern tale the part of Tarquin is played by King Satavahana to whom Gunadhya sends a poem of
Tarquin.
seven hundred thousand slokas written in his
own
blood.
This poem the king rejects as being written in the Pisacha dialect. Gunadhya then burns a portion of the poem on the
top of a mountain, but while
brings together
all
it is
who weep
and
is
for joy
The king
falls
ill,
told that
he must eat game but none is to be had, for all the beasts are listening to Gunadhya. On hearing this news, the king
hastens to the spot and buys the poem, or rather the
now
It is scarcely necessary to add that in this tale, as in that of Wainamoinen, we have two stories which must be traced to a common source with the myths of Hermes, Orpheus, and the Sibyl, in other words, to a story, the framework of which had been put together before the separation of the Aryan tribes. 2
Section
IV. PAN.
The song
*
e
.
Orpheus and the harp of Hermes are but Of the real meaning of this name the Western poets were utterly unconscious, In the Homeric Hymn he is said to be so called because all the gods were cheered by his music. 3 Still through all the
lyre of
Katha Sant Sagara, Curious Myths, ii. 172.
1
The
the reeds.
i.
8;
Gould,
2
3
See
vol.
to
i.
p. 121, et seq.
Hymn
Pan, 47.
248
BOOK
>.
'
tell
us of
and horns, his noisy laughter and capricious wind is pre-eminent. It is the notion not so much of the soft and lulling strains of Hermes in his gentler mood, or of the irresistible power of the harp of Orpheus, as of the purifying breezes which blow gently or strong, for a long or a little while, waking the echoes now here now there, in defiance of all plan or system, and with a wantonness which baffles all human powers of calculation. To this idea the Homeric hymn adheres with a singular fidelity, as it tells us how he wanders sometimes on the mountain summits, sometimes plunging into the thickets of the glen, sometimes by the stream side or up the towering crags, or singing among the reeds at eventide. So swift is
his pace that the birds of the air cannot pass
him by. With him play the water-maidens, and the patter of the nymphs'
feet is
fountain.
heard as they join in his song by the side of the dark Like Hermes again and Sarameya, he is the
1
child of the
it is
his
wont
to lie
Pan, the
purifying
from which he takes it ill if he be rudely roused. Of his parentage we have many stories, but the same notion underlies them all. Sometimes, as in the Homeric Hymn, he is the son of Hermes and of the nymph Dryops, sometimes of Hermes and Penelope, sometimes of Penelope and Odysseus but Penelope is the bride of the toiling sun, who is parted from her whether at morning or eventide, and to be her son is to be the child of Sarama. Nor is the idea changed if he be spoken of as the son of heaven and earth (Ouranos and Gaia), or of air and water (Aither and a Nereid). Pan then is strictly the purifying breeze, the Sanskrit pavana, 3 a name which reappears in the Latin Favonius, and perhaps also in Faunus and his real character, as the god of the gentler winds, is brought out most prominently in the story of his love for Pitys, and of the jealousy of the blustering Boreas, who hurled the maiden from a rock and
at noontide in a slumber
;
down
changed her into a pine-tree. The myth explains itself. In Professor Max Muller's words, ' We need but walk with
1
Hymn
to
Pan, 7-20.
Theok.
vii.
107.
Max
Miiller, Chips,
ii.
159.
PAX AXD
our eyes open along the meaning of that legend/
cliffs
PITYS.
249
to see the
>
of
Bournemouth
'
CHAP,
,
the
tale of Pitys,
the pine-tree
..
'
wooed by Pan, the gentle wind, and struck down by jealous Boreas, the north wind.' Of Boreas himself we need say but little. His true character was as little forgotten as that of Selene, and thus the name remained comparatively barren. The Athenian was scarcely speaking in mythical language when he said that Boreas had aided the Athenians by scatThe phrases were almost as tering the fleets of Xerxes. transparent which spoke of him as a son of Astraios and Eos, the star-god and the dawn, or as carrying off Oreithyia,
the daughter of Erechtheus, the king of the dawn-city.
Another myth made Pan the lover of the nymph Syrinx is but a slight veil thrown over the phrase which spoke of the wind playing on its pipe of reeds by the river's bank and the tale which related how Syrinx, flying from Pan, like Daphne from Phoibos, was changed into a reed, is but another form of the story which made Pan the lover of
;
but this
m anaj s J nnx
p.
-
the
nymph Echo,
is
Echo
for
Narkissos
Section
The same power of the wind which is signified by the The Tlieban harp of Orpheus is seen in the story of Atuphion, a being Orpheus. But Amphion is a localised in the traditions of Thebes.
twin-brother of Zethos, and the two are, in the words of
Euripides, simply the Dioskouroi, riding on white horses,
and thus
fall
But the myth runs into many other legends, the fortunes of their mother Antiope
Koronis.
calls
The
tale is told in
many
versions.
One of these
another speaks of Lykos as her husband; but this is only saying that Artemis Hekate may be regarded as either the
child of the darkness or the bride of the light.
third
version
makes her
250
BOOK
II.
affinity
Her
children,
like Oidipous,
Telephos and
like
many
on
their birth,
and
among whom Antiope herself is said to have long remained a captive, like Danae* in the house of Polydektes. We have now the same distinction of office or employment which marks the other twin brothers of Greek myths. Zethos
herds,
the flocks, while Amphion receives from Hermes a harp which makes the stones not merely move but fix themselves in their proper places as he builds the walls of
tends
like the
The sequel of the history of Antiope exhibits, myths of Tyro, Ino, and other legends, the jealous second wife or step-mother, who is slain by Amphion and Zethos, as Sidero is killed by Pelias and Neleus. Amphion himself becomes the husband of Niobe, the mother who presumes to compare her children with the offspring of Zeus and Leto.
Thebes.
Z ethos
and
Prokne.
In one tradition Zethos, the brother Amphion, is the husband of Prokne, the daughter of the Athenian Pandion and
;
own
child
fertility
she proposed
1
But in its more complete form the myth makes her a wife of Tereus,
to slay the eldest son of her sister-in-law
Mobe.
who
is
Megarian Pegai.
king either of the hill-country (Thrace) or of the When her son Itys was born, Tereus cut
sister Philomela,
out his wife's tongue and hid her away with her babe, and
Prokne killed her own child Itys, and served up meal for Tereus. Tereus in his turn, learning what had been done, pursues the sisters as they fly from him, and he has almost seized them when they pray that they may be changed into birds. Tereus thus became a hoopoe, Prokne a swallow, and Philomela a nightingale. 2 Hence it is that as the spring comes round, the bride mourns for her lost child with an inconsolable sorrow, as in the Megarian
1
Preller, Gr.
of the sisters, and made Prokne the nightingale and Philomela the swallow.
251
CHAP,
/
_
.
The transformation is the result of the same process which turned Lykadn into a wolf, and Kallisto into a bear and as Philomela was a name for the nightintaken to pieces.
;
gale,
so
is
said
to
have been
this fitting
With
closely associated,
and
transformation was at once suggested for Prokne. But it becomes at the least possible that in its earlier shape the
myth may have known only one wife of Tereus, who might be called either Prokne or Philomela. Of these two names Prokne is apparently only another form of Prokris, who is also the daughter of an Athenian king and thus the legend
;
seems to explain itself, for as in Tantalos and Lykaon we have the sun scorching up and destroying his children, so
here the
dew
is
The myth
Kephalos or Prokris. The name Philomela, again, may denote one who loves the flocks, or one who loves apples but we have already seen how the sheep or flocks of Helios becomes the apples of the Hesperides, and thus Philomela is really the lover of the golden-tinted clouds, which greet the rising sun, and the name might well be
;
dawn or the dew. The mournful or dirge-like sound of the wind is signifled by another Boiotian tradition, which related how the matrons and maidens mourned for Linos at the feast which was called Amis because Linos had grown up among the lambs, in other words, the dirge-like breeze had sprung up while the heaven was flecked with the fleecy clouds which,
given to either the
in the
German popular
stories, lured
the rivals of
Dummling
The myth that Linos torn to pieces by dogs points to the raging storm which was may follow the morning breeze. Between these two in force would come Zephyros, the strong wind from the eveningto their destruction in the waters.
The
wife of Zephyros
ISTotos
Argesis
who
But
as the clouds
before Podarge or
wind
is
indicated in the
to
Kaikias, a
Section
In the Odyssey
the power of rousing or stilling But beyond this fact the poem has nothing more to say of him than that he was the father of six sons and six daughters, and that he dwelt in an island which bore his name. With the mythology which grew up around
the charge of Aiolos,
who has
them
at his will.
we
As a
is
local or a tribal
name,
it
has as
much and
In
as
value
itself
the word
connected apparently with the names Aia and Aietes, and may denote the changeful and restless sky from which the winds are born. But the ingenuity of later mythographers was exercised in arranging or reconciling the pedigrees of the several children assigned to Aiolos, and
their
efforts
some of the many names thus grouped in a more or less arbitrary connexion. With them this association was valuable, chiefly as accounting for the historical distribution of certain Hellenic clans and this supposed
;
been imported into the controversy respecting the date and composition of our Homeric poems, by some critics who hold that Homer was essentially an Aiolic poet, who
fact has
all
the other
members
It
may
no trace of such a feeling in either our Iliad or our Odyssey, which simply speak of Aiolos as a son of Hippotes and the steward of the winds of heaven.
253
CHAP,
V
.
"
Greek mythology.
as alternately soothing-
among
the pipe of
but simply in their force as the grinders or crushers of everything that comes in their way. These
;
Pan
They are the Moliones, or mill-men, or who have one body but two heads, four hands, and four feet, who first undertake to
in
Greek legends.
him near Kleonai. These Thor Miolnir we see also in the Aloadai, the sons of Iphimedousa, whose love for Poseidon led her to roam along the sea-shore, pouring the salt water over her body. The myth is transparent enough. They are as mighty in their infancy as Hermes. When they are nine years old, their bodies are nine cubits in breadth and twentyseven in height a rude yet not inapt image of the stormy wind heaping up in a few hours its vast masses of angry vapour. It was inevitable that the phenomena of storm
against the hero are slain by
representatives of
1
should suggest their warfare with the gods, and that one
version should represent
vanquished.
might are
them as successful, the other as The storm-clouds scattered by the sun in his the Aloadai when defeated by Phoibos before
analogies of /J.6trx os and oo-^os, a tender shoot or branch, Xa for nia in Homer, the Latin mola, and the Greek ovKai, meal, adding that 'instead of our very word frXevpov, wheaten flour, another form,
/xaXevpov, is mentioned by Helladius.' Led. Lang, second series, 323. The same change is seen in fthr as corresponding to the numeral eV. The idea of the storm as crushing and pounding is seen in molnija, a name for
bitably yields Molione, /j.v\t], the Latin mola, our mill and meal. There is no proof that certain words may in Greek
assume an initial fx which is merely but there is abundant evieuphonic dence that Greek words, which originally began with /x. occasionally drop it. This, Professor Max Midler admits, is a violent change, and it would seem physically unnecessary but he adduces the
: ;
lightning
among
the
Slavonic
songs.
tribes,
and
in
Munja, the
sister of
Grom, the
Max
254
BOOK
II.
giants
Ephialtes, like Ixion, seeks to win Here while Otos follows Artemis, who, in the form of a stag, so runs between the brothers that they, aiming at her at the same time, kill each other, as the thunderclouds perish from their own
discharges. 1
name he storm-wind raging through shares, represents like them the the sky. As the idea of calm yet keen intellect is inseparable from Athene, so the character of Ares exhibits simply a blind force without foresight or judgment, and not unfrequently illustrates the poet's phrase that strength without counsel insures only its own destruction. Hence Ares and Athene are open enemies. The pure dawn can have nothing in common with the cloud-laden and wind-oppressed atmo2 He is then in no sense a god of war, unless war is sphere. taken as mere quarrelling and slaughtering for its own sake. Of the merits of contending parties he has neither knowledge
Ares, the god imprisoned by the Aloadai, whose
nor care.
Where
lie
thickest,
and thus he becomes pretreacherous, 3 the object of hatred and eminently fickle and disgust to all the gods, except when, as in the lay of Demodokos, he is loved by Aphrodite. But this legend implies that
he go
;
1
Otos
and
Ephialtes,
i.
and the
hurricane,'
e.
Max
series.
2
Midler,
Led. on
Lang,
second
Professor Max Midler remarks, ib. 325, that In Area, Preller, without any thought of tho relationship between
'
Ares and the Marids discovered the personification of the sky as excited by Athene then, according to storm.' Preller, als Gfottin der reinen Luft and des JEthers die naturiiche Feindin des Ares ist.' Gr. Myth. 202.
'
a\AoTrp6(Ta\hos.
255
CHAP.
'
.
body
is
ricane,
But
life is little more than a series of storm-wind must soon be conquered by the powers of the bright heaven. Hence he is defeated by Herakles when he seeks to defend his son Kyknos against that hero, and wounded by Diomedes, who fights under the In the myth of Adonis he is the boar protection of Athene.
who
whom
he
is
jealous,
autumn grudge
1
to the
dawn the
light
of the beautiful
1
summer.
When Herodotos says that Ares was worshipped by Scythian tribes under the form of a sword, to which even human sacrifices were offered, we have to receive his statement with as much
caution as the account given by him of the Ares worshipped by the Egyptians. That the deities were worshipped under
Hellenic name, no one will now maintain and the judgment of Herodotos on a comparison of attributes would not be altogether trustworthy. The so-called Egyptian Ares has much more of the features of Dionysos. The Scythian sword belongs to another set of ideas. See ch. ii. sect. xii.
this
;
CHAPTEE
VI.
THE WATEKS.
Section
I.THE
DWELLERS IN THE
SEA.
BOOK
II.
Between
is little distinction beyond that of name. Both dwell in the waters, and although the name of the latter points more especially to the sea as his abode, yet the power which, according to Apollodoros, he possesses of changing his form at will indicates his affinity to the cloud deities, unless it be taken as referring to the changing face It must, of the ocean with its tossed and twisting waves. however, be noted that, far from giving him this power, the Hesiodic Theogony seems to exclude it by denying to him
He
is
man, we are here told, because he is truthful and cannot lie, because he is trustworthy and kindly, because he forgets not law but knows all good counsels and just words a singular contrast to the being who will yield only to the argument of Like Proteus, he is gifted with mysterious wisdom, force.
and his advice guides Herakles in the search for the apples His wife Doris is naturally (or flocks) of the Hesperid.es. the mother of a goodly offspring, fifty in number, like the children of Danaos, Aigyptos, Thestios, and Asterodia but the ingenuity of later mythographers was scarcely equal to the task of inventing for all of them names of decent mythical semblance. Some few, as Amphitrite and Galateia, but most of are genuine names for dwellers in the waters Pherousa, Proto, Kymodoke, Nesaia, them, as Dynamene, Aktaia, are mere epithets denoting their power and strength, Of Pontos himself, the father their office or their abode.
;
;
of Nereus, there
is
even
less to
be said.
In the Hesiodic
THE NYMPHS.
Theogony
lie
is
257
CHAP.
a mere
name
for
VL
>
_.
7ro\ir]s
and Oakaaaa
ttovtov
its
and of
its
affinity
irdros,
a path.
therefore a
name
they had seen the great water, had used it only of roadways on land. In the myth of Thaumas, the son of Pontos and
the father of Iris and the Harpyiai,
we
;
back to the phenomena of the heavens the latter being the greedy storm-clouds stretching out their crooked claws for their prey, the former the rainbow joining the heavens and the earth with its path of light. Another son of Poseidon, whose home is also in the waters,
is
Giaukos.
the Boiotian Giaukos, the builder of the divine ship Argo and its helmsman. After the fight of Iason with the
is
Tyrrhenians, Giaukos sinks into the sea, and thenceforth endowed with many of the attributes of Nereus. Like
is
him, he
coasts
like him, he is full of wisdom, and his words may be implicitly trusted. The domain in which these deities dwell is thickly peopled. Their subjects and companions are the nymphs, whose name, as denoting simply water, belongs of right to no beings who live on dry land, or in caves or trees. The classification of
1
and
Naiads
a nd
T
.
the
nymphs
is
therefore in
strictness
an impossible one
confined to the
nymphs
as general a
term as the name Nymph itself. Nor is there any reason beyond that of mere usage why the Nereides should not be called Naiads as well as Nymphs. But the tendency was to multiply classes and seldom perhaps has the imagination of man been exercised on a more beautiful or harmless subject than the nature and tasks of these beautiful beings who comfort Prometheus in his awful agony and with Thetis cheer Achilleus when his heart is riven with grief for his
:
1
vv^cpT]
Latin
VOL.
158
EOOK
,'
a higher faith at the cost of with beings malignant as they were peopling whole worlds powerful. The effect of Christian teaching would necessarily invest the Hellenic nymphs with some portion of this malignity, and as they would still be objects of worship to the
make
vain profession of
unconverted, that worship would become constantly more and more superstitious ; and superstition, although its nature
remains unchanged,
objects are beings
is
stripped of half
is
its
horrors
when
its
whose nature
wholly genial.
This
comparatively wholesome influence the idea of nymphs inhabiting every portion of the world exercised on the
Hellenic mind.
and
marsh, each well, tree, hill, and vale had its guardian, whose presence was a blessing T not a curse. As dwelling in the deep running waters, the nymphs who in name answer precisely to the Yedic Apsaras, or movers in the waters,
have in some measure the wisdom of ISTereus, Glaukos, and of Proteus hence the soothsayer, as he uttered the oracles of the god, was sometimes said to be filled with their spirit. They guarded the flocks and fostered the sacredness of
;
home, while on the sick they exercised the beneficent art and skill of Asklepios. These kindly beings must, however, be distinguished from the Swan-maidens and other creatures of Aryan mythology, whose nature is more akin to the clouds and vapours. The lakes on which these maidens are seen to swim are the blue seas of heaven, in which may be seen beautiful or repulsive
forms, the daughters of Phorkys, Gorgons, Harpies, Kentaurs, Nor can it be said that Thetis, Titans, Graiai, Phaiakians.
is
companions
THETIS.
259
CHAP, L
.
,.
among whom she dwells. She lives, indeed, in the sea; but she has been brought up by Here the queen of the high heaven, and like the Telchines and Kouretes, like Proteus and Glaukos, she can change her form at will, and Peleus obtains her as his bride only when he has treated her as Aristaios treats the guardian of the ocean herds. She belongs thus partly to the sea, and in part to the upper air,
and thus the story of her life runs through not a little of the mythical history of the Greeks. When Dionysos flies from Lykourgos, and Hephaistos is hurled down from Olympos, it
is
_.
Thetis
who
gives
it is
a mortal man,
them a refuge ; and if she is married to only because at the suggestion, it is said,
it
would have
its
it,
because
child should be
in
In yet another version she plays the part of Aphrodite to Anchises in the Homeric Hymn, and wins
the most renowned of
Peleus as her husband by promising that his son shall be all the heroes. The story of her
wedding carries us far away from her native element, and when, as in the Iliad, she preserves the body of Patroklos from decay, she appears rather in the character of the dawngoddess who keeps off all unseemly things from the slain
Hektor. Nor is she seen in her true character as a Nereid, before the last sad scene, when, rising from the sea with her
attendant nynrphs, she bathes the body of her dead son, and wraps it in that robe of spotless white, in which the same
nymphs
But as the sea-goddess thus puts on some of the qualities and is invested with some of the functions which might seem
to belong exclusively to the powers of the heavens
and the
light, so the latter are all connected more or less closely with the waters, and the nymphs might not unnaturally see their
Peneian stream
rodite
Anadyomene
Daphne, the child of the and in AphAll these, indeed, whatever may
;
in
be their destiny, are at their rising the offspring of Tritos (Triton), the lord of the waters. The Triton of Hellenic mythology,
who
60
BOOK
_
**
..
rides
horses.
reflected in Amphitrite,
who
is
present at the
is
simply the
he
and loud- sounding. Another aspect of the great deep is presented in the Seirens, who by their beautiful singing lure mariners to their
ruin.
As basking among
represent, as
some have supposed, the belts (Seirai) of against which the sailor must be ever on his deceitful calms guard, lest he suffer them to draw his ship to sandbanks or quicksands. But apart from the beautiful passage in the Odyssey, which tells us how their song rose with a strange power through the still air when the god had lulled the waves to sleep, the mythology of these beings is almost wholly artificial. They are children of Acheron and Sterope, of Phorkos, Melpomene, and others, and names were deIn vised for them in accordance with, their parentage. form they were half women, half fishes, and thus are akin to Echidna and Melusina and their doom was that they should live only until some one should escape their toils. Hence by some mythographers they are said to have flung themselves into the sea and to have been changed into rocks, when Odysseus had effected his escape, while others Other versions gave them ascribe their defeat to Orpheus. wings, and again deprived them of them, for aiding or refusing to aid Demeter in her search for Persephone. Nor are there wanting mythical beings who work their rocks and awful whirlpools. will among storm-beaten Among the former dwells Skylla, and in the latter the more These creatures the Odyssey places on terrible Charybdis. two rocks, distant about an arrow's flight from each other, and between these the ship of Odysseus must pass. If he goes near the one whose smooth scarped sides run up into a
;
1
may
men
as a
prey to the six will open to engulf them. But better thus to sacrifice a few to this monster with six outstretching necks and twelve shapeless feet, as she
1
SKYLLA.
shoots out her hungry hands from her dismal dens, than to have the ships knocked to pieces in the whirlpool where
261
CHAP.
.
Charybdis thrice in the day drinks in the waters of the sea, and thrice spouts them forth again. The peril may seem to be less. The sides of the rock beneath which she dwells are not so rugged, and on it blooms a large wild fig-tree, with
1
dense foliage but no ship that ever came within reach of the whirling eddies ever saw the light again. In other words, Skylla is the one who tears her prey, while Charybdis
;
the boiling surf beating against a precipitous and iron-bound coast, the other the treacherous
swallows them
the one
is
back-currents of a gulf
taiis also
full
of hidden rocks.
irresistible
many
given to her in the Odyssey denotes simply her power. This horrid being is put to death in ways. In one version she is slain by Herakles, and
brought to life again by her father Phorkys as he burns her body. In another she is a beautiful princess, who is loved by Zeus, and who, being robbed of her children by the jealous Here, hides herself in a dismal cavern, and is there changed This into a terrific goblin which preys upon little children.
is called a daughter of Lamia the devourer, is in hobgoblin of modern tales, and was manifestly used fact the by nurses in the days of Euripides much as nurses may use 2 In such names now to quiet or frighten their charges.
Skylla,
who
another version she refuses her love to the sea-god Glaukos, who betakes himself to Kirke but Kirke instead of aiding him to win her, threw some herbs into the well where Skylla bathed and changed her into the form of Echidna. It is need;
much to the same effect. brings before us another Skylla, The The Meo-arian tradition who is probably only another form of the being beloved by skylla. Glaukos or Triton. Here the beautiful maiden gives her
legends which are
Cretan Minos, who is besieging Megara to revenge the death of Androgeos, and in order to become his wife she steals the purple lock on the head of her father
love
to the
own
life
yevos
quoted
xx. 41.
from
\bZ
,1
BOOK
<
story she
sea.
Over
all
in
supreme king.
name,
fruits. 1
Hence
some myths he
the
and guardian of Dionysos, and the lover of Demeter, who becomes the mother of Despoina and the horse Orion and although he can descend to the depths of the sea and there dwell, yet he can appear at will on Olympos, and his power is exercised scarcely less in the heavens than in the
dej^ths beneath.
and he can
his empire
let loose
Like Zeus, he is the gatherer of the clouds, the winds from their prison-house. But
defined,
relat-
even with some towards whom he is generally friendly. It was not unnatural that the god of the waters which come from the heaven as well as of those which feed and form the sea, should wish to give his name to the lands and cities which are refreshed by his showers or washed by his waves. It was as natural that the dawn-goddess should wish the rocky heights on which her first beams rest to bear her name and thus a contest between the two became inevitable. In the dispute with Zeus for Aigina, the water-god had been successful, and the island retained one of the many names denoting spots where break the waves of Poseidon. His power and his dwelling were in like manner seen at Aigai
;
1 '
Sein
Name
driickt
hin
nocreiSoojj/,
Tloo-eiSuv,
dor. Tloriddv,
IlocretSeta
woraus weiter-
gewnrden ist. Die "NVurzel ist dieselbe wie in den Wortern kotos, itot^o), TroTa^tos.' Preller, Gr. Myth. i. 443.
26 1
and at Helike, spots where the billows curl and dash upon CHAP, But in the city on the banks of Kephisos he en- ._ / counters a mightier rival and here he fails to give his name to it, although in one version he shows his power and his beneficence by striking his trident into the rock of the In her Akropolis and causing the waters to leap forth. turn Athene produces the olive, and this is adjudged to be the better gift for men. Poseidon here acts in strict accordance with the meaning of his name but it is not easy to see on what grounds the claims of Athene are allowed precedence, and hence we may suppose that the more genuine form of this myth is to be found in the other version which makes Poseidon call forth from the earth not a well but a horse. That Poseidon should become the lord and tamer of the Poseidon horse was a necessary result as soon as his empire was *^L
the shore.
1
As the
his
maned
Thus he ascends
at Aigai,
and
from
play
Pound him
the monsters of the deep, and the sea in her gladness makes
In the myth which traces the name of is said to have sprung from its surface, we have a story which might have made Poseidon the goatherd, whose goats leap from rock to rock as the waves toss to and fro in the sea. But it failed to take root, probably because such names as Aigialos, the shore where the sea breaks, retained their meaning too clearly. There was nothing to prevent the other association, and thus Poseidon became especially the god who bestowed on man the horse, and by teaching them how to tame and use it fostered the art of war and the love of
a path for her lord. 2
the [iEgean] Aigaian sea, to the goat. 3 which
iEg?e unci Helike bedeuten eigentdas Meer oder die Meereskiiste, wo sichdie Wogen brechen.' Preller, Gr. Myth. i. 443. Thus the name Helikon denotes the upward curling or spouting of the water when the soil is dinted by the hoof of Pegasos.
1
'
2 8
II. xiii.
lich
rb
juei/
ttjs irepl
(paaiv,
ol
Kopvcrr'nxs
Soli.
ttjs
i.
Alyairjs bvoixa^ofxivns
11. 65.'
Apollon.
i.
44.3.
264
BOOK
II.
Athene receives its full justification. His defeat is followed, as we might expect, by a plague of waters which burst over the land when he is worsted by Athene, or by the drying up of the rivers when Here refuses to let him be king in Argos.
In Corinth there
Poseidon
is is
a compromise.
him on
by his waves. All these disputes, together with his claim on Naxos against Dionysos, and on Delos against Apollon, mark simply the process which gradually converted Poseidon the lord of the rain-giving atmosphere into the local king of the sea. It is the degradation of Zeus Ombrios to the lordship of a small portion of his ancient realm. But he still remains the shaker of the earth, and his trident exercises always its
1
nrysterious powers. 2
Poseidon
to
him a
definite place in
and the
Telchines.
Like
name had
been made to yield a mythical personality, he became also a son of Kronos, and was swallowed by him, like the other children of Rhea. A truer feeling is seen in the myth which makes the Telchines, the mystic dancers of the sky,
guardians of his infancy. 3
against the Titans, and
division
is
when
made between the Kronid brothers, Poseidon must be made to own allegiance to Zeus, an admission
which is followed by no great harmony. He can retort the angry words of Zeus, and he plots with Here and Athene to
bind him.
Poseidon the Bond-
man.
The myth which makes Poseidon and Phoibos together Laomedon belongs to the earlier stage in the growth of the myth, during which he is still
like the
air, and therefore may be represented, Delian god and the heroes who share his nature, as toiling for the benefit of mean and ungrateful man. For at the hands of Laomedon he receives no better recompense
1
This earlier identity of Poseidon with his brother is attested by the name Zenoposeidon. PreUer, Gr.Myth.'\.Ao2.
i.
iuvoaiyaios, neiaixQ^u.
PreUer,
ib.
446.
a
Diod.
v.
55.
26
;
than
CHAP, L
is
the huge
storm-cloud, which appears in the Cretan legend as the bull sent by Poseidon to be sacrificed by Minos, who instead of
so dealing with
it
hides
it
among
his
own
cattle,
the fitting
punishment
for thus
of Triton, the
name
Poseidon.
other mythical inhabitants of the sea are Ino, the
Melikertes
-
Among
daughter of Kaclmos and Harmonia, and her child Melikertes. Their earthly history belongs to the myth of the Golden Fleece; but when on failing to bring about the death of Phrixos she plunges, like Endymion, into the sea,
she is the antithesis of Aphrodite Anadyomene. With her change of abode her nature seemingly becomes more genial. She is the pitying nymph who hastens to the help of Odysseus as he is tossed on the stormy waters after the breaking up of his raft and thus she is especially the white goddess whose light tints the sky or crests the waves. In his new borne her son Melikertes, we are told, becomes Palaimon, the wrestler, or, as some would have it, Glaukos. The few stories related of him have no importance but his name is more significant. It is clearly that of the Semitic Melkarth, and thus the sacrifices of children in his honour, and the horrid nature of his cultus generally, are at once
;
;
explained.
Kadmos
east
least
;
It becomes, therefore, the more probable that but a Greek form of the Semitic Kedem, the and thus the Boiotian mythology presents us with at
is
be the conclusion to which they point. In his later and more definite functions as the god of the The ocean stream waters, Poseidon is still the lord only of the troubled sea
-
far
266
BOOK
II.
Danaos and Aigyptos with their fifty daughters we put aside the name Belos and possibly that of Aigyptos as not less distinctly foreign than the Semitic Melikertes, Kadmos, and Agenor in the Boiotian
If in the legend of
fifty
sons and
names on either side not a single name which is not purely Greek or Aryan. Doubtless when at a comparatively late time the myths were systematically arranged, this singular story was dovetailed into the cycle of stories which began with the love of Zeus and when 16 was further identified for the Inachian 16 with Isis, a wide door was opened for the introduction of purely foreign elements into myths of strictly Aryan origin. Nor would it be prudent to deny that for such identifications there may not, in some cases, have been at the least a 16 was the horned maiden, and her calfplausible ground. but the Egyptian worshipped Apis, and child was Epaphos had Isis as his horned maiden. There was nothing here which might not have grown up independently in Egypt and in Greece nor is any hypothesis of borrowing needed
list
of
//.
//.
11.
xxi. 195.
xiv. 246. xiv. 301.
Ivy
2
3
4
Acheron and Acheloos, the long by Azios, Axe, Exe, Esk, Usk, and other forms.
See also vol. i. p. 383. 3 Hes. Theog. 282.
The name Tkeog. 365, &c. referred by some to the same root with the Latin ayua (of. acer, wkv>),
Hes.
Okeanos
is
267
CHAP,
>
horns of the new moon. notion that the whole Greek mythology not merely exhibited certain points of likeness or contact with that of
Semitic or other alien tribes, but was directly borrowed from it; and when for this portentous fact no evidence was demanded or furnished beyond the impudent assertions of Egyptian priests, there was obviously no limit and no difficulty in making any one Greek god the counterpart of a Hence, speaking genedeity in the mythology of Egypt. rally, we are fully justified in sweeping away all such statements as groundless fabrications. Nay more, when Herodotos
,_
us that Danaos and Lynkeus were natives of and that the Egyptians trace from them the Chemmis, genealogy of Perseus, the periodical appearance of whose
tells
caused infinite joy in Egypt, we can not be sure that his informers even knew the names which the In all probability, the historian puts into their mouths.
gio-antic slipper
points
of likeness were supplied by Herodotos himself, although doubtless the Egyptians said all that they could
nor does the appearance of a solitary sandal lead us necessarily to suppose that the being who wore it was in any way akin to the Argive hero who receives two sandals from the
Ocean nymphs. Hence it is possible or likely that the names Belos and x Aigyptos may have been late importations into a purely native myth, while the wanderings of Danaos and Aigyptos with their sons and daughters have just as much and as little In the form thus assigned to value as the pilgrimage of 16. it, the legend runs that Libya, the daughter of Epaphos the calf-child of 16, became the bride of Poseidon and the mother of Agenor and Belos. Of these the former is placed in Phoinikia, and takes his place in the purely solar myth of Telephassa, Kadmos, and Europe the latter remains in Libya, and marrying Anchirrhoe (the mighty stream), a daughter of the Nile, becomes the father of the twins Danaos and Aigyptos, whose lives exhibit not much more
...
\QS
BOOK
II.
where they disembark near Lernai during a time He at of terrible drought caused by the wrath of Poseidon. once sends his daughters to seek for water and Amymone (the blameless), chancing to hit a Satyr while aiming at a stag, is rescued from his hot pursuit by Poseidon whose bride she becomes and who calls up for her the never-failing fountain of Lerna. But Aigyptos and his sons waste little time in following them. At first they exhibit all their old vehemence and ferocity, but presently changing their tone, they make proposals to marry, each, one of the fifty Danato Argos,
;
The proffer is accepted in apparent friendship; but on the day of the wedding Danaos places a dagger in the hands of each maiden, and charges her to smite her husband His bidding is before the day again breaks upon the earth. obeyed by all except Hypermnestra (the overloving or gentle) who prefers to be thought weak and wavering rather than
ides.
1
to be a murderess.
them
in the
marshland of Lerna,
:
while they placed their bodies at the gates of the city from this crime they were purified by Athene and Hermes at the
bidding of Zeus,
who
dead the guilty daughters of Danaos were condemned to pour water everlastingly into sieves. Danaos had now to find husbands for his eight and forty daughters, Hypermnestra being still married to Lynkeus and Amymone to Poseidon. This he found no easy task, but at length he succeeded through the device afterwards
With this number we may compare the fifty daughters of Daksha in Hindu mythology, and of Thestios, and the fifty sons of Pallas and Priam.
1
2G9
CHAP.
.
we
them
as all slain
Danaos himself
to death.
rJ
noteworthy in the rest of the legend, unless it be the way in which he became chief in the land where the people were The dispute for supremacy between after him called Danaoi. referred to the people, and the decision himself and Gelanor is is to be given on the following* day, when, before the appointed hour, a wolf rushed in upon the herd feeding before the gates and pulled down the leader. The wolf was, of course, the minister of the Lykian Apollon the stricken herd were the subjects of the native king, and the smitten ox was the king himself. The interpretation was obvious, and Gelanor had to give way to Danaos. What is the meaning and origin cf this strange tale? With an ingenuity which must go far towards producing conviction, Preller answers this question by a reference to the physical geography of Argolis. Not much, he thinks, can be done by referring the name Danaos to the root da, to burn, which we find in Ahana, Dahana, and Daphne, as denoting the dry and waterless nature of the Argive soil. This dryness, he remarks, is only superficial, the whole territory being rich in wells or fountains which, it must be specially noted, are in the myth assigned as the works of Danaos, who causes them to be dug. These springs were the object of a special veneration, and the fifty daughters of Danaos are thus the representatives of the many Argive wells or springs, and belong strictly to the ranks of water nymphs. 2
; 1
Origin of
myth
"
may
fail.
Still
later
even
Kephisos, may be left dry, while in the rainy portion of the year these Charadrai or Cheimarroi, winter flowing streams,
come down with great force and overflow their banks. Thus the myth resolves itself into phrases which described ori1
The
quantity of the
Danaos
is
is
Daphne and
it
dava v\a,
long,
is
wood
easily inflammable,
2 If the name Danaos itself denotes water, it must be identified with Tanais, Don, Donau, Tyne, Teign, Tone, and other forms of the Celtic and Slavonic words for a running stream,
270
BOOK ginallv these alternations of flood and drought. The dovvnII ^1_ ward rush of the winter torrents is the w ild pursuit of the sons of Aigyptos, who threaten to overwhelm the Danaides, or nymphs of the fountains but as their strength begins to
.
fail,
they
offer
T
But the time for vengeance has come the fail more and more, until their stream is even more scanty than that of the springs. In other words, they are slain by their wives, who draw or cut off the waters from their sources. These sources are the heads of the rivers, and thus it is said that the Danaides cut off their
at their
w ord.
husbands' heads.
myth
is
fur-
which speaks of Skephros (the droughty) as slandering or reviling Leimon (the moist or watery being), and as presently slain by Leimon, who in his turn is killed by Artemis. If in place of the latter we substitute the Danaides, and for the former the sons of Aigyptos, we have at once the Argive tradition. The meaning becomes still more obvious when we mark the fact that the Danaides threw the heads into the marsh-grounds of
Lernai (in other words, that there the sources of the waters were preserved according to the promise of Poseidon that that fountain should never fail), while the bodies of the sons of Aigyptos, the dry beds of the rivers, were exposed in the
sight of all the people. It may therefore well be doubted whether the name Aigyptos itself be not a word which may in its earlier form have shown its affinity with Aigai, Aigaion, Aigialos, Aigaia, and other names denoting simply the breaking or dashing of water against the shores of the sea or the banks of a river. But one of the Danaides refused or failed to slav her husband. The name of this son of Aigyptos is Lynkeus, a myth to which Pausanias furnishes a clue by giving its other form Lyrkeios. But Lyrkeios was the name given to the river Inachos in the earlier j^ortion of its course, and thus this story would simply mean that although the other streams
1
1 Preller thinks that when the idea of a foreign origin for Aigyptos and Danaos was once suggested, the Nile with its yearly inundations and shrink-
The Lyrkeios.
in^s presented an obvious point of oomparison with the Cheimarroi or wintertorrents of the Poloponnesos. Gr.
Myth.
ii.
47.
LYXKEUS.
were quite dried up, the waters of the Lyrkeios did not
wholly
1
271
CHAP,
fail.
1
.
VL
mnestra refused to touch. The heads of the slain sons of Aigyptos are the heads which Herakles hewed off from the Hydra's neck and thus this labour of Herakles resolves itself into the struggle of the sun with the streams of the earth, the conquest of which is of course the setting in of thorough drought.
:
The head of Lynkeus (Lyrkeois), the one stream which is not dried up, answers to the neck of the Lernaian Hydra. So long as streams were supplied from the main source, Herakles had still to struggle with the Hydra. His victory was not achieved until he had severed this neck which Hyper-
CHAPTER
VII.
THE CLOUDS.
Section
I. THE
BOOK
II.
mythical narratives which stretch down to a time even later than the alleged period of the return of the She is the mother of the children whose disHerakleids.
appearance led to the long searching of the Argonautai for the Golden Fleece, to be followed by the disappearance of
each with
its
when
closely
a different colouring, and with names sometimes only slightly But Nephele herself disguised, sometimes even unchanged.
is strictly
such she becomes the wife of Athamas, a being on whose nature some light is thrown by the fact that he is the brother
of Sisyphos, the sun condemned, like Ixion, to an endless and In this aspect, the myth resolves itself into a fruitless toil.
a series of transparent phrases. The statement that Athamas married Nephele at the bidding of Here is merely the assertion
brought to pass in the sight of the union spring two children, Phrixos and Helle, whose names and attributes are purely atmoIt is true that a mistaken etymology led some of spheric. mythographers to connect the name of Phrixos with the old
Herakles with
blue heaven.
From
this
the roasting of corn in order to kill the seed, as an explanation of the anger of Athamas and his crime but we have
;
to
mark the
it
is
of the very
INO
AND NEPHELE.
