Cults Myths and Religions
Cults Myths and Religions
Cults Myths and Religions
ERKELEY
^
\
ll-RARY
rai/ERSlTY
Of j
CALIFORNIA
'II
STUI
'..\f:!IA.\>.
INCI AM.
\J
CULTS,
CULTS,
MYTHS
AND RELIGIONS
SALOMON REINACH
TRANSLATED BY
ELIZABETH FROST
LONDON
17
LOAN STACK
3Uo
INTRODUCTION
In the eyes of the evolutionist
ists
and we are
beast,
all
evolution-
nowadays
man
springs from
humanity from
animality.
will, is
a religious animal
is
and
would say,
It
and Hovelacque, that quaternary man was ignorant of Unless, then, we admit the gratuitous and religion. childlike hypothesis of a primitive revelation, we must
look for the origin of religions in the psychology, not
of civilised
civilisation.
man, but
of
man
Of
direct
man, anterior to all history, we have no knowledge, beyond what we glean from the implethis
artistic
ments and
have striven to
show on a
us far
less
later
page