273
chap. VIL
falls off
is
ill-fated
maiden
the Helloi, or Selloi, or Hellenes, and that the latter are the children of Helios, will probably be disputed by none. Helle then is the bright clear air as illuminated by the rays of the
away from the western Thessaly to But before the dawn can come the evening light mnst die out utterly, and hence it was inevitable that Helle should meet her doom in the broad-flowing Hellespontos, the path which bears her name. What then is her brother but the air or ether in itself, and not merely as lit up by the splendour of the sun ? It was impossible, then, that the frigid Phrixos could feel the weariness which conquered his sister. Her force might fail, but his arms would cling only the more closely round the neck of the ram, until at last, as the first blush of light was wakened in the
;
sun
and she
is
carried
home
Not less clear are the other incidents of the legend. Athamas has been wedded to Nephele but he is no more at ease than is Iason with Medeia, and the Kadmeian Ino plays
;
Findino- that her husband's love has been given to another, Nephele vanishes away. The morning mist retreats to Mflheim, its
cloud-home, leaving her children in the hands of Ino Leukothea, the open and glaring day, in which there is nothing
down the heat of the sun. Hence between her and the children of the mist there is an enmity as natural as that
to keep
which
between Ares and Athene, and this enmity is as naturally signified in the drought or famine which she brings upon the land. It is, in fact, the same plague with which
exists
men
consulted as to the cause misery, the Delphian priestess answers that the
When
Athamas must be sacrificed, or in other words that the crime of Tantalos and Lykaon must be committed again. Ino seeks to bring the doom on the children of Nephele, who now sends the golden-fleeced ram to bear them away to Kolchis. But the curse works on still; and the
children of VOL.
II.
274
BOOK
v_
,J
.
madness of Herakles
drought has reached
falls
The
Athamas now asks whither he must go and where he may find a home: and the answer is that he must make his abode where wild beasts receive him hospitably. This welcome he finds in a spot where wolves, having torn some The beasts must sheep, leave for him the untasted banquet.
the lord
needs be wolves, and the country of which he thus becomes is the Aleian plain, through which the lonely Bellelife.
CLOUD-LAND.
like
Nephele then is the mist of morning tide, which vanishes, Daphne and Arethousa, when the sun becomes Chrysaor. The myths of the earth under its many names bring the clouds before us in other forms, as the Kouretes, who weave their mystic dances round the infant Zeus the Idaian Daktyls, who impart to the harp of Orpheus its irresistible power ; and the marvellous Telchines, who can change their forms at will. But the cloud-land in all its magnificence and
;
1
imperial array
is
displayed not so
much
in these
isolated
It
may
which
them
to us as
,.
Korkyra or Corfu and with Preller or lay stress on the fact that they are altogether a people of ships and of the sea, living far away from mortal men near the western Okeanos; but no one who
island
known
other writers
we may
Whether Scheria
be or be not the Mediterranean Korkyra, the meaning of most of the names occurring in the myth is beyond all
doubt
he
tells
the
275
CHAP,
Y1 *'
.
than they and did them sore harm, until Nausithoos led them away to Scheria, and there built them a city and planted them vineyards and raised temples to the gods. Here we have no sooner recalled to mind the nature of the Kyklops as the storm-cloud which clings to, or keeps its
1
on the rough mountain-side, than the whole story becomes transparent. The broad Hypereia is the upper region, where dwell also the Hyperboreans in their beautiful gardens. Nay, we may safely say that the Phaiakians are the Hyperboreans who have been driven from their early home by the black vapours between whom and themselves there can be no friendship. From these malignant foes they can but fly to Scheria, their fixed abode, 2 where these rugged shepherds 3 cannot trouble them. This new home then is that ideal land far away in the iff west, over which is spread the soft beauty of an everlasting twilight, unsullied by unseemly mists and murky vapours, where the radiant processions which gladden the eyes of mortal men only when the heavens are clear are ever passing through the streets and along the flower-clad hills. On this beautiful conception the imagination of the poet might feed, and find there an inexhaustible banquet and we need only mark the several images which he has chosen to see how faithfully he adheres (and it may be unconscious^) to the
flocks,
;
The palace
c
noos.
phenomena of cloud-land. He who has seen in the eastern or western sky as lit up by the rising or setting sun the cloudcapped towers and gorgeous temples catching the light on their burnished faces, can well feel whence came the surpassing and everlasting glory of the palace and the gardens
of Alkinoos.
all
canvas,
we may
Ocl. vi. 1,
&c.
akin to typos.
3
The
art:
avepes
that
denotes simply the firm land, It -would thus be Gr, Myth, i, 492.
of
clearly the
others.
x 2
276
BOOK
II.
Nay, who has not silver. and half convinced himself that forms
him
men
and beasts who people that shadowy kingdom ? Who has not seen there the dogs of gold and silver who guard the house of Alkinoos and on whom old age and death can never lay a finger the golden youths standing around the inmost shrine with torches in their hands, whose light never the busy maidens plying their golden distaffs as dies out their fingers run along the filmy threads spread on the bare
ground of the unfading ether ? Who does not understand the poet at once when he says that their marvellous skill
came from Athene, the goddess of the dawn ? And who does not see that in the gardens of this beautiful palace must
bloom
trees laden always with golden fruits, that here the west wind brings new blossoms before the old have soft ripened, that here fountains send their crystal streams to freshen the meadows which laugh beneath the radiant heaven?
It is certainly possible that in this description the poet may have introduced some features in the art or civilization of
his
but the magnificent imagination even of a Spanish beggar has never dreamed of a home so splendid as that of the Scherian chieftain, and assuredly golden statues and doors, silver stairs and brazen walls formed no part of
own day;
the possessions of any king of the east or the west from the days of the Homeric poets to our own. In truth, there is
The
fleets
nothing of the earth in this exquisite picture. In the PhaiaThe kian land sorrow and trouble are things unknown. where the dancers house of Alkinoos is the house of feasting, are never weary, and the harp is never silent. But the poet carries us to the true Phaiakian domain,
of Alkinoos.
none can outrun them on land or and we may well suppose that rival their skill on shipboard some consciousness of the meaning of his tale must have been present to the mind of the bard as he recounted the wonders of the Phaiakian ships. These mysterious vessels
;
have neither helmsmen nor rudders, rigging nor tackling but they know the thoughts and the minds of men. There
277
CHAP.
VII.
not a city nor a cornfield throughout the wide earth which they fail to visit, as they traverse the sea veiled in mist and cloud ; and in this their ceaseless voyaging they dread no
of that goodly fleet has ever been stranded or wrecked, for so the gods have ordained for the blameless Far in leaders and guides of all across the sounding seas.
disaster. 1
No bark
the distance only looms a danger of which the wise Nausithoos has dimly warned the king ; and whence can the
peril
come but from Poseidon, whose huge and ungentle But offspring drove them from their ancient heritage?
whether the sea-god will really be able to fulfil his threat and sink the gallant Phaiakian bark, is a matter which So xllkinoos is content to leave to the disposal of God. light of a sun which has not yet gone down dwell in the
but their beautiful ships are seen not only by Achaian eyes. The old Teutonic poet also beheld Skidbladnir, the magic bark of Freya ; the Icelander
the happy Phaiakian people
;
as the wish-breeze bore them Nor were these the only vessels endowed with the power and wisdom of the Phaiakian ships. The divine Argo can speak the language of men, and guide
Ellide,
its
myths.
which can carry all the Asas, may yet be folded up like a mist and carried in the hand like a garment; and thus the imagery of the cloud is interwoven with that of the earth and its teeming womb. One question only remains. If the ships of Alkinoos have neither helm, nor rudder, nor rigging, what can these ships be but the Phaiakians themselves, as they sail at will through the blue seas of heaven, not
bladnir,
1 In tho Norse story ofBigBird Dan the ship has become an iron boat but still sails of itself, if you only say, Boat, it In that boat there is an boat, go on.
; '
iron club,
little
lift
when you see the ship [which is bearing away the dawn-maiden] straight
ahead of you, and then
they'll get
such
In short, each time that look at yon.' the club (of the Marnts) is raised, the The old fiercer -will be the storm. myth is still further apparent in the When you've concluding direction. got to land, you've no need to bother the boat first yourself at all about turn it about and shove it off and say, Boat, boat, go back home.'
' ;
278
BOOK
>_
,'
_,
As the Kyklopes
beings
and love
who gladden them with their light. When the heavens are veiled with the murky storm vapours, the lovely Phaiakians may still be thought of as comforting the bright
hero in his sorrow
and hence the sympathy which by the agency of the dawn-goddess Athene is kindled in the heart of the pure Nausikaa for the stranger whom she finds on the
:
This
man
of
many
what he seems
and the
real nature of
the being
whom
Niobe
ar.d
content to wear. No sooner has Odysseus cleansed his face, than the soft locks flow down over his shoulders with the hue of the hyacinth flower, and his form gleams like a golden statue 3 and the same air of regal majesty is thrown over him when he stands in the assembly of the Phaiakians, who must love him when they see his glory. 4 Prom the sorrows of the forsaken Nephele we passed to
the happiness of the cloudland
itself.
Prom
this peaceful
region
we must
is
wife of Athamas.
Of the many
itself
Niobe, there
easily seen.
Her name
;
and
if in
called a
we might expect, conhimself when he relates the voyage of the Phaiakians as they carry Odysseus from Phaiakia to Ithaka. Hero the ship has oarsmen and oars, and these imply the furniture of other ships, which he has expressly denied to
The. poet, as
about to
tradicts
armed
die, he bids his men lay him in the boat and put him out to sea. This is the bark Ellide of Icelandic legend, the wonderful ship of the Norso tale of Shortshanks, which be-
them
2
before.
xiii.
;
93 Preller, Or. Myth. i. mysterious than the Phaiakian ships is the vessel without sail or rudder, which brings Scild, the son of
Od.
495.
Not
less
Sceaf, the skiff, to the coast of Scandia. Srildbccomcsthekingof the land, and in
comes bigger and bigger as soon as the hero steps into it, which goes without rudder or sail, and when he comes out becomes as small as it was before. This is, manifestly, nothing more than the swelling and shrinking of vapour: and so the ship which can carry all the Asas may be folded up like a napkin.
3
Od. Od,
vi.
225.
21.
viii.
279
CHAP.
VII.
heaven springs the light-crowned cloud. But the commoner version which represents her as a daughter of Tantalos is
still more significant. Here Mobe, the bride of the Theban Amphion, a being akin to Orpheus, Pan, and Hermes, becomes the mother of beautiful children, whose number varies as much as that of the sons and daughters of Endymion, or of the mystic Kouretes and Telchines. Then follows the rivalry of the proud mother with the mightier parent of Artemis and Phoibos the presumption of the mist or the ice which dares to match the golden-tinted clouds with the sun and moon in their splendour. The children of Leto are but two in number her own cluster round her, a blooming But Leto had only to carry the troop of sons and daughters. story of her troubles to her children, and the unerring arrows
Mobe
of
and there her grief turned her into stone, as the water turns into ice on the cold hill-side. 2 Local tradition so preserved the story that the people fancied that they saw on the heights of Sipylos the actual figure of Mobe mourning but in fact, there were many Mobes in for her children many lands, and the same luckless portion was the lot of all. 3
;
The number of these children is variously given in almost every account, The clouds are never the same. 3 Sophokles, speaks Antig. 830, expressly of the snow which never leaves her, and thus shows that he is dealing with the phenomena of congelation. 3 With many other names, that of Niobe may be traced back to a root snu, to flow, which yields the Sanskrit Nyava, snow, as from Dyu we have Dyava, i.e. Atjw. Hence Professor Max Miiller sees in Niobe the goddess of winter, whose children are smitten by the arrows of Phoibos and Artemis, us the winter gives place to summer. Thus the myth that there were none to bury
1
on her stony seat, point to the melting or weeping of the petrified or frozen
winter earth.
Professor
Max
Miiller
compares this myth with that of Chione (x c^> hiems, winter), who for presumption much like that of Niobe is slain by Preller, Gr. Myth. ii. 383, Artemis. takes a different view. 'Niobe ist selbst die Ehea dieser Bergen und di< Thaler [of Sipylos], 'die fruchtbare Mutter und doch sotraurig, im Friihlinge prangend in dem Schmucko bliihender Kinder, im Sommer, wenn die heissen
'
them because all who might have done so had been turned into stone, is explained as indicating the power of frost which congeals everything: and
thus also the tears of Niobe, as she
sits
der Cotter dee Lichtes treffen, und wie Rachel, die ubcr den Leichen ihrer Kinder sitzt und "will sich nicht trosten lassen, denn es ist aua mitihnen.'" He adds that the petrifaction of Niobe seems to indicate the tradition of some catastrophe. The catastrophe is simply that of every northern winter.
Pfeile
verwaist,
In the Vedic hymns, the cloud myths are inextricably intermingled with those of the dawn and the light. The very enemy of Indra hiding the stolen herds in his horrid den is but the storm-cloud which shuts up the rain-clouds ready to refresh the parched earth. He is Cacus who drags
the cattle of Geryon into his cave, and the Sphinx which
Of the beautiful
Indra thus stolen by the Panis Sarama is the guardian; each morning she comes forth to lead them to
home.
each evening she reappears to drive them The same scenes are repeated daily in the Homeric Thrinakia, when the cattle of the sun are tended by the nymphs Phaethousa and Lampetie, the fair-haired children
their pastures,
1
whom
But although the companions of Odysseus are made actually to slay some of these cows, and although strange signs
follow their crime, yet the
to
another
The Thrinaldan cattle are not the clouds, but the days of the year. The herds are seven in number, and in each herd are fifty cows, never less, and representing in all the three hundred and fifty days of
origin for these particular herds.
Thus in the story that the comrades of Odysseus did not return home with him because they slew the cattle of the sun, we may ' recognize an old proverbial or mythological expression, too literally interpreted even by Homer, and therefore turned into mythology.' If, then, as
Professor Mtiller adds, the original phrase ran that Odysseus
reached his
his
home because he
'
wasted their time, killed the days, i.e., the and were therefore punished, nothing would be more natural than that after a time their punishment should have been ascribed to their actually devouring the oxen in the island of Thrinakia.' 3
cattle of Helios,
1 In many popular talcs these blue pastures with the white flocks feeding on them are reflected in the water, and the sheep feeding far down in the depths are made the means by which I3oots or Dummling (the beggar Odysseus) luros Ids stupid brothers to their death. See the story of Big Peter and Little Peter,'
'
companions
ii.
Dasent's Norse Talcs ; tho Gaelic story of the Three Widows, Campbell, 224, 228, 237 ; and the German tale of the Little Farmer, Grimm.
in
- Sir G. C. Lewis, Ancients, 21.
Astronomy of
:
the
Chi$si $c.
ii.
166.
281
On
Homeric
or
enough has perhaps been said in the The swananalysis of the myths of Urvasi, Psyche, Ixion, and Aside- pi^Jdes. pios. These myths may each run into others which relate more exclusively to the earth or the sun; but the close connexion of earth, light and vapour, is so constantly present to the minds of all the Aryan tribes that it becomes almost impossible to set down any one myth, as a whole, as a specimen of one definite class; and thus the language
poems,
used of the powers of darkness themselves is applied to the gloomy storm-vapours, whether they appear as the monstrous Polyphemos, or as the three daughters of Phorkos,
wdio have but one tooth each
These beings JEschylos especially calls swanwe have the germ of a large family of legends common to all the Aryan tribes and extending, it would seem, far beyond them. We have already seen the clouds, whether as lit up by the sun or as refreshing the earth with rain, spoken of as cows tended by nymphs,
common.
while the
relentless
enemies, are
repulsive tribe,
But the Sphinx, one of the most prominent of this is called particularly the winged hound, and
1
These two The one classes of vapours are kept tolerably distinct. brings only famine and sickness the other recalls the dead earth to life, like the serpents with their snake-leaves in the stories of Glaukos, of Faithful John, and of Panch Phul Sometimes, however, the vapours play an interRanee.
as messengers of
sky.
mediate part, being neither wholly malignant, nor kindly. Thus in the Arabian Nights the rushing vapour is the roc,
which broods over its great luminous egg, the sun, and which haunts the sparkling valley of diamonds, the starry
6
i
TTTTjvhs
kvw.
282
BOOK
,_
**'
,
morning.
The Muses
ValkyHen.
Weathersky. In the Hymn to Apollon the clouds appear as the nymphs or goddesses who bathe the new-born Phoibos, and the white robe which they wrap around him is the garment of morning mist, through which his orb may be seen ascending amidst zones of gold. Among these nymphs are the Charites, who attend on Aphrodite, the lovely clouds which dance in the morning sky, while in the hymn of Kallimachos the clouds are plainly spoken of as the singing swans who hasten from Paktolos and fly seven times round Delos
at the birth of Phoibos,
who
seven notes as the complement of the musical scale. These beautiful beings in their thousand forms all spring from the water, whether
be Athene or Aphrodite, Melusina, or All therefore are the Apsaras or water-maidens, of Urvasi. whom the germs may be seen in Yedic hymns, while in
it
later
Hindu
Teutonic Yalkyrien
and the consolation addressed to the warriors of the Mahabharata is that by which Mahomet
'
A hero
slain is not to be
lamented, for he
ful
is
exalted in heaven.
Thousands of beauti-
nymphs
(apsaras)
Be my husband.' 2
nixies,
Here
all
men
wedded
to
fairies,
nymphs,
mermaids,
swan-maidens, or other supernatural beings. The details may vary indefinitely; but the Aryan and Turanian myths From the thought alike point to the same phenomena.
which regarded the cloud as an eagle or a swan, it was easy to pass to the idea that these birds were beautiful maidens, and hence that they could at will, or on the ending of the
inchantment, assume their
1
human
form.
This would, in
Gould, Curious Myths, second series, 146. Muir, SJcr. Texts, part iv. p. 235.
SWAN-MAIDENS.
fact,
283
CHAP.
be nothing more than the power exercised by Herakles, who, whenever he desired it, could lay'aside his robe of lion's Then would follow the myth, that the only way to skin.
capture these beings was to seize their garment of swan's or eagle's feathers, without which they were powerless ; and
this
late
,_*
reflected in a
thousand
tales
which
re-
how men, searching for something lost, have reached some peaceful lake (the blue heaven) on which were floating the silver swans, birds only in outward seeming, and so longSome as they were suffered to wear their feathery robes. this class, cited by specimens of Turanian myths belonging to
1
Mr. Gould, are noteworthy as containing not only this idea but all the chief incidents belonging to the Teutonic story of the Giant who had no Heart in his Body, and the Hindu tale of Among the Minussinian Tartars, Mr. Gould Punchkin.
adds, these maidens appear, like the Hellenic Harpyiai, as beino-s which scourge themselves into action with a sword,
and fly gorged with blood through the heavens, forty in number, yet running into one, like the many clouds absorbed The vapour in this, its less inviting into a single mass. aspect, is seen in the myth of Kyknos, the swan son of Ares,
or Sthenelos, or Poseidon (for
all
who
after a hard fight is In the legend of Helen and the Dioskouroi Zeus himself The comes to Lecta in the guise of a swan, as to Danae he appears in the form of a golden shower; and hence from
slain by Herakles.
swan-
|^
the two eggs sprung severally, according to one of many versions, Kastor and Helen, Polydeukes and Klytaimnestra,
while others say that the brothers were the sons of Zeus, and Helen the child of the mortal Tyndareos. When the notion which regarded Helen as doomed to bring ruin on
her kinsfolk and friends had been more fully developed, the story ran that the egg came not from Leda but from Nemesis, the power which, like the Norns, gives to each
man
1
his portion.
The
ideas
of
inchantment
and transformation
once
These robes in other tales become which the Persian Peri "cannot leave the human husband Keightley, to whom she is wedded.
Fairy Mythology, 21. With these legends we may also compare the stories of mermaids who unite themselves with human
lovers.
254
300K
-
in
nchanted
awakened ran riot in a crowd of stories which resemble some of their features the myths of which the tale of Psyche and Eros is a type in others, the legends in which
;
sister,
Boots or Cinderella,
little
is
in the
of
him
in
times past, and, in others again, the narratives of jealous wives or stepmothers, found in the mythology of all the
Thus the ship and the swan are both prominent in the mediaeval romance of the Knight of the Swan, in which the son of queen Matabrune, having married the beautiful Beatrice, leaves her in his mother's
tribes.
Aryan
charge.
After his departure, Beatrice gives birth to six sons and a daughter, each with a silver collar round its neck. These children the stepmother seeks to destroy, but
she
is
human
victim.
At length Matabrune
is
may
be
silver collar, and again she decrees their death. They are, however, only deprived of their collars, and the loss changes
them
hermit
into
swans,
all
whom
is
a of
had taken
away
companion.
Helias,
when
she
about
and then makes a vow that he will never until he has delivered his brothers and sister from the inchantment. Having recovered five of the collars, he
succeeds at length in restoring five to their human shape ; but one remains spellbound, his collar having been melted to make a drinking-cup for Matabrune. This swanbrother now appears drawing a boat, in which Helias embarks, and arriving at
Neumagen fights on behalf of the lady who claimed the duchy of Bouillon. His victory makes him duke of Bouillon, but he warns the duchess that if she asks his name he must leave her. In due time the quesis
tion
reappearing,
Helias
vanishes
like
Eros
when seen by
some of other
Psyche.
1
who
gives
In Grimm's story of The WhitP and the Black Bride,' the mother and
but at the same moment a snow-white swan is seen swimming down the
stream.
BAI.
285
of Brabantine
myth
CHAP,
'_.
,
eala,
swan.
This
myth has been worked into the traditions European towns, and attached, like the story of the early The tale life of Cyrus, to names undoubtedly historical.
words, that an old
of
itself
agrees in
many
Teutonic legends but with the Hindu story of Guzra Bai, the Beatrice of the tale of Truth's Triumph. This beautiful
maiden
plain of
is
teeming source of life as dison which it works. tinguished from the dead She thus becomes at once, like Beatrice, the mother of many children; here the number is a hundred and one,
or inert matter
this one being as
ful children
Nysa
the
These beauti-
awaken the jealousy and hatred of the twelve childless wives to whom the husband of Guzra Bai was already married, and in whom we may see an image of the months of the year or the hours of the night, in themselves
producing nothing, until the spring reawakens the slumbering earth or the dawn flushes the eastern sky. In either
case, it is
otherwise
but one hour or one day doing the work which be unable to
follows a series of transformations
accomplish.
which
have the effect of counteracting the arts queens as those of Matabrune are frustrated in the western story, and which end in the change of all the brothers not
into
of the twelve
swans but into crows, the only one of Guzra Bai's who is saved being the daughter, as Helias alone is not transformed in the myth of Matabrune. The subsequent marriage of Guzra Bai's daughter under the name of Draupadi to a king who sees her feeding the crows is the return of Persephone from the lower world in more than her
children
former beauty.
child
Draupadi now becomes the mother of a who avenges her wrongs as Perseus requites the persecutors of Danae, and punishes the demon who, with the wand of Kirke, had changed his mother's brothers into crows. The final incident is the deliverance of Guzra Bai from the
286
BOOK
II.
As the storm-cloud brooding over the earth without yielding rain became in Greek mythology the Theban Sphinx or the Pythian Dragon, so the clouds as rain-givers were the
Hyades or the rainy sisters. These, it is obvious, might be described in a hundred ways, and accordingly almost every mythographer has a different account to give of them. They are the daughters of Atlas and Aithra, the heaven and the pure air, or of Okeanos, the water, or of Erechtheus (the earth) and thus the myths do but repeat the genera;
am
And
giving
it
denote their cherishing, fructifyThey are the nymphs of Nysa ing, and reviving powers. or Dodona, who guard the infant Dionysos, or are the
all
1
names which
by causing Medeia, the wise dawn-goddess, to restore them to youth when they had grown old, a sight witnessed every morning. These nymphs are seen again in their sisters the Pleiades, whose name, pointing only to their watery nature, became confused with that of the ring dove, Peleias, and so the story ran that they were changed
requites
into doves
and placed among the stars. Generally these Pleiades are seven in number, six being visible and one Without taking into account any supposed invisible. astronomical explanations, it is enough to note that the same difference marks the stories already cited of Matabrune, Guzra Bai, and others, in which of a troop of children some remain visible while the rest vanish through
incliantment.
The
Graiai.
These
But we may think also of clouds as dwelling for ever far away in the doubtful gloaming, not wholly dark, but faintly
1
THE GLOAMING.
visible in
287
CHAP,
'
-.
a weird and dismal twilight. These clouds, which are never kindled into beauty by the rays of the sun, are the Graiai, the daughter of Phorkys, whose hair was grey from
away
into night.
The
we have
seen, to
and the story of the single tooth and the would follow from the notion of their evercommon eye lasting old age, even if these features were not suggested by myths like those of Polyphemos and the Kyklopes. Some of the features which characterise these gloomy sisters were transferred to the Gorgons, if the idea of one Gorgon, as in our Iliad and Odyssey, be older than the Hesiodic myth of the three Gorgon daughters of Phorkys and Keto, Stheino or Stheno, Euryale, and Medousa. The Gorgo of the Odyssey is the hideous head of a monster belonging to the nether world in the Odyssey she is a In the being with an awful face and a terrific glance. Hesiodic Theogony the two undying and barren sisters are sharply distinguished from Medousa, the woman of pitiable
1
The Gorgons
*
woes. 2
It
is,
doom passed on her, take the may represent the hideous storm
vapours streaming across the heaven at night, and still more likely that the wings and claws given to her fearful sisters
attest their cloud nature.
But
account for
the myth
who once
Walked in beauty like the night Of cloudless climes and starry skies,
whom
meadow among
the
and who became the mother of the mighty who rose from heaven to the house of Zeus, where he is the bearer of thunders and lightnings to the king of gods and men. Here plainly Medousa is none other than Leto, the mother of
flowers of spring,
1 Among the many monsters which are either children of Poseidon or are sent up by him from the sea are the two serpents who destroy Laokoon and his
the
The storm-cloud here assumes snake form which in the Hindu mythology belongs to Vritra and Ahi. - hvypa ira6ovaa. Hes. Theog, 27G.
sons.
Chrysaor, the lord of the golden sword in other words, the night in its benignant aspect as the parent of the sun, and
:
must not the birth of the sun be fatal to the darkness from which it springs ? Hence Perseus, the child of the golden shower, must bring her weary woe to
therefore as mortal, for
The remaining feature of the story is the early loveliness of Medousa, which tempts her into rivalry with the dawn goddess Athene herself, a rivalry which they who know
an end.
the moonlit nights of the Mediterranean can well understand. But let the storm-clouds pass across the sky, and the maiden's beauty is at once marred. She is no longer the darling of
Poseidon,
sporting on the grassy shore.
like serpents across
The unseemly
her once beautiful face, vapours stream night-breeze, and a look of hissing with the breath of the agony unutterable comes over her countenance, chilling and freezing the hearts' blood of those who gaze on the brow
of the storm-tormented night.
life;
in
other words,
Phoibos smites and scatters the murky mists. But although Medousa may die, the source from which the storm-clouds
sister's
immortal.
In the Theban myth of Aktaion, the son of the Kadmeian Autonoe, the cloud appears as a huntsman who has been
taught by the Kentaur Cheiron, but who is torn to pieces by his own dogs, just as the large masses of vapour are rent
and scattered by the wind, which bear them across the sky. As this rending is most easily seen in a heaven tolerably free from clouds, so the story ran that Aktaion was thus punished because he had rashly looked on Artemis while she was
bathing in the fountain of Gargaphia.
Not
less
significant
is
the
myth
of Pegasos, the
off-
spring of
piles of
which seem to rise as if on eagle's wings to the highest heaven, and in whose bosom may lurk the lightnings and thunders of Zeus. Like Athene and Aphrodite, like Daphne and Arethousa, this horse of the morning (Eos) must be born from the waters hence he is Pegasos, sprung
sunlit cloud,
;
ATHENE CHALINITIS.
from the fountains of Poseidon, the
Bellerophon
is
289
sea. 1
On
this
horse
:
CHAP.
mounted
Y* L
.
but he becomes possessed of this steed only by the aid of Athene Chalinitis, who, giving- him a bridle, enables him to catch the horse as he drinks from the well Peirene, or, as
others said, brings
bridled.
When
either
heaven on the back of his steed, but was from giddiness, while the horse continued to soar upwards, like the cumuli clouds which far outstrip the sun as they rise with him into the sky.
sought to
thrown
Pegasos, however,
is
Pegasos
Zeus
he
is
2
also connected
swan forms
morning breezes. The same blending myths of vapour and wind is seen in the rivalry of the between the Pierides and the Helikonian Muses. When the former sang, everything, it is said, became dark and gloomy, as when the wind sighs through the pinewoods at night, while with the song of the Muses the light of gladness returned, and Helikon itself leaped up in its joy and rose heavenwards, until a blow from the hoof of Pegasos smote it down, as a sudden thunderstorm may check the soaring cirri in their heavenward way. But Pegasos is still in this myth the moisture-laden cloud. From the spot dinted by his hoof sprang the fountain Hippokrene, whether in Boiotia or
in Aro'os.
Section
IV. THE
The vapour in more than one of its aspects receives another embodiment in the myth of Orion, which in almost
all
its
many
Like
other
horse
Grimm's story of the Two Wanderers (Dioskouroi), which courses thrice round the castle yard as swiftly This is as lightning, and then falls. the moment of the lightning flash, and the story of course goes on to say that
at the same moment a fearful noise was heard, and a piece out of the ground of the court rose up into the air like a of water leaps ball,' and a stream
forth,
as
Sphinx, 2 Kallim.
Hymn
to JDdos,
255.
VOL.
II.
290
BOOK
._
is
IL
the waters, as a son whether of Poseidon and Euryale, or He grows np a mighty hunter, the cloud of Oinopion.
ranging in wild freedom over hills and valleys. At Chios he sees the beautiful Aero, but when he seeks to make her his bride, he is blinded by her father, who, on the advice of
Dionysos, comes upon
that he
him
in his sleep.
if
Orion
is
now
told
he would go to the east Thither he is led by the rising sun. and look toward the help of Hephaistos, who sends Kedalion as his guide. On his return he vainly tries to seize and punish the man who had blinded him, and then wandering onwards meets
yet recover his sight
may
and
is
loved by Artemis.
left in
It is
cloud
darkness
covering
his death
its brilliance
when the sun goes down, but rewhen he rises again in the east. Of
were
told.
many
stories
In the Odyssey he
is
dawn land, by Artemis, who is jealous In another version Artemis slays him unwittingly, having aimed at a mark on the sea which Phoibos had declared that she could not hit. This mark
slain in Ortygia, the
waters
Seirios.
Orion was after his death placed among the constellations, and his hound became the dog- star Seirios, who marks the
He
is
who
is burns up 2 stayed from his ravages only by the moistening heaven. This, however, is but one of the countless myths springing
who
destroys his
own
earth.
1
The word
qvMos
dcr'fjp.
Id's
Ikp-cuos.
35S.
SKY.
291.
Herakles
and the Greek Helios, Here, and and with Archilochos and Suidas it was still a
1
CHAP.
YI1
. '
mere name for the sun. The characteristics of the Phaiakians and their ships The Telcarry us to other myths of the clouds and the light. As K ureUsl roaming over hill and dale, as visiting every corn-field and seeing all the works of men, and as endowed with powers of thought, these mysterious vessels are possessed in some measure of the wisdom of Phoibos himself. The kindred Telchines and Kouretes, the unwearied dancers who move across the skies, have the power also of changing their forms
If we put these attributes together, we at once have the wise yet treacherous, and the capricious yet truthful Proteus, the Farmer Weathersky of Teutonic tales. This strange being is the old man of the sea, who reappears in
<l
at will. 2
He
is
necessarily a subject,
lives
some
and he
myth
Memnon.
the heat
Huge
is
flocks of seals
sport around
;
him
in the
greatest he raises
the repose of the cloud armies which hang round the heaven in the hot noon-tide.
It is at this time that Virgil represents Aristaios as fettering
the old
man by
is
The
attempt
followed by
becomes first a fire, changes before he is compelled to return to his proper form. In Proteus, the king of Egypt, we have one of those persons
In .support of his assertion that was a name for any glittering orb or star, Prellor quotes Hesychios Znplov Kwhs Stejv SocpoKKvs rhp Lro&ov kvvo, 6 5^ >Ap X i\o X os rbv ^Kiov, "IfivKos bh irdura ra &<rr P a, and adds 'Suidas kennt die Form Seir fur Sonne. Arat. Vlioin. 331 os pa fxaKiara '0e'a (teipiaei, Kai fj.iv KaKfova uvdpxiroi. Seipioj/.' G Myth i 355 - So with 'the fairy in the Ballad of
1
many changes
We
Seirios
* r
size
wo can convert
An
As
the
loit ->'
halL
'he sequel of the ballad specifies all the changes of Thetis when Peleus seeks to
Tamlane:
I quit
h ? L?5"
% ^gSS^t
Talcs.
,,
,,
,. lI
Bt
my body when
it
Frera
Deccan
t:
Or unto
repair
292
BOOK
,
whom
I]:
with Helen in the course of his homeward wanderings from It was easy to say that the real Helen went no Sparta. further, and that the Helen seen in Hion was only a phantom
with which Proteus cheated the senses of Paris and his countrymen. It is enough to remark that of such a tale the
poets of our Iliad and Odyssey
know nothing
Egyptian Proteus is none other than the son of Poseidon, gifted with more than the wisdom of Hermes,
293
CHAPTER
VIII.
THE EARTH.
I. DIONYSOS.
Section
the simple tale how Dionysos in The capthe first bloom of youth was sitting on a jutting rock by the p^onysos. sea-shore, a purple robe thrown over his shoulders and his
tells
golden locks streaming from his head, when he was seized by some Tyrrhenian mariners who had seen him as they were sailing by. These men placed him on board their vessel and strongly bound him, but the chains snapped like twigs and fell from his hands and feet, while he sat smiling
on them with his deep blue eyes. The helmsman at once saw the folly of his comrades, and bade them let him go lest the god, for such he must be, should do them some harm. His words fell on unheeding ears, and they declared that they would take him away to Kypros, Egypt, or the Hyperborean land. But no sooner had they taken to their oars than a purple stream flowed along the decks, and the air was Then the vine-plant shot up the filled with its fragrance. masts, and its branches laden with rosy fruit hung from the
yardarms, mingled with clustering ivy, while the oar pegs were all wreathed in glistening garlands. The sailors now beseech Medeidcs, the steersman, to bring the ship to shore but it is too late. For Dionysos now took the forms of a lion and a bear, and thus rushing upon them drove the cruel
mariners into the sea, where they became dolphins, Avhile the good steersman was crowned with honour and glory. In this story we have clearly the manifestation of that power which ripens the fruits of the earth, and more especially the vine, in the several
Dionysos
greosf
stages from
its
germ
to its
294
BOOK
,
The
fearful
is
the
Its juice
may
flow as a quiet stream, filling the air with sweet odours, but
men
drink of
it its
aspect
is
changed, and
it
is merely and by no means designedly malignant. Nor is the god himself invested with the majesty of the supreme Zeus, or of Phoibos or Poseidon, although the helmsman says that either of these gods may possibly have taken the form of the youthful Dionysos. But before we find ourselves in hisDionysos torical Hellas a complete change has taken place. is now the horned Zagreos after his death and resurrection, and the myth of the son of Semele is anticipated or repeated by the legend of this child of Persephone, whom his father Zeus places beside him on his throne. In this, as in other cases, the jealousy of Here is roused, and at her instigation the Titans slay Zagreos, and cutting up his limbs, leave only
whose character
his heart,
which Athene carries to Zeus. This heart is given This to Semele, who thus becomes the mother of Dionysos. slaughter and cutting up of Zagreos is only another form of the rape of Persephone herself. It is the stripping off of leaves and fruits in the gloomy autumn which leaves only
the heart or trunk of the tree to give birth to the foliage of
is
the
Henceforth
with Demeter, who really is his mother also, Dionysos beand into his mythology are comes a deity of the first rank
;
Dionysos an "
derer^
on the popular Hellenic religion. The opposition of the Thrakian Lykourgos and the Theban Pentheus to the frenzied rites thus foisted on the cultus of Dionysos is among the few indications of historical facts exhibited in Hellenic mythology. In the Homeric hymn the Tyrrhenian mariners avow their 011 of taking Dionysos to Egypt, or Ethiopia, or the i 1^ 01
Hyperborean land
and
i
this idea of
t
Gvote, ffl$t
Greece,
31,
295
CHAP,
^*
when the notion was once suggested, every country and even every town would naturally frame its own story of the wonderful things done by Dionysos as he abode
in detail, for
in each. Thus he flays Damaskos alive for refusing to allow the introduction of the vine which Dionysos had discovered, and a false etymology suggested the myth that a tiger bore
But wherever he goes there is the same monotonous exhibition of fury and frenzy by which mothers become strange unto their own flesh and maidens abandon themselves to frantic excitement. All this is merely translating into action phrases which might tell of the and the epithets applied manifest powers of the wine-god to him show that these phrase's were not limited merely to In his gentler aspects his exciting or maddening influences.
him
he
is
against plagues.
the giver of joy, the healer of sicknesses, the guardian As such he is even a lawgiver, and a pro-
moter of peace and concord. As kindling new or strange thoughts in the mind, he is a giver of wisdom and the reIn this, as his more vealer of hidden secrets of the future. genuine and earlier character, he is attended by the beautiful Charites, the maidens and ministers of the dawn-goddess Aphrodite, who give place in the later mythology to fearful
troops of raging Mainades or Bassarides, bearing in their
hands the budding thyrsus, which marks the connection of this cultus with that of the great restoring or revivifying
forces of the world.
by his
attri- Skmysos.
Weak and
;
Hermes
or Phoibos himself, he
boundless power
him
the languid and voluptuous character which marks the early Hence the story that foliage and vegetation of summer.
Persephone placed her child Dionysos in the hands of Ino and Athamas to be brought up as a girl and from this character of feminine gracefulness he passes to the vehement licence of his heated worshippers,
;
296
BOOK
is
The moDionysos
birth.
He is spoken of sometimes as a son of 16, or of Arge, of Dione, or Amaltheia, the nurse of Zeus ; and there was a
which related how, when Kadmos heard that Zeus had his child Semele a mother, he placed her and her babe in a chest, and launched them, as Akrisios launched Danae and her infant, upon the sea. The chest, according to local tradition, was carried to Brasiai, where the babe was rescued by Ino Semele, who was found dead, being solemnly buried on the shore.
tale
made
of Pprsfi phone,
and most clearly the history of the earth through the changing year is to be found not so much in the legend of Adonis as in the legend of Persephone herself. This story as related in the Hymn to Demeter tells us how the beautiful maiden (and in her relagives most fully
tions with the upper world she
is
Nysian plain, when far away across the meadow her eye caught the gleam of a narcissus flower. As she ran towards it alone, a fragrance, which reached to the heaven and made the earth and sea laugh for gladness, filled her with delight but when she stretched out her arms to seize the stalk with its hundred flowers, the earth gaped, and before her stood the immortal horses bearing the car of the king Polydegmon, who placed her by his side. In vain the maiden cried aloud, and made her prayer to the son of Kronos for Zeus was far away> receiving the prayers and offerings of men in his holy place, and there was none to hear save Hekate, who in her secret cave heard the wail of her agony, and Helios, the bright son of Hyperion, and one other the loving mother,
;
1 reller, Gr. Myth. i. r>23, regards the name Dionysos as simply an epithet of Zeus as the Nysaian or ripening god ' Der Name scheint einen feuchten, saftig fruchtbaren Ort zu bedeuten, "wie
jenes
Umgebung
der
Musen
297
CHAP.
VIII.
cave of Hekate, who knew only of the theft of the maiden, From Helios, but could not tell whither she had gone.
whom
clearer tidings
who
reigns in the
unseen land beneath the earth. The grief of the mourning mother is almost swallowed up in rage, as she leaves the
home
men, so changed in form, and so closely veiled that none could know the beautiful queen who had till then shed a charm of loveliness over all the wide world. At last she sat down by the wayside, near Eleusis, where the maidens of the city come to draw water from the fountain. Here, when questioned by the daughters of Keleos the king, the mourner tells them that her name is Deo, and that, having escaped from Cretan kidnappers, she seeks a refuge and a home, where she may nurse young children. Such a home she finds in the house of Keleos, which the poet makes her enter
cities of
veiled from
head to
foot. 1
utter in
answer to the kindly greetings of Metaneira, and the deep gloom is lessened only by the jests and sarcasms of Iambe. When Metaneira offers her wine, she says that now she may not taste it, but asks for a draught of water mingled with flour and mint, and then takes charge of the new-born son of
Keleos,
whom
she names
Demophoon.
babe thrives marvellously, though he has no nourishment The kindly nurse designs, ineither of bread or of milk. deed, to make him immortal and thus by day she anoints him with ambrosia, and in the night she plunges him, like
;
by the
a torch, into a bath of fire. But her purpose is frustrated folly of Metaneira, who, seeing the child thus basking
1 The hymn writer forgets for a moment the veiled Mater Dolorosa, when
touched the roof, while a blaze of light streamed through the doors and filled
the d-welling.
298
BOOK
<,'
to the return of Persephone, who leaps with delight for the joy that is coming. Still he cannot altogether give up his bride, and Persephone finds that she has unwittingly eaten the pomegranate seed, and must come back to Aidoneus again. But even with this condition the
1
degmon consents
is
scarcely lessened.
A
;
Hades through all the other months she is to be once more the beautiful maiden who sported on the plains of Nysa. The wrath of Demeter
grief, the air is filled with fragrance, and the corn-fields wave with the ripening grain. In Teutonic tradition Persephone is represented by Iduna, the beautiful, whom Loki brings back in the shape of a quail Wachtel), a myth which cannot fail to remind us of Artemis Ortygia. Loki here distinctly plays the part of Per(
Iduna.
him
as he bears
away Iduna,
1
Gorgon
sisters
way
ward tier Grranatapfel als Symbol des Zeugung Und Empfahgniss verwendet, was wohl davon berriibrt dass er, well seine Kerne zugleich Samenkerne sind, Samenbehaltniss ist und insofern diese Kerne in zahlreicber Menge in ihm entbalten sind, diento er sehr passend zum Symbol
haufigsten
;
'Am
don Mytben erscbeint der Granatbaum als entsprossen aus dem auf die Erdo geflossenen Blute eines des Zeugegliedes beraubten Grottes und Nana, die Tochter des Flussgotts Sangarus, wurde scbon dadurch schwanger, weil sie einen Granatapfel in ihren Scbooss gelegt batte (Arnob. adi\ Gent. 5).' Nork s,v,
:
des Gescblecbtsvcrbaltnisses,
...
In
Apfel.
290
CHAP;
s.
Hyperborean gardens. This myth in Bunsen's belief an exact counterpart of the earliest myth of Heraldes, 'is who falls into the sleep of winter and lies there stiff and
stark
till
,__.
Iolaus wakes
him by
This idea of the palsied or feeble sun is reproduced in the Egyptian Harp-i-chruti (the Grecised Harpokrates), the sun regarded as an infant, the lame child of Isis, the earth,
phrase which carries us to that wide class of legends, which speak of the sun, or the wind, or the light, as weak, if not impotent, in their first manifestations. Osiris can be avenged
only by Horos, the full-grown sun, after the vernal equinox. Although with the mythical history of Persephone are Thestumingled some institutional legends explaining the ritual of Narcilus.
myth
itself is so
transparent
The
stupifying narcis-
hundred flowers springing from a single stem is yet in the opinion of Colonel Mure a monstrous hyperbole sleep the vegetation of it must be a narcotic which lulls to nature in the bright yet sad autumn days when heaven and earth smile with the beauty of the dying year, and the myth necessarily chose the flower whose name denoted this dreamy
;
lethargy.
ter of
Even in her gloomy nether abode the characShe is still not the maiden is not wholly changed.
who
yearning to be clasped once more in her mother's arms. That mother is carefully nursing the child of Keleos, the seed which grows without food or drink, except the nourish-
ment
dew and the heat which still lurks in the bosom of the winter-smitten earth. But while she is engaged in this task, she is mourning still for the daughter who has
of the
been taken away from her, and the dreary time which passes before they meet again is the reign of the gloomy winter, which keeps the leaves off the trees and condemns the tillers
of the soil to unwilling idleness. The sequel of the hymn simply depicts the joy of returning spring and summer, when the mourning mother is exalted in glory to the everlasting halls of Olympos.
Hence, so
far as the
meaning of
the myth is concerned, it matters little whether Demeter be herself the earth grieving for the lost treasures of summer,
300
MYTHOLOGY OP
or the
*
BOOK
II
.
for the
desolation of the
Th
f
w-
loep
^is
stoi
is
ference between
to leave on the
rection.
Its
summer and winter is sufficiently marked mind the impression of death and resurit is
in
The beautiful summer flowers is as truly the bride of the sun as is the blushing dawn with its violet tints. The grief of Demeter for Kore is the sorrow of Apollon when
fact repeated virtually in every solar legend.
converse is the mourning of Psyche Endymion. But there is hope for all. Sarpedon, Adonis, Memnon, Arethousa shall all rise again, but only when the time is come to join the being who has loved them, or who has the power to rouse them from their sleep. The utter barrenness of the earth, so long as the wrath of Demeter lasts, answers to the locking up of the treasures in Teutonic folk-lore but the awakening of spring may be said to be the result of the return, not only of the maiden from the underworld, but of the sun from the far-off regions to which he had departed. In the former case the divine messenger comes to summon the daughter from the unseen land; in the other the sleeper rests unawakened until she feels the magic touch of the only being who can rouse her. With either of these ideas it was possible and easy to work out the myth into an infinite variety of detail and thus in the northern story Persephone becomes the maiden Brynbereft of
its
Daphne, as
hild
who
the
Hindu
surrounded by seven
hedges of spears.
But she must sleep until the knight arrives who is to slay the dragon, and the successful exploit of Sigurd would suggest the failure of weaker men who had made the same attempt before him. Thus we have the germ of those countless tales in which the father promises to be1
Professor
Max
latter explanation
to the Sanskrit
and
name
dyavamatar. Lectures, second series, 517. If Demeter, or Deo, as she also styles herself, be only a name for the earth, then Gaia stands to Demeter, in the relation of Nereus to
Poseidon or Holios to Apollon. Gaia thus the actual soil from which the deadly narcissus springs, and therefore the accomplice of Polydegmon, -while Demeter is the mysterious power which
is
causes
ripen.
all
living
things
to
grow and
301
CHAP,
>_.
'
,
work
his
all
it
who guards her dwelling, death being who try and fail. The victorious knight
sufficient strength to
the sun
when
has gained
break the
free
and
set,
making
from her deathlike slumbers. This is the simple tale of Dornroschen or Briar Eose, who pricks her finger with a spindle and falls into a sleep of a hundred years, the spindle answering here to the stupifying narcissus in the myth of Persephone. This sudden touch of winter, arresting all the life and activity of nature, followed in some climates by a
return of spring scarcely less sudden, would naturally suggest the idea of human sleepers resuming their tasks at the
precise point at
which they were interrupted ; and thus when, after many princes who had died while trying to force their way through the hedge of briars, the king's son arrives at the end of the fated time and finds the way open, an air of burlesque is given to the tale (scarcely more extravagant, however, than that which Euripides has imparted to the deliverer of Alkestis), and the cook on his waking gives the scullion boy a blow which he had raised his hand to strike a
hundred years ago.
told in
is
This myth of the stealing away of the summer-child is Tho Grimm's story of Kapunzel, where the witch's garden ^upunzel the earth with its fertilising powers pent up within high
Kapunzel herself is Kore, the maiden, the Rose of the Alhambra, while the witch is the icy Fredegonda, whose story Washington Irving has told with marvellous but unconscious fidelity. The maiden is shut up, like Danae, in a high tower, but the sequel reverses the Argive legend. It is not Zeus who comes in the form of a golden shower, but the prince who ascends on the long golden locks which stream to the earth from the head of Kapunzel. In the story of the Dwarfs Persephone is the maiden who eats a golden apple (the narkissos), and thereupon sinks a hundred
walls.
102
BOOK
II.
Wood, which
ice, at
The
sides crack,
;
'
walls
the beams groaned as if they were being riven away from their fastenings the stairs fell down, and at last it seemed as if the whole roof fell in.' On waking from her
;
sleep the
maiden
finds herself in
rounded by regal luxuries. The maiden has returned from the dreary abode of Hades to the green couch of the lifegiving mother.
of the
Nix of the
Mill Pond. In this tale, the dawn-bride, severed from her husband, betakes herself to an old woman, who comforts her
and bids her comb her long hair by the water-side and see what would happen. As she plies her golden comb, a wave rolling to the bank carries it away. Presently the waters began to bubble and the head of the huntsman (Alpheios)
appears.
fully,
'
He
on and
woman, who
and
'
appeared
not only the head, but half the body of the man,
stretched out his arms towards his wife
;
who
but at the same moment a wave came and covering his head drew him down, again.' The third time she comes with a spinning-wheel of gold (the wheel of Ixion), and the huntsman leaping out of the waters hurries away with his wife from the demons who seek to seize them. In the story of Jungfrau Maleen (Kore), the princess and her maid are shut up in a dark
tower, and are constrained to scrape a hole through the wall
in order to let in the light.
When
they see a blue sky, but everything on the earth is desolate as at the close of a northern winter, and like Cinderella, the
maiden
palace,
is
where at length, as
becomes the
oUd
CHAP.
v_
prince
The Norse
tale of the
her
falls
Hen
down
^1^
disconsolate be-
'who is hard and drink, and has no one pinched, she knows, for meat with her,' a true picture of the lonely Demeter on the EleuThe Einkrank (Hades) of the German story sinian plain. is here a Troll, who is cheated in the same way, the sisters whom the Maiden sends back to the upper world before herself being the less genial spring-days which precede the return of the true summer. In the Spanish story Jungfrau Maleen assumes a less She is here the ill-tempered princess, who attractive form. To this strongs is shut up in a castle which has no door. hold comes a poor young knight in search of adventures, the Odysseus, Sigurd, Boots, or Beggar, of Greek and Teutonic legends and he and his three companions for a long time The grip of strive in vain to make a breach in the wall. winter is too strong to be overcome, and the hill of ice cannot yet be scaled. At last they hear a cry which seems to come from an old well overgrown with creeping plants but on opening the cover of the well, they find that the hole
cause she cannot get back to her mother,
;
The
ill-
p^
e
s#
seems to go down to the very depths of the earth, in short, They then set to work to twist a rope by which to Hades. to descend for the rescue of the maiden who is imprisoned
in this dismal
dungeon
but when
further
it
is
share
in
the enterprise.
Sigurd alone can ride through the flames to awaken Brynhild, and the young knight alone has the courage to go The maiden who has been down into the black abyss.
by a horned demon becomes, of course, the For awhile she behaves fairly, but at length knight's wife. her ill temper so far gets the better of her that the knight
carried off
is
heartily glad
when
T
the
demon
takes her
In other words, the w orn-out summer puts on the sorry garb of autumn, and is again carried away into the winter-land. But far more noteworthy is the Hindu story of Little
Surya Bai, or the sun-child, as exhibiting a developement of
1
'
and
traditional,
304
BOOK
__
y:
the myth far more elaborate than that of either Hellenic or Teutonic legends. This beautiful child, the daughter of a poor milkwoman, is stolen by two eagles, who bear her to a
nest
made
doors.
wood hooped with iron, and having seven Here, having lavished upon her all the costliest
of
for her little finger.
and fetch a While they are still away, the fire in the nest, without which the maiden could not cook her food, is put out and in her perplexity, Surya, peering over the walls of the nest, sees smoke curling up afar off, and going towards it, finds herself at the house of a Eakshas, or evil demon, whose mother tries to keep her
diamond ring
Surya Bai, howand when the Eakshas, learning from his mother what a prize he had missed, comes to the nest, he finds the little maiden asleep, and in his frantic efforts to break open the walls, leaves a piece of his claw sticking in
ever, will not stay
;
that she
may
This nail
is,
which wounds Briar Eose and the narcissus which stupifies Persephone ; and thus Surya, placing her hand unwittingly upon it, loses all consciousness. In this state she is found by a Rajah, who, after gazing long upon her, feels sure that
her slumber
is
not the sleep of death, and spies the claw As soon as it is taken out, Surya
revives, and becomes the bride of the Rajah, thus rousing the jealousy of his other wife, as 16 rouses the jealousy of
Here
for
and like 16, Surya is made to disappear, not by the ; stinging of a gadfly, but by the fate which Here had designed
Semele and her child Dionysos. Surya is enticed to the edge of a tank and thrown in ; but on the spot where she fell there sprang up a golden sunflower, which the Eajah sees as he wanders about in his inconsolable agony. The
flower bends lovingly towards him, and he lavishes on it the wealth of affection which he had bestowed on Surya, until the jealous wife has the flower carried into a forest and
burnt.
blossom on
ashes a mango tree rises, with one fair topmost bough, which swells into a fruit so beautiful that it is to be kept only for the Eajah. This mango, when ripe, falls into the can of the poor milkwoman,
its
its
From
305
who
home, and is astonished to see that the can CHAP. VI a. contains not a mango, but a tiny lady richly dressed in red and gold and no bigger than the fruit. But she grows with wonderful quickness, and when she reaches her full stature, she is again seen by the Eajah, who claims his bride, but is repulsed by the milkwoman. The truth, however, cannot be hid: and the Eajah and the milkwoman each recognise the lost maiden, when Surya tells her own tale and confesses that an irresistible impulse made her throw herself into the milk can, while her form was yet that of the mango. The milkwoman of this myth is simply Demeter in the The " aspect with which the Vedic hymn- writers were most familiar. eJJ To them the earth was pre-eminently the being who nourishes all living things with heavenly milk, who satisfies all The eagles which desires without being herself exhausted. clouds of sunrise and sunset the Ascarry the child are the vius or the Dioskouroi, who carry away Aithra from Athens, the swan-maidens of Teutonic folk-lore, the Erinyes and HarThe nest is the secret place where pyiai of Hellenic legend. Persephone is hidden, whether Hades, or the lonely heath where Brynhild sleeps, or the gloomy Ninheim where Fafnir guards the stolen treasures. Bat dreary though it may be, it is not without fire to keep up the maiden's life, as that of Demophoon is strengthened by the fiery bath of Demeter.
carries
it
1
The journey
of spring.
may
first
vegetation
From
this
slumber she
who, like Sigurd, is the sun. The jealousy of the elder queen is matched, not only by that of Here, but more Thus Surya, precisely by that of Eos, the rival of Prokris. imperishable. If thrown exposed to countless dangers, is yet into the water, she rises like Aphrodite in renewed beauty if consumed by fire, the fruit-tree rises from her ashes,
I can but follow here the writer of very able review of Miss Erere's Deccan Talcs, which appeared in the The Spectator for April 25, 1868. passages quoted are from the Atharva Veda, but these are perhaps more valuable for the purpose of illustrating the current folk-lore than if they occurred
1
see, however, a in the Big Veda. conception as early as that of the Ge Pammetor of iEschylos in the invocation
We
which the Asvins meted on which Vishnu hath stepped, which the mighty Indra has rid of all his enemies, may Earth pour out her milk mother Earth to me her son.'
'
out,
VOL.
II.
;06
BOOK
II.
mango
falls
into the
milkwoman's can
fall
mother.
Holda.
The idea of Demeter finds an expression in the Teutonic Holda, the benignant goddess or lady, who reappears as Frau Berchta, the bright maiden, the Phaethousa or LamThe few details which we have of petie of the Odyssey.
these beings agree strictly with the
meaning of
their names.
Thus Holda gently wraps the earth in a mantle of snow, and when the snow falls Holda is said to be making her bed, of which the feathers fly about, reminding us of the Scythian statement made by Herodotos that the air in the northernmost This Fran Holda part of Europe is always full of feathers. is transformed into Pharaildis, a name said to have (verelde) been given to Herodias, who in the medieval myth was confounded with her daughter, and of whom the story was told that she loved the Baptist, and determined never to wed any
that Herod, discovering if she could not be his wife ordered John to be put to death, and that the bringing of the head on a charger was not for any purposes of insult,, but that she might bathe it with her tears. 2 The head flies
;
man
this,
from her
Adonis.
kisses,
and she
is left
mourning
race
like
is
Aphrodite for
subject to
A third part
in this kindly
of the
human
made
her by way of atonement for her sufferings. The same 3 is told of dame Habonde in the Roman de la Rose.
The Eleu nnian
myth.
myth
and attractive guise that Persephone Here the story took root most firmly; and the fountain where the daughters of Keleos accosted the mourning mother, and the spot where Iambe assailed her with friendly jests, were pointed out to the veneration of the faithful who came to celebrate her solemn To the Eleusinians, beyond a doubt, the whole mysteries. was genuine and sacred history. 4 But this belief narrative would, of course, explain to them as little as it would to us
It
is
appears in the
myth
of Eleusis.
storyteller
is,
not more conscious of the meaning and origin of this tale than the authors of the Homeric hymns were of the myths of Aphrodite, or Dionysos. Now and then we can scarcely suppose that they fail to have some conception
doubtless,
of the nature of their materials a conception which must almost have reached the stage of knowledge in the author of
the
2
3
Hymn
lb.
to
Hermes.
Grimm, D. M. 262.
265.
G-rote,
History of Greece,
i.
55.
DEMETER AND
IASlON.
307
CHAP.
A
.
Both are alike laid bare the origin and nature of the story. by a comparison which has shown that every incident may be matched with incidents in other legends so far resembling each other as to leave no room for questioning their real
identity, yet so far unlike as to preclude the idea that the
nL
one was borrowed from or directly suggested by the other. But the Eleusinian could adduce in evidence of his belief not only the mysteries which were there enacted, but the geographical names which the story consecrated
;
and here he
circle
name denoted
was
stolen
she met her mother, there were other versions which local-
on some Nysaian plain, as in the Homeric Enna, or near the well of Arethousa. hymn, As we might expect, the myth of Demeter is intertwined with the legends of many other beings, both human and Like Herakles and Zeus, she has^ in many lands, divine. many loves and many children. As the wife of Poseidon The earth must she is the mother of Despoina and Orion. love the beautifully tinted skies of morning and thus Demeter loves Iasion, the son of Zeus and Hemera, the heaven and the day, or of Minos and the nymph Pyronea, 2 and becomes the mother of Plouton or Ploutos, the god who guards the treasures of the earth, and whom the Latins identified with Hades. She must hate those who spoil her trees and waste her fruits hence she punishes with fearful
ised this incident
in the Sicilian
1
Demeter
an (1 la "
,
Max
;
517
-
Apollod.
6, 8.
The name Minos, it has been already Menu, the same word as But man the measurer or thinker. Minos himself is the husband of Pasisaid, is, like
phae the light-giver, and the father of Ariadne who guides Theseus to the den
It is scarcely necesof the Minotauros. sary to give all the names which occur in the story of Iasion or other myths of
a like kind. There are but few which would be found to withstand the test of philological analysis but even where this is the case, we are fully justified in selecting those versions which explain The mere fact that in one themselves. of them Iasion is called a son of Zeus and Hemera, is sufficient evidence that this was one way of accounting for his and this phrase is transexistence
; ;
parent.
;os
BOOK
II.
and
Ceres and
Saturn.
enough to say that although, like other Latin deities, she has no special mythology, her name She is strictly the ripener of the at least is significant. and since, as such, she could have no fruits of the earth attribute wholly inconsistent with the character of the Greek Demeter, it became easy to attach to Ceres all the stories
With
ought to connect that of Saturn, common with the Greek Kronos with whom the later Eomans identified him, as they identified his wife Ops, a name corresponding in meaning with that of Ploutos, with Saturn, as the sower of the seed, 2 answers far more Rhea. nearly to the Greek Triptolemos, who is taught by Demeter. At the end of his work Saturn is said to have vanished from the earth, as Persephone disappears when the summer has come to an end and the local tradition went that Latium was his lurking-place. 3
in
;
As the Eleusinian myth tells the stoiy of the earth and her treasures under the name of Demeter, so the Athenian legend tells the same story under the name of Erechtheus or Erichthonios, a son of Hephaistos, according to one version,
by Atthis, a daughter of Kranaos, according to another, by Athene herself. 4 In the latter version Athene becomes his
fied
The name has by some been identiwith the Greek Kore, by others with By the Latin G-aranus or Recaranus.
1
Professor Max Miiller it is referred to the root which yields the Sanskrit Sarad, autumn, viz. sri or sri, to cook or ripen. Sri, or Lakshmi, is in the Ramayana the Like Aphrodite, she wife of Vishnu. rises from the sea, but with four arms, and her dwelling is in the Lotos.
Breal, H<rcule et Cacus, 38. The name must necessarily be traced through its cognate forms ; and thus, before we can judge positively, we must compare it with Latini, Lakini, Lavini,
3
&c.
4
See vol.
i.
p.
is
of Athene, Atthis the child of Kranaos is probably only Athene under a slight disguise.
As Kranaa
235. a title
oU
CHAP,
'
.
it
immortal
and, placing
it
and
They disobey, and finding that the coils of a snake are folded round the body of the child, are either slain by Athene or throw themlid.
1
selves down the precipice of the Akropolis. Henceforth the dragon-bodied or snake-bound Erichthonios dwells in the shrine of Athene, and under her special protection.
There were other stories of Erichthonios or Erechtheus 2 which some mythographers assign to a grandson of the supposed child of Hephaistos and Athene. Of this latter
Erechtheus
*
was killed had been sacrificed to atone for the slaughter of Eumolpos by the Athenians a tale manifestly akin to the punishment of Tantalos after the crime committed on his son Pelops. But the legend of Erichthonios is merely a repetition of
Erectheus, the son of Panclion,
it is
said that he
Kekrops.
the
myth
who gave
to the land which had till then been called became the father not only of Erysichthon but of the three
sisters
who proved
assigned one version of the story which relates the rivalry of Poseidon and Athene ; but here
To the time
of Kekrops
Poseidon produces not a horse, but a well on the Akropolis, a work for which he is careless enough to produce no witness, while Athene makes her olive tree grow up beneath
1
holding a double
the addition of Agraulos merely states that the dew covers the fields. 2 Of the name Erichthonios, Preller, Gr. Myth. i. 159, says, 'Der Name recht eigentlich einen Genius der fruchttranslate
.
personality. 'The Homeric Scholiast treated Erichtheus and Erichthonios as the same person under two names and since in regard
;
baren Erdbodens bedeutet,' and compares it with ipiovvt]s, ZpifioiXos, and If Erechtheus and Erichother words. thonios are names for one and the same person, the explanation which regards the name as a compound of x^" tne earth, seems to become at least doubtful. There is, however, no ground for up-
such mythical persons there exists no other test of identity of the subject except perfect similarity of attributes, this seems the reasonable conclusion.' Grote, History of Greece, i. 264. The case is, however, altered when we find the names in the mythology of other nations, in which the origin of the word no longer remains open to doubt,
to
Preller, Gr.
Myth.
ii.
136.
310
BOOK
^
Pelops.
bear the
A
have
who gives judgment that the city shall dawn -goddess. more transparent myth of the earth is found in the
name
of the
1
some His father in his magnificent palace and with his inexhaustible wealth is manifestly only another form of Ixion and Helios and the child whom he slays represents not less clearly the fruits of the earth first sustained by his warmth and then scorched by his raging heat. This horrible banquet of his flesh he sets before Zeus, for the ravages of drought are accomplished in the face of the blue heaven but none of the gods will eat of it, except Demeter, who, plunged in grief for the loss of her child, eats the shoulder and thus the story ran that when at the bidding of Zeus Hermes boiled the limbs and restored them to life, an ivory shoulder supplied the place of the part devoured by Demeter. 2 In the story of Hippodameia, a name which occurs as an epithet of Aphrodite, 3 Pelops
it,
Klytia or Euryanassa.
The heads of those who have failed to conquer Oinomaos in the chariot race stare down upon him from the doorposts but nothing daunted, he makes a comhild, or Briar Eose.
;
pact with Myrtilos the charioteer to loosen the wheels of Oinamaos. Pelops is thus the victor; but as even the
Pelops
his children,
and death
many
The meaning of the myth of Kekrops whether we adopt or reject Preller's explanation of the word Per Name scheint mit Kapnbs und Kpunriov zusammenhangen, so dass sich
1
is sufficiently clear,
'
also schon dadurch die Beziehung auf Prucht und Erndte ankundigen wiirde.' Gr. Myth. ii. 137.
- Hence the notion that his descendants likewise had one shoulder white as ivory. Pindar rejects the story, preferring the version that he was carried off by Poseidon, as Ganymedes was taken by the eagle to Olympos.
01.
8
i.
40.
Preller, Gr.
Myth.
ii.
385.
311
Section
which grow from it or the power which nourishes them, is known as Gaia in the Hesiodic Theosfony, where she is J described seemingly as self-existent, for no parents are assigned either to her or to Chaos, Tartaros, and Eros. All this, however, with the assignment of Erebos and Nyx as children of Chaos, and of Aither and Hemera as children of Nyx, the night, may have been to the poet as mere an allegory as the birth, of the long hills which together with the troubled sea are brought into being by Gaia. Then follows the bridal of the earth and sky, and Gaia becomes the mother of a host of children, representing either the sun under the name of Hyperion, or the forces at work in the natural world, the thunders and lightnings, here called the round-eyed giants, and the hundred-handed monsters, one of whom, Briareos, rescues Zeus from the wiles of Here, Athene and Poseidon. But in all this there is really not much more mythology than in the little which has to be said of the Latin Tellus or Terra, a name, the meaning of which was never either lost or weakened. It was otherwise with Mars, a god who, worshipped originally as the ripener of fruits and grain, was afterwards from the accident of his name invested with the attributes of the fierce and brutal Ares of the Greeks. In his own character, as fostering wealth of corn and cattle, he was worshipped at Prseneste, as Herodotos would have us believe that Scythian tribes worshipped Ares, with the symbol of a sword, one of the many forms assumed by the Hindu Linga. As such, he was
1
VIII
,
pre-eminently the father of all living things, Marspiter, or Maspiter, the parent of the twin-born Romulus and Remus.
The root is mar, which yields the name of the Maruts and many other
1
'
and
mythical beings. See vol. i. p. 32, &c. Mars, with his common epithet Silvanus,
the softener of the earth and the ripener of its harvests. The name occurs under the forms Mamers and Mavors. Of these Professor Miiller says,
is
in
the Oscan Mamers the r of the reduplicated syllable is lost. Mayors imore difficult to explaia, for th^re is no instance in Latin of m in the middle of a word being changed to i\' Lectures, second series, 324.
As the
ripener and grinder of the corn he is Pilumnns and Picumnus, 1 although the process of disintegration constantly at
work on mythical names converted these epithets two independent deities, while another myth affirmed that he received the name Picumnus as being the god to whom the woodpecker was consecrated. 2 Another representative of the earth is Rhea, herself a child of Ouranos and Gaia, and the wife of Kronos, by whom she becomes the mother of the great Olympian deities Hestia, Demeter, Here, Hades, Poseidon, all swallowed by their father, and lastly, Zeus, who is saved to be brought up in the cave of Dikte. But throughout Rhea remained a name and a power, worshipped as the great reproductive force of the world, as producing life through
into
by the sacrifice of the reproThus she became preeminently the great mother, worshipped under the titles Ma and Ammas, and perhaps even more widely known and 3 feared as Kybele or Kybebe.
ductive power in her ministers.
1
'
Pilumnns
et
Picumnus,
deux
The
origin of the
name
is
doubtful.
anciens participes presents, le dieu qui Le pUum, broie et le dieu qui fend. avant d'etre l'arme du soldat romain, si celebre chez les historiens, fut le pilon
Preller,
Gr.
words
KrjpvKeiov,
caduceus
Pihim est une qui sert abroyer le ble. contraction de pistillum et vient de Pila est le vase ou Ton broyait, pinsere.
et
medidies.
3 This name Preller explains, after Hesychios, as denoting her abode on the hills but such interpretations must be regarded with great suspicion. A large
:
Pilumnus,
comme
le dit
expressement
Servius (JEn.
dieu des boulanPicumnus vient d'une racine pic gers. qui vent dire fendre: on la trouve dans picus, le pic-vert qui creuse le tronc des arbres, pour y cherclier sa nourriture Breal, Hercule et et y loger ses petits.'
ix. 4), le
number
are as
little
Cacus, 34.
is
another
god whose name belongs to the same Of this deity root with Pilumnus. Professor Mtdler says that he 'was originally the god who crushes with the and the Molse Martis thunderbolt; seem to rest on an analogous conception
Lectures, second of the nature of Mars.' It seems more probable 324. 3eri< s, that Jupiter Pistor, like Mars Silvan us The or Pilumnus, was a rustic god. expression Moire Martis, like the Greek
p.a>\os "Aprjos, is
we are in adopting the conclusion of Herodotos, that Athene is only another form of the Egyptian word Neith. To Mas, as a name of Ehea, Papas as a title of the Phrygian Zeus precisely
as
either
the
corresponds. Preller, ib. i. 511. They are no more than the terms Pater and Muter applied to Zeus and Deo, or AllFather as a name of Odin. The old title of Rhea is applied, whether with or without design, to the Virgin Mary. Thus Dr. Faber, writing to Mr. Watts Russell, asks him to think of him 'amid the glories of Christian Rome on those Sunday evenings in October, all dedicated to dearest Mama.' Life, p. 329.
god.
313
CHAP.
'
With the name of Rhea are connected the mystic beings known as the Kouretes, the Korybantes, the Idaian
Daktyloi, and the Kabeiroi.
lations of
which these names have been made the subject J^JU^ It is as possible that they may, Daktyls. it is unnecessary to enter. some or all of them, denote races displaced and overthrown by the advancing Hellenic tribes, as that the Trolls may represent aboriginal inhabitants driven to the mountains by the Teutonic invaders. But in the absence of all historical evidence it is as useless to affirm
as
it is
name
Telchines
is
only another
name
Phenician people, or
recollections of
them
'
embody
whom
they visited.'
It
enough
to
simply that of Hephaistos. Like him, they forge iron weapons or instruments for the gods and they resemble the Kyklopes not only in this their work, but in their parentage, which exhibits them as sons of Poseidon, or Thus also we see in them not Thalassa, the troubled sea.
:
Hence they
They
can pour down rain or snow on the earth, and, like the
change their form at will and thus they by Phoibos in the guise of a wolf, as the sun's rays scatter the mists at noon-day. In this capacity of changing their form and bringing storms upon the earth we have all that is needed as the groundwork of their reputation as sorcerers, even if we refuse to indulge in any conjectures as to the origin of the name. 2 Their office as nurses of Poseidon 3 is even more significant, as showing
;
are destroyed
i.
ch.
iii.
Der Name TeAx<Ves ist abznleiten von 64\yca in der Bedeutung bezaubern,
2
(lurch
Beriihrung
beriicken,
daher
Schlage, welehe das Bewusstsein verdunkeln, reK^ves genanut hatte.' Preller, Gr. Myth. i. 473. 3 Thirlwall, Hist, Greece, i. 76.
Stesichoros die
314
BOOK
*
,
-^
which hang at dawn on the eastern sky as contrasted with the rough mists which seem to brood over and to feed the sea. Hence the story recorded by Strabo that those of the Telchines who went with Ehea to Crete were there called Kouretes, the guardians of the child (icovpos) Zeus. These are the dancers clad in everlasting youth, like the lovely cirri which career in their mystic movements through the sky, the Daktyloi, or pointers, of
Dikte,
soft clouds
1
the
ot
These also are beings endowed with a strange wisdom and with magical powers, and from them Orpheus received the charm which gave to his harp its irresistible power. Their
seen,
fifty
sometimes
of
fifty
or a hundred, like
the
children
That the Kabeiroi and Korybantes were sometimes regarded as exhibiting only another phase of the idea which
underlies the conception of the mythical Kouretes,
scarcely open to doubt.
is
a point
they have a protecting and soothing power, and hence are nourishers of the
latter,
Like the
earth and
its fruits,
to the Argonautai.
They
names pointing to the generation of But as the myths of Cacus or the Kyklopes seem in some of their features to indicate the phenomena of volcanic action, so it is quite possible that such phenomena may have modified the stories told of the several classes of these mysterious beings. The fires of the
Zeus and Kalliope,
Kyklopes may be either the lightnings seen in the heaven or the flames which burst from the earth and the mysterious flash which reveals the treasures of the earth to the Arabian prince or the Teutonic Tanhauser may equally represent
;
both.
1
Preller, Gr.
Myth.
i.
and digitus with the root from which sprung the Greek Se'iKw/jn, the Latin indico and other words, is generally admitted. The
of
The connection
103. SciktuXos
grow up when the real meaning of the name was weakened or forgotten, although it would be scarcely an exaggeration to say that the clouds are the fingers of the earth which she can point as she wills.
as
the
315
Section
The woods and hills form the special domain of the Satyrs, a worthless and idle race with pointed ears, small horns, and
the
tail
of a goat or a horse.
forest, in
Their
life is
Sa-
tending their
flocks, or in idle
Their music
may
cunning nature makes them no safe companions for man. Nay, if the sheepfold were entered and the cattle hurt or stolen, if women were scared by goblin shapes as they passed through the woods, this was the doing of the Satyrs. We can scarcely be at a loss in our search for the origin of these mythical beings and their characteristics. When we find them represented as sprung, like the nymphs and the mystic dancers, the Kouretes, from the daughters of Hekataios or Phoroneus, or as the offspring of Hermes and Iphthime when also we find that Pan, whom they resemble in outward form and powers of music, is also a son of Hermes and the nymph Dry ops or Kallisto, or of Penelope who weaves the morning clouds, we can scarcely fail to see in these Satyrs the phenomena of the life which seems to animate the woods as the branches of the trees move in wild dances with the clouds which course through the air above, or assume forms strange or grotesque or fearful, in the deep nooks and glens or in the dim and dusky tints of the gloaming. At such
hours, or in such places, the wayfarer
may
be frightened
with strange sounds like the pattering of feet behind him, or ugly shapes which seem to bar the path before him, or entangle his feet and limbs as he forces his
brushwood. If we translate all this into the language of mythology, we have more than the germ of all that is told us about the Satyrs. But the source thus opened was found to be a fruitful one, and the Satyrs became the companions of Dionysos, the lord of the wine-cup and the revel, or of Herakles, the burly and heedless being who goes through
life
toiling for a
mean and
316
BOOK
^_
...
him.
The
Sei-
lenoi.
Of these Satyrs the oldest are named the Seilenoi, or But although there are between these many points of likeness, both in form and character, beings there is this marked distinction, that while the Satyrs dwell among woods and hills, the Seilenoi haunt streams, fountains, They are thus, like the Naiads, spirits or marshy grounds.
children of Seilenos.
The grotesque form which made to assume may be an exaggeration of the western Greeks, who saw in the ass which bore him a mere
the clouds that float above them.
Seilenos
is
it
high value set on the ass by Eastern nations. It was, in fact, the symbol of his wisdom and his prophetical powers, and not the mere beast of burden which, in western myths, staggered along under the weight of an unwieldy drunkard. The same
"With these creatures we are brought almost into the domain of modern fairy mythology, of which it is enough here to say that there is scarcely an important feature in it which has not its parallel
1
Smith
and thus the whole fabric of modern superstition is but a travesty of myths with which in other forms we are already familiar. Thus in these myths dwarfed or maimed beings abound
:
mythology of
Greece and Rome. The Latin Lares aro the Venus who takes the Brownies away the lover of Psyche, the Kalypso who seeks to lay the spell of her beauty on Odysseus, is the Fairy Queen of the Tanhaiiser and of True Thomas Kyklops is the misshapen Urisk the limping Hephaistos is Wayland the
;
; :
Daktyls,
days,
literally the
Goodies
stition.
popular
Teutonic
super-
317
whom
-
CHAP,
_
-
shame but
his glory.
is,
name, and with Tantalos, as with Sisyphos, the idea of wealth If, again, Tanis inseparable from that of wisdom or craft. talos and Sisyphos have palaces rich in all conceivable treasures, Midas has his beautiful rose-gardens, in which the country folk catch Seilenos, who is brought bound before the king. Ity him Midas is instructed in the knowledge of all events, whether past or future, as well as in the origin and nature of all things. In return for the kindness with which he is treated, Dionysos promises to grant to Midas any wish which he may express. Midas asks that everything which he touches may be turned into gold, and finds to his dismay that it is as impossible to swallow his food as the dishes on which it is laid. To his prayer for deliverance the answer is that he must go and wash in the stream of Paktolos, which has ever since retained a golden hue. This myth is nothing more than a story framed on a saying, like the German Morgenstunde hat Gold im Munde,' Morningproverb, hour has gold in her mouth,' and simply expressed the fact that the newly risen sun sheds a glory over all the earth, in
'
'
l
The
sequel,
which
to
command
bathe in the river finds a meaning in the fact that the flaming splendours of the sun are quenched when, like En-
dymion, he plunges beneath the waters. A faint reflection of similar ideas seems to mark the story which accounted for
the ass's ears, as a punishment for adjudging the prize to
Marsyas
in his contest
with Phoibos.
It
now becomes
it,
and being
it
unable to keep
it
Max
didactic
to rise
Makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise,' which keeps up the same connexion between wealth and wisdom.
118
BOOK
II.
The Latin
Silanus.
with the Italian Silanus, a word for gushing or bubbling water ; nor is it easy to avoid a comparison with the Seirenes, who, like Seilenos, haunt the waters. As the
dweller in the fertilising streams, he can bestow draughts of
Priapos.
and the wine which his son Evanthes pronounced by Polyphemos to be more delicious than honey. As such also, he is the guardian and teacher of Dionysos, for from the life-giving streams alone can the grape acquire its sweetness and its power. But this higher and more dignified aspect of Seilenos, which led Plato to speak of Sokrates as getting wisdom from him as well as from his scholar Marsyas, was obscured in the folk-lore of the western tribes by the characteristics of jollity and intemperance exhibited by the Satyrs and the Herakles whom they cheat and tease, while his office as the fertiliser of the vineyard brought him into close connexion with Priapos, who exhibits the merely sensuous idea of reproduction in its grossest form, and of whom we need only say here that he is a son of Dionysos, Adonis, Hermes, or Pan, while his mother is Aphrodite or the Naid Chione, names denoting simply the relations of the waters with the winds or the sun.
wonderful sweetness
gives to Odysseus
is
;
1
Priapos is, in short, only a coarser form of Vishnu, Proteus, Onnes and other like beings and as snch, he has
1
:
like
of predicting things
The same idea was expressed by the Latin Mutinus, JMutunus, orMuttunus, who was represented by the same symbol.
to come.
319
CHAPTER
IX.
THE UNDERWORLD.
Section
I. HADES.
CHAP.
The myths
"
maiden back to her mother, or in other words, until Sigurd comes to waken Brynhild out of her sleep. Hence, as containing the germs of all future harvests, this unseen region becomes at once a land of boundless wealth, even if we take no thought of the gold, silver, and other metals stored up in its secret places. This wealth may be of little use to its possessor, and poverty beneath the sunlit heaven may be happiness compared with the dismal pomp of
the underworld
of
all
;
but
its
king
is
monarchs, and thus the husband of Persephone is known especially as Plouton, the king who never smiles in the midst of all his grandeur.
framework was raised the mythology of mythology which runs continually into the stories Hades, a related of the dark powers who fight with and are vanquished by the lord of light. The dog of the hateful king, the Kerberos of the Hesiodic Theogony, is but another form of and Orthros is only a Orthros, who is called his brother reflection of the Yedic Yritra, the dark robber who hides away the cattle of Indra. But the conception of Hades as
this slender
;
On
is
in
Elysion.
The
transformation is, of course, a mere playon her name, while the myth resolves itself into the phrase that the night loves the tender light of morning.
;20
BOOK _^J
Katachthonios he would be also Hades, Ais, or Aidoneus, the king of the lower world ; and the identity of the two is proved not only by these titles, but also by the power which,
after the triple partition, Hades, like Poseidon, retains of appearing at will in Olympos. Zeus then, as Hades, is simply the unseen, or the being who can make himself as
As
cap or helmet, which appears as the tarn-kappe or nebelkappe of Teutonic legends. This cap he bestows on Hermes,
who
is thus enabled to enter unseen the Gorgons' dwelling, and escape the pursuit of the angry sisters. But his home is also the bourne to which all the children of men must come, and from which no traveller returns; and thus he becomes the host who must receive all under his roof, and
whom
it
is
who
as
will give
in
other words,
Polydektes,
one
Still,
who
will
man
none may
(ttv-
character of the
gate-keeper
be addressed, not as the unseen, but as Plouton the wealthy, the Kuvera Hades of the Ramayana ; and the averted face of the man who offered sacrifice to him may recall to our minds the horrid
the lower world.
rites of the devil-worshippers of
He must
the Lebanon.
Hades, then, in the definite authority assigned to him war with the Titans, is the only being who is as the lord who remains always in his dismal regarded
after the
kingdom,
for Persephone,
who
Kore
men, and
whom
Of the
to let it free until he gives her the ladder by which he climbs out of the mountain-depths into the open air. Thus escaping, she returns with her heavenly lover, and despoils Rinkrank (Plouton) of all his treasures,
and refuses
?>21
CHAP,
IX
waves of
fire.
But, in truth, such details as these, produced as they are, The not by the necessities of mythical developement but by the of the* growth or the wants of a religious faith, belong rather to the Dcad history of religion, and not to the domain of mythology,
-
which is concerned only or mainly with legends springing from words and phrases whose original meaning has been
misunderstoood or else either wholly or in part forgotten. Thus, although the ideas of Elysion in the conception of the
epic or lyric poets
may
be
full
throwing light on the thoughts and convictions of the time, their mythological value must be measured by the degree in which they may be traced to phrases denoting originally
only the physical phenomena of the heavens and the earth. With the state and the feelings of the departed we are not
here concerned
but there is enough in the descriptions of ; the asphodel meadows and the land where the corn ripens
thrice in the year, to guide us to the source of all these notions. The Elysian plain is far away in the west where the sun goes down beyond the bounds of the earth, when Eos gladdens the close of day as she sheds her violet tints over
the sky. The abodes of the blessed are golden islands sailing in a sea of blue, the burnished clouds floating in the pure
ether.
dread no disaster
1
plague and The barks of the Phaiakians and thus the blissful company gathered
;
Acheron, the remaining river, is probably only another form of Acheloos, the flowing water, and may perhaps
VOL.
II.
Of the other
number would
nomena
What
What unseemly
lit
which can never go down ? Who the truthful and the generous, can be suffered to tread the And how shall they be tested save by judges violet fields ? who can weigh the thoughts anc intents of the heart ? Thus every soul, as it drew near to that joyous land, was brought before the august tribunal of Minos, Rhadamanthys, and Aiakos and they whose faith was in truth a quickening
^ ;
forms can mar the by the radiance of a sun then but the pure in heart,
power might draw from the ordeal those golden lessons which Plato has put into the mouth of Sokrates while awaiting the return of the theoric ship from Delos. These,
however, are the inferences of later thought.
earlier ages
The
belief of
itself
the meeting of
Hektor
rified,'
is
clasped in the
hand of hand of the hero who slew him. the lovely Helen, pardoned and pu'
became the bride of the short-lived yet long-suffering Achilleus, even as Iole comforted the dying Herakles on But what earth, and Hebe became his solace in Olympos. is the meeting of Helen and Achilleus, of Iole, and Hebe, and Herakles, but the return of the violet tints to greet the sun in the west, which had greeted him in the east in the morning? The idea was purely physical, yet it suggested the thoughts of trial, atonement, and purification and it is unnecessary to say that the human mind, having advanced thus far, must make its way still further. To these islands of the blessed only they could be admitted who on earth had done great things, or who for whatever reasons might be counted among the good and noble of mankind. But of the beings who crossed the fatal streams of Styx, there would be some as far exceeding the
;
1
Pind. 01.
ii.
120.
TART AIIOS
^23
CHAP
lx
-
common crowd
in wickedness or
unworthy to tread the asphodel meadows of Elysion. Hence one of the names of the unseen world, which denoted especially its everlasting unrest, would be chosen to signify the There can be little hopeless prisons of the reprobate. doubt that in the name Tartaros we have a word from the same root with Thalassa, the heaving and restless sea, and that Tartaros was as strictly a mere epithet of Hades as Plouton or Polydegmon. The creation of a place of utter darkness for abandoned sinners was a moral or theological, not a mythical necessity and hence the mythology of Tartaros as a place of torment is as scanty and artificial as that of the Nereid and Okeanid nymphs; for when the Hesiodic Theogony makes Tartaros and Gaia the parents of the Gigantes, of Typhoeus, and Echidna, this only places Tartaros in the same rank with Poseidon, who is the father of Polyphemos or of Here, who, according to another myth, is herself the mother of Typhaon, another Typhoeus.
;
t2
CHAPTER
X.
THE DAEKNESS.
Section
LVRITRA AND
AHI.
BOOK
II.
No
of religion as the expressions which described originally the physical struggle between light and darkness as exhibited in
the alternations of day and night. These phrases stand out with wonderful vividness in the hymns of the Rig Yeda. The
rain-god Indra is concerned with the sacrifices of men, chiefly because these supply him with food to sustain his steeds in the deadly conflict, and the drink which is to invigorate his own strength. On the Soma, of which, as of the Achaian
Nektar,
all
;
depends
the gods have need, the might of Indra especially and as soon as he has quaffed enough, he departs
This struggle may be conto do battle with his enemy. sidered as the theme, which in a thousand different forms
enters into all the conceptions of Indra and into all the Like himself, his adversary has prayers addressed to him. names; but in every word we have the contrast bemany
tween the beaming god of the heaven with his golden locks and his flashing spear, and the sullen demon of darkness, who lurks within his hidden caves, drinking the milk of the
cows which he has stolen. The issue of the battle is always the same but the apparent monotony of the subject never deprives the language used in describing it of the force which belongs to a genuine and heartfelt conviction. So
;
from the truth is the fancy that great national epics cannot have their origin in the same radical idea, and that the monotony which would thus underlie them all is of itself conclusive proof that in their general plan the Iliad and the
far
325
CHAP,
_
','
Ramayana of Hindustan and the have nothing in common. In the brief and changeful
the
of the bright but short-lived sun; in his love for the dawn,
who
dew
which
tures so poor
and weak
as
man, in
the beautiful morning which cheered him at his rising, in the sullenness with which he hides his grief behind the
clouds, in the vengeance
his
glory, in
Indra and
c
l
eus
'
Breal,
HercuU
et
Cams,
89.
>26
I300K
II.
simple hymns the strictly mythical imagery is, as M. Breal well remarks, intermingled with phrases which speak
and darkness. Throughout these hymns two images stand out before us with overpowering distinctness. On one side is the bright god of the heaven, as beneficent as he is irresistible on the other the demon of night and of darkness, as false and On both of these contending treacherous as he is malignant. powers the Hindu lavished all his wealth of speech to exalt the one and to express his hatred of the other. The latter (as his name Yritra, from var, to veil, indicates,) is pre-eminently the thief who hides away the rainclouds. But although the name comes from the same root which yielded that of Yaruna, the lurking place of Vritra has nothing to do with that broad-spreading veil which Yaruna stretches over the loved earth which is his bride. But the myth is
1
which are brought before us in the conflicts of Zeus with Typhon and his monstrous progeny, of Apollon with the Python, of Bellerophon with Ohimaira, of Oidipous with the
Sphinx, of Hercules with Cacus, of Sigurd with the dragon Fafhir ; and thus not only is Yritra known by many names,
but he
the fire-god,
opposed sometimes by Indra, sometimes by Agni sometimes by Trita, Brihaspati, or other deities ; or rather these are all names for one and the same god.
is
The
great
is
known pre-eminently
as Yritrahan,
luierny.
from being petrified into a dead personality, became a name which might be applied The Yritra of the Yritras denoted the most to any enemy. malignant of adversaries. 2 So again Yritra, the thief, is also called Ahi, the throttling snake, or dragon with three lieads, like Geryon, the stealer of the cows of Herakles, or
Kerberos, whose
name reappears
He
enemy, a
name which we
1
we
Breal. Hercule
lb. 92.
327
1
Wayland Smith
in Warwickshire.
Other
CHAP,
names of this hateful monster are Cushna, Qambara, Namuki 2 hut the most notable of all is Pani, which marks him Such he is, as enticing- the cows of Indra as the seducer. pastures, and more especially as seeking to to leave their
corrupt Saraina,
when
Helen
Pad
ans
and
"
but as round this destroyer of his house and kinsfolk ideas are grouped which belong to the conception of Phoibos and
and other solar heroes, so in its Hellenic form Yritra has sometimes a fair and sometimes a repulsive form. Orthros is the hound of Geryon, slain by
Helios, of Achilleus, Theseus,
Herakles
but
it is
also a
name
dawn, 3 just as the night may be regarded now as the evil power which kills the light, now as the sombre but benignant mother of the morning. 4 This difference of view accounts precisely for the contrast between Yaruna and Yritra. Between the Yedic and the Hellenic myths there is this difference only, that in the latter the poets and mythog-raphers who tell the story recount without understanding it. They are no longer conscious that Geryon and Typhon, Echidna and Orthros, Python and Kerberos, are names for the same thing, and that the combats of Herakles, Perseus, Theseus, and Kadmos with these monsters denote simply the changes of the visible heavens. Each story has its own local names and its own mythical geography, and this fact alone constituted an almost insurmountable hindrance to the sucBut the language of the cessful analysis of the legends. Yedic hymns explains itself; and the personality of Indra and
Yritra
Greek and
JjzJJ
M. Breal has noted, only intermittent. 5 Yritra then, the enemy of Indra, reappears in all the dragons, snakes, or worms, slain by all the heroes of Aryan mythology and if the dragons of some myths wear a less repulsive form, if they are yoked to the chariot of Medeia or impart a mysterious wisdom to Iamos and the children of
is after all,
as
Snakes and
vY
orrn g
vi <pi\la.
Cacus, 93.
105, &c.
97,
98.
Asklepios, this
into serpents.
Yritra, however,
is
but the snake which chokes or throttles its victim ; and the names which are used to describe his loathsome features are the names which the Iranian and Teutonic tribes have given
to their personations of
evil.
The Yedic
is
which he
in
Whether the
is
a question of
Greek nrpo^arov, simply the moving thing, the name might be applied as strictly to the clouds which move in the heavens as to the 2 The myth would come cattle which walk on the earth. into existence only when the name had become confined to
first,
horned cattle. It is but another instance of the process which changed the flocks of Helios into the apples guarded by the Hesperides, 3 and by transforming Lykaon into a wolf
laid the foundations of the horrible superstitions of lykan-
thropy. 4
The Blocktaiag.
The Hellenic tribes carried away from their common Aryan home not merely the phrases which told of a battle between
1 Max Muller. Lectures on Language, second series, 353, &c. 2 Breal, Hercule et Cacus, 108. * This is at once explained by the
word fx-fjXa has the meaning both of apples and sheep. 4 Breal, Herctdeet Cams, 115; see also
vol.
i.
appendix F,
p. 459.
329
CHAP,
...
If the
name
hound Orthros,
every western myth of monsters slain by solar heroes. When Phoibos smites the Python at Delphoi, a stream of water gushes out from the earth the dragon slain by the Theban
;
the
and the defeat of Sphinx can alone bring rain to refresh the parched This warm and fertilising rain becomes from Boiotian soil. mere necessities of climate the hidden treasure guarded, in the Teutonic legend, by the dragon whom Sigurd slays on
blocks
all
Kadmos
access to a fountain
is
The
stolen
ls -
Ny m P
As
<yvvaiKS9,
Paris
is
name for the gods transformed them into Gnas, or Nymphs, in whom we see the fair Helen whom stole from Menelaos, and Sita, the bride of Rama, who
But here
also, as in its
and we have to turn to the Iranian land to see the full growth of the idea which the old Hindu worshippers faintly shadowed in the prayer that Vritra might not be suffered to reign over
earlier
form, the
physical;
them.
known by
and
In the later Hindu mythology the power of darkness is Ravana an the names Bali, Ravana, or Grata. The first of these is in the Ramayana the conqueror of Indra himself,
sun or the rain-god he enjoys the empire of the three worlds, intoxicated with the increase But the darkness which has ended the brief of his power. career of Achilleus must in turn be subdued by one who is but Achilleus in another form and Bali, the son of Yirochana,
after his victory over the
;
meets his match in Yishnu, who confronts him in his dwarf incarnation as Hara. 2 In the readiness with which Bali
yields to the request of the dwarf,
1
w ho asks only
T
for leave to
iv.
Breal,
Hercuh
et
'
117.
330
BOOK
II.
we
see the
which has imparted a burlesque character to the trolls and fairies of Northern Europe. No sooner is the prayer granted than the dwarf, who is none other than the sun, measures the whole heaven with his three strides, and sends Bali to his fit abode in the dark Patala. But Bali himself is closely akin, or rather identical, with the giant Ravana, who steals away Sita, the bride of Rama, by whom he is himself slain, as Paris falls by the
interests
to their
own
arrows of Philoktetes. This story is modified in the Yishnu Purana to suit the idea of the transmigration of souls, and Ravana we are here told had been in a former birth Sisupala, the great enemy of Yishnu, whom he daily curses with all the force of relentless hatred. But these maledictions had, nevertheless, the effect of keeping the name of the god constantly before his mind and thus, when he was slain by Vishnu, he beheld the deity in his true character, and became united with his divine adversary. 2 But Yishnu, the discus-bearing god, has another enemy in Graha, in whom we see again only a new form of Ravana and Bali. 3 Against this wise and powerful being, for the Panis are possessed of a hidden treasure which passes for the possession of knowledge, not even the discus of Yishnu nor a thousand thunder;
The darkness is at the least as subdue as is the dawn or the day. The three names, Pani, Yritra, and Ahi, which are
specially used to denote the antagonist of Indra, reappear in the mythology of other tribes, sometimes under a strange disguise, which has invested a being originally dark and
little
With
these modified
The Pani appears in the German story of the Feather Bird as a sorcerer,
who
went begging from house to house that he might steal little girls, lie is, in short, Paris Gynaimanes, the Bluebeard of modern stories, who gives each successive wife the keys of his house, charging her not to look into a certain chamber. At last he is cheated by the Helen whom he carries to his dwelling, and who dresses up a turnip to
deceive him. The brothers and kinsfolk of the bride now come to rescue her they immediately closed up all the doors of the house, and then set tire to it; and the sorcerer and all his accomplices were burnt to ashes a burning which is manifestly the destruction of Ilion. 2 Muir. Sanskrit Texts, 180, note, s 76. 159.
; '
;
'
THE TROJAN PARIS. But in no case are and essential features of the myth so much lost the common si<>-lit of, or rather overlaid with colours borrowed from other mythical conceptions, as in the case of Paris. That the
virtually translate the Vedic epithets.
CHA
X.
Helen of the Iliad is etymologically the Sarama of the Yedic hymns, there is no question that the Pani who tempts, or
;
who
clear.
prevails over
Sarama
are
is
is
not less
and seducers, and both bring down their own doom by their offence. But when we have said that Paris, like the Panis and Yritra, steals away the fairest of women and her treasures (in which we see again the cows of Sarama) from the western land, that he
Both
alike
deceivers
hides her
away
shut up in the prison-house of the Panis, and that the fight between Paris and Menelaos with his Achaian hosts ends in
a discomfiture precisely corresponding to the defeat and death of Pani by the spear of Indra, we have in fact noted every feature in the western legend which identifies Paris
Qucestiones
Professor Max Miiller (Riff Veda Sanhita, i. 31) remarks 'that vi/u in the Veda has not dwindled down as yet to a mere name, and that therefore it may have originally retained its purely appellative power in Greek as well as in Sanskrit, and from meaning a stronghold in general, have come to mean the stronghold of Troy 2 Professor Miiller, having identified the name Paris with that of the Panis, although he adds that the etymology of Pani is as doubtful as that of Paris, thinks that I am mistaken in my 'endeavours to show that Paris belongs to the class of bright solar heroes,' and says that if the germ of the Iliad is the battle between the solar and nocturnal powers, Paris surely belongs to the latter, and he whose destiny it is to kill Achilleus in the Western Gates
this
'
second series, 472. Doubtless the germ of Paris is not solar. So far as he is the seducer of Helen and the destroyer of himself and his people by his sin, he is the counterpart of the Vedic Pani. But this explanation covers only this part of the myth and it must not be forgotten in the mythology of all the Aryan nations that the sun is not less fickle, capricious, and treacherous than In every case the the darkness itself. solar heroes either lose or desert their Ariadne, Brynhild, Prokris, brides. Koronis, Echo, Selene, Aithra, with
ffuaffc,
:
many
others,
fj/ACLTl
T< 0T6
KZV
(Te
TldpiS
Kdl
$>o7fioS
'AiroWwv
e<rd\bu e'(W oAecraxriv iy\
~2,Kairjai Tvv\n)aiv
could hardly have been himself of solar Lectures on Lanor vernal lineage.'
the same sad destiny, impossible for Herakles, or Phoibos, Perseus or Sigurd, to tarry with the women whose, love they have won. Hence there was nothing but the name of Paris to prevent the Hellenic tribes from investing the tempter of Helen with the characteristics of the and the meaning deserter of Ariadne of this name seems to havo been wholly This is more than can be forgotten. said of the name of Hermes, which clearly conveyed the idea of motion to the author of the Homeric Hymn. Yet we have seen (ch. v. section 2.) to what an extent the features of the Hellenic
linked together
which makes
In the Odyssey, Sarama reappears as in the older Yedic and unswerving in her fidelity to her absent lord. The dark powers or Panis are here the suitors who crowd around the beautiful Penelope, while Odysseus is journeying homewards from the plains of Hion. But the myth has here reached a later stage, and the treasures of Indra are no longer the refreshing rain-clouds, but the wealth which Odysseus has left stored up in his home, and which the suitors waste at their will. The temptation of Penelope assumes the very form of the ordeal which Sarama is obliged to go through. She, too, shall have her share of the treasures, if she will but submit to become the wife of any one of the chiefs who are striving for her hand. The wheedling and bullying of the Panis in the Yedic hymns
portraits, pnre
reproduced in the alternate coaxing and blustering of the but as Sarama rejects their offers, strong through the might of the absent Indra, so Penelope has her
is
western suitors
scheme
midst of
for
all
frustrating the suitors' plans, trusting in the her grief and agony that Odysseus will assuredly
moments
of a
Far above, in the upper regions of Hypereia, where the beautiful Phaiakians dwelt before the uncouth Kyklopes sought to do them mischief, the fairy network of cirri clouds is seen at sundown flushing with deeper tints as the chariot of the lord of day sinks lower in the sky. This is the network of the weaver Penelope, who like Iole spreads her veil of violet clouds over the heaven in the morning and Below it, stealing up from the dark waters, in the evening.
day.
differ from those of the Vedic Sarameya, and how completely in this case the idea of the morning has given way before that of air in motion. There can be no doubt that the Greek Orthros in name identical with the Vedic is Vritra; and yet the former, as taken to denote the first wakening of the dawn, assumes a shape far less fearful than that of the hated snake who chokes the
summer
Hermes
went
to seek and if need be to fight for the golden fleece the Trojans represent the Panis, it can as little be questioned that some of those who fight on the side of Hektor belong as clearly as Phoibos or Herakles himself to the ranks of
rain-clouds. And again, although as fighting against the children of the sun
i. cli. x.) who come to recover Helen and her treasures as the Argonauts
(book
solar heroes. It is enough to mention the instances of Sarpedon and Menmon, even if no stress be laid on the fact that Paris himself is the darling of Aphrodite, which he could scarcely be if regarded simply as an embodiment of the dark and treacherous night. Such modifications are obviously inevitable.
66
CIIAP.
>
,__
arms, to clasp the fairy forms which still shed their beauty over the upper heavens. At first their efforts are vain twice it may be, or thrice, the exquisite network fades from
;
and then appears again with its lustre dimmed, as if through grief for the lover of Eos or of Daphne, who has gone away. But the shades of night grow deeper, and with it deepens the tumult and rage of the black vapours which hurry to seize their prey aud the ending of the web which the suitors compel Penelope to finish is the closing in of the
sight,
;
night
when the
penetrable darkness.
the suitors seek to
Then follows the weary strife in which overcome the obstinacy of Penelope, and which corresponds to the terrible struggle which precedes the recovery of Helen from the thief who has stolen her away. But like the Panis, and Paris, and Vritra, the suitors 'I do not know that brino" about their own destruction. Indra is to be subdued,' says Sararoa, for it is he himself that subdues you Panis will lie prostrate, killed by Indra.' So too Penelope can point to a weapon which none of the suitors can wield, and which shall bring them to death if ever the chief returns to his home. In the house of Odysseus
<
;
there
be servants and handmaids who cast in their lot with the suitors, as Sarama proved faithless when she accepted the milk offered to her by the Panis and for these there is a penalty in store, like the blow of Indra which Finally, by his punished Sarama for her faithlessness. Odysseus rescues Penelope and his wealth from the victory,
may
hands of his enemies, who are smitten down by his unerring arrows, as Vritra is slain by the irresistible spear of Indra. The wealth of the Ithakan chieftain has assumed a different form from that of the cows of Sarama but there are
:
other myths in which the cattle of Indra reappear as in the Yedic hymns. Herakles has more than once to search, like
1 As in the case of Sarama. so in that of Penelope, there are two versions of the myth one representing her as inAccorruptible, the other as faithless. ding to the latter, she became the C
'1'
mother of Pan either by Hermes or by This merely means that all the suitors. the night hreeze springs up as the dark clouds veil the clear hyht of the upper heaven after sun down.
334
BOOK
v
i/ -,
they are found hidden away in the secret dwelling of the In the story of Echidna we have not only the cattle robber.
and the
his
the epithet
serpent Vritra.
Accordingly in the
who
Hesiodic Theogony Echidna is the parent of all the monsters represent the cloud-enemy of Indra. Night and day
and as Phoibos is the child of he in his turn the father of the night which is his deadliest enemy. The black darkness follows the beautiful twilight, and thus in the Hesiodic version Echidna is the daughter of Chrysaor, the lord of the golden sword and of the
follow or produce each other,
Leto, so
is
beautiful Kallirhoe.
offspring
may
cause
upwards she
is
is
a beautiful maiden,
Like the French Melusina, from the waist the rest of her body
1
Her
among the Arimoi, where Typhoeus slumbers, or according to Herodotos, far away in the icy Scythia. Among her children, of some of whom Typhaon, ' the terrible and
wanton wind,'
is
Phix But whether in Hesiod, Apollodoros, or Herodotos, the story of Echidna is intertwined with that of Geryones, who like herself is not only a child of Chrysaor and Kallirhoe, but a
monster, who has the bodies of three men united at the waist. This being lived in Erytheia, the red land, which, in some versions, was on the coast of Epeiros, in others, near Gadeira
or Gades beyond the Pillars of Herakles.
or Sphinx
In either case, he abode in the western regions, and there kept his herds of red oxen. In other words the myth of Geryones exhibits a fiery
oxen are the These herds are guarded by the shepherd Eurytion and the twoheaded dog Orthros, the offspring of Echidna and Typhon. These herds Herakles is charged to bring to Eurystheus,
in
which the
red, or purple
335
CFAP.
w^
conveys them across the Ocean stream, and begins his journey westward. The stories of Alebion and Derkynos, and
again of Eryx, as noted by Apollodoros, 2 are only fresh versions of the myth of the Panis, while the final incident
of the gadfly sent by Here to scatter the herds reproduces
The myth
as related
in-
terest,
although he starts with speaking of oxen and ends with a story of stolen horses. Here the events occur in the wintry Scythian land, where Herakles coming himself with
his lion skin goes to sleep,
and
away
are
caught by Echidna and imprisoned in her cave. Thither Herakles comes in search of them, and her reply to his question is that the animals cannot be restored to him until he should have sojourned with her for a time. Herakles must fare as Odysseus fared in the palace of Kirke and the
and Echidna becomes the mother of three sons, whose strength is to be tested by the same ordeal to which Theseus and Sigurd are compelled to submit. He only of the three shall remain in the land who can brace around his body the girdle of Herakles and stretch his bow. To the girdle is attached a golden phial or cup, of which we
cave of Kalypso
;
Orthros.
Theo-
simply a hound sprung from Echidna and Geryones, but in Apollodoros becomes a dog with two heads, as Kerberos appears with three, although in Hesiod his heads are
gony
is
not
less
than
fifty in
is
that Orthros
thus the being who, like Vritra, hides away the light or the glistening cows of the sun ; but the time specially assigned
1
Max
Miiller, Chips,
ii.
184.
ii-
5, 10.
336
BOOK
.
him
as to the Asvins
is
first faint
although
this
forests,
supreme drawing towards its close. It was at time that Hermes, having toiled all night in the kindled
still
its
reign
is
returned
home
down
like a
may have raged through the night. This who with Kerberos answers seemingly to the two dogs of Yama, is slain by Herakles, as Vritra is killed by Indra, who thus obtains the name of Vritrahan, a name
gale which
Orthros,
which must have assumed in Greek the form Orthrojxhon. Nor is the name of Kerberos, who, armed with serj)ents for his mane and tail, has sometimes even a hundred heads, wanting in the Yeda, which exhibits it under the form Sarvari, an epithet for the night, meaning originally- dark or pale. Kerberos is thus the dog of night, watching the
(
The same terrible enemy of the powers of light appears again under the names Typhon, and Typhoeus, which denote the smoke and^flames vomited out by Vritra, Geryon or Cacus, in other words, the lightning flashes which precede the fall of
This being
is
all the dreadful winds which bring mischief and ruin to mortals, destroying ships at sea and houses and By this fearful hurricane, Ssubv v/3picrT7]v crops on land. ave/jiov, Echidna becomes the mother of Kerberos, the Lernaian Hydra, the Chimaira, the Sphinx, and the Nemean Lion, all of them representing under different forms the dark powers who struggle with and are conquered by the lord of day, and whose mightiest hosts are seen in the armies of the Titans leagued against the Kronid Zeus. Of these beings it is enough to say that later mythologists arranged their names and their functions almost at their will. Among the former appear some, as Hyperion and Phoibe, which are elsewhere mere names for the sun and moon and in this its later form the myth is little more than an attempt to explain how it was that Kronos, time, was not able to devour and destroy all his children. With
the father of
Max
Miiller, Chips,
ii.
18J.
lb. 183.
Theog. 8G9.
33
must be inevitably engaged in an internecine war, the issue of which could not be doubtful. The thunderbolts by which Indra overwhelms his foe reappear in the Greek myth as the Kyklopes and the Hekatoncheires or hundred-handed beings whom on the advice of
insatiable parent Zens
CHAP
.
^__
Gaia the king of the blue heaven summons from the depths
of Tartaros into which Kronos and his associates are hurled.
This struggle
in the
is,
indeed,
Ouranos are seen once more who league themThese giants are mentioned in selves against all the gods. Hesiod merely as children sprung from Gaia along with the Erinyes after the mutilation of Ouranos. Elsewhere they
assailed
Echidna and Ahi, with snaky bodies. Against these foes even Zeus himself is powerless unless he can gain the help of the mortal Herakles, and the latter in his turn can prevail over Alkyoneus only by taking him away from his own soil, from which, like Antaios, he rises When at with renewed strength after every downfall.
aspect,
and
like
is
Section II.THE
LATIN MYTH.
Hermios
an
The main features of the myths of Yritra, Geryon and Echidna reappear in the singular Latin legend known to us This story had undergone as that of Hercules and Cacus. before it assumed its Euemerised strange transformations forms in the hands of Livy and of the Halikamassian Dionysios, with whom even the account which he rejects as mythical has been carefully stripped of all supernatural inciAccording to Dionysios, Herakles driving before him dents. the oxen of Geryon had reached the Palatine hill when, as in the myth of Echidna, he was overcome by sleep. On wakinghe found that some of his cattle had been stolen by some Doubtless thief who had dragged them away by their tails.
1
Paus.
viii.
29, 3.
VOL.
II.
Dionysios means that he saw through the clumsy device, which the writer of the Homeric hymn discreetly avoided by
and thither, until and with him the story goes on with a colloquy between Herakles and Cacus, who stands at the entrance of the cave and denies all knowledge of the cattle. But his guilt is proved when the lowing of the other cattle whom Herakles brings up rouses the imprisoned oxen to reply. He then slays Oacus with a blow of his club, and builds an altar to Zeus the discoverer (svpsa-Los) near the Porta Trigeminal The myth as related by Yirgil and Ovid carries us back at once to the language of the Yedic hymns and this fact, of which the poets were of course profoundly unconscious, shows the fidelity with which they adhered to the genuine tradition of the country. Here we have the deep cave of Vritra, with its huge rocks beetling over it, the mighty mass which represents the dark thundercloud in which the waters are confined. 2 Into this cave the rays of the sun can never enter 3 and here dwelt the monster, who, like Echidna, is but half a human being, and of whom the fire-god Vulcan is
drive the cattle hither
all possibility
making Hermes
of tracking
them was
lost
Dion. H. i. 39-41. This version Dionysios rejects as fabulous 'because thr expedition of Herakles to drive oxen from the far west, in order to please Eurysthens, is an improbable event, not becauses it contravenes the order of nature.' Lewis, Credibility of Early Roman History, i. 289. Dionysios has no scruple in converting the myth into history by making Herakles the leader of a great army, and by stating that the stolen beasts belonged to his commissariat. Herakles is also invested by him with that high moral character on which the apologue of Prodikos is made Sir Cornewall Lewis reto turn. marks that in a legend of the Epizephyrian Lokrians Latinus fills the place of Cacus and steals the oxen of Hercules.' //;. 335. That the myth took a strong hold on the Latin imagination cannot be doubted. The den of Cacus is placed in the Aventine; but the steps of Cacus were on the Palatine; they are known to Diodorus and the latter hill is in his narrative the residence of Cacius, who with Pinarius hospitably and reverently entertains the Tirynthian
1
hero,
and is substituted for Potitius, nay, for Evander; the latter does not
appear at all, nor do any Arcadians: none but natives are mentioned. So a sister of Cacus, Caca, was worshipped like Vesta, with eternal fire.' Niebuhr, History of Borne, i. The Aborigines and Latins.' Niebuhr saw that in this legend 'the worship of the Sabine Semo Sancus was transferred to the son of Alkmene but he merely states the fact without attempting to account for
'
'
it.
Livy
in the description of
'
'
Cacus, 94.
3
'
Yirg. 2En.
viii.
195.
339
CHAP,
'
The hurling down of the rock by Hercules is the shattering of the castle of Vritra by the spear of Indra. No sooner is the blow struck than the horrible abyss of his dwelling is lighted up by the flames which burst from the
clouds.
monster's mouth, in other words, the darkness of the stormcloud is pierced by the lightning. Then follows the death of the monster, to whose carcase the poet applies an epithet
which links this myth with the legend of the Chimaira slain by Bellerophon and thus connects it again with that of
Yritra.
1
buhr.
But we have here to meet the difficulty noticed by Me- Sancus or Whatever is to be said of the name Cacus, it is clear E ^aranus.
that the
in the
There was indeed a Latin god Herculus, but, like the Lares worshipped by the Arval Brotherhood, he was strictly a god of the country and the guardian of fences
and land-marks.
Genial Hercules, a
He
is known as the Rustic, Domestic, or name which points to an old verb hercere,
;
herciscere, akin to arcere, and the Greek sipysiv but this very fact precludes the idea that the Latin Hercules, of which the old form Herclus, Herculus, survives in the ex-
clamation Mehercule, Mehercle, is identical with the Greek Herakles. 2 But the god who overcame Cacus must have
1
'
Villosa
viii.
setis
Pectora semiferi.'
Mn.
2
M. Bival
as in the
that Herakles, like Perseus, Theseus, Achilleus, and the rest, is in the Greek
mythology
tlir
strictly not a god. Though son of Zeus himself, he is doomed to toil, weariness, and death and the only offset to his short career on earth is the assurance that when his journey here is done he shall enter the halls of Olympos, there to live in everlasting youth. But it is most doubtful whether the Latin mythology knew anything of heroes in
;
the Greek sense of the word. L'esprit a la fois net et abstrait du Pomain ne lui a pas permis de creer des etres interraediaires entre les dieux et les homines. Sans doute, il cormait, des genies d'un ordre plus ou moins reh ve qui president aux actions humaines et interviennent dans la vie; il sacrifie aux Manes de ses anceta s qui apres k-ur mort ont pris place parmi les dieux mais des demi-dieux comme Tin Persee, Heracles, tenant a la fois du ciel et de la terre, on n'en voit pas dans la mythologie Latine. La transformation de Romulus en dieu Quirinus est une tentative tardive et mal reussie, que Pome ue renouvela pas. jusqu'au ti mps ou elle fit de Cesar mort un demidieu.' P. 51.
'
z 2
Roman became
name
his own ancient gods, he attributed to his own Hercules the deeds which were rightly told of the son of
amongst
Alkmene, and doubtless also of the god into whose place he The god thus displaced was, in M. was thus intruded. Breal's judgment, the deity known as Sancus or Eecaranus. The former, answering to Zeus Pistios of the Greek and the Dius Fidius of the Latins, imparted to the Ara Maxima the peculiar sanction which rendered all oaths there taken inviolable. The name Eecaranus, which is actually given by Aurelius Victor as that of the slayer of Cacus, 2 must in M. Breal's judgment be referred to the root cri, or hri, which has furnished to Sanskrit, Greek, and Latin a large number of words denoting the ideas of creation and power. M. Breal cites from Festus the word cerus as an epithet of Janus, 3 and connects with it the Greek Kronos and the Keres, who have power over the life and death of men. 4 If then Caranus or Garanus, is the maker, Eecaranus must be the god who makes again, or who, like Dahana, renders all things young; and thus Eecaranus would denote the Ee-creator, and so the Eecuperator or recoverer of the cattle stolen by Cacus, Geryon or When, however, the Eoman, becoming acquainted Yritra. with Greek myths, found the word Alexikakos among the epithets of Herakles, he naturally came to regard Eecaranus as only another name for that hero. But the quantity of the name Cacus leaves no room for this identification. The first syllable is long, and the word, given by Diodoros under the
1
Cacus, 57. The that of Sancus is so often connected is an epithet denoting fertility and wealth, as in semen:' and Herculus himself is necessarily ineluded in the number of the Semones, along with Ceres, Pales, and Flora. 2 Orig. Gen. Bom. vi. Eecaranus quidam, Grsecse originis, ingentis cor1
Breal, Hercule
et
Koman
tra-
narae
'
The name
in
es, duonus Ianus.' found on a cup preserved the Gregorian museum at Kome and
is
'
'Duonus cerus
inscribed
4
Ceri Poculom.'
Oavdroio.
KTJpes
The words
xvpios
'
magnarum virium pastor. ... Hercules appellatus.' That Victor should look on Eecaranus as strictly a Greek word is not surprising but as it does not occur in any Greek myths, the evidence becomes conclusive that he has
poris et
;
and Koipauos have passed into the notion of mastery from the obvious fact that he who has made a thing must have power over it. So Kpaiveiv is to decree,
because an effectual command can be given only by him who has a constraining authority, i. e. who can make others do his bidding.
OECUS AND
KAIKIAS.
leads
form Kakios, and reappearing in the Prsenestine Cseculus, M. Breal to the conclusion that the true Latin form What then Csecius, as Sseturnus answers to Saturnus. was The idea of the being who bears this name is ? is Csecius clearly that of the Sanskrit Yritra, the being who steals the Such beautiful clouds and blots out the light from the sky.
is
to
such also is Typhon and the latter word suggests M. Breal a comparison of Cacus with Csecus, the blind or But in a proverb cited by Aulus Gellius eyeless being.
Paris
;
;
from Aristotle, a being of this name is mentioned as pos2 and sessing the power of drawing the clouds towards him of an thus we have in M. Breal's judgment the explanation incident which, translated into the conditions of human life, becomes a clumsy stratagem. In storms, when contrary currents are blowing at different elevations, the clouds may often appear from the earth to be going against or right towards the wind. Then it is that Cacus is drawing the cattle
;
Section III.
BELLEROPHOK
:
rough and shaggy (villosa) and this epithet carries us to breast of the monster Cacus the names of similar beings in the mythology of other Aryan That the root var, to hide or cover, has furnished tribes. names for Yaruna the brooding heaven, as well as for Yritra, the enemy who hides away or imprisons the rain, we have already seen. We may follow Professor Max Muller as he
Virgil notes
especially the
other words, the wool-bearer), to urna, wool, the Greek slpos and ep-iov, in urnayu, a goat and a spider (the Greek ap-ayyrj), the one as supplying wool, the other as
ram
(in
be established (and the Csecius, Kakios, and the Greek KaiKias seems to leave no room for doubt), the word Cacus is at once accounted for. Csecus is one of many words in which the negative is expressed by the particle ha denoting the number 1, which Bopp discovers in
1
If this can
affinity of Cacus,
Csecus,
the eye.
is
The
Cf.
made up
and
found
2
in the
English phrase
'
lithe of
p. 88.
limb.'
kolk
vi<pos
6 Kat/cio?
man who
ib.
the Gothic haihs = csecus, blind, hanfs, one-handed, halts, lame, halbs, half.
Ill;
fleece.
But
as in
is
a protector.
The meaning of
the word
into that of
mere roughness, and the term varvara was Aryan invaders to the negro-like aboriginal tribes, whom the Greeks would have termed barbarians. That this last word can be referred to no other root is further proved by a comparison of the Sanskrit lomasya with the Greek Saavrrjs, words in which the shagginess of hair furnishes a metaphor denoting roughness of pronunciation. But the Sanskrit varvara transliterated into Greek would yield the word Belleros and thus we retain some notion of a being of whom the Greek myth gives otherwise no account whatever. The invention of a noble Corinthian of this name, to serve as the victim of Hipponoos the son of Glaukos, is on a par with the explanations given by mythographers for such names as Pan, Odysseus, Oidipous, or Aias. Belleros then is some shaggy or hairy monster, slain by the hero named from this exploit, in short, another Cacus, or Ahi or Vritra and as Indra is Vritra-han, the
applied by the
1
slayer of Indra, so
is
Although no mythical being is actually found bearing this name in the Rig Veda, yet the black cloud is one of the This cloud is sometimes chief enemies (dasas) of Indra. called the black skin, sometimes the rain-giving and fertilising skin, 3 while the
demon
ram, or a shaggy and hairy creature, with ninety-nine arms. This wool- or fleece-covered animal is therefore reproduced
not only in the monster Belleros, but in the Chimaira which
1
It
is
needless for
me
to
do more
than refer the reader to Professor Max Miiller's chapter on Bellerophon (Chips,
ii.)> where he will find the subject treated at length and most convincingly, Were I to repeat my obligations as often as I feel that I ought to repeat them, I
vol.
Sanskrit han, the Greek <p6vos, and the English bane. The precise Greek equivalent for Vritrahan would be Orthrophon, a word which is not actually found, although Herakles is really Orthrophontes, the slayer of the shaggy hound Orthros.
3
Max
Miiller, Chips,
ii.
180.
We may
trace
the
root
in
the
CHIMAIRA.
34
CHAP. _ \
Hipponoos is said to have slain, a being, like Geryon, Kerberos, Ortliros, and Echidna, of a double or triple bodj\ In the Chimaira the fore-part is that of a lion, the middle that of a goat, while the hinder-part, like that of his mother Echidna
and all other cognate beings, is the tail of a fish or serpent. The death of Vritra or the wool-weaver (Aurnavabha) is followed by the loosening or the downfall of the rain but
1
although it is not said that this is the effect of the slaughter of Chimaira, the idea of rain or moisture as repressed by the monster is not absent from the myth of Bellerophon. His
victory
is
won by means
he finds feeding by the fountain or waters (77-17717) of Peirene, and from its back, as he soars aloft in the air, Hipponoos pours down his deadly arrows on the offspring of
Echidna, as Indra from his chariot in the heaven hurls his
lance against the gloomy Vritra.
whom
and the other dark beings are and he who destroys them is dasyuhan, the slayer of the dasas a name which translated into Greek would yield Leophontes. This epithet and it is applied to Hipponoos as well as that of Bellerophon clear that he cannot be so called as killing lions, for he is would then be Leontophontes. Nor is it easy to connect this Leo or Deo, of which he is the conqueror, with anything but the Sanskrit dasa, which reappears in dasapati, the
But
Le<
tes.
all of
them enemies
In the Theban legend this foe is requered enemies. 2 produced as Laios, 3 who is doomed, like Akrisios, to perish
1 It is possible that the introduction of the word Chimaira into this myth may be the result of a confusion like those already noticed between Arkshas and Pukshas, Leukos and Lukos, &c. At the least, Chimaira is a name not for goats of any age, but only for those The older which are one year old. goats are called Aiges. Theokr. i. 6.
2 With this wo must compare not only the Greek \a6s, Keds, people, but This word the adjective Sifios, hostile.
Professor Max Miiller {Chips, ii. 187;, traces to the root das, to perish, although he adds that, 'in its frequent application to fire the adjective Sdios might
well
Chimaira then, is strictly a wintera yeaiiing), just as the Latin bimus or trimus (bi-himus, hiems), denotes things of two or three winters But the sun is the slayer of old. winter; and hence the creature which he slays would be the Chimaira.
ling, (i.e.
referred to the root du, to difference in meaning beis not greater than that which separates Varuna from Vritra, or
be
Laios, in the opinion both of ProMiiller and of M. Breal, is an exact equivalent of the Sanskrit Dasyu. To the assertion of M. Comparetti that
44
to the
Section
he
IV. THE
THEBAN MYTH.
The
to the
throttling snake,
manifest from
Theban Sphinx with the Ahi, the its name, which belongs
same root with the verb a<f>iyyay, to bind tight, to and so to choke. In the Hesiodic Theogony this word is given under the form Phix, and points to the connexion between the words atyiyyco, ir^yvvfii, and the Latin figo, to fix or fasten. If the Thebans derived this name from the mount Phikion, their mistake was but a repetition of the process which traced the surnames of Phoibos to the island of Delos and the country of Lykia. The Sphinx, then, like Vritra and the Panis, is a being who imprisons the rain in hidden dungeons. Like them, she takes her seat on a rock, and there she utters her dark sayings, and destroys the men who cannot expound them. In Hesiod, she is a daughter of Orthros and Chimaira, who with her mother Echidna exhibits the same composite form which reappears in the Sphinx. In the Sphinx the head of a woman is combined with the body of a beast, having like Typhon the claws of the lion, the wings of the bird, and the serpent's tail and in Apollodoros Typhon is himself her father. It is, of
squeeze,
1
may be
an expression
Ahi, Vritra,
;
same idea which has given birth to the Panis, and the kindred beings of Greek
for the
mythology but neither the name nor the figures of the Hellenic Sphinx have been borrowed from Egypt. The
an Aryan d never appears in Greek as I, Professor Miiller replies by saying that the instances in support of his own position were supplied by Ahrens, De
'
Dialecto
Za<pvit),
Dorica,,'
who
cites
>
{Chips, ii. 168). He adds (186) a large number of instances in which the same word in Latin exists under both forms, as impedimenta, impeliconsimenta presidium, prsesilium dium, consilium dingua (Goth, tuggo), and lingua, &c. Professor Curtius, when he speaks of the transition of 5
;
= SI(tkos.
into \ as unheard of in Greek, must, in Professor Miiller's opinion, be speaking of classical Greek, and not of the Greek dialects, which are nevertheless of the greatest importance in the interpretation of the names of local gods and heroes, and in the explanation of local legends.' But if we sought for a Greek equivalent to the Latin lavo, we might look for a form Sefco, not less than for Xovw and we find both, as in 11. ii. 471,
'
(ire
J
y\dyos fryyea
iii.
Sewet.
5. 8.
34
never represented
.
Egyptian Sphinx
of a lion with a
Nile
is
is
CHAP.
-^
may have originated with Herodotos, or may have been taken for granted on the bare assertion of Egyptian priests by others before himself; bnt the name existed in Greek
mythology long before the port of Naukratis was opened to Greek commerce. The conclusions which Herodotos drew from his Egyptian informants on the subjects of ethnology and mythology were in almost every case wrong; and the Sphinx is too closely connected with Echidna and Zohak, with Orthros, Vritra, Geryon and Cacus, to justify any classification which professes to account for one without
explaining the rest. 1
In point of fact, few Greek myths are more transparent than that of the monster which is slain by Oidipous. The story which made her the daughter of Orthros or Typhon, said simply that the cloud in which the thunder abode, and in which the rain was imprisoned, was the child of the darkness the version which made her a daughter of Laios 2 spoke of her as sprung from the great enemy of Indra and The huge Phoibos the darkness under another name. stormcloud moves slowly through the air and so the phrase went that Here the goddess of the open heaven had sent the Sphinx, because the Thebans had not punished her enemy Others Laios, who had carried off Chrysippos from Pisa. grinder, to related that she had been sent by Ares, the avenge herself on Kadmos for slaying his child the dragon, or that she was come to do the bidding of Dionysos or of Hades. The effect of her coming is precisely that which follows the The blue heaven is theft of the cows of Indra by the Panis. veiled from sight, the light of the sun is blotted out, and
:
The Piddle
solved.
over the city broods the mighty mass, beetling like a gigantic
In the Vishnu Tnrana (H. H. Wil514) the sphinx appears as the
'
son,
demon Dheanka, whom Pama seized by both hind legs, and whirling him round until he expired, tossed his carcase to the top of a palm-tree, from the
The
simile
here gives the original form of the myth, 2 Paus. ix. 26, 2.
4b
BOOK
_
,.!
Kadmos
instructing
and learning, we see in one and all the keenness of wit and strength of purpose which do their work while gods and men think little of the dwarfs Vishnu and Hari, the halting Hephaistos, or Apollon wrapped in his swaddlingTheir career begins in weakness to end in clothes at Delos. strength, in defeat to be crowned by victory. In three strides the child Vishnu traverses the heaven; and the despised Oidipous, who knows nothing,' solves the riddle of the Sphinx as surely as Indra and Herakles discover the
'
It is
own
hall, or
Boots sitting
among
him
to
due rather to
347
CHAP.
,
essential
1
-^
The Voice
Thunder.
the utterances of Typhaon, which even the gods can only sometimes understand, 2 and which cease when the cloud has
been pierced by the lightning and the rain has fallen upon the earth. Thus, in two or three mythical phrases, we have the framework of the whole myth. The first, Oidipous is talking with the Sphinx,' indicates the struggle of Indra with the Panis, of Zeus with Typhon, of Apollon with the Delphian dragon in the second, Oidipous has smitten the Sphinx,' we have the consummation which sets the land
'
' ;
free
Section
VTHE
In other myths the incidents of the imprisonment and The Pvliberation of the waters are marked with scarcely less clear- j^on. ness than in the history of Indra himself. The being with whom Apollon has to fight is the dragon of Pytho, who had chased and vexed his mother during her journey ings before she reached Delos, and at whose death the imprisoned waters started from the sources opened by the spear of Phoibos. In the Theban myth the snake who is slain by Kadmos guards the well of Ares, and slays all who come to fetch
The water until Kadmos himself deals it the death-blow. snakes or serpents are no other than the dragon of the glistening heath, which, in the myths of the frost-bound regions of the north, lies coiled round the sleeping Brynhild and all her treasures. The myth is changed only in the point of view which substitutes deliverance from the deadly
3
cold of winter for deliverance from the not less dreadful plague of drought. The latter idea may be traced in the
Pind. Pyth,
T 350.
2
3
M. Breal (Hercule
instance adds the 'Eurybate ayant tire monstre Sybaris qui desolait les environs de Delphi, et l'ayant brise contre
Cacus,
monster, under the form of a huge wild ass, who haunts a spring, is slain again by the Persian Rustem. Keightley,
Fairy Mythology,
4
19.
vi. 6.
3-48
BOOK
,1
The enemy here is not a snake but an evil spirit, or rather demon of one of the companions of Odysseus who had been slain for wrong done to a maiden of that city. The
the
him
once a year a beautiful maiden. From this point the story is but another version of the myth of Perseus. Like him,
(a wrestler who is said to have won several vicOlympia between the 70th and 80th Olympiads, but whom his countrymen regarded as a son of the river Kaikines) resolves to rescue the maiden, and wins her as his bride, while the demon, like the Libyan dragon, sinks into the sea. Of the mode by which Euthymos mastered him nothing is said ; but Pausanias adds that Euthymos was not subjected to death, and that the demon whom he overcame was a creature terribly dark and black, with the skin of a wolf for his garment. With this legend we may compare the story of the monsters slain by Beowulf, the wolf-tamer,
Euthymos
tories at
the
first
who ravages
slays
the country of
after a struggle as
arduous as that of Indra with the Panis. The second is but another form of the first. It is a huge dragon which guards
a treasure -hoard near the sea-shore, and which sinks into
the waters
The Mmo-
becomes master of all his wealth. The same devouring enemy of the lord of light reappears in the Cretan Minotauros and here also, as we resolve the myth into its component parts, we see the simple framework on which it has been built up. The story in its later form ran that at the prayer of Minos Poseidon sent up from the sea a bull, by whom Pasiphae became the mother of a com;
made by the cunning workman Daidalos, and there fed with the children whom the Athenians were obliged to send yearly, until at length the tribute-ship brought among the intended victims
1
In a
still
tale of the
in Southey's metrical
349
who by the aid of Ariadne slew the human-headed bull, or the bull-headed man, for this being To search this myth for a is exhibited under both forms. residuum of fact, pointing to some early dependence of historical Athens on the maritime supremacy of some Cretan
king,
is,
as
we have
We
know nothing
what we learn from the myths The Minotauros is the offspring of the bull from the sea, which appears again in the myth of Europe and is yoked to the chariot of Indra, and of Pasiphae, who gives light to all. This incident
these myths relate except
but a translation of the fact that the night follows or is born from the day. The same notion assigns Phoibos Chryis
saor, the
lord
of the
fair
nymph
The mon-
Cacus, and the Sphinx. In other words, he must steal, kill, and devour, and his victims must belong to the bright
he is sprung. The Panis can steal only the cows of Indra, and the Minotauros can consume only the beautiful children of the dawn-goddess Athene; in other words, the tribute can come only from Athens. But all these fearful monsters lurk in secret places; each has his cave or mountain fastness, where he gorges himself on his prey. The road to it is gloomy and bewildering; and in
beings from
whom
who
tell
and leads tortuously away,' we Sarama that the way have something more than the germ of the twisting and hazy labyrinth we have the labyrinth itself. This intricate abode is indeed the work of the magnificent Daidalos but the walls of Ilion, to which Paris the seducer takes the beautiful Helen, are built by Phoibos and Herakles themIn this dark retreat lurks the monster who can be selves.
is far
;
but although Indra is the he cannot find out where his destined destroyer of Yritra, enemy is hidden away except by the aid of Sarama. In in this lovely being, who, peering about through the sky to the den of the search of the stolen cattle, guides Indra
slain only
by one
invincible hero
350
BOOK
v_
we
abode of the Minotaur and thus the myth resolves itself into a few phrases which spoke of the night as sprung from the day, as stealing the treasures of the day and devouring its victims through the hours of darkness, and as discovered by
the early morning
sun.
who
brings up
its
Section
The Phorkides,
Graiai,
and
Gorgons.
Nor are myths wanting for the other phases of the heaven between the setting and the rising of the sun. If the lovely flush of the first twilight is betokened by the visits of Selene to Endymion, the dusky gloaming is embodied in the Graiai, or daughters of Phorkys and Keto, who are grey or ashenThus the phrase that Perseus coloured from their birth.
had reached the home of the Graiai only said in other words that the sun had sunk beneath the horizon. In the Hesiodic Theogony they are only two in number, Pephredo and Enyo, the latter name being akin to Enyalios and Enosichthon, epithets of Ares and Poseidon as shakers of the earth and In the scholiast on iEschylos 2 they appear as swansea. maidens, who have only one tooth and one eye in common, which they borrow from one another as each may need them. The night again, as lit up by a grave and sombre beauty, or as oppressing men by its pitchy darkness, is represented by the other daughters of Phorkys and Keto who are known as the Gorgons. Of these three sisters, one only, Medousa, as em1
bodying the short-lived night, is subject to death the others, Stheino and Euryale, as signifying the eternal abyss of darkness, are immortal. According to the Hesiodic poet,
;
Poseidon loved Medousa in the soft meadow among the flowers of spring ; and when her head fell beneath the sword
of Perseus, there sprang from
it
sword, and the winged horse Pegasos an incident which is simply the counterpart of the birth of Geryoneus from Kallirhoe
and Chrysaor.
1
273.
Prom. V. 793.
MEDOUSA.
351
had once been beautiful, but had roused the wrath of Athene" as becoming the mother of glorious children, or as having
dared to set her
liness of the
own beauty
herself.
Dawn
The
rivalry
was indeed
vain.
The serene st night cannot vie with the exquisite hues of the morning and henceforth, to requite her daring, the raven locks of Medousa must be turned into hissing snakes, the deadly glance of her joyless face should freeze all who gazed on it into stone, and even Perseus could bring her long
;
agony
to
an end only by fixing his eye on the burnished fell on the neck of the
The notion of these serpent enemies of the bright gods The Night runs through the mythology of all the Aryan nations. ^'-'J^ Sometimes they have three heads, sometimes seven or even more but we cannot forget that the words Ahi, Echidna,
:
had nothing in common with the thought denoted by the dragon. The latter was strictly the keen-sighted being, and as such belonged to the heavenly hierarchy. The dragons who bear the chariot of Medeia through the air, or who impart to the infant Iamos the gift of prophecy, are connected only by the accident of
anguis, expressed an idea which
cradle,
the snakes whom Herakles strangles in his Phoibos slays at Delphoi, or Indra smites in But when by the weakening of the land of the Panis. same word was used to denote the malignant memory the serpent and the beneficent dragon, the attributes of the one
name with
whom
some myths more or less blended with those of the other. In the popular Hindu story of Yikram Maharajah, the cobra who curls himself up in his throat and will not be dislodged is clearly the snake of winter, who tab away the gladness and joy of summer; for this disaster is followed by the rajah's exile, and his people mourn his became
in
3
absence as Demeter grieves while her child Persephone is sojourning in Hades. It is in fact the story of Sigurd and
1 In Teutonic folk-lore the night or darkness is commonly the ravening wolf, the Fenris of the Edda. This is the evil beast who swallows up Little Red Cap or Red Riding Hood, the evening,
with her scarlet robe of twilight. In one version of this story Little Red escapes his malice, afl Mi mndn r again from Hades.
I
.52
BOOK ,_
for here it is
Yikram who
is
banished or
sleeps,
while
the
beautiful
princess
him among
Him
still
woful state
Polyidos.
is
remains coiled up in his throat. This brought to an end by an incident which occurs
of Glaukos and two cobras conversing, and learns from them the way not merely to rid her husband of
in the stories of
Buccoulee
more notably
is
myth
softened
down
man
To the treachery
most disinterested generosity and But Hektor had had no share in the sin of Paris, and there was nothing even in the earliest form of the myth which would require that the kinsmen of Paris should not fight bravely for their hearths and homes. We have, however, seen already that the mythical instinct was satisfied when the legend as a whole conveyed the idea from which the myth sprung up. Hion was indeed the fastness of the dark powers but each chief and warrior who fought on their side would have his own mythical history, and threads from very different looms might be woven together into a single skein. This has happened to a singular extent in the Trojan legend. The warmer hues which are seen in the pictures of Phoibos, Perseus, and Herakles have been shed over the features even of Paris himself, while Glaukos, Sarpedon, and Memnon are children of the dawn who come from the gleaming eastern
his indolent selfishness the
In the story of Muchie Lai, the seven-headed cobra is the friend anddefender of the dawn-maiden, and is, in
1
the snake who dwells in the shrine of Athene, the goddess of the morning,
fact,
Dcccan
AHRIMAN.
353
CHAP.
Hence it is that Aphrothe dawn-goddess has her child Aineias within the Trojan lines ; and when the brave Hektor has been smitten
dite
X
,
'
beneath the spear of Achilleus, she keeps his body from decay as Athene watched over the corpse of Patroklos.
Section VII.
Thus
Contrast
1,etween
entirely physical;
Iranian
h "
DJf
not be suffered to reign over the worshippers of Indra, and in the admission made by Zeus that the light between the
l
one for sovereignty or suball that we can cite as symptoms of that marvellous change which on Iranian soil
is
we have
myth of Vritra into a religion and a philosoSo completely does the system thus developed exhibit a metaphysical character, and so distinctly does it seem to point to a purely intellectual origin, that we might well doubt the identity of Ahriman and Vritra, were it not that an identity of names and attributes runs through the Vedic and Iranian myths to a degree which makes doubt imconverted this
phy.
possible.
is
identity
j
between the Hindu and Persian mythology than between that of the former and the Greeks. The names of Alii, Vritra, Sarama, and the Panis reappear in the west as Echidna, Orthros, Helene and Paris but Trita or Traitana as a name of the god of the air has been lost, and we fail to
;
P
]";
rv
the form Orthrophontes as a parallel to Vritrahan, although such epithets as Leophontes and Bellerophontes would lead us to expect it. In the Zendavesta not merely does this name seem but little changed, as Verethragna, but
find
1
VOL.
II.
A A
354
BOOK
II.
we
Tama and Krisasva of the Yeda in Yima-Kshaeta, Thraetana and Keresaspa of the Avesta, the
also find the Trita,
the representatives of three of the earliest generations of mankind, jnst as the Germans spoke of the Ingsevones,
Azida-
haka and
Zohak.
Herminones and Iscsevones as sprung from Manirus the son The identification of these names with of Tuisco (Tyr). the Feridun, Jemshid and Garshasp of the modern Persian epic of the Shahnameh is regarded by Professor Max Miiller as among the most brilliant discoveries of one of the greatGoing beyond this, Eugene Burnouf est of French scholars. asserts that as Vivasvat is the father of Yama in the Yeda, so is Yivaughvat the father of the Zend Yima, and that the father of the Yedic Trita is Aptya while the father of Thraetana is Athwya. But Thraetana is also known as Yerethragna, the Yeretbra or Yritra slayer, although his enemy is commonly spoken of
1
under the name of Azidahaka, the biting snake, the throttling Ahi of Yedic, and the Echidna of Hellenic, myths. 2 These names again M. Burnouf has traced into the great epic of Firdusi for the Pehlevi form of his name leads us to Feridun,
;
and Feridun is in the Shahnameh the slayer of the tyrant Zohak. But the struggle, which as carried on between Indra and Yritra is clearly a fight to set free the pent-up
waters, is between Thraetana and Azidahaka a contest between a good and an evil being. The myth has received a moral turn, and it suggested a series of conflicts between the
like opposing powers, until they culminated in the eternal
warfare of
Agni, Yishnu, Yaruna, were but names for one and the same divine Being, who alone was to them the Maker and Preserver of all things.
If
it
was said that they had enemies, nor was there anything
;
hymns
any
1
power as having an existence independent of the great Cause of all things. But on Persian soil, the word
evil
Lectures on Language, second series,
522.
The wo- d Dahak reappears in the Greek fidicva), and in 5a, the name for any biting animal, and may be comFor pared with tiger and with dg.
2
the changes which from the same root have produced the Greek Sdnpv, the Gothic tagr, and the English tear, with the Latin laeryma and the French Lectures on larme, see Max Miiller.
ormuzd.
Verethragna, transparent in its meaning to the worshippers of Indra, so thoroughly lost its original sense that it came
to denote
sical point of
oil
355
\i'
-
mere strength or power and as from a metaphyview the power opposed to the righteous God
l
must be a moral one, a series of synonyms were employed which imparted to the representative of Yritra more and more of a spiritual character. The Devas of the Veda are the bright gods who fight on the side of Indra in the Avesta the word has come to mean an evil spirit, and the Zoroastrian was bound to declare that he ceased to be a worshipper of the daevas. 2 Thus Yerethra and all kindred deities were placed in this class of malignant beings, and branded with the epithet Drukhs, deceitful. 3 But the special distinction of the being known to us under the familiar name of Ahriman, was the title of Angro-Mainyus, or spirit of darkness. This name was simply an offset to that of his righteous adversary, Spento-Mainyus, or the spirit of light. But SpentoMainyus was only another name for the Supreme Being, whose name Ahuro-mazdao we repeat in the shortened form of Ormuzd. 5 In this Being the devout Zoroastrian trusted
; 4
1
As
such,
M. Breal remarks
and
is
that it
mauvais,
became an
adjective,
sometimes
used in the superlative degree, a hymn being spoken of as Verethrazanctema. Hercide et Cams, 129.
2
3
Max
i.
25.
The word
Greek
d-TpeK-rjs,
= trust-
worthy, sure.
4 M. Maury, regarding the name Ahriman as identical with the Vedic Aryaman, sees in the Iranian demon a degradation of the Hindu sun-god, an
l'idee d'une divinite adversaire constante d'Ormuzd et de Mithra.' Croyances et Legendesde VAntiquite, 61. The degradation of Aryaman involved the exaltation of Mithra. Une fois devenu la personnifieation de la peril e et de la bonne foi. Mithra recut le caractere de mediatcm* outre Dieu et ^ectTTjs, l'honime, comme Fappelle l'auteur du Traite sur Isis et Osiris,' ih.
'
164.
5 Like Thraetana and Verethragna, the name Ormuzd is Sanskrit. Plato speaks of Zoroaster as a son of Oromazes, which is clearly only another form of the name of this deity. In the inscriptions at Behistun it appears in but in Persian the form Auramazda In the the word conveys no meaning Zendavesta it is found both as Ahuro;
inverse change to that which invested the Trojan Paris with the attributes of Mitra a un autre paredre solar heroes.
'
que
Varouna,
e'est
Aryaman
....
Cette divinite nous offre a l'origine une nouvelle personnifieation du soieil dans son action fortirlaiite et salutaire: a ce titre il est souvent associe a Bhaya, l'Aditya qui dispense des bient'aits et qui Mais, plusbenit les homines .... tard, Aryaman devint l'Aditya de la mort, le soieil destrueteur; car, sous le
mazdao and
as
climat briilant de lTnde. on sait combien est dangereuse l'insolation .... Voila- comment Aryaman fournit a la religion de Zoroastre le type du dieu
these forms lead us at on<-e to the Sanskrit, in which they correspond to the words Asuro medhas, wise spirit name which suggests a comparison with the Metis and Medeia of Greek myths, See Max Midler, Lectures on Language,
A A
356
BOOK
IL
.
with
all
Iranian
which made him the creator and the sovereign of an evil universe at war with the Kosmos of the spirit of light. Such was the origin of Iranian dualism, a dualism which divided the world between two opposing self-existent deities, while it professedly left to men the power of choosing whom Ahura-mazda is holy, true, to be honoured they should obey. through truth, through holy deeds.' 'You cannot serve In the beginning there was a pair of him and his enemy.' These are twins, two spirits, each of a peculiar activity. the Good and the Base in thought, word, and deed. Choose one of these two spirits. Be good, not base.' But practically Ahriman took continually a stronger hold on the popular
4
'
imagination, and the full effects of this process were to be The religion of Zoroaster has been rerealised elsewhere.
garded as a reform in M. Breal's judgment, it was rather a return to a classification which the Hindu had abandoned or had never cared to adopt. ' While Brahmanism kept to the
;
Mazdeism preserved
its
spirit.
The
Parsee,
who
forces,
everywhere present and each in turn victorious until the final victory of Ormuzd, is nearer to the mythical representations of the first age than the Hindu, who, looking on everything as an illusion of the senses, wraps up the
universe and his
Being.'
1
Jts in-
Tx
flnence on
the Jews,
Jews were brought into contact during the captivity at Babylon. That the Hebrew prophets k^ reiterated their belief in one God with the most profound
With
is not to be questioned ; but as little can it be that as a people the Jews had exhibited little imdoubted pulse towards Monotheism, and that from this time we
conviction,
discern a readiness to adopt the Zoroastrian demonology. Thus far Satan had appeared, as in the book of Job, among
1 Hercule et Cams, 129. The same view of the origin of the Dualistic theo-
logy
is
#c,
97.
ST.
357
CHAP.
the ministers of God; but in later books we have a closer approximation to the Iranian creed. In the words of M. Breal, ' Satan assumes, in Zacharias and in the first book of
Chonicles, the character of Ahriman, and appears as the author of evil. Still later he becomes the prince of the
devils, the
enemy
of the
tempts the Son of God; The Apocalypse exhibits Satan with the physical attributes of Ahriman he is called the dragon, the
word of God.
He
he enters into
who
fights against
God and
his angels.
The
Yedic myth, transformed and exaggerated in the Iranian books, finds its way through this channel into Christianity.' The idea thus introduced was that of the struggle between
Satan and Michael which ended in the overthrow of the former, and the casting forth of all his hosts out of heaven
;
but
it
myth spread
in countries
all the Aryan nations to avoid further modification. Local traditions substituted St. George or St. Theodore for < It is under this Jupiter, Apollon, Herakles, or Perseus. Breal, ' that the Yedic myth has come disguise,' adds M.
held by
down
to our
own
times,
and has
and
is
its
monuments.
image
in a thousand ways.
an
as familiar
now
l
demon
been to the Hindu.' That this myth should be Euemerised by Firdusi was natural and inevitable, when once the poet had made Feridim a king of the first Persian dynasty. He could no longer represent Zohak as a monster with three heads, three tails, 2 but the power of the old six eyes, and a thousand forces myth gave shape to his statement that, after the embrace of
the demon, a snake started up from each of his shoulders, whose head, like that of the Lernaian hydra, grew as fast as Nor has it influenced the modern poet only. it was cut off. Cyrus is as historical as Charlemagne but from mythical
;
epic
"
of Firdusl
history
we should
learn as
know
of the latter, if
much
of the former as
lb. 130.
myth
of Roland.
;
What
other sources
like
simply anlive,
Odysseus and the Boots of German tales, in mean disguise, until his inborn nobleness proclaims him the son of a
king.
But as in the case of Oidipous, Perseus, Theseus, and many more, the father or the grandsire dreads the birth of the child, for the sun must destroy the darkness to whom he seems to owe his life. This sire of Cyrus must belong therefore to the class of beings who represent the powers of night in other words, he must be akin to Yritra or to Ahi; and in his name accordingly we find the familiar words. Astyages, the Persian Asdahag, is but another form of the modern Zohak, the Aziclahaka, or biting snake, of Yedic and Iranian mythology ; and the epithet reappears seemingly in the name of Deiokes, the first king of the
Median
nation. 1
Section
ARYAN
DEVIL.
Thus
far
only on Iranian
soil
that
struggle between day and night, the sun and the darkness,
the
which
being with
he is at war. This absolute partition of the universe between two contending principles was the
very groundwork of Iranian belief; but the idea was one
whom
fail to strike
it
soil.
To
a certain extent
found such a
in the
mind
of the
Jewish people, who had become familiar, by whatever means, with the notion of a being whose office it was to tempt or try
the children of men.
is,
there
1
this duty and in the book of Job no indication of any essential antagonism between
;
The story of Deiokes is certainly not told by Herodotos for the purpose of establishing the divine right of kings but it is more than possible that the selfishness and rapacity which mark
and
his inac-
cessible
within a palace from which he never emerges, may have beea suggested by the myth to which his name belongs.
retreat
IRANIAN DEMONOLOGY.
them.
strict
&5(
God
The position of Satan in this narrative is indeed in accordance with the Hebrew philosophy which regarded as the author both of good and evil, as the being who
CHAP.
>
\1
hardened Pharaoh's heart and authorised the lying spirit to go forth and prevail among the prophets of Ahab. But when a portion of the Jewish people was brought into contact with the fully developed system of Persian dualism, the victory of the Iranian theology seemed complete. Henceforth the notion of two hierarchies, the one heavenly, the other diabolical, took possession of their minds and the Satan, who ruled over the powers of darkness and exercised a wide dominion as prince of the air, was confined to a level lower than that of Ahriman, only because he had once stood
;
among
At
remained malignant demons who did his will among mankind, plaguing them with sorrow, disease, and madness, until the convictions
this level he
of the
if
first
enemy
more overpowering than those of the Iranian The Jew, chiefly, if not wholly, from the conviction which led him to regard God as the author both of good and evil, drew no sharp distinction between mind and matter as existing in irreconcilable antagonism and since as a nation they can scarcely be said to the last to have attained to any definite ideas either of the fact or
possible
of Ormuzd.
the conditions of a
life continued after death, Satan could with them obviously have no definite dominion beyond the bounds of our present existence. He could torture the but of bodies, afflict the souls, or darken the minds of men multitudes ruined by his his everlasting reign over countless
;
subtle wiles
we
find
no very
it
definite notion
But
Christianity, while
1:
personal immortality altogether stronger than any to which the most fervent of the Hebrew prophets had ever attained, took root among nations who had filled all the world with
Christian teaching.
gods or demons, each with his own special sphere and office. These deities the Christian teachers dethroned; but far
from attempting to destroy them, they were careful to insist that they had always been, and must for ever continue to be,
60
BOOK
.
malignant devils
speedily to
far a conqueror in his great struggle with the author of his being as to succeed in wresting for ever out of the hands of
God all but an insignificant fraction of the whole race of The victory of the Almighty God could not mankind. extend either to the destruction of Satan and his subordinate demons, or to the rescue of the souls whom he had enticed to their ruin and if power be measured by the multitude of subjects, his defeat by Michael could scarcely be regarded as
;
much impairing
this belief
Of the
effect of
developement of Christendom, it is unnecessary to speak but it must not be forgotten that this particular developement of the Jewish demonology was the natural outgrowth of passionate convictions anima-
and impure. It was almost imwhose eyes were opened to its horrors to look upon it as anything but a loathsome mass which could never be cleansed from its defilement. What could they see but a vast gulf separating the few who were the soldiers of Christ from the myriads who thronged together under the standard of his adversary? Hence grew up by a process which cannot much excite our wonder that severe theology,
society thoroughly corrupt
which,
known
open only to those who received the sacrament of baptism, and shut both here and hereafter to infants dying before it could be administered. It was inevitable that under such conditions the image of Satan should more and more fill the
The Christian missionaries were further conscious that their own thaumaturgy might be called into question, if that of the old creed were treated as Die neue mere imposture or illusion.
1
'
und
schilderte
die
Wunder
des
Christen
Lehre konnte leichter keimen und wurzeln wenn sie die alte als gehassig
ghuihhafter, dass audi dem althergebrachten Heidenthum etwas ubernatiirliches gelassen wurde.' Grimm, 1). M. 7o7.
erscheinen
dadurch
LOKI AND
IIEL.
theological horizon for the few whose enthusiasm and convictions were sincere.
CHAP.
X.
with the conversion of tribes, in whom the thought of one malignant spirit marring and undoing the work of God lmd never been awakened and although henceforth the teaching of the priesthood might continue to be as severe as that of Augustine or Fulgentius, it was met by the passive resistance
;
and oppressive. had no character, was a very devil. Pluto, though of a sombre and Loki, though a mischievous respectable personage The German goddess, Hel, too person, was not a fiend. It was thus no like Proserpine had seen better days.' easy task to imbue them with an adequate horror of a being of whose absolute malignity they could form no clear conof
6
men whose
The Aryan
Max
Miiller,
'
ception.
had their full share of that large inheritance of phrases which had described originally the covering or biting snake, Yritra or Ahi, who shuts up the rain-clouds Probably not one of the phrases which in his prison-house. furnished the groundwork of Iranian dualism had been lost or forgotten by any other of the Aryan tribes; but like Yritra or Ahi, like the Sphinx or the Python, like Belleros
But these
tribes
The Tentonic
DeviL
Chimaira, or Echidna, the beings to whom the German tribes applied these phrases had already been overor
The phrases also had varied in character from grave solemnity to comedy or burlesque, from the type of the Herakles whom we see in the apologue of Prodikos to the
come.
(Death) after he
at
has
away
Alkestis.
To the people
mode
of thinking and speaking on the subject was more congenial; and to it the ideas of the old gods were more
1
Dr. Chips, &c, vol. ii. p. 235. Dasent's words are not less explicit. 'The notion of an Arch-enemy of god and man, a fallen angel, to whom power was permitted at certain times fur an all-wise purpose by the Great Ruler of
the
universe, was as foreign to the heathendom of our ancestors as his name was outlandish and strange to their
This Christianity notion tongue. and brought with it from the easl though it us a plant which ha- struck deep routs, grown distorted and awry, and borne a bitter crop of superstition,
;
it
required all the authority of the to prepare the soil for it- recepPopular Ta tion.'
Church
introduction, p. xcviii.
bZ
"BOOK
^
readily adapted.
*
queen
of the unseen-land,
in
a land of bitter cold and icy walls. She now became not the queen of Niflheim, but Mflheim itself, while her
abode, though gloomy enough, was not wholly destitute of
became the Hell where the old man fire, and where the Devil in his eagerness to buy the flitch of bacon yields up the marvellous quern which is good to grind almost anything.' It was not so pleasant, indeed, as heaven, or the old Valhalla, but it was better to be there than shut out in the outer cold beyond its padlocked gates. 2 But more particularly the devil was a being who under pressure of hunger might be drawn into acting against his own interest in other words, he might be outwitted, and this character of a
material comforts.
It
is almost the only one exhibited in In fact, as Professor Max Miiller remarks, the Germans, when they had been indoctrinated with the idea of a real devil, the Semitic Satan or Diabolus, treated him in the most good-humoured manner nor is
'
it
'
no greater
Tayland ie Smith.
Salt.' Dasent, is This inexhaustible is only another form of the treasures of Helen or Brynhild. But though the snow may veil all the wealth of fruits and vegetables, this wealth is of no use to the chill beings who have laid These beings must their grasp upon it. be therefore f-o hard pressed for hunger that, like Esau, they may be ready to part with anything or everything for a mess of pottage or a flitch of bacon. 2 The Master Smith, in the heathenish
1
'Why
the Sea
ii.
Norse quern
Tales,
carefully locked. Dr. Dasent remarks that the Smith makes trial of hell in the first instance, for 'having behaved ill to the ruler of heaven, and actually quarrelled with the master' of hell, he was naturally anxious to know whether he would be received by either.
'
'
'
'
Ibid. cu.
3 It has been said of Southey that he could never think of the devil without laughing. This is but saying that he had the genuine humour of our Teutonic ancesiors. His version of the legend of Eleeraon may be compared with any of the popular tales in which Satan is
story so entitled, entraps the devil into a purse, as the Fisherman entraps the Jin in the Arabian Tale, and the devil
overmatched by men
whom
ciii.
he despises,
tho Smith preBents himself at the gate of hell, he gives orders to have tho nine padlocks
is
so scared that
when
Grimm,
4
969.
WAYLAND.
that
3G3
CHAP.
x.
the word devil passed into an immense number of forms, the Gothic tieyal, diuval, diufal, the Icelandic djofull, Swedish
them, together with the Italian, French, and Spanish forms carrying back the word SidftoXos to the same root which furnised the Latin Divus, Djovis, and the Sandjevful, all of
skrit deva. 1
To
this
epithets
antagonist of Indra.
Like Vritra, he
(o
more often
he
is
speech at the present day. Like Pani, he is Yalant, the cheat or seducer, 3 who appears in a female form as Valandinne. 4 But to the Germans the fall of the devil from
heaven suggested the idea that, like Hephaistos, he must have been lamed by the descent, and hence we have the lame devil, or devil upon two sticks, who represents the limping Hephaistos not only in his gait but in his office. Like him, the Valant is a smith, and the name, which has assumed elsewhere the forms Faland, Phaland, Poland, Yalland, passes into the English form Wayland, and gives
us the
novel of Kenilworth.
cattle,
Like the robbers who steal Indra's the dark, murky, or black being, the Graumann or Grey man of German folk-lore. 6 Like the Fauns and other mythical beings of Greek and Latin mythology, he has a body which is either wholly or in part
he
is
also
that of a beast.
leaves behind him the print English demon Grant, another of a horse's hoof, and the
Some times he
Grimm, Deutsche Mythologie, 939. This name, one of a vast number of forms through which the root of the Greek W/xw. to swim, lias passed, denotes simply a water-spirit, the nicor of the Beowulf, the nix or nixy of German The devil is here regarded fairy tales. as dwelling in the water, and thus the name explains the sailor's phrase 'Davy's Grimm, D. M., 456. -locker.'
1
Scott's
romance, Wayland
is
mere im-
postor
avails himself of a popular superstition to keep up an air of mj st< ty about himself and his work: but the
who
Nib. 1334.
character to which he makes pretence belongs to the genuine Teutonic Leg< od. Grimm, D. M., 945. This black demon is the Slavish Tschernibog /.. rnibog), who is repr. Bented as the enemy a dualism of Bjelbog, the white god, which Grimm regards as of lute growth,
D. M., 936.
b4
BOOK
II
hag's
fell,
or
to the gate
them. 5
beyond which the lost souls leave hope behind The same process, which converted the kindly
to the devil occupations borrowed from those of the Teutonic Odin and the Greek Orion. But it is no longer the mighty hunter following his prey on the asphodel meadow, or the god
The brave and good who, had followed the midnight journeys of Wuotan give place to the wretched throng of evil-doers who are
hurried along in the devil's train, or in that of some
being,
human
pre-eminent wickedness is made to take the devil's place. In Denmark the hunter is King
for
who
his
Waldemar, in Germany Dietrich of Bern, in France King Hugh or Charles V. in England it is Heme the Hunter of Windsor, and the one-handed Boughton or Lady Skipwith
;
Grimm, D. M. 946. Grimm, ib. 946-7. The buck was specially sacred to DonarorThor; but
1
it is
like that of
possible that this transformation, Lykaon and Arkas, was suggested by an equivocal name; and the buck may be only a kindred form to the
the former answering to the Hellenic Kerberos. He also compares the Old German warg, a wolf, with the Polish wroq, the Bohemian wrah, the Slovinian
vrag, an evil-doer.
ib. 950. 954. This word nobis is formed from the Greek &/3 v<r<ros, through the Italian form ombisso for in abysso a change similar to that which converted is nvvas /3aAAeii/ into aKv^aXa.
5
4
Grimm,
lb.
Slavish Bog, which reappears among us in the form of Puck, Bogy, and Bug. 3 Grimm, ib. 948. With these Grimm couples the hell hound and black raven,
POLYPIIEMOS.
of Warwickshire tradition.
1
365
CHAP.
-
comes the devil's shows something of her ancient character in the part which she plays towards those who throw themselves on her proThus she shields Thor and Tyr in the house of tection. Hymir, as the giant's mother shelters Jack in the nursery In the lay of Beowulf Grendel's mother is less comstory.
plying, and avenges on the hero the death of her son.
-^
The
binding of the
is
'
the devil
the devil
dead.'
One legend
it
myth
of Polyphemos, although
p *^
seems rash to infer any direct derivation of the story from the Odyssey. The devil asks a man who is moulding buttons what he may be doing and when the man answers that he is moulding eyes, asks him further whether he can He is told to come again give him a pair of new eyes.
;
another day
ingly, the man tells him that the operation cannot be performed rightly unless he is first tightly bound with his back fastened to a bench. While he is thus pinioned, he asks the man's name. The reply is Issi ('himself'). When the lead
is
stream.
melted, the devil opens his eyes wide to receive the deadly As soon as he is blinded he starts up in agony,
bench
to
Grimm, D. M.
legends it is Herodias, who, confounded with her daughter, is made to dance on fur ever; or Satia, Bertha, Abundia, (names denoting kindliness, brightness, or plenty), who, with Frigga, and Freya, Artemis and Diana, are degraded into
leaders of midnight troops.
* Here Dionvsos is lowered to the same level with Orion or Wuotan, Grimm, D. M. 961. The devil, of
Many
and
expressions common to England Germany come from the same The compassionate phrase der source. arme Teufel was formerly 'der arme
'
'
Donner
'
devil's brood,'
Teufelskind is nerskind and that here again we are confronted with old mythical expresThunder is red- bearded, and the sions.
and the expletives 'Hagel' 'Donner-wetter' and unser Herr-I point to the time when the heathen Donar was lord of the atmospl His conduct to his wife also (i&. 965). carries us back to some ot the oldest He is said to beat mythical phrases. his wife when the rain falls in snnshine, and the rapid alternation of sunshine and shower is said to be caused by his blanching his grandmother.
;
'
'
366
BOOK
II.
fields
ask him
'
who had
it).
;
Issi teggi
(Self did
lie
The
new
eyes,
Grimm, D. M. 963-980.
cessary to trace in detail all the fancies and notions on the subject of the devil
and
his
works
which
it
said that scarcely a single point mentioned by him is without its value, as throwing light on popular forms of thought and expression. The blinded devil reappears in Grimm's story of the Robber and his Sons, which reproduces the narrative of the Odyssey. Here the robber is the
a ring which, when placed on his makes him cry out, Here I am, here I am.' But although he is guided by the sound, the giant stumbles sadly in his blindness, and the rohber at last makes his escape by biting off his finger and so getting rid of the ring.
finger,
'
him
Sindbad
but
only one who is not devoured by the Giant, and he blinds his enemy while pretending to heal his eyes. In the sequel, instead of clinging to the ram's fleece he clings to the rafters of the ceiling, and afterwards wraps himself in a ram's skin, and so escapes between the giant's legs. But as soon as he gets out of the cave, he cannot resist the temptation of turning round, like Odysseus, to mock at his enemy. The giant, saying that so clever a man ought not go unrewarded, holds out to
the myth has gained nothing by being dressed out in Arabian garb. He is the Urisk of the Western Fairy Tale. Keightley, Fairy Mythology, 396. The Lap story runs as follows There was a Karelian who had been taken by a giant and was kept in a castle. The giant had only one eye, but he had The night came and flocks and herds. the giant fell asleep. The Karelian put out his eye. The giant, who now could no longer see, sat at the door, and felt everything that went out. He had a great many sheep in the courtyard. The Karelian got under the belly of one of them and escaped.' Latham, Nationalities of Europe, i. 227.
:
'
367
APPENDICES.
APPENDIX A.Page
Laios and Dasyu.
72.
The objections raised by M. Comparetti (Edvpo e la Mitologia Comparata), can scarcely be regarded as of weight against the identification of the Greek Laios with the Vedic Dasa or Dasyu, an
enemy.
slaves,
Professor
Max
Miiller,
who
stress,
planation,
holds that Leophontes as a name of Bellerophon is a Greek equivalent of the Sanskrit dasyuhantu, the slayer of the enemies of the bright gods, i.e., of the dasas or demons of the Veda,
such as Yritra, "Qpdpoq, Namuki, 'A/zi/jcoe, Sambara and others.' He would even be inclined to trace back the common Greek word for people Xuoc, to the same source with the Sanskrit dasa, were it not dialects, that the change of d to I in Greek is restricted to certain cannot be admitted as a general rule, unless there be and that it some evidence to that effect,' Chips, ii. 167, 186-7. Some such evidence may be furnished by hvio and Xovu as being both the Of fche equivalents of the Latin lavare in our Homeric poems.
'
'
adjective caiog or
h'fioc,
hostile,
he says, that
it
is
clearly derived
das, to perish,
though
it
is
might true that in its frequent application to fire bhe adjective M'ios
But surely a rod which well be referred to the root da, to burn.' conveys the senseof perishing, i.e., of an abstract result, musl itself be
referred to
some means or process which produced thai result. the first instance, could not say that mri was a root signifying, in meaning is accounted for, when we see that it iir to die: but this said to meant to grind, and hence that the thing crushed maybe the root da in a different The root das would thus be simply die.
I
application.
368
APPENDIX.
APPENDIX B. Page
I give this conclusion in Professor
ii.
102.
Max
must strengthen any inferences which I may venture to make, but because I wish to disclaim any merit of having been the first to proclaim it. I must be forgiven if I notice here, once for all, the strange plan which some writers have thought fit to adopt of quoting as coming from myself passages which I have quoted from others. Thus Mr. Mozley, writing in the Contemporary Revieiv, rejected the solar character of the Trojan War on the ground that this conclusion was a fancy on my part shared by none others, and cited without inverted commas words which in the Manual of Mythology I had quoted with inverted commas from
234, not only because they
Max Miiller's Lectures on Language, second series, p. 471. These words are the simple assertion that the siege of Troy is a reflection of the daily siege of the East by the solar powers that every evening are robbed of their brightest treasures in the West.' I am fuily prepared to share the responsibility which may be involved in this belief, supported as it is by a mass of evidence which it is almost impossible to strengthen, and which might rather be thought, and probably hereafter will be thought, ludicrously excessive in amount; but I cannot claim the merit of having been the first to propound it. The solar character of Achilleus and of the Odyssey I had fully recognised and distinctly declared in the Introduction to the Tales of Thebes and Argos but on the meaning of the siege of Troy itself I had said nothing. I cannot but regret the remarks with which Mr. Gould has closed his excellent chapter on the Tell story, which he thinks has not its signification painted on the surface like the legends of Phoibos or Baldur. Though it is possible,' he adds, 'that Gessler or Harald may be the power of evil and darkness, and the bold archer the storm-cloud with his arrow of lightning and his iris bow bent against the sun which is resting like a coin or golden apple on the edge of the horizon, yet we have no guarantee that such an interpretation is not an overstraining of a theory.' Such an overstraining would probably be confined to himself. The elements common
Professor
' ;
'
'
'
myth are the apple, or some other round and an unerring archer: but here, as we have seen, the absolute agreement ends and it is enough to say that the attributes assigned to Tell, Cloudeslee (whose very name marks him as an inhabitant of the Phaiakian or Cloudland), and the rest are the attributes of the sun in all the systems of Aryan mythology, while no such unfailing skill is attributed to the storm-cloud. Still less
to all the versions of the
object,
;
3G9
its proper place may be of great service. This caution is directed against a supposed temptation felt by Comparative Mycologists to resolve real history into solar
and it is supported by an ingenious and amusing argument proving that Napoleon Bonaparte was the Sun. The parallel cited by Mr. Gould is drawn out with great cleverness; but with referlegends,
it is
Mr. Gould
has demolished
its historical
aside as a narrative
based on actual facts not less decidedly than Professor Max Miiller or Dr. Dasent. Like the latter he is perfectly aware that it is not told at all of Tell in Switzerland before the year 1499, and the earlier Swiss Chronicles omit it altogether.' Dasent, Norse Tales, Intro'
duction, xxxv.
which have not only no sort of contemporary attestation but which cannot be made to fit in with the known facts of the time. Thus the warning
are dealing with matters
Hence we
to those
based on the supposed mythical character of Napoleon applies only who may resolve Perikles or Alexander the Great into tinsun; and we may well wait until some Comparative Mythologist gravely asserts that we may treat or regard as mythical events aiid
characters for which we have the undoubted and unquestionable testimony of contemporary writers. The lack or the complete absence of all such evidence is an essential criterion in the assign-
ment
other.
may separate the one from the Max Miiller does for the story
less closely re-
it
sembling
is
and then to
not more a
myth
in his
Gould.
APPENDIX
C Page 115.
or Cross.
The Stauros
The forms of these crosses varied indefinitely from the simple Tau to the most elaborate crosses of four limbs, with whose modified outlines the beautiful designs of Christian art have made us familiar. 'Ware das Kreuz keine Phallus- zeichen, so fragt sich, was sollte
die
Wesen
Oder welche Absicht leitete jenen Maler, dessen Kunstwerk den Ausonius zu der Idylle, Cupido cruci Nork, s. v. Kreuz, 389. The malefactor's affixus, begeisterte ?
?
'
Roman
VOL.
II.
B B
370
law,
is
APPEXDIX.
as distinct
is
the Vritra
who opposes Indra from the subtle serpent which tempts the woman into transgression. But in both cases the terms applied to
the one are, according to the
mind
the language used of the other, and on the subject of the cross
both ideas have notably converged. But the cross of shame and life are images which can be traced back to times long preceding the dawn of Christianity. In his chapter on the Legend of the Cross Mr. Gould, Curious Myths, ii. 79, gives a drawing of a large cross found in the pavement of a Gallo-Roman palace at Pont d'Oli, near Pau. In the centre of this cross is a figure of the water-god, with his trident (another form of the
the cross of
rod of Hermes) surrounded by figures of fishes (the vesica piscis or Yoni). Mr. Gould also gives engravings of a large number of crosses of various shapes which are certainly not Christian, and then expresses his belief that the cross was a Gaulish sign. Doubt-
but Mr. Gould has himself shown that it was also unfortunate that he should have looked on this subject as one which might be suitably dealt with by means of conHe needed not to jectures, assumptions, and arbitrary conclusions. enter upon it at all but having done so, he was bound to deal with the facts. Among the facts which he notices are the cross- shaped hammer or fylfot of Thor, and the cross of Serapis or Osiris he also mentions a coin of Byblos on which Astarte is represented as holding a long staff surmounted by a cross and resting her foot on the prow of a galley,' (96), and an inscription to Hermes Chthonios in Thessaly accompanied by a Calvary cross (98). Having collected these with many other specimens, Mr. Gould contents himself in one page (94) with saying that no one knows and probably no one ever will know what originated the use of this sign (the cross with the ovoid handle) and gave it such significance.' Elsewhere (105), he asserts that the sign had a religious signification, and that all these crosses (108), were symbols of the Rain- god. We can but ask but from Mr. Gould we get only the assurance that for the reason lie sees no difficulty in believing that the Cross, as a sacred sign,
less it was,
Egyptian.
It is
'
'
'
'
'
'
formed a portion of the primaeval religion, and that trust in the cross was a part of the ancient faith which taught men to believe in a Trinity and in the other dogmas which Mr. Gladstone declares to have been included in the revelation made to Adam on the Fall. The difficulty of accepting Mr. Gould's solution of the matter lies in the absurdities into which the theory must lead everyone who
adopts
is
it.
To
is
untenable,
unphilosophical
give in a
work addressed
371
all, but certainly not for dismissing the question with the dictum that he has examined the evidence for a given hypothesis and found it wanting. Every fact
very
In an illustration inserted in his Tales of the West Highlands, hi. copied all the fish which are figured on the Sculptured Stones of Scotland, together with some of the character339, Mr. Campbell has
'
istic
Among
which few probably will dispute I am not bound, therefore, to examine theories which do not take into account all these facts or But I refer gladly to an article in the their bearings on each other. 'Edinburgh Review,' January 1870, on the Pre-Christian Cross, as bringing together a mass of facts, every one of which points in the direction indicated by the earliest form of the emblems under discussion. Of the reviewer's theory as to their origin and meaning,
;
it is
It
may
be
it is
proved,
who
object to
having one
set of facts
reviewer's conclusion
is
put aside in order to explain another. The that the worship of the cross or tree was
'
have been
and a cross
a region of absolute purity and perpetual felicity the other those four perennial streams that divided and watered the several quarters
of it ? I confess myself quite unable to see either the force of this, or any connexion between the symbols and the ideas but on the other hand we have the indisputable facts that the earliest form of
' ;
the cross (a word which has acquired a meaning so equivocal as to mislead almost every one who uses it) is simply the pole or the Tau,
and that with this stauros or pole, the ring, or the boat-shaped sign, has from the first been associated in every country. These are everywhere the earliest forms, and for these alone wo must in the To go off to later developements in which first instance account. the sign has assumed something like the form of the date-palm is a mere hysteron-proteron. When it has been disproved that the Linga and Yoni have in every country been regarded as the emblems of vitality and reproduction, and as such have been used everywhere to denote the vivifying power of the sun, and therefore adopted as emblems in his worship, we may go on to test the value of theories which, until this is done, have no base to stand on. I feel confident
bb
872
APPENDIX.
that on further consideration the reviewer will see that the facts
his conclusions.
opportunity of referring to a
N". Gr. Batt, on the Corruption of Chrisby Paganism, Contemporary Review, March 1870, and of quoting his remarks on the phallic character of the columns used by the 'pillared saints.' One of the most extraordinary accommodations of heathen ideas to corrupt Christianity is the now obsolete form of asceticism, introduced by Simon Stylites in the neighbourhood of Antioch, and very popular during the last age of the Roman empire. We are told by Lucian in his interesting treatise on the Syrian goddess, that in Hierapolis on the Euphrates there stood a renowned temple of the Assyrian Juno, in front of which two columns, each thirty cubits " Now it was the annual high, were set up in the shape of phalli. custom for a priest to climb to the top of one of .these pillars by the aid of a cord drawn round the column and his own body, in the same manner as the gatherers of dates ascend their And the reason of his going up is this, that most palm-trees. people think that from this height he converses with the gods, and asks blessings for all Syria. He remains there seven days, drawing up his food by a rope. The pilgrims bring some gold and silver, and others brass money, which they lay down before him, while another priest repeats their names to him, upon which he prays for each offerer by name, ringing a bell as he does so. He never sleeps, Moreover, for if he did it is said that a scorpion would bite him. this temple exhales a most delightful perfume like that of Arabia, which never leaves the garments of such as approach it." Now with the classical author's account compare the narrative of Evagrius four centuries later. " Simon of holy memory originated (?) the contrivance of stationing himself on the top of a column forty cubits high, where, placed between earth and heaven, he holds communion with God, and unites in praises with the angels, from earth offering his intercessions on behalf of men, and from heaven drawing down upon them the divine favour." In other words, the so-called Christian practice was indubitably heathen and the heathen rite was indubitably phallic.
'
'
INDEX.
ABA
AKR
Agathos Daimon,
of,
i.
ABARIS,
ii.
114
ii.
20, 129
45
ii.
ii.
195 201
Abundia, ii. 306, 365 Acca Larentia, ii. 82 Acerbas, i. 433 Achaia, i. 364 Achaians, i. 234 Achaimenidai, i. 235
-Acheron,
260, 266, 321 175, 244 et seq. ; ii. 165 Achilleus, i. 90, 191, 236, 292, 430; ii. 76, 156, 325 the womanly, i. 248 ii. 64, 163
ii.
i.
Achilleis,
the bondman, 163 armour 246 168 career 245 character 165 254 horses 252 341, 434 vengeance 249
;
Aglauros, ii. 232 Agni, i. 105; ii. 190 et seq. Agraulos, ii. 309 Aha ha, i. 86, 346 Ahana, i. 418 Ahans, the two, i. 390 Ahi, i. 342 ii. 72, 328 Ahriman, i. 335; ii. 14, 353 Ahura, i. 335
;
et seq.
ii.
of,
i.
ii.
et seq.
of,
i.
et seq.
of,
i.
et seq.
ii.
et seq.
of,
i.
ii.
of,
i.
Ahuro-mazdao, i. 210, 335 Aiaia, ii. 174, 178 Aiakos, ii. 87, 322 Aias, i. 448 Ai'donens, ii. 297, 320 Aidos, ii. 203 ii. 150 Aietes, i. 304, 429 Aigai, ii. 263
;
ii.
355
Adam
Adeva,
Aditi,
Bell,
i.
ii.
100
i.
354 333
332, 334
ii.
Aditya,
i.
Admetos,
Adonis,
i.
41
Aigaion, ii. 88 Aigeus, i. 274, 436 Aigimios, ii. 183 Aigina, ii. 88, 263 Aigis, i, 348, 383
;
ii.
64
et seq.,
ii.
219
66,
Adrasteia, i. Adrastos, ii. iEacus [Aiakos] iEgina [Aigina] jEgis [Aigis] JEgyptus [Aigyptos] iEneas, i. 260. 432
;
Aigle,
ii.
Aigyptos, ii. 30, 266 et seq. Aineiadai, i. 92, 453 Aineias, i. 260 ii. 4, 353
;
i.
202
ii.
202
177,
^Eneid of Virgil, i. 260,432 iEolus [Aiolos] Aer, i. 347 Aero, ii. 290 Aerth, ii. 119 Aeshma-daeva, i. 210, 354 JEsir, i. 335
Aiolos, i. 202, 237; Aipytos, ii. 81 Air, i. 349 Ais, ii. 320 Aisa, ii. 17
252
^ther
[Aither]
ii.
Aison, ii. 154 Aither. i. 251, 327, 329, 347, 373 Aithiopians, i. 234. 432 ii. 37, 156 Aithra, i. 433
;
Aethlios,
30,
212
i.
Ajax [Aias]
116
;
ii.
Agamemnon,
164
et seq.
i.
259, 261
ii.
48, 160,
162 Akastos, Akersekomfcs, i. 107, 369; Akm&n, L 358, 359 Akraia, ii. 20
ii.
ii.
33
374
AKR
436 ii. 58 Aktaion, ii. 288 Aktor, ii. 54 Aktoridai, ii. 253 Alalkomene, ii. 41 Albanians, i. 227 Alcis, i. 286 Alda, i. 308 Alebios, ii. 335 Aleian Plain, ii. 55, 68, 274 Aleos, i. 437 Alexandras, i. 64 ii. 78 Alexiares, i. 432 ii. 55 Alexikakos, ii. 340 Alfar, i. 381 Alfheim, i. 381 Alfur. i. 286 Ali, ii. 95 Alkaios, ii. 47 Alkestis, ii. 41 et seq. Alkides, ii. 47 Alkimos, i. 251 Alkinoos, ii. 276 et seq. Alkmaion, ii. 185 et s(q. Alkmene, i. 309; ii. 41, 136, 181 Alkyoneus, ii. 337
Akrisios,
i.
;
Ds DEX.
ARE
Aniruddha, i. 417 Anna, i. 432 et seq. Anna Perenna, i. 433 Anostos, i. 411
Antaios,
ii.
51,
337
162
i.
Antauges,
Anteia,
ii.
i.
86
4 et seq.
73,
188
Antikleia, ii. 172 Antiloehos, i. 432; ii. 91 Antiope, ii. 66, 73, 249
ii. 177 Anygros, i. 430 Apate, i. 58 Aphaia, ii. 146 Aphareus, ii. 79 Aphrodite, i. 48 ii.
;
Antiphates,
Anadyomene, 2 Argynnis, the armed, 425 Enalia and Pontia, kestos 304 Ourania, 4 Pandemos, 4 Philomedes, 357 Philomeides, 357 ring 115 118
ii.
i.
1 et seq.
79
48,
ii.
4
;
ii.
i.
48
ii.
of,
i.
ii.
ii.
i.
i.
of,
ii.
shell of,
ii.
ii.
28, 143
438; ii. 73, 188 i. 360 ii. 296 Amata, i. 239 Amazons, ii. 65 Ambika, i. 389 Ammas, ii. 312
Amaltheia,
;
nymphs, ii. 143 Amphiaraos, ii. 184 et seq. Amphion, ii. 249, 279 Amphithea, ii. 172 Amphitrite, i. 441 ii. 21, 260 Amphitryon, i. 309 ii. 92 Amshaspands, i. 335 Amulius, i, 80 ii. 63, 82 Amykos, i. 343 ii. 28, 152 Amymone, ii. 268 Ananke, i. 365; ii. 13, 17 Anchirrhoe, ii. 268 Anehises, i. 434 ii. 4 Androgeos, ii. 64 Androgynous Deities, i. 346, 39c 444 Andromeda, i. 437 Andvari, i. 277, 282 Angelburga, i. 457
Aranisiads, or river
; ; ; ; ;
Apis, ii. 129, 140 Apollon, i. 442 ii. 21 et seq. Akersekomes, ii. 33 Daphnephoros, ii. 55 Delphinios, i. 292, 435 ; ii. 25 Delphian, i. 414 Hekatos, ii. 102 Klarian, ii. 113 Lykegenes, i. 266 Lykeios, Lykios, ii. 23 Nomios, ii. 34, 121 Olympios, ii. 55 Pangenetor, ii. 55 Phanaios, ii. 23 Sminthios, ii. 242
ii.
ii.
34,
i.
Apna Purna,
301
ii.
and sheep,
ii.
38, 251,
328
Apsaras, ii, 258, 282 Aptya, i. 441; ii. 354 Apulians, i. 239 Ara, i. 424
Arbhu,
ii.
240
ii.
;
ii.
355 55
[A rktouros] Areion, ii. 187 Areiopagos, ii. 189 Arethousa, i. 400; ii. 11, 28
A returns
INDEX.
ARE
Ares, i. 32, 369; ii. 12,51, 254 Arge, ii. 296 Argeia, ii. 186 Argeiphontes, ii. 139 et seq.
375
AUR
Asopos,
ii.
322
Argennos, i. 230 Arges, ii. 213 Arghanautha, ii. 126 Argiope, ii. 75 Argives, the, i. 230 Argive legends, i. 220 Argo, the sbip, i. 278, 313, 322 ii. 118, 175, 151, 241 Argonautai, i. 204; ii. 149 et seq., 241 Argos, the dog, i. 269 Panoptes,i. 231, 382 the land of, i. 230 Argynnis, i. 48, 230, 425 Argyros, ii. 30 Ariadne, i. 429, 435; ii. 65, 87 Arion, ii. 26, 245 Ark, i. 414; ii. 118 Arkas, i. 48, 231
;
Astarte, ii. 141 Asteria, i. 233,418, 429 Asteriou, ii. 10, 87 Asterodia, i. 418 ii. 30, 138, 212 Asteropaios, i. 164 Astolat, i. 315
;
Arkshas or
!Shiners,i.
414
Aristhanas, ii. 35 Aristodemos, ii. 183 Aristomachos, ii. 182 Aristomenes, ii. 121
Arjuna,
Arjuni,
425 ii. 132 424 Arkadia, i. 361 Arkadians, i. 230 Arkah, the sun, i. 231 Arnaios, i. 139 Arrows, poisoned, use of, i. 49, 56 ii. 46, 80 Arsinoe, ii. 34 Artemis, i. 430 ii. 29, 92, 142 et seq., 290 Diktynna, i. 364 ii. 146 Ephesian, ii. 66 Orthia, ii. 143 Tauropola, ii. 144 Arthur, i. 308 et seq.
i.
;
i.
Arthur's
Round
i.
Table,
ii.
121
426 Aruslii, i. 426 Aryaman, i. 334 ii. 355 Asas, i. 335, 372 Asdahag, ii. 83, 358 Asgard, i. 371 -Ashera, ii. 86, 112, 113
Arusha,
;
ii. 116 432; ii. 38 Astu Phoronikon, ii. 195 Astyages, i. 80, 442; ii. 83 et seq., 358 Astydameia, ii. 162 Astymedousa, ii. 71 Asura, i. 335 Asuro-medhas, ii. 355 Asvins, i. 423 Atalante, ii. 29, 143 Ate, i. 365, 424 ii. 15, 19, 43 Atergatis, i. 400 Athamas, ii. 272 et seq. Athenai, i. 440, 443; ii. 181 Athene, i. 141, 269, 365, 418 et seq.; ii. 11, 44, 79, 199, 264, 308 Ageleia, i. 443 Atria, i. 228, 344, 441 ii. 12, 20 Alalkomene, ii, 41 Chalinitis, ii. 289 Glaukopis, i. 443 ii. 3 Hellotis, i. 237 Hermapbroditos i. 444 Koryphasia i. 228, 441 olive of, i. 443 ii. 309 Ophthalmitis, i. 443 Optiletis, i. 443 Oxyderkes, i. 443 Pallas, i. 357; ii. 114 peplos of, i. 444 relations of, with Zeus, i, 16, 444, ii. 47 serpent of, i. 444; ii. 128 Tritogeneia, i. 228, 440 Athenians i. 228 et seq. ii. 57 Athwya, ii. 354 Atlas, i. 337, 371; ii. 11, 18 it siq., 60, 201 Atli, i. 189, 283 et seq., 342; ii. 97 Atman, i. 372, 373 Atri, i. 342
Astrabakos,
Astraios,
i.
Atropos,
Attila,
i.
ii.
16
of,
i.
Attabi^oar, Bong
Attes, ii. 118 Attbis, ii. 308 A iv-. ii. 8
189
_Ashtaroth, Asklepios,
ii. i.
141 430;
ii.
290
Audhumla,
Auge,
i.
i.
371
;
Askr, ii. 19, 184, 195 Aslak, ii. 100 Aslauga, i. 61, 107,284 Asniodeus, i. 210, 354
435, 437
ii. -19
ii.
53, 157
Angelas,
Aureola,
Auramazda,
i.
ii.
355
370
376
AUK
Aurinia,
INDEX.
BUN
Bhayanana,
120 Bheki, i. 165, 400; Bhrigu, i. 413
ii.
280 Aurnavabha, ii. 341 i. 415 Aurora, Auster, ii. 196 Autolykos, i. 334 ii. 44, 139, 172 Automedon, i. 251. Autonoe, ii. 288 Avatars of Vishnu, ii. 206 Avenging of Baldur, ii. 95 Grettir, i. 325 Sigurd, i. 284 et seq, Avilion, i. 316 Azidahaka, ii. 83, 354
ii.
;
ii.
26
Bhu, i. 334 Bhuvana. i. 346 Bhuranyu, i. 399 ii. 191, 195 Biblindi, i. 377 Bifrost, i. 382 Bikki, i. 284 Bjelbog, ii. 92, 363
;
Black,
BAAL,
Baaltis,
Altar
of, ii.
ii.
113
Baal-peor,
113
ii. 118 Bacchos, ii. 4 Bacon, Lord, his method of explaining Greek mythology, i. 28 Bala, i. 343
i. 247 Blanche Flor, i. 317 Bleda, i. 289 Blindness of solar heroes, ii. 71, 72 Blodel, i. 299 Bludi, i. 289 Boabdil, i. 413 Boar, bite of the, ii. 172 Kalydonian, ii. 53, 143 Bogy, ii. 364 Bolina, ii. 29
Bolthorn,
i.
371
solar heroes,
i.
Balarama,
Balcan,
ii.
ii.
Bondage of
92
ii.
13,
199 Bali, ii. 104, 329 Balia, i. 308, 311 Baldag, ii. 93 Baldur, i. 286, 291, 369
seq.
264
ii.
93
et
Boots, i. 138, 168, 266, 321 : ii. 179, 214, 346 Boreas, i. 432; ii. 221, 248 Bor, i. 371 Borrowed myths, hypothesis of, i.
Balios,
Baldringas, i. 239 ii. 162, 253 i. 247, 341 Balmung, i. 292, 300 Barbarossa, i. 413 Bassarides, ii. 295 Baudry, M., on the origin of myths, i. 43
;
Bears Beast
mythology, i. 162 ii. 78 epic, Northern, i. 63 Beasts in mythology, i. 140, 162,405, ii. 78 Beatrice, ii. 284 et seq Beauty and the Beast, i. 402, 406, 459 Bebrykes, ii. 50, 152 Bedivere, i. 315 Beggars in mythology, i. 158 et seq., 257, 301,321; ii. 158, 179, 303 Bego, i. 317 Beidsla, i. 371 Bellerophontes. Bellerophon, i. 324, 448 ii. 55, 68 et seq., 162, 342 Belleros, ii. 67, 341 et seq. Belos, ii. 257 Beowulf, i. 274 ii. 93, 200, 348 Berchta, Fran, ii. 306, 365 Bertha Largefoot, i. 317 Bestla, i. 371 Bevis of Hampton, i. 316 Bhaga, ii. 104 Bhava, i. 337, 416 ; ii. 24 Bhavani, ii. 133
in
; ;
;
129 et seq., 166 Bors, i. 314; ii. 123 Bosi, ii. 245 Bosporos, ii. 140 Boutes, ii. 8 Bragi, i. 287, 381 Brahma, i. 337, 344 et seq. the foxir-armed, i. 370
ii.
136
Brahmanaspati, ii. 104 Bran, ii. 120 Brandenburg, Piper of, ii. 243 Breal, M., on the myth of Oidipous, i. 454 et seq. ii. 70 et seq. on the myth of Caeus, ii. 339 et seq. Breast of Light, ii. 158 Breidablick, ii. 96 Briareos, i. 360; ii. 12, 311 Bridge of Heimdall, i. 144 Brihaspati, i. 420 Brisaya, i. 246 Bris&s, i. 246 ii. 164 et seq. Brisingamen, i. 380 Britomartis, ii. 145 Brond, ii. 93 Brontes, ii. 198, 213 Brownies, ii. 306
i. 107, 437, 438; 49 Bunsen, on the influence of the Iliad and Odyssey on Greek literature, i. 213 et seq.
ii.
INDEX.
BUR
Buri,
377
CYC
405;
216, 304
Clouds as eaglos,
i.
439
i.
ii.
earth,
ii.
314
CABIRI
[Kabeiroi] Cacus, 419 ii. 88, 280, 337 Cseculus, ii. 341 Camilla, ii. 29, 143 Camulus, ii. 143
;
swans,
ii.
i.
405, 456
ii.
216, 281
95,
et seq.
of,
ii.
368
Cambara,
327 Camelot, i. 311 Cap, invisible [Tarnkappe] Caradoc, ii. 120 Caranus, ii. 340 ii. 213, Cattle of the Sun, i. 54, 421 280 Cave of Dikte i. 357 ii. 146 Kyllene, ii. 224 Latmos, ii. 31 Lyktos, i. 357, 364 Cave-born gods, ii. 133 Centaurs [Kentaurs] Ceres, ii. 308 Ceridwen, ii. 120 caldron of, ii. 122 Cestus [Kestos] Chalybes. ii. 140 Chalkodon, ii. 53 Chaos, i. 329 ii. 212 Chando, the bull, ii. 84 Chandragupta, i. 260; ii. 84 ii. 2 Charis, i. 48 ii. 3 et seq., Charites, the, i. 48, 210
ii.
;
Cocytus [Kokytos] Ccelius Mons, i. 382 Comparetti, M., on the myth of Oidipous, i. 454 Conall Gulban, ii. 157 Consentes, Dii, i. 346 Consualia, i. 347 Consus, i. 346 Correlative Deities and Twin Heroes, ii. 40, 268 i. 286, 389 et seq., 423
;
Correlatives, Asvins,
i.
Amphion and Ahans, 390 Danaosand Aigyptos, 268 Dioskouroi, 390 Dyava, 423 Eros and Anteros, 393
ii.
i.
i.
295
Charms and
talismans,
i.
410
et seq.
Charon, ii. 144 Charybdis, ii. 260 Charlemagne [Karl the Great] Chatumerus, ii. 93 ii. 35, 150, 162 -Cheiron,i. 280 Chimaira, ii. 49, 68, 342 Chione, ii. 275 Christianity, influence of, on mythology, i. 314; ii. 357, 359 Chronos, ii. 212 Chrysaor, i. 338 ii. 101 Chryses, ii. 164, 183 Chrysippos, ii. 70, 345 Chthonian gods and chthonian worship, ii. 144, 308, 320 Chumuri, i. 343
;
;
391; Eteokles and 184 Eurysthenes and Prokles, 183 89 Glaukos and Grettir and Hlugi, o24 43 Herakles and Hermaphrodites, 393 Indragni, 390 Krishna and Arjuna, 394, 425 Patroklosand Achilleus,i.247, 394 Pcirithoos and Theseus, 394 40 Pelias and Neleus
Polyneikfcs,
i.
i.
ii.
ii.
Sarpfcdon,
i.
ii.
85,
Iphikles,
i.
ii.
i.
i.
i.
ii.
Phaethon and Helios, 247, 394 Phoibos and Artemis, 141 Podaleirios and Macha&n, 391 Prometheus and Epimetheus,
i. ii.
i.
ii.
Rama and Luxman, 425 Romulus and Remus, Rudrau, 391 Soma and Surya, 393 Telemachos and Theseus and Eippolytos, Uma and Soma. 389
i.
201, 208
ii.
74, 82
i.
i.
fdysseus,
ii.
i.
:;
'
66
i.
Cinderella,
ii.
i.
i.
i.
330
177
et seq.
179
Credibility, historical,
Cities,
i.
227
ii.
66 Clym of the Clough, ii. 99 ClVtemnestra [Klytaimnestra] Clouds, ii. 91, 136, 161, 2o9,2J2 et seq Clouds, as apples or sheep, ii. 38
Ciza,
as cows,
i.
425
Cromwell, Oliver, traditions respecting i. 187 Cross of Osins, ii. 114 Cross and Crescent, ii. 115 Curetes Kour&tes] Cybele [Kybele] Cyclic Poems, the, i. 86
|
378
CYC
Cyclops [Kyklops] Cyclopes [Kyklopes] Cyrus, i. 260, 309 ii. 74, 83 Cups, divining, ii. 122 and drinking-horns, ii. 120 Cuskna, ii. 327
;
INDEX.
DEY
Deukalion, ii. 87, 210 Deva, ii. 329, 355
et seq.
Devil, the Semitic, ii. 359 Devil, the Teutonic, ii. 51, 361 the word, i. 354 ii. 363
Devaki,
ii.
130
et stq.
ii.
137
DAG, 287 Dagon, i. 400 Dahak, ii. 84, 354 Dahana, i. 104, 341
i.
Daidalos, ii. 65, 199 Dairnones, ii. 202 ii. 133 Daityas, i. 334 Daktyloi Idaioi, i. 364
;
ii.
314
Daksha, i. 334 Damaskos, ii. 295 Danae, i. 435 ii. 58 et Danaides, ii. 152, 266 Danaoi, i. 234 Danaos, ii. 30, 266
;
seq.,
133
264,
Dheanka, ii. 345 Dhuni, i. 343 Dia, i. 266 ii. 92, 147 Diabolos, i. 354 Diana, i. 354 Dianus, i. 354 Diarmaid, i. 316 Dido, i, 432 Dietrich, i. 297 et seq. of Bern, i. 60, 305 and Sigenot, i. 280 Diewas, i. 354
;
ii.
364
Dancers,
the
mystic,
161,
274 Dankwart, i. 296 Daphne, i. 52, 400, 418; Daphnis, ii. 29. Dapplegrim, i. 296
Darkness, ii. 31 Dasra, i. 423 Daunii, i. 235
;
ii.
28
ii. 146 364 ii. 59, 88 Diktys, i. 364, 436 Diomede, i. 246 Diomedes, i. 247 ii. 5
;
Diktynna,
i.
horses
of,
ii.
50
Dawn,
scq.
the,
i.
59 328, 394
ii.
i.
et seq.,
416
et
ii.
173
i.
children,
358,
names as a horse,
416;
ii.
ii.
Days of the year, ii. 39, 280 Deianeira, i. 150, 439 ; ii. 53 Deiokes, ii. 83, 358 Deimos, ii. 4
Deion, ii. 91 Deiphobos, ii. 156 Deipyle, ii. 186 Delians, i. 233
ii. 21 et i. 101, 106, 232 Demeter, i. 357 ii. 296 et scq. Thesmophoros, ii. 307 Demodokos, lay of, ii. 2, 198 Demons, i. 322 ii. 20
Delos,
seq.
guardian,
Hesiodic,
ii.
21
ii.
202
i.
Demophoon, Demophon,
297, 299 Deo, ii. 297, 312
436
ii.
Derketo, i. 400 ii. 84 Derkynos, ii. 335 Detspoma, i. 361 ; ii. 262, 307
;
his account of the Trojan war, i. 184 Dione, i. 361 ii. 2, 9, 21, 296, 310 Dionysos, ii. 9, 34, 65, 292 et seq., 315 Antheus, ii. 132 the womanly, ii. 295 Dioskouroi, i. 436 ii. 22, 34, 67, 316 Dirghotamas, i. 441 Diti, i. 334 Dius Fidius, ii. 340 Divination, ii. 208 Djovis, i. 354 Dobruna, ii. 33 Doliones, ii. 152 Dolios, i. 269 Dollinger, Dr., his theory of Greek mythology as an eclectic system, i. 94 et seq. Donar, i. 378 Donnerskind, ii. 365 Dorian Migration, i. 206 Dorians, i. 227 Dorippe, i. 237 Doris, ii. 256 Dorkas, i. 230, 428 Dracpe, ii. 116 Dragon of the glistening heath, i. 157 Dragons in mythology, i. 428; ii. 88 's teeth, ii. 86, 153, 202 Draupadi, i. 180; ii. 285 Drought, myths of the, ii. 273, 280, 329, 343 Drukhs, i. 424 ii. 355 Dryades, ii. 257
;
Dion Chrysostom,
INDEX.
DRY
284, 314 Dualism in theology, i. 121 Iranian, i. 121 ii. 14, 356 et seq. of nature, i. 121, 389
379
EVE
Dryops,
ii,
Durandal, i. 274, 308 Durga, i. 343 ii. 193 Dyaus, i. 327 et seq. pitar, i. 328 Dyavaprithivi, i. 389 Dymas, ii. 183 Dyotana, i. 418 Dyu, i. 325, 327, 349
;
Dwarf
Incarnation,
in
ii.
104
et seq.
ii.
Epic poetry, origin of, i. 42 Epigonoi, the, ii. 187 Epimenides, i. 413 Epimetheus, ii. 201, 208 Eponymoi, ii. 82, 84 Ereildouno, i. 324, 412; ii. 218 Ercules, ii. 238 Erebos, i. 329 Erechtheus, i. 442 ii. 128, 308 Erginos, ii. 46 Erichthonios, i. 86, 346; ii. 124, 199, 308 et seq. Erigone, i. 430
;
Dwarfs
Hindu mythology,
i.
104,
276, 369
Erinyes, ii. 13 et seq. Erinys, i. 419, 423; ii. 188 Eriphyle, ii. 185 et seq.
i. 58, 424; ii. 11, 78 Erl king, the, i. 121; ii. 214 Eros, i. 329 Eros, i. 401 et seq., 427 Erp, i. 284 et seq. Erymanthos, boar of, ii. 49 Erysichthon, ii. 308, 309
Eris,
EAKTH,
Echidna,
334,
i.
ii.
Echemos,
et seq.
;
76
ii.
;
182
11, 50, 261,
224, 390
ii.
Echo, i. 393 ii. 32, 73, 249 Ecke, Dietrich and, i. 305 et seq. Eckesahs, i. 383 Eckhart, i. 165 Ector, i. 310 Eelliats, i. 236 Egeria. ii. 66 Egg, Mundane, i. 345; ii. 133, 212 of Nemesis, ii. 283 Eggs and apples, ii. 246, 282 Egill, ii. 100
Erytheia,
ii.
11,
334
seq.
Eryx,
ii.
335
Eileithyia,
Eileithyiai,
ii. ii.
21
13,
43
the. ii. 120 Ethnological distinctions, i. 240 Euemerism, modern, difficulties of, i. 172 et seq. of Thucydides, ii. 81 Euemeros, i. 170 his method not devised byhimself, i. 171 et seq. Eumenides, i. 423 ii. 14, 73
table of
of,
i.
441
Eumolpos,
ii.
ii.
309
39, 53,
Elaine, i. 312, 314 Elberich, i. 412 Elektra, i. 366 Elektrian gates, ii. 182 Eleusis, i. 440 ii. 187, 297 Eleutherai, i. 365
;
Eunomos,
Euros,
ii.
162
Euphorion,
ii.
156
Eur vale,
ii.
19 6 287, 290
;
Elf,
ii.
29
i.
Euryanassa, i. 43 1 ii. 310 Europe, i. 1<>7. 417, 437; ii. 85, 195 Eurvbai.''s, ii. 347
i. 315, 400; 239 Eurydomene, ii. 3 Euryganeia, i. 417, 439 Eurykleia, i. 266, 270
Elfland,
381
Eur'vdike,
ii.
Elidoe, Fouque's, ii. 217 Elissa, i. 433 Ellide, the ship, ii. 277 Elves, i. 381 Elysion, i. 346 ; ii. 321
ii.
71
Endymion,
i.
306, 355
ii.
30
et seq.
Euxykrei6n, Eurylochos,
ii.
i.
7:
Enkelados, ii. 212 Enosichthon, ii. 350 Enyalios, ii. 350 Enyo, ii. 350 Eos, i. 431 ii. 92
;
ii. 39 i. 359. 417 ii. 3, 198 Eurrphissa, i. 417; ii. 38 Eurystheus, i. 293, 365, 424; ii. 41,
263
Eurynome,
ct s^q.,
181
ii.
Eurvtion,
162, 334
Epaphos,
Ephialtes,
ii.
140, 267
i.
108, 209
Euthymos, ii. 318 Evadne, ii. 81 Evanthes, ii. 318 Evenos, i. 439
380
EVI
Evidence, historical,
i.
INDEX.
GLA
178
et seq.,
191
Ewain.
i.
312
i.
Excalibur,
FAFNIK,
i.
276
i.
Freyr, i. 372 Frigga, i. 372 Fro, Friuja, i. 381 Frodi, quern of, ii. 121 Frog sun, i. 165, 233, 400; 124, 184
ii.
25,
26
Fairyland,
411
i. 328, 330; ii. 300 Galahad, i. 313 et seq., 437; ii.123 Fatum, ii. 17 Galar, i. 369 Faustulus, ii. 82 Galateia, ii. 256 Favonius, ii. 221, 248 Galaxy, ii. 135 Fenris, i. 370 ii. 351 Galdner, ii. 246 Feridun, i. 441 ii. 354 Gandharba-Sena, i. 273 Fetish worship, i. 73 Gandharvas, i. 226, 395; ii.35 Fialar, i. 369 Ganesa, i. 347 Fiction, plausible, i. 171 et seq. Ganymede, i. 432 Fifty Argonauts, ii. 150 Ganymedes, i. 432 ii. 70, 310 children of Proteus and Doris, ii. Ganzblick, ii. 96 256 Garanus, ii. 308, 340 Daktyloi, ii. 314 Garden, Great Eose, i. 307 daughters of Asterodia, ii. 30, 138 Gardens, Hyperborean, i. 307 Danaos, ii. 30, 266 et seq. Hesperian, i. 238 Selene, ii. 30 Phaiakian, i. 307 Thestios, ii. 45 Garin, the Lorrainer, i. 317 sons of Aigyptos, ii. 30, 266 et seq. Garshasp, ii. 354 Pallas, ii. 64 Garutmat, ii. 193 Priam, ii. 183 Gata and Karpara, story of, i. 115 Fionn, i. 316 Ge Pammetor, ii. 305 Fingall's Cave, i. 92 Geierstein, the Lady of, ii. 239 Fire, myths of the, i. 225 201 et seq. Gelanor, ii. 269 Gods of the Gemini, i. 391 Agni, ii. 190 et seq. ^.^Geography, Homeric, i. 184 Bburanyu, ii. 191 mythical, ii. 85, 154, 274, 307 Hephaistos, ii. 12, 104 George, St., ii. 357 Hermes, ii. 233 Gerairai, ii. 117, 126 Loki, i. 370 et seq. Geri, i. 376 Phoroneus, ii. 194 et seq. Geryon, Geryones, Geryoneus, 290, Prometheus, ii. 201 et seq. 360 ii. 50, 326, 334, 349 Fish, the emblem, ii. 115 Geyti, ii. 100 Fish sun, the, i. 292, 400 ii. 25, 124 Giants, i. 370; ii. 214, 311 Fish-gods, i. 164, 311 Giants' Causeway, i. 92 Fitela, i. 279 Gibicho, i. 303, 375 Fleece, the golden, i. 204 Gigantes, ii. 213, 323, 337 Flegetanis, ii. 122 Girdle of Aphrodite, i. 304 Flexibility of the characteristics of Brynhild, i. 292, 304 the Vedic gods, i. 333, 337 - Freya, i. 372 Flora, ii. 340 HippolytS, ii. 50 Folk-lore, Aryan [Popular Tales] Giselher, i. 292, 299 Fool, Lay of the Great, ii. 157 Giuki, i. 281 Forest, the dark, i. 409 ^/Gladstone, Mr., his theory of mythoForget-me-not, ii. 217 logy as a perversion of revealed Forseti, ii. 93 doctrines, i. 14 et seq. Fortuna Mammosa, ii. 66 on the historical authority of Homer, Fosite, ii. 93 i. 449 et seq. Freki, i. 376 Glaive of Light, the, i. 138 Freya, i. 3/2, 380, 3S1 ii. 115 Glam, i. 322
Fairy Queen, i. 411, 418 Faith, the ship, i. 313 Fatal children, the, i. 80, 273, 312, 436; ii. 9, 33, 58, 65, 69, 78, 132, 154, 191
sisters, the,
iii.
Fatal
GAIA,
16
et seq.
INDEX.
GLA
Glauke, i. 429, ii. 154 Glaukos, i. 161, 232 ii. 90, 257 Glenkundie, Harp of, ii. 245 Gloaming, ii. 38, 350 Gnas, ii. 329 Gnostics, ii. 128 Goblins, ii. 144 Godiva, i. 121 Godmnnd, ii. 89
;
381
HEL
330
Yvvaifxavi]s,
ii.
Gunnar,
i.
62,
281
Guttorm,
Gyges,
i.
282
of,
ii.
Gwyddno, basket
121
Godwine, Earl, traditional history of, i. 285 Gokala, ii. 134 Golden Age, i. 373 Golden cups and beds, ii. 39 Golden fleece, the, i. 204 ii. 150 et seq. Goodies, ii. 316 Goose-girl, i. 321 Gopias, ii. 135 Gorgo, ii. 36 Gorgons, ii. 37, 60, 287, 350 et scq. Gorlois, i. 309 Govinda, ii. 130 GAR, the root, i. 34 Graces, the, i. 426 Grseci, i. 237 Graha, ii. 329 Graiai, ii. 60, 140, 286, 350 et seq. Graikoi, i. 237
;
i.
144
ii.
ring
of,
125
HABONDE,
Bacon,
i.
Dame,
ii.
ii.
306 306
302, 319
et
ii.
seq.
,
i.
309,
et. seq.
Grainne,
316 Graioi, i. 237 Gran, i. 247, 279 Granmar, i. 287 Grant, ii. 363
i.
helmet of, Hagene, Hagen. i. 156, 281, 283, 288, 292 et seq., 303 ii. 80 Ilacno, i. 361 Hags' fell, ii. 364 Hahnir, i. 277, 372 llaimon, ii. 73, 188 Hakolberend, i. 376 Halfdan, i. 288 Hall of Slaughter, i. 258, 299, 307, 322 Hamdir, i. 284 et scq. Hameln, piper of, i. 121; ii. 243 Hammer of Thor, i. 265, 359, 380 ii.
ii.
;
;
320
115
Hand
Gram,
ii.
i.
62
Gratise,
i. 426 Great Fool, Lay of the, i. 139 Great Rose Garden, the i. 307 Greeks, i. 238 belief of the, in their mythology,
cf glory, ii. 219 Hansavati Rich, i. 342 Hari, i. 426 ii. 105, 130 Harits, i. 48, 229, 426 ii. 2 Harmonia, necklace of, ii. 86 Harold Fairhair, i. 321 Gormson, ii. 100 Signrdarson, ii. 100 Harpagos, i. 300
;
ii.
245
;
i.
,
76
et seq.
304
tribal legends of the, i. 220 Grein, i. 280 Grendel, i. 279 ii. 200, 348, 363
;
Saga,
Grettir,
i.
Greyman,
319 363 Grimhild, i. 281 Grimm's law, i. 327 Gripir, i. 274 Grom, ii. 253
i.
Healers or Saviours, the, i. 377, 391 ii. 27, 33. 35, 55 Heaven, ideas of the, i. 326 Hebe, i. 432; ii. 12, 55, 57, 194 Hedin, i. 286 Heimdall, i. 144, 381 IlekalH". i. 245; ii. 78 Hekale, ii. 64 ii. 315 Hekatains. i. 321
:
Hekat,".
method of treating
i.
i.
128,
12!)
ii.
39,
HI
ii.
Greek myths,
(
structure of
112
Hekatos.
Hektor,
ii.
Ill
ii.
Heklufiall,
i.
Gudrun, i. 62, 89, 280 et seq., 304 Guenevere, i. 311, 325 Round Table of, ii. 119 Gunadhya, ii, 247
364 252 et seq. ii. 6, 77 11,1. i. 370: ii. 94, 361 et seq. Heleh.'. i. 295 Helen [Helcne]
;
382
HEL
285 Helgi Haddipgaheld, i. 27 son of Hiorvardur, i. 286 Hundingsbana, i. 286 Heliades, ii. 40 ii. 284 Helias, i. 457 Helikon, ii. 263. 289 ii. 26, 39 Helios, i. 263 cattle of, i. 54, 421 robe of, i. 150
Helgis. the three,
,
INDEX.
HOR
Herodotos,
seq.
i.
scepticism
of,
i.
181
et
Heroes guarded by Athene, i. 269 Heroic Age, the ii. 203 Herse, i. 430 ii. 30, 91, 232, 309
;
Helene,
5,
i. 64, 139, 205, 311, 422; ii. 67, 75 et scq., 155 et seq., 283,
292
i.
i.
430 458
ii.
157, 161
ii.
150, 272
ii.
273
Helmet of Hades [Tarnkappe] Hemera, i. 239; ii. 91, 307 Heming, ii. 100 Heosphoros, i. 432 ii. 38
;
Hephaistos.
i.
444
ii.
290
Herakleids, expulsion of the, i. 205 ii. 57, 181 et seq. et scq. return of the, i. 199 et seq.; ii. 67, 182 Herakles, ii. 42 et seq. 135, 318 Daphnephoros, ii. 55 labours of, ii. 43 et seq. Maiv6/xVos, ii. 41, 47 Olympios, ii. 55 Pangenetor, ii. 55 pillars of, ii. 19 Hercules, ii. 56. 339 Herculus, ii, 56, 238, 339 Herentas, ii. 9 Herleus, i. 311
Herth, ii. 119 Hesiodic Ages, ii. 201 poems, morality of the i. 19, 351 Works and Days, i. 19 Hesione, ii. 48 Hesioneus, i. 226 ii. 36, 147 Hesperides, ii. 38 apples of the, i. 234 ; ii. 22 Hesperioi, i. 238 Hesperion, ii. 39 Hesperos, ii. 38 Hestia, i. 357; ii. 11, 192, 196 Hettel, i. 304 Hialprek, i. 276; ii. 198 Hiarbas, i. 433 Hierodouloi, ii. 4, 117 Hilaeira, ii. 34 Hilda, i. 304 Hildebrand, i. 301 Hildegund, i. 303 Himeros, i. 48, 334; ii. 2 Himinbiorg, i. 382 Hitopadesa, i. 113 Hipponoos, ii. 67 Hippotes, i. 202, 252 ; ii. 183 Hippodameia, i. 393; ii. 29, 310 Hippokrene, ii. 289 Hippolyte, ii. 50 Hippolytos, ii. 66 Historical credibility, law of, i. 178 Hjarrandi, ii. 247 Hjordis, i. 276 et seq., 322 ii. 46, 168, 198 Hlodr, ii. 34 Hlorridi, i. 381 Hnikar, i. 377 Hnossa, i. 372 Hoard, The Niblung, i. 283, 293 et
seq.
Hudr. i. 369; ii. 93 Hogni, i. 281, 283 Holda, i. 317; ii. 115, 506 Holle, i. 317 Homer, i. 175, 449 et seq. biographers of, i. 196 Homeric poems, historical value i. 194 et seq. age of the, i. 214 et seq.
of,
135 Akraia, ii. 12 the matron, ii. 12 Hero, i. 434, 435 Herodias, ii. 365 Herodotos, his idea of the war, i. 183 et scq. Herodotos, historical method
i.
196
et seq.
history,
i.
et seq.
i.
Trojan
of, i.l
Hope,
81
Horai,
ii.
10,
285
INDEX. noR
Horos, ii. 299 Horse, the wooden, ii. 175 Horses, immortal, i. 434 ii. 162 of the sea, ii. 263 et seq. sun, i. 152 Horselberg, i. 165, 412 ; ii. 218 Horseshoes, ii. 127 Hours, the, ii. 285
Iliad,
on o
JEM
idea of the. as originally a written poem, i. 447 present form of the, i. 241 et seq.
ii.
Hmarinen,
208
Ilmatar, i. 120 Ilsan the monk, i. 307 Incorruptible bodies, i. 160, 249, 253;
ii.
5,
169, 259
Hrimgerda, i. 286 Hrimthursen, i. 371 Hrodmar, i. 286 Hrothgar, ii. 348 Hrungnir, i. 369 Huginn, i. 376 Hunding, i. 275, 279 Hundingsbana, i. 286 Huon of Bordeaux, i. 412 Hvergelmir, ii. 18 Hyades, ii. 38, 286 Hydra, ii. 48 and Lynkeus, ii. 271 Hymir, i. 364 Hyllos, i. 206; ii. 57, 181 Hyperborean Gardens, i. 423; ii. 11, 60 Hyperboreans, ii. 23, 279 Hypereia, ii. 182, 279 Hyperion, i. 357; ii. ^38 Hvpermnestra, ii. 268 Hypnos, i. 366 Hypsipyle, ii. 152 Hyrieus, i. 116; ii. 24
ii.
120
Indra, i. 336 et seq. Parjanya, i. 340, 379 the rainbringer, i. 340 Savitar, i. 303, 384 Sthatar, i. 340 the wanderer, i. 324, 340 the wife of, i. 343 Indragit, i. 338 Indrani, i. 343 Ingebjorg, i. 411 Ino, ii. 179, 265 et seq. Interchangeable characteristics of the
Vedic gods,
16,
ii,
i.
20
et seq.,
337
ii.
138^^.,
i. i.
102,
307,
Iobates
Iokaste,
Iolaos,
Iole,
i.
i.
ii.
ii.
258, 435
ii.
52
Iun.
237
et srq.
;
Ionians, i. 227 ii. 81 Ios, poison, i. 230 Ios, an arrow, i. 230; ii. 81 Iphianassa, ii. 30
Iphikles,
ii. 297 Iamos, ii. 33, 81 et seq. Iao, ii. 113 Iasion, i. 364; ii. 307 Iasios, i. 364 Iaso, ii. 150 Iason, i. 429; ii. 118, 150 Iasos, ii. 195 Iapetos, i. 357; ii. 201 Iarnsaxa, i. 369 Ice, myths of the, ii. 279 Ichor, 1 368 ii. 78 Ida, i. 360, 364 Ida, i. 361 Idaioi Daktyloi, i. 161, 364; 314 ii. 75 Idas. i. 364, 395 Iduna, ii. 298 Idyia, i. 429 Igraine, i. 309
; ;
IAMBE,
314 ii. 145, 157 43 Iphimedousa, ii. 253 Iphthime, ii. 315 ii. 52 Iphitos, i. 270 Irinc, i. 299 Iris, i. 366; ii. 168, 298 Irmin, ii. 19, 184
Iphiffeneia,
i.
;
ii.
Irminsul,
Iros,
i.
ii.
;
19
ii.
367
ii.
162
Ischys,
Isco,
Isis,
i.
34, 80, 92
92,
240
i.
Isfendiyar,
ii.
156
66, 140
ii.
Ismene,
Issi,
ii.
ii.
71
365
i.
274,
239
12, 14,
250
Ixion,
Ikaros, Ikarios,
Ilias.i.
i.
430
254;
ii.
164
i.
JAN.
i.
i.
354
i.
Iliad,
261,
66, 178
354 328 Janarddana, ii. 133 Jason [Iason] Jemshid, ii. 121, 354
Janus, Januspater,
i.
384
JON
Jonakr,
Jord,
i.
INDEX.
KYZ
Keyx, ii. 51 Kestos of Aphrodite,
;
284 372
i.
i.
304
ii.
122
Kikones,
Kilix,
ii.
ii.
176
i.
85 33
Tonans,
Juturna,
i.
Matrona, 13 Moneta. 415: 13 Virginal 13 328 435 312 Pluvius, 376 340
ii.
i.
Juno,
ii.
13
ii.
is, ii.
432
Jupiter,
i.
Indiges,
Pistor,
i.
ii.
i.
349,
Stator,
i.
i. 379 239
Kleisthenes, ii. 269 Kleodaios, ii. 181 Kleopatra, i. 283, 439 ii. 161, 188 Klete, ii. 3 Klim of the Clough, ii. 99 Klotho, ii. 16, 17
;
ii.
283
XABEIROI,
Kadmos,
ii.
i.
85
ct
seq.,
ii.
87
Kaikias, ii. 88, 252, 341 Kalchas, ii. 164 Kale, ii. 3 Kalewala, i. 316
Kali,
i.
343, 370;
ii.
ii.
193
Kalinak,
136
Kalliope, ii. 241, 310, 314 Kallirhoe, i. 290; ii. 189 Kallisto, i. 48, 231 ii. 314
;
Knights of the Rouud Table, i. 313 Kobalos, ii. 144 Kobold, ii. 144 Koios, i. 357 Koiranos, ii. 36 Kokalos, ii. 88 Kokytos, ii. 321 Kore, ii. 39, 296, 320 Koronis, i. 430 ii. 33 et seq. Korybantes, ii. 161, 314 Korythos, ii. 74 Kouretes, i. 360; ii. 142, 161, 259, 274, 290, 314
;
Kalyke,
ii.
30,
212
Kraka,
i.
61
i.
Karme,
ii.
116
20(3
ii.
;
Karnos, i. Kasandra,
ii.
183
78
Kassiopeia, i. 437 Kastor, ii. 44, 283 Kaunos, i. 58 Kanravas, i. 180 Karl the Great in mythology,
et seq.
ii. 308 261 Kreon, i. 429 ii. 73, 188 Kres, ii. 88 Kresphontes, ii. 183 Kretea, i. 361 Kriemhild, i. 288 Krios, i. 357; ii. 215 Krisasva, ii. 354 Krishna, i. 335, 346, 357;
i.
;
Kranaoi, Kranaos,
Krataiis,
227 227
;
ii.
ii.
107,
l.
189
130, etseq.
78 Kedalion, ii. 290 Keingala, i. 319 Kekrops, i. 363 ii. 128, 309 Keleos, ii. 297 Kentaurs, i. 226 ii. 35, 47, 162 Kephalos, i. 49 ii. 80, 91 Kepheus, i. 437 ii. 47 /Kerberos, ii. 46, 95, 142, 240, 319, 336 Kerdo, ii. 195 Keres, ii. 17, 340 Keresaspa, ii. 354 Kerkopes, ii. 63 Kerkyon, ii. 63 Keryneia, stag of, ii. 48
ii.
; ; ;
;
Kebren,
Krommyon, son of, ii. 63 Kronides, i. 358 Kronion, i. 358 Kronos, i. 356, et seq. ; ii. 132 Kteatos, ii. 49 Kumara, ii. 105 Rumania, i. 87
Kuvera,
ii.
320
ii. 242 Kybele, Kybebe. ii. 118, 312 Kyklopes, ii. 356, 361 ii. 41, 176 Kyklops, ii. 176, 213 et seq. Kyknos, ii. 51, 255, 283 Kymodoke, ii. 256 Kynthos, ii. 22 Kypselos, chest of, i. 215 Kyzikos, ii. 152
Kyanean
rocks,
INDEX.
LAB
MAI
ii.
385
161, 198
LABYRINTH,
the Cretan,
65,
i.
212
et seq.
i.
144, 367
Lad&n,
ii.
22, 38
;
Laios, i. 442 ii. 69, 83, 343 the word, ii. 367 Lake, Lady of the, i. 313
Ligyr6n, ii. 163 Linga, ii. 113, 118 Linos, ii. 44, 251 Lion of Kithairon, Nemea, ii. 44
et seq.
ii.
44
Litai,
ii.
19
ii.
308
Loki,
i.
277, 370
ii.
et seq.
ii.
95, 199.
Lampos,
i.
421 431
et seq.,
Lamyroi, ii. 144, 177 Lancelot dn Lake, i. 314 325 Landnama-b6k. i. 321 Laodameia, ii. 89 Laokoon, ii. 287
eaters,
ii.
i.
312,
Lucifer,
120 158; 38
ii.
Lucius of Corinth,
i.
Luck of Edenhall,
Luck-flower,
ii.
ii.
120
217
Laomedon,
Lap
Luxman,
mos.
ii.
366
Lapithai, ii. 151 Lar, i. 422 Lares, ii. 316 Larvae, ii. 316
Latini, i. 253 Latinos, ii. 22, 31 Launfal and the
Fay Triamour,
i.
402 Lannus,
Lavinia,
i.
i.
225
235, 260, 434 Leander [Leiandros] Leda, i. 439 ii. 3, 22, 156, 283 Leiandros, i. 434 et seq.
;
ii. 296 Lemures, ii. 144, 177, 316 Lenore, Burgers, i. 287 Leophontes, ii. 72, 343, 353 Leos, ii. 64 Lernaian hydra, ii. 48, 271 Lethe, ii. 3, 22, 321 Leto, i. 359 ii. 3, 21 et seq., 279 Leuke, ii. 156, 174, 319 Leukippos, ii. 34 Leukothea, ii. 273 Lewis, Sir G-. C, on the early history of the Hellenic and Italian tribes, i. 201 et seq. on the laws of evidence, i. 179,
Leibethron,
i. 393 Lychnos, i. 12 Lykabas, i. 435 ii. 55 Lykaian Hill, i. 362 Lykanthropy, i. 63, 363, 459 Lykaon, i. 363 son of Priam, i. 251 Lykastos, ii. 87 Lykr, ii. 29 Lykegenes, i. 267 Lykomedes, ii. 67, 163 Lykoreia, ii. 210 Lykos, ii. 50, 249 Lykosoura, i. 361, 362 Lyktos, i. 357, 364 Lykourgos, ii. 72, 259, 294 Lympha, Lymphaticus, ii. 257 Lynkeus, ii. 152, 269 Lyrkeios, ii. 271
I
i.
Macduff,
i.
312:
ii.
:
191
et seq.
Macha6n, i. 391 Macusi Indians, myths of Madhu, ii. 132 Maghavan, i. 340 Magni, i. 369 Magnus, Lay of, ii. 199 Mahabharata, i. 180 Mahadeva, i. 345; ii. 131 bow of, i. 389
311 33 ii. 3C
the,
ii.
2]
Mahakali,
ii.
\'2<)
Mahendra.
Maia,
of, ii. 14,
ii.
ii.
131
i.
224
deities,
ii.
Maimed
376. 385:
VOL.
II.
C C
386
MAM
Mamers, ii. 311 Man, ii. 184
Manduci, ii. 144 Manes, ii. 316, 339 Mania, i. 445 Mannus, i. 206 ii. 184, 354
;
INDEX.
MTR
Mermaids, ii. 282 Merope, ii. 69 Meropes, ii. 53 Metaneira, ii. 297 Metaphor, influence of, on mythology, i. 42, 48, 425 Metis, i. 358, 441; ii. 355 Michael Scott, ii. 121 Midas, i. 132,385,403; ii. 317 Midgard, i. 371 Milky way, ii. 135 Mimas, ii. 18 Mimir, i. 376; ii. 18, 91 Minerva, i. 358, 374, 417, 445 Capta, i. 228, 442 Minos, i. 293 ii. 65, 85, 307, 322 Minotauros, ii. 87, 264, 348 et seq. Miolnir, Thor, i. 32, 380 ii. 186 Mist, children of the, ii. 272 ^Mithras, i. 335, 357 ii. 355 Mitra, i. 330 et seq. Mnemosyne, i. 359 ii. 215 Mnevis, ii. 129 Modred, i. 315
87, 191
MAR,
the root,
i.
34
ii.
64
Marmar, Marmor,
Mars,
i.
ii. 311 311 Marspiter, Maspiter, ii. 311 Marsyas, ii. 317 Maruts, i. 32, 117, 132; ii. 221 et seq. Master Thief, the, i. Ill et seq., 127 ;
32;
ii.
ii.
Matabrune,
284
et seq.
Matarisvan, ii. 193 Mater Dolorosa, ii. 297 Matuta, i. 445; ii. 156 Materials of the Arthur romances, i. 308 Grettir Saga, i. 319 Helgi Sagas, i. 285 Homeric poems, i. 259 et seq. Nibelungenlied, i. 289 et seq.
Moira,
Moirai,
ii.
i.
16
287, 365, 438;
ii.
16
et seq.
tale
i.
Moke Marti s,
54,
253
story,
i.
Moneta,
i.
415
Maurice Connor, ii. 245 Mavors, ii. 311 Maypole, ii. 127 Medeia, i. 428; ii. 142 robe of, i. 429 Medeides, ii. 293 Medousa, i. 101, 221 ii. 82,287, 350 Megaira, ii. 16 Megapenthes, ii. 61, 157 Megara, ii. 47, 54 Megarian tradition, i. 223 Melanthios, i. 269, 271 ii. 180 Melantho, i. 266 Meleagros, i. 90, 254, 412, 439; ii. 76, 160 Melia, ii. 195 ii. 86, 265 Melikertes, i. 401 Melite, fountain of, i. 233 Melkarth, i. 401; ii. 86 Melpomene, ii. 260 Melusina, i. 164, 401 ii. 50 Memnon, i. 232, 432: ii. 19, 91 Menehios, ii. 79, 105 Menestheus, ii. 67 Menoikeus, ii. 187 Menoitios, ii. 167, 201 Mentor, i. 415 Menu [Manu] Mercurius, ii, 237
Monk and
Months
ii.
247
97,
Monotheism, Aryan,
72,
332
Semitic,
110
i.
97, 331,
332
Moon, the, ii. 138 et seq. Morana, i. 32 Mordur, i. 372 Morgan, the Fay, i. 311
Mors, ii. 17 Muller, Professor Max, on the myth of Paris, i. 65 Tell, ii. 102 Troy, ii. 368 Muninn, i. 376 Munja, ii. 253 Murdered and risen gods, i. 301 ; ii. 91, 95, 96, 113, 300 Murdha-divah, i. 440 Mure, Colonel, on the text of Homer, i. 244 influence of Homer, i. 213 myth of Hermes, ii. 228 character of Odysseus, i. 264 Muses, i. 427; ii. 136, 282 Muspelheim, i. 371 Mutinus, Mutunus, Muttunus, ii. 318 Mykenai, i. 184 Mylitta, i. 164, 401 ii. 117
;
Merlin,
i.
311
Myrmidons,
i.
INDEX. MTR
ODU
Naubandhana,
i.
;
387
414
Nausikaa, i. 257 ii. 278 Nausithoos, ii. 279 Neaira, i. 436 ii. 172
;
Semitic,
ii.
Mystic chests, ii. 119 Mythical geography, i. 355, 361 et seq., 440 ii. 85, 154, 238, 274, 30 7 heroes, i. 60, 78 et scq., 02, 220 names, significance of, i. 84, 189, 270 phrases, i. 41, 53, 93, 100 et srq., 326, 395, 424 ii. 27, 76, 32, 347 speech, developements from, i. 54 weapons, i. 49, 138, 274, 308 ii. 170 Mythology, relation of, to language,
of,
ii.
13, 37
Neda,
i.
361
aspects 84 and between, 2 74 Aryan, key 106 Egyptian, 66 56 Northern, 92 Vedic, 52; 221, 102, 324 Hindu, 130
of,
i.
i. 31 repulsive,
3, 56,
72,
i.
et seq.
religion, contrast
to,
et seq.,
i.
;
i.
ii.
i.
67,
i.
20,
ii.
190,
later
ii.
i.
Myths, allegorised, i. 58, 102 arising from equivocal words, 47, 385, 414; ii. 11, 50, 75
"borrowed,
of,
i.
hypothesis 129 142 combination 149 140; disintegration 231 Euemeristic interpretation of Finnish and Mongolian, 101 importation 101 356 moral aspects 44 220 primary and secondary, 42 proverbial, 385 317 age 53 43; 56
109, circulation
of,
i.
i.
99,
et seq.
ii.
of,
i.
Neleus, ii. 82, 150 Nemesis, ii. 19, 203 egg of, ii. 20, 283 Neoptolemos, ii. 46 Nuphele, ii. 35, 148, 272 et seq. Neptunus, i. 376 Nereides, ii. 257 Nereus, ii. 256 et seq. Nerthns, i. 381 Nessos, ii. 54 Nibelungenlied, i. 189, 289 et seq. historical value of the, i. 189 seq. 288 Nick. i. 377 Nicolaitans, ii. 128 Nicor, i. 377 Nidhogr, ii. 19 Niflheim, i. 370, 371; ii. 305, 362 Niflungs, i. 281, 285 treasure of the, i. 290, 297 80 Nikostratos, ii. 157 Nine worlds, the, i. 382 Ninos, ii. 84 Niobe, i. 437 ii. 195, 278 Niordr, i. 381 Nirjuts, ii. 221 Nirriti, i. 344
et
ii.
of, ii. 4,
76,
Nishtigri,
i.
344
ii.
ii.
262
of,
i.
99,
localised,
i.
57, 84,
ii.
ii.
i.
i.
relative
solar,
i.
of,
i.
300 Nobiskrug, ii. 364 Norns, i. 287, 365 Nostoi, i. 205 ii. 159, 171 Notos, i. 432 Numa, ii. 72
Njal,
i.
;
et seq.
41,
ii.
Nnodung, shield
Nykteus,
ii.
i.
of,
i.
297
et seq.,
11)
Nymphs,
306;
ii.
257
311
281
et
NAIADS,
i.
Names, 220 et seq. Namuki,i. 342; ii. 152 Nana, ii. 298 Nanda, ii. 130, 134 Nanna, ii. 93 Naraka, ii. 137 Narayana, ii. 130
377:
ii.
seq.
i.
Nyx,
i.
58,
329;
ii.
ii.
120,245
277, 368 et
38
l'74,
Narcissus, the flower, ii. 33, 299 Narkissos, i. 306 ; ii. 32 et seq.
2 c c
i.
Odin's
Kune
i.
song,
i.
371 371
Nasatya,
i.
423
Odur,
372
388
ODT
Odysseus,
i.
INDEX.
PEL
;
ii.
45,
Oskabyrr,
the womanly, 174 character 264 return from 267 vengeance 269 weapons 256 purpose of Odyssey, story of 256 of 196
ii.
70, 105,
346
of,
i.
et seq.
i.
of,
Ilion,
Othyrades,
Otnit,
i.
i.
76
of,
i.
305, 412
of,
i.
Otos,
ii.
ii.
254
;
didactic
the,
the,
45
i.
structure
the,
i.
Ouraniones, ii. 213 Ouranos, i. 334, 349, 357 and Gaia, i. 334
ii.
12,
215
CEdipus [Oidipous] Oegir, i. 381 Oegishialmr, i. 383 Offa's dyke, i. 92 Ogen, i. 383 Ogier the Dane, i. 317, 412 Ogres, i. 382 ii. 222 Ogyges, i. 383 Oiagros, ii. 241 Oidipous, i. 222, 423, 454 et seq. ii. 15, 23, 69 et seq., 186 Oineus, i. 439; ii. 47, 161 Oinomaos, ii. 310 Oinone, i. 64; ii. 78 et seq. Oinopia, ii. 88 Oinopion, ii. 290 Okeanos, i. 356 ii. 10, 266 Olaf. ii. 100 Old Davy, ii. 363 Old Nick, ii. 363 Olger Dansk [Ogier the Dane] Olive of Athene, ii. 309 Olyseus, ii. 172 Olympia, i. 364 Olympian deities, ii. 312 Olympos, i. 356, 361 Olympian hierarchy, later, i. 336 Omphale, ii. 52 On, Onnes, ii. 84 One-handed gods and heroes, i. 303, 325, 369, 385 One-eyed gods, i. 104, 369, 376 ii. 19 Oneiros, i. 58 Ophites, ii. 128 Ops, ii. 308 Oral tradition, value of, i. 187 Oreads, ii. 257 Oreithyia, ii. 249 Orestes, ii. 183 Orion, i. 432 ii. 262, 289 et seq., 307 Ormuzd, ii. 14, 354 et seq. Oromazes, ii. 355 Orpheus, i. 120, 283, 292 ii. 42, 95, 151, 154, 239 et seq. Orphic hymns, i. 86 theogony, ii. 212 Orthros, i. 66; ii. 48, 319, 327 Ortlieb, i. 299 Ortwein, i. 304 Ortygia, i. 233 ii. 23, 298 Oaci, Oski, i. 357
;
Ovelgunne,
ii.
364
i.
Owl
in folk-lore,
ii.
153
Oxylos,
183
PAIE6N,
i.
153, 286;
i.
ii.
36
Paionios.
364
Pakkels, i. 379 Palaimon, ii. 265 Palamedes. ii. 174 Palatium, ii. 114 Pales, ii. 114 Paley, Mr., on the influence of Homer on the Greek lyric and tragic poets, ii. 213 et seq. Palikoi, ii. 114 Palnatoki, ii. 100 Palladion, ii. 113 Pallantides, ii. 64 Pallas Athene, ii. 114, 118 the giant, i. 442 ii. 64 Pamphylos, ii. 183 Pan, ii. 138, 143, 173, 221, 247 etseq., 315 Pandia, ii. 62, 138 Pandion, ii. 62 Pandora, i. 444; ii. 208 Pandavas, i. 180 Pandrosos, ii. 309 Pani, i. 64, 420, et seq. ii. 327 Pankoites, ii. 320 Papas, ii. 312 Parameshthin, ii. 103 Parjanya, i. 3-10, 379 Paris, i. 64, 258 ii. 5, 75 et seq., 156, 292, 331 et seq.
judgment
_
of,
ii.
;
3,
11
Pasiphae, i. 436 ii. 87, 265 Pasupata, i. 393 Paul Pry, i. 121 ii. 235 Pecheur, King, ii. 123 Peeping Tom of Coventry, i. 121 Pegasos, i. 279 ii. 68, 287 et seq., 350 Pehrkons, i. 379
; ;
Peirene,
Pelasgians, ii. 195 Pelasgos, ii. 195 Peleus, ii. 11, 162
Pelias,
i.
429
ii.
INDEX.
PEL
Pelles, ii. 123 Pellinore, i. 310 Pelopids, story of the,
;
380
POP
i.
Phoroneus,
i.
399, 441
ii.
191, 194
et seq., 275,
315
224
;
Pelops, i. 393 ii. 145, 310 Penelope, i. 258, 270, 399 etseq., 248, 315, 322 et seq.
ii.
173
Pentheus,
ii.
294
ii.
Penthesileia,
171
Phorkides, ii. 281 Phosphoros, ii. 38 Phrixos, ii. 150, 272 Phyleus, ii. 54 Pickle, i. 379 Picumnus, ii. 312
350 Peplos, ii. 113 Pereival, i. 315; ii. 123 Periklymenos, ii. 187 Perilous seat, the, i. 312
ii.
Pephredo,
Pierides,
ii.
Periphetes,
Peris, the,
ii.
02
283 379 -Persephone, i. 60; ii. 33, 67, 136, 296 et seq. Perseus, ii. 37, 58 et seq. Perun, Piorun, Peraun, i. 379 Phaenna, ii. 3 Phaethon, i. 431, 432 ii. 39, 161 Phaethousa, i. 421 Phaia, ii. 63 Phaiakian ships, i. 377, 381, 457, 276,
ii.
Perkunas,
i.
i. 121 Pipers, mysterious, ii. 242 et seq. Pipon, i. 343 Pillared saints, ii. 114, 372 Pillars of Atlas, ii. 37 Dionysos, ii. 114 Herakles, ii. 19, 114, 372 Roland, ii. 19 Osiris, ii. 114
Sesostris,
ii.
ii.
114
Pinarius,
338
et seq.
Phaiakians, ii.154, 176, 274 Phaidra, ii. 66 Phalaris, ii. 153 Phallos, ii. 113, 116 et seq. Phanaios, ii. 23 Phanes, i. 86
et seq.
Pitamaha, ii. 131 Pitys, ii. 248 Pleiades, ii. 37, 286 Pleione, ii. 37
ii.
119
Pharaildis, ii. 306 Phegeus, ii. 189 Phemios, i. 299 Phenix, ii. 23 Phenieians, i. 229, 362, 438 Pheredur, ii. 124 Philoktetes, ii. 80, 171 Philomela, ii. 250 Phineus, ii. 60, 152 Phix, ii. 344 Phlegraian Fields, ii. 53 Phlegyas, ii. 34 Phobos, ii. 4 Phoibe, ii. 34, 336 Phoibos, i. 337 ii. 21 et seq., 313 Akersekomes, i. 311 ii. 33 Akesios and Akestor, ii. 27 the bondman, ii. 28, 46 Delphinios, ii. 25 Lykegenes, i. 48, 232 ii. 23 Lykeios, i. 232 ii. 23 Paieon, ii. 33 Phanaios, ii. 23 Soter, ii. 27 Phoibos and the Telehines, ii. 313 and Hermes, ii. 26 Phol, ii. 93 Phorbas. i. 246 Phorkys, i. 379 ii. 38
;
320 307 Pluto, ii. 361 Podaleirios, i, 391 ii. 36 Podarge, i. 247 ii. 167, 252 Pohjola, ii. 246 Poias, ii. 55 Poisoned arrows, i. 49, 56, 230, 2G5 ii. 46, 80 Poisoned robes, i. 56, 429 ii. 54, 155 Polybos, ii. 69 Polydegmon, i. 370 ii. 296 Polydektes, i. 370, 436 ii. 59 Polydeukes, i. 395 ii. l.VJ. 283 Polyidos, i. 161; ii. 36, 217, 352 Polykrates, i. 406
36, 307, 319,
;
Polyneikes,
ii.
184
et seq.
Polyonvmy, as a source of myths, i. 43, 219; ii. 110 Polyphemus, i. 267, 356 ii. 3, 52,
;
Semitic,
Polyxena.
Polyx6,
ii.
176, 213
Ill
ii.
i.
314;
-"'7
170
Pontos,
Pomegranate seeds, the. ii. 298 ii. 256 Popular tales, noticed <>r analysed Ahmed and the Peri Banou, ii. 218 Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves, i. Ill, 127; ii. 217
390
POP
Popular Tales, continued
i.
INDEX.
POP
:
Allah-ud-deen, 121, 282, 402; 121, 217 Almond Tree,125, 34 Babes the Wood, 162 72 Ball of Crystal, 234 Battle of the Birds, 158; 49 Bearskin, 408 Beauty and the Beast, 403, 406 Bedreddin Hassan, 121 Best Wish, 266, 375 Big Bird Dan, 159, 281 277 Big Peter and Peter, 185, 280 Bluebeard, 330 Blue 72 Boots made of Buffalo Leather, 159 Boots who ate a match with the 266 Brahman and the Goat, Ill Brahman, the Jackal, and the Barber, 133 301, 304 Broken Oath, 146 Brother Lustig, 375, 429 Brown Bear of the Glen, 138 Bushy Bride, 132, 422 18 Champa Ranee, 126 Chest, 404 Chunclun Eajah, 249 Cinderella, 139, 265, 375;
ii.
39,
ii.
in
i.
ii.
i.
i.
ii.
i.
i.
ii.
i.
159,
i.
ii.
Little
ii.
ii.
36,
Belt,
ii,
i.
Troll,
i.
i.
i.
Briar-rose,
ii.
33,
i.
i.
i.
i.
ii.
i.
the,
i.
i.
i.
ii.
Conall Gulban, 157 Cuchullin and Ferdiah, 39 Dame of the Fine Green 291 Dapplegrim, 391 26 Daughter of the 403
ii.
ii.
i.
i.
144
Kirtle,
i.
Donkey Cabbages, 375 Drummer, Dummling, 251375, 408 Dwarfs, 301 Easaidh Ruadh, Young King 136 East of the Sun and West of the Moon, 408 Faithful John, 145, 161, 393;
i.
154, Skies,
ii.
i.
the,
ii.
i.
the,
ii.
of.
i.
i.
i.
ii.
281
i.
Farmer Weathersky,ii. 26,282, 291 Fearachus Leigh, 81 Feather Bird, 330 Ferdinand the Faithful and Ferdinand the Unfaithful, 185 Fir Apple, 26
18,
i.
beasts,
234, 375
ii.
ii.
ii.
i.
292
Popular Tales, continued : Fisherman and the Jin, ii. 254, 222, 362 Forty Thieves, i. 114 Four accomplished Brothers, i. 117 Frog Prince, i. 147, 234, 375 ii. 26 Gandharba-Sena, i. 403 Gata and Karpara, i. 115 Giant who had no Heart in his Body, i. 138, 457; ii. 283 Glass" Coffin, i. 265 ii. 219 Gold Child, i. 159; ii. 58 Gold Children, i. 292 Golden Bird, i. 141 Goose, i. 159 Good Bargain, i. 138 Goose-girl at the Well, i. 429 Governor Manco, i. 154 Guzra Bai, ii. 285 Hacon Grizzlebeard, i. 159 Handless Maiden, i. 385 Hans and the Hedgehog, i. 408 Hansel and Grethel, i. 404 House in the Wood, ii. 302 How Six travelled through the World, i. 382 ii. 29 Ill-tempered Princess, ii. 303 Inchanted Horse, i. 154 Iron Stove, i. 234, 408, 436 ii. 36 Jack the Giant-killer, i. 144 ii. 246 Jungfrau Maleen, ii. 302 Jew among the Thorns, i. 120; ii. 26, 244 Jorinde and Joringel, i. 410 Katie Woodencloak, i. 438, 440 King of Lochlin's three Daughters, i. 382 King of the Golden Mountain, i. 144, 159 King who wished to marry his Daughter, i. 317 Knapsack, the Hat, and the Horn, i. 159, 375 Lad and the Devil, ii. 225 Lad who went to the North Wind, i. 120, 133, 135 Lavra Loingsech, i. 132, 403 Little Ass, i. 403 Little Brother and Sister, i. 404 Little Farmer, ii. 226, 281 Little Redcap, ii. 357 Little Snowwhite, i. 404 ii. 34, 121 3Iac-a-Ruso-aich, i. 266 Mac Iain Direach, i. 406 Man of Iron, i. 234 Mason, the Poor, i. 115 Master Maid, ii. 49 Master Smith, i. 375, 429 ii. 198, 225 362
;
;
INDEX
POP
Popular Tales, continued Master Thief, i. Ill et seq., 127 Miller's Son and the Cat, i. 159 Moor's Legacy, ii. 218 Muchie Lai, ii. 352 Nautch Girl and the Parrot, i. 125 Nighean High Fo Thuinn, i. 402, 405 Nix of the Mill-pond, i. 234 ii.302 Nuad of the Silver Hand, i. 385 Old Dame and her Hen, ii. 303 Old Griffin, i. 234 Old Man and the Hind, ii. 139
391
PRE
One
Popular Talcs, continued: Star Lady, i. 164, 310 Strong Hans, i. 280, 408 Surya Bai, i. 155, 282, 304; ii. 303 et seq. Table, the Ass, and the Stick, i. 131 Tailor's Son of Basle, i. 412 Tara Bai, i. 164, 310
who
travelled to learn
i.
what
Osgar, son of Oisein, 356 Panch Phul Ranee, 155 Pilgrim of Love, 151 Pink, 375 Poor Man and the Rich Man, 375 Prince who was afraid of nothing, 72 280; 159 Princess on the Glass Punchkin, 135 283 Putraka, 144, 159, 375 Queen Bee, 410 Queen of the Five Flowers, 155 Rama and Luxman, 145 301 Rapunzel, Red Riding Hood, 351 Rinkrank, 303, 320 Ritter Red, 281 Robber and his Sons, 365 Rogue and his Master, 117 Roland, 244 Rose of the Alhambra, 121 245, 301 Rumpelstiltskin, 265 Sea-maiden, 160 Seventee Bai, 154 Sharp Grey Sheep, 318 Shortshanks, 159, 266; 105, 222, 279 Shifty Lad, 112, 116,225 Sick Queen, 26 Simeli Mountain, 219 160 Sindbad, Voyages 366 Six Servants, 382 Six Swans, 404, 409 Snake Loaves, 160; 36
i.
i. i.
shivering meant,
138
_ Tatterhood, 139 Three Aunts, 18 36 375 Three Feathers, Three Men the Wood, 132 Three Princesses of Whiteland, 144 138 Three 18 Three
ii.
ii.
i.
234,
ii.
Little
in
i.
i.
Soldiers,
i.
the,
i.
i.
i.
ii.
Hill,
i.
i.
ii.
i.
i.
i.
i.
ii.
72,
ii.
ii.
i.
ii.
i.
ii.
26,
i.
ii.
i.
i.
i.
i.
n. 18,
i.
ii.
ii.
of,
i.
ii.
Three Widows, 280 Thrushbeard, 138 Tom Thumb, 105 Travels of Dummling, 117 185 True and Untrue, True Bride, 280, 408 Trusty Henry, 149 Truth's Triumph, 165 291 Twelve Brothers, 404, 409 Twelve Wild Ducks, 266 Two Brothers, 141, 142, 161,281, 393 Two King's Children, 26 Two 137, 410 49 Two 371 289 Two Wanderers, Valiant Tailor, 265 236, 214 Vicram Maharajah, 155, 351 White and the Black Bride, 284 White Snake, 406 121, 362 Why the Sea Widow and her Daughters, 36 Widow's Son, 154, 159, 185 Wishes, The Three, 144, 159, 375 Goats, Wolf and the Seven 358, 410 Wonderful Musician, 244 Woodcutter's Child, 280, 409; 36 Young Giant, 117
ii.
i.
Spinsters,
ii.
ii.
i.
ii.
72,
i.
i.
i.
ii.
i.
i.
i.
ii.
Sisters,
i.
Step-sisters,
i.
ii-
ii.
71,
;
i.
ii.
i.
the,
ii.
i.
is salt, ii.
ii.
i.
i.
Little
i.
ii.
i.
ii.
i.
3G,
i.
n.
i.
i.
ii.
Red,i. 266,
Soaring Lark, 407 Sodewa Bai, 157, 249 225 Son of the Scottish Yeoman, 127 Soria Moria Castle, 159 and the _ Spindle, the Shuttle, 265 Needle, Spirit in the Bottle, 224, 225
i.
176, 262
et seq.
of,
i.
91,
trident of,
ii. ii.
ii.
Potitii,
Soldier, the,
ii.
Potitius,
56 338
ii.
l.
Pradyumna,
26
i.
i.
ii.
Pramantha, ii. 208 Danaides, Preller, on the Myth of the ii. 269
392
PRI
Priamos, Priam,
Priapos,
Prisni,
i.
i.
INDEX.
SAT
;
434
ii.
78
Remus,
ii.
82
i.
346;' ii. 4, 113, 318 223 Prithivi, i. 328 Prodikos, apologue of, i. 306 ii. 44 Proitos, i. 448 ii. 68 Prokles, ii. 183 Prokne, ii. 91, 250 Prokris, i. 49, 54, 430 ii. 30, 91, 137, 251 Prokronstes, ii. 63 Prometheus, i. 332, 368, 369, 441, 444; ii. 201 etseq. Prophasis, ii. 208 Proserpine, ii. 361 Protagoras, i. 353 Proteus, i. 164, 183; ii. 26, 256, et seq. 291, 314 trident of, ii. 115 Protogeneia, i. 86 ii. 30, 211 Protogonos, i. 86 Prytaneion, ii. 197 Psyche, i. 402, et seq. Psychopompos, i. 392 ii. 193, 232 Puck. ii. 364 Puncher, ii. 100 Pururavas, i. 103, 395 Pushan, ii. 101 Putana, ii. 135 Pygmalion, i. 433
ii.
;
;
Renouart,
318
i.
9,
37
Rhadamanthys,
ii.
84,
322
Rhampsinitos, story of, i. 113 Rhea. Rheia, i. 357, 364; ii. 10, 133, 312 Ilia or Silvia, ii. 82 Rhodopis, i. 157, 249 Rhydderch, dish of, ii. 121 Ribhus, i. 120; ii. 240 Rience, i. 311 Rind, i. 369 ii. 97 Rings in mythology, i. 277, 278, 282, 303: ii. 115, 116 et seq. 292, Rishis, the Seven, i. 47, 413 Robes, poisoned, i. 150 ii. 54, 155 Roc, the, ii. 281 Rod of plenty, the, i. 159
Py lades, ii. 1 89 Pythagoras, ii. 120 Python, i. 270 ii. 24 Pyrakmon, ii. 198 Pyriphlegethon, ii. 321 Pyronia, ii. 307
;
Rohits, i. 426 ii. 2 Romulus, i. 310 ii. 74, 82 Roland, i. 188, 190, 307 Roncesvalles, battle of, i. 189 Rother, king, i. 304 Round Table, the, i. 308 et seq.; ii. 121 Rudiger, i. 297 Rudra, i. 346; ii. 131. 223 the Master Thief, i. 121 Rudrau, i. 390 Rustem, i. 92, 156, 282 ii. 33, 347 Rutulians, i. 239
;
;
U
i.
SACRIFICES, human,
Sacti,
ii.
ii.
i.
26;
ii.
144
117
155,
wishing,
Quern of Frodi,
ii.
ii.
218, 316
T)ADHA,
ll
ii.
136
;
i. 61, 92, 281 Rakshas, i. 280 ii. 304 Rakshasa. i. 339 Eama, i. 393; ii. 131 Pan, i. 383 Randver, i. 284 Parana, i. 281 ii. 132 Ravens, i. 376 ii. 329 Rays, solar, in myths, i. 141, 247, 405 Recaranus, ii. 56, 308, 340 Reidartyr, i. 377 Reidmar, i. 277 Regin, i. 274 et seq. ii. 168, 198
; ;
Ragnar Lodbrog,
200 Saga, i. 382 Sagas of Northern Europe, i. 318 Salmakis, i. 393 Salmoneus, ii. 82 Sambara, i. 342 ii. 26, 46 Samojed myths, i. 456 Sampo, ii. 2 16 Samsa, ii. 104 Samvatsara, ii. 193 Sangaros, ii. 298 Sancus, ii. 340 Sangreal, the, i. 166 ii. 122 et seq. Saparnas, i. 427 Sarama, ii. 207, 301, 419 et seq. ii. 156, 229 et seq., 333 Sarameya, i. 422 ii. 230 Saranyii, i. 415, 419, 422 et seq. Sarasvati, i. 344 Sarpedon, i. 232, 419; ii. 85, 89, 167 Sarvara, ii. 46 Sassafras, ii. 217 Satan, ii. 356 et seq. SAtiivahana, ii. 247 Saturnus, ii. 200, 308
Sfetere,
;
INDEX.
SAT
Satyrs,
39:
SPR
Sigrun,
seq.
;
i.
i.
Sigtyr,
287 377
et seq.
ii.
35
et seq.
i.
;
Savitar,
i.
303, 384
ii.
220
321
ii.
89
Simoeis,
Sintiotli,
Si
ii
i.
251, 270
27-")
Saxifrage,
Sceaf,
i.
ii.
;
217
ii.
i.
458
ii.
33, 278
Schamir,
216
Pityokamptes, ii. 63 Sintians, ii. 198 Sintram, i. 404 ii. 57 Sisupala ii. 330
is
;
458; ii. 278 Seburk, i. 305 Seilenoi, ii. 316 Seilenos, ii. 316, 318
i.
SisyphoB,
14, 27,
i.
152, 324,
et seq.
ii.
ii.
367,438
ii.
12,
Sita,
i. i.
36 281;
132, 329
Siva,
392;
Seirenes, Seirens,
Seirios,
ii.
Skamandros,
138
i.
251, 270
ii.
Selene,
Selloi,
ii.
i.
30
et seq., 73,
Skambha,
131, 191
i.
337, 386,388;
37, 103,
Selleeis,
i.
236 236
;
Skephros,
Skirnir,
i.
ii.
270
i.
Semele, ii. 9, 34, 59, 294, 296 Semiramis, i. 223 ii. 84 Semo Sancus. ii. 338 Serapis, i. 166 Serpent of Asklepios, ii. 36 Athene, i. 444 worship, tree and, ii. 36, 116 Servius Tullius, ii. 35
Skidl.ladnir,
381
ii.
277
247 63
;
ii.
260
of,
i.
217 Sesostris, ii. 84 Seven Champions of Christendom, 47, 165, 413 days of the week, i. 358, 410 Manes of Leinster, i. 413 Eishis, i. 47, 413 Shiners, i. 165 sleepers of Ephesus, i. 165, 413
ii.
Sesame,
322
Sleipnir,
i. i.
i.
Susekoll,
377 322
ii.
94
Snake-leaves,
i.
81,
428;
ii.
seq.,
136,
137,
351
Society, evidence of archaeology
and
i.
47,
413
language as of, i. 36
38, 251,
landic sagas,
in the Iliad
seq.
i.
319
et seq.
i.
and Odyssey,
2 et
by, 57 Ship, the Panathenaic, ii. 118 of Isis, ii. 119 Shoes, superstitions connected with,
Sokrates,
Sol,
ii.
318
;
Sichseus,
i.
433
Sidero, ii. 82, 250 Siegbert, i. 60, 189 Siege Perilous, i. 312
Siegfried,
i.
288
et seq.
i.
374
ii. 38 Solar myths, i. 43 ii. 38 et seq. moral aspects of, ii. 44 Solomon, ivory ewer uf, ii. 122 Solymoi, ii. 68 Soma, i. 369, 386 et seq. a name for the moon, ii. 131 Somadeva Bhatta, i. 115 Sophokles, i. 353 Sorcery, i. 428 Spear of Abaris, ii. 114. 123 Spells and talismans, ii. 125, 284
et
Sigenot, Siggeir,
Sigi,
i.
i.
280, 305
Sphin:
Spirit,
!2.
155;
i.
ii.
70.
344
i.
et seq.
31
Spiritual place,
i.
300
et seq.
394
SEA
Sraddha, i. 344 Sri, ii. 308
INDEX.
TIS
Teleboans, ii. 92 Telegonos, ii. 174 Telemachos, i. 278 Telephassa, i. 438 ii. 85 Telepheian wounds, ii. 75 Telephos, i. 436 ii. 74 et seq. Tell, William, ii. 95
;
;
Srentor, ii. 222 Sterope, ii. 260 Steropes, ii. 198, 213 Stheino, Stheno, ii. 286 Stymphalos. birds of, ii. 50 Styx, ii. 322 Suitors of Penelope, and the Panis,
ii.
332
sleep or death of,
fish.
iii.
Summer,
Sun. the
i.
145
ii.
brides of of horses of
cattle
25
i.
the,
the,
i.
135
ii.
213
the,
i.
152
Sunbeam,
ii.
159
Superstitions arising from equivocal words, i. 428, 429 Surya, i. 237, 384 et seq. Surya, i. 237
Sushna,
i.
343
Svayambhu, i. 415 Swadha, ii. 134 Swaha, ii. 134 Swan, knight of the,
311 195 Telphoussa, ii. 24, 25 Temenos, ii. 183 Temessa, Hero of, ii. 347 Tereus, ii. 250 Termagant, ii. 237 Termilai, i. 233 Terra, ii. 311 Tethys, i. 356 ii. 10, 266 Teutamidas, ii. 61 Teuthras, i. 437 ii. 74, 157 Thalassa, ii. 313 Thaleia, ii. 114 Thanatos, i. 232 ii. 41 Thaumas, i. 366 ii. 257 Theban legends, i. 221 Thebes, founding of, ii. 85 Thebes, sieges of, i. 219; ii. 186
Tellus,
ii.
Telodike,
ii.
et
seq.
i.
457
;
Swan maidens,
ii.
Swanhild, i. 189, 284 Swans, the singing, ii. 282 Swava, i. 286 Swiss myth of Tell, ii. 97 Sympathetic trees, gems, and stones, i. 292, 401 Symplegades, ii. 152, 242 Syrinx, ii. 249
Themis, i. 359; ii. 215 Theodore, St., ii. 356 Theodoric, i. 190
Theogony:
ii.
i.
i.
Theophane,
TABLE
Taliesin,
i.
166
ii. 150 Theseus, i. 309, 321 ii. 61 et seq. the womanly, i. 386 ii. 63 Thestios, ii. 45
Thetis,
78,
i.
279, 322
seq.,
ii.
the,
i.
ii.
211
ii.
411;
115,
ii. 90, 113 Tanarus, i. 379 Tanhauser, i. 324, 409, 412; ii. 218 Tantalos, i. 363, 367; ii. 27, 275, 317 Taranis, i. 379 Tarnkappe, i. 144, 292; ii. 59, 320 Tarquin, ii. 247 Tartaros, i. 329; ii. 141, 206, 323 Tegan Euroron, ii. 120 Teiresias, i. 444; ii. 3, 178, 187 Telauge, ii. 172 Telchines, i. 391; ii. 259,264,274, 291, 313
Tammuz,
259 Thirl wall. Bishop, on Homeric credibility, i. 297 et seq., 451 on the Trojan War, i. 197 on the unity of Homer, i. 197 Thoosa, ii. 213 Thorgerda, ring of, ii. 116 Thraetana, i. 441 ii. 354 Thrakians, i. 227 Thriai. ii. 18, 227 Thucydidos, treatment of the Trojan
\Uet
legends by,
i.
183
et seq.
ii.
339, 345
311
ii.
Tisamenos,
Tisiphone,
ii.
183 16
INDEX.
TIT
Titania and Bottom, i. 402 Titans, ii. 206. 212 et seq. Tithonos, i. 413, 415, 431 ;
Titurel, ii. 122 Tityos, i. 438;
ii.
305
VEN
31, 89
143
Tlepolemos,
ii.
48, 51
Tradition, oral, value of, i. 187 et seq. Traitana, i. 441 ii. 353 Transformation, power of, i. 391, 395; ii. 26, 223, 2o6, 259, 291 et seq., 313 Treasure, the lost or stolen, i. 204, 276, 283, 313, 413; ii. 80, 1-47
;
Tyndareos, ii. 79, 1N6, 283 Typh&on, Typhoons, Typhon, i. 359, ii. 24, 71, 212, 334 360, 305 Tyr, i. 370, 377 Tyrins, i. 184 Tyro, ii. 82
;
TTCKESAHS,
i.
383
et seq., 319 Tree and serpent worship, ii. 36, 116 Tribal legends, Greek, i. 77, 83, 219 the Argive story, i. 220 Athenian story, i. 224 Megarian story, i. 223 Pelopid story, i. 224 Teutonic story, i. 239 Theban story, i. 221 Tribute children, ii. 65, 349 Trikorythos, ii. 182 Trimurtti, i. 345, 372, 384 Triptolemos, i. 292 ii. 162, 309 Tristram, i. 312 ii. 33, 120 and Iseult, i. 323 Trita, i. 440, 441 ii. 354 Trito, i. 440
Ukko, i. 120 J Ulysses, Ulyxes, ii. 172 Uma, i. 343, 389 Una and the Ked Cross Knight,
437 Undine, Fouque's, Unholda, ii. 364
i.
i.
400
Upend ra,
Urre of Hungary,
i.
315
;
ii.
218
Uranus [Ouranos]
Urvasi, i. 103, 397 et seq. Ushapati, i. 427 Ushas, i. 20, 115, 415, 440 Uther, i. 309
VACH,
ii.
i.
344, 382
Trivikrama,
Trolls,
i.
ii.
131
51, 303,
313 Trophonios, i. 116 ii. 24 Tros, ii. 84 ii. 48, Troy, sieges of, i. 190, 219 160, 368 wars of, i. 156, 193, 254 ii. 5, 160 as related by Dion Chrysostom, i. 184 Herodotos, i. 183 Stesichoros, i. 183, 186 Thucydides, i. 183 et seq. Tschernibog, ii. 363 Tuisco, i. 354, 415 Tullius, Servius, i. 260 Turanian myths, i. 456 Turnus, i. 239, 260 Tvashtar, i. 391 Twilight, ii. 38 of the gods, i. 70, 368 ii. 95, 211 the sister of Night, i. 418 Twelve Olympian gods, i. 360 Twins, the, i. 391 Twin deities, i. 391 ii. 82, 114 Tyche., ii. 20 Agathe, ii. 20
; ;
Vaisvanara, ii. 192 ii. 230, 326 Vala, i. 441 Valandinne, ii. 362 Valant, ii. 362
;
Valhalla, Valkyrie,
Vali,
i.
i.
i.
375
ii.
326
ii. 285 369 Vampire, i. 363 Vanaheim, i. 372 Vanamali, the flower-crowned Krishna, ii. 132
280, 375;
Vanir,
i.
381
i.
335 123 Vasishtha, i. 395 Vastoshpati, i. 422 Vasu, i. 342; ii. 130, 196 Vavu, i. 153; ii. 221 Vedic hymns, language of 102 Vedjovis, Vejovis, i. 354 Vengeance, mythical, i. 160 of Achi Ileus, i. 249 Brynhild, i. 289 ('.mall, ii. 58 Grettir, i. 323 Kriemhild, i. 299 et seq. Odysseus, i. 160, 269
of,
i.
horses
VAS,
Varuna,
the,
i.
396
VEN
Vengeance of Perseus, ii. 60 of Siggeir, i. 274 Yenilia, i. 239 Venus, i. 402 ii. 8, 115
INDEX.
WUO
Wanderer, Grettir
ii.
i.
ii.
9 9
9 9
9
ii.
ii.
Militaris,
ii.
ii.
i.
Venusberg, Verdandhi,
324
11
ii.
Verethra, ii. 354 Verethragna, ii. 353 Vesica Piscis, ii. 115, 120 Vesta, ii. 126, 192 Vestal Virgins, ii. 117
Herakles, 46 Indra, 324, 340 140 The Jew, 415 Odysseus, 257 Oidipous, Perseus, 58 Phoibos, 22 291 Sigurd, 279 Theseus, 62 Wuotan, 291, 372
16,
ii.
i. i.
the,
i.
323
et seq.
ii.
15, 23,
69
ii.
ii.
Siegfried,
i.
i.
ii.
et scq.
;
Vibhvan,
Vigblar,
104 287 Vikramaditya, i. 273 Vilkina Saga, ii. 100 Vindhialm, i. 287
ii.
i.
ii. 95 Water, in connexion with, myths of the Dawn and the Sun, ii. 259 Water, myths of the, ii. 256 et seq. Wayland, i. 343; ii. 65, 199, 316, 327, 363
i.
Weapons, mythical,
i.
49,
ii.
poisoned,
Weavers, 333
170
i.
49, 265
i.
Violet colour, the, i. 81 Vipar, i. 341 Virbius, ii. 66 Virochana, ii. 104, 329
the,
265,
i.
317;
;
ii.
173,
Web
of Penelope,
265
ii.
173
Vishnu,
ii.
102
et scq.
of,
ii.
329
ii.
Weda, i. 374 Wegtam, ii. 95 Weird elves, ii. 18 Lady of the Woods,
i.
ii.
18
;
Sisters, the,
i.
312, 315
ii.
18
strides of,
i.
103
Visvakarraan, i. 346 Vivanghvat, i. 392 ii. 354 Vivasvat, i. 392, 415 ii. 35, 354 Volcanoes, ii. 314 Volker, i. 296 et scq. Volsung, i. 273 Volsunga Saga, i. 66, 189, 273
;
of Orange, 95
Tell,
ii.
land,
ii.
95,
i.
368 317
Winds,
the,
ii.
299
et seq.
Wish,
maidens,
et seq.
breeze,
i.
i.
292 375
;
Wishes, the three, ii. 62 Witchcraft, i. 71, 428 ii. 142 Witege, i. 297
WALI,
ii.
95
Wolves
233;
i.
in
ii.
Wainamoinen, i. 120; ii. 208, 246 Wanen, i. 381 Waltam, ii. 95 Walthar of Aquitaine, i. 302 et seq. 325 ii. 80 Wanderers in mythology, i. 159, 291, ii. 95, 294, 303 324, 394, 405 Wanderer, Bellerophon the, ii. 68
; ;
mythology, 274
i.
140,
165,
Womanly
aspect of mythical heroes, 248, 380; ii. 63, 163, 174, 295 Wooden horse, the, ii. 175 Words, use of abstract, i. 45 equivocal, as a source of myths, i.
47 Writing, introduction
of,
i.
217, 447
of,
i.
ii.
146
Written 447
literature, late
growth
et seq.
the,
ii.
i.
294
117
Wuotan [Wuodan],
tho,
All-Father
i.
388
INDEX.
397
ZOR
wuo
Wuotan Harbard,
Wegtam,
the one-eyed,
ii.
i.
376
Zen.l 354
Zephyros,i.247, 367,432 ii. 177,251 Zernibog, ii. 363 Zethos, ii. 249 Zeus, i. 347 et scq. ii. 11 et scq., 207 forms of the name, i. 354 the judge, i. 350, 367 relations of, with Here, ii. 12 et scq. Arkadios, i. 361 Aigiochos, i. 347 Cretan, i. 361 Daphnephoros, ii. 55 Dodonaios, i. 364 Herkeios, ii. 56 Heuresios, ii. 338 Katachthonios, ii. 320 Kenaios, ii. 54 Kerauneios, i. 379 Lykaios, i. 362 Olympios, i. 364 Ombrios, i. 376; ii. 264 Ouranion, i. 349 Pangenetor, ii. 55 Pater, i. 348 Phrygian, ii. 312
;
on Yggdrasil,
XANTHOS,
95
i.
371
Wunsch [Wish]
i. 232, 341 horse, 12, 162
the
Xenophanes, 353
Xerxes, canal of, at Athos, Xouthos, i. 237
i.
92
YAMA,
Yaman, Yamen,
dogs
i.
i.
392
ii.
47,
354
of, ii.
336
391
ii.
194
;
Yggdrasil,
i.
274, 370
ii.
ii.
18
354
Yng.
Yoni,
i. i.
371 240;
ii.
ii.
278
184 113
et seq.
Pistios,
ii.
ii.
ii.
ii.
ZAGREOS,
ii.
294, 320
Zio,
Zizi,
i.
354
66,
ii.
Zohak,
83,
et seq.
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INDEX.
Acton's Modern Cookery Allies on Formation of Christendom Allen's Discourses of Chrysostom Alpine Guide (The)
Journal Amos's Jurisprudence Anderson's Strength of Materials Arnold's Manual of English Literature .. Authority and Conscience Autumn Holidays of a Country Parson .... Ayre's Treasury of Bible Knowledge
19 15 1G 17 20
5
r
....
Campbell's Norway
Cates's Biographical Dictionary
20 n;
4
6 14 7 15
5
.
and Woonw win's Encyclopaedia Cats and Farlie's Moral Emblems Changed Aspects of Unchanged Truths .... Chesney's Indian Polity "Waterloo Campaign Chorale Book for England
Christ the Consoler Clough's Lives from Plutarch
3 12
7
12
4
5
14
2
"Works Bain's Mental and Moral Science on the Senses and Intellect Ball's Guide to the Central Alps Guide to the "Western Alps Guide to the Eastern Alps Batldon's Reuts and Tillages Beaten Tracks Becker's Charicles and Gallus
8
8
of
Joshua
18
....
,.
17 17 17 14 17 18 6
1
Town and
7
Conington's Translation
of Virgil's JEneid
....
.
18
7
Miscellaneous Writings
Bernard on
British Neutrality
19
..
Boultbee on
39 Articles
Bourne
's
on Screw Propeller Catechism of the Steam Engine Examples of Modern Engines .. Handbook of Steam Engine .... Treatise on the Steam Engine.
. . .
19 19 9 S 14 13 13 13 13 13
13 18
Copland's Dictionary of Practical Medicine Cotton's Memoir and Correspondence Counsel and Comfort from a City Pulpit Cox's (G. W.) Aryan Mythology
14 12 11 12
4
7
3 2
17 17 17
2
Creasy on
18
7
14
11
Chemical Analysis
....
Braddon's Life in India Bramley- Moore's Six Sisters of the Valley Beande's Dictionary of Science, Literature,
and Art BRAY's Manual
Anthropology Philosophy of Necessity On Force (Mrs.) Hartland Forest
of
16 18 10
7 7 7
18
2
17
D'Aubigne's History of the Reformation in the time of Calvin Davidson's Intn duction toNewTestament Dead Shot (The), by Maiiksmah De la Rive's Treatise on Electricity
15 19
''
Bree's
Fallacies of
Darwinism
.
.
Browne's Exposition of the 39 Articles. Brunel's Life of Beunel Buckle's History of Civilisation
10 15
De Morgan's
"
1
Paradoxes
4
4
2
7
Posthumous Remains Bull's Hints to Mothers Maternal Management of Children Bunsen's God in History
Prayers
20 20
3
Denison's Vice-Regal Life Disraeli's Lord George Bcntinck Novels and Talcs Dobson on the Ox Dove's Law of Storms Doyle's Fairyland
17
M
'*
12
Dkkws
Reasons
of
for Faith
M
'>
14
Dyer's City
Rome
22
NEW WORKS
published by
LONGMANS and
CO.
13 Eastlake's Gothic Revival Hints on Household Taste .... 13 Musical Criticism and Biography 4 Eaton's 16 Eden's Queensland 20 Edinburgh Review Elements of Botany 10 15 Ellicott on New Testament Revision 15 's Commentary on Ephesians ....
7
7
.
4 11 11
's
Galatians .... Pastoral Epist. Philippians,&c. Thessalonians Lectures on Life of Christ ....
15 15 15 15 15 11 10
15
Hoene's Introduction to the Scriptures How we Spent the Summer Howitt's Australian Discovery
Rural Life of England Visits to Remarkable Places
HiiBNEE's Pope Sixtus the Fifth
15 16
17 17 17 4 4
8 8
....
Human Nature
Ewald's History
of Israel
Faiebaien's
Wrought
Story of
Doom
3 18 18
and Millwork
Iron Shipbuilding
13 13 4
6 7 19 19 19 20 16 1 1
7
Fitzwygeam
Fowleb's
and
Colliers
James's Christian Counsels Jameson's Legends of Saints and Martyrs Legends of the Madonna Legends of the Monastic Orders Legends of the Saviour Jamieson on Causality Jaedine's Christian Sacerdotalism Johnston's Geographical Dictionary
.
14 12 12 12 12 5 14 8
Feoude's English
Short Studies
Keith on Destiny
Horse-Shoeing Ganox's Elementary Physics Natural Philosophy Gaeeod's Materia Medica
6 6
Gamgee on
,,.,....
Giant
.
(The)
....
Gilbeet's Cadore and Chuschill's Dolomites Gibdlestone's Bible Synonyms Gietin's House I Live In Gladstone's Life of Whitefield Goddaed's Wonderful Stories Goldsmith's Poems, Illustrated
19 9 9 12 17 16 16 14 11 4 17 18
9
Keel's
15 15
14 9
18 16
6
Goodeve's Mechanism
9 19 3 8 4 7 7 3 6 12 10 2 2 20 14 14 10 10 18 16
Geaham's Autobiography
of Literature and Art Geant's Ethics of Aristotle Home Politics Graver Thoughts of a Country Parson
of
Milton
....
4
2 5 2 7 11
....
View
Geiffith's Fundamentals Geove on Correlation of Physical Forces Guenet's Chapters of French History .... Gwilt's Encyclopedia of Architecture ....
.
9 14 9
2 13
of
Nature
....
10
Wonders Subterranean World Hatheetok's Memoir and Correspondence Haywabd's Biographical and Critical Essays Heeschel's Outlines of Astronomy
10 10
10 2
12,
Macaulay's
(Lord) Essays
4
7 11
Hewitt on the
Diseases of
Women
3 1 18
NEW WORKS
Macaulay's
(Lord) Speeches
published by
LONGMANS
aot CO.
23
5 1 5
5
"Works
12
Economy
. , ,
19 19
4,
Compendium
;,
..
New Testament
gs
Illustrat
10
....
Manning's England and Christendom Maecet's Natural Philosophy Marshall's Physiology Maeshman's History of India
15 9
from the Old Mastei 9 tr*B History of his Religi uaOpi ; NiGKrnra ah: on ii la Lying-in 1 Nilsson's Scandinavia
i]
..
20
10
i .
12
2
5
Notes on Books
go
-Life of Havelock
after the Chris-
Maetineau's Endeavours
tian Life
16
of the
3 2 5
Odling's Course
of
l'i
Massingbeed's History
Reformation Mathews on Colonial Question Maundee's Biographical Treasury G cogra) >li ieal Treasury Historical Treasury Scientific and Literary Treasury Treasury of Knowledge Treasury of Natural History .. Maxwell's Theory of Heat Mat's Constitutional History of England. Melville's Digby Grand General Bounce
Gladiat3rs
Ow;
9 3 10
Outlines of Chemistry Comparative Anaton y ai <i logy of Vertebrate Animals Lectures on the Invertebrate
\'s
I
i 9
19 10 9
1
17
:
14
Good
for
Nothing
18 18 18 18
IS 18 18
Pewtner's Comprehensii
Pictures in Tyrol Piesse's Art of Perfumery
20
L6
:
i
Holmby House
Interpreter
Playee-Feowp's Pbebt>ERGAST
<
California
16
8
Kate Coventry
Queen's Maries
Mendelssohn's Letters Meeivale's Fall of the Roman Republic Romans under the Empire Meeeifield's Arithmetic and Mensuration Magnetism and Evees's Navigation Metetaed's Group of Englishmen Miles on Horse's Foot and Horse Shoeing
18 4 3 3
8 8
PEESCOTT's SoriptUtt Present-Day Thoughts, by A. K. H. Peoctoe's Astr Essays Orbs around Us Plurality of Worlds Saturn
I
IS
7
v
B
v
Scientific
Essays
9
B 8
8 s
on Horses' Teeth and Stables Mill (J.) on the Mind Mill (J. S.) on Liberty
Subjection of Women
4 19 19
5
Sun
Public Schools.Atlas
5 5
5 5
5
16
U
-
's
by
Economy
System of Logic
5 5 11 9
A.K. 11.13 Reeve's Royal and Republican France Reicuel's See of Rome
l!i:iin's Mai> Of
ftf<
1
-
M
17
10
Millee's Elements
Hamilton's Philosophy of Chemistry Inorganic Chemistry Mitchell's Manual of Architecture Manual of Assaying Monsell's Beatitudes His Presence not his Memory. 'Spiritual Songs'
Mooeb's
13 14 16 16 16 IS 18 18
6 G
Roget's Thesaurus
Phrases
~>
fl
H
]
*
I
Mental Philosophy Mossman's Christian Church Mullee's (Mai) Chips from a German
BAEDABa's Justinian
1
1
I
3
7
5
'
Workshop
Lectures on the Science of Lan-
r<
"
guage
(K.
O.)
U
*
Literature of Ancient
2
B
of
1
Greece
193
24
NEW WORKS
published by
17 17
3
LONGMANS and
CO.
Tyndall's Lectures on
Electricity
Readings Examination
for
Lent
for Confirmation
..
Stories and Tales Thoughts for the Age Thoughts for the Holy Week .... SniPLET's Essays on Ecclesiastical Reform Short's Church History S^ii m's Paul's Voyage and Shipwreck .... (Sydney)* Life and Letters
16 16 1G 16 16 16 17 16 16 14 3 14 4
7
Heat a Mode
of
Motion
Molecular Physics
9 9 9 9 11
Ueberweg's System
of Logic
13
10 14
Watson's Geometry
Watts's Dictionary
Principles and Practice of Physic of Chemistry Objects for Common Telescopes. ...
9
11 11 8 15 4 11 11 20
5
7 8 6
Webb's
Poetical
Works
Stanley'- History of British Birds Stephen's Ecclesiastical Biography Playground of Europe Stepping-Stone* to Knowledge, &c Stirling's Protoplasm Secret of Hegel
Sir
18 9 4 16 20
7 7
West
Life, by Gleig on Children's Diseases on Children's Nervous Disorders on Nursing Sick Children Whately's English Synonjmaes
....
Logic Rhetoric
William Hamilton
7
1
Stockmar's Memoirs Stonehenge on the Dog on the Greyhound Strickland's Queens of England Sunday Afternoons at the Parish Church
.
19 19
4 of
7
White and Riddle's Latin Dictionaries Wilcocks's Sea Eisherman Williams's Aristotle's Ethics Williams on Consumption Willich's Popular Tables Willis's Principles of Mechanism
Winslow
Wood's
on Light
Bible Animals
(J. G.)
5 5 6
19 5
11
20
13
9
a University City, by A. K. H.
....
Taylor's Historj
of India
(Jeremy) Works, edited by Eden Text-Books of Science Text-Books of Science Thirlw all's History of Greece
16
8
10 9 10 10
9 11 14
9
2
Thomson's Laws
of
Thought
of Being
.
5
7
New World
Tarndale
17 of
Thudichum's Chemical Physiology Todd (A.) on Parliamentary Government and Bowman's Anatomy and Physiology of Man Trench's Realities of Irish Life
11
1
Yonge's History
Horace
England
English-Greek Lexicons
6 18
5 3
12
2
Warden
Twiss's
Law of Nations
Faraday as a Discoverer Eragments of Science Hours of Exercise in the Alps
Tyndall's Dianiaguetism
18 IS 20 9 4 9 16
Youatt
19
19
Zeller's Socrates
Stoics, Epicureans,
and Sceptics.
3 3
15
SPOTTI3WOODE AND
CO.,
FBlJfTBBS
DATE DUE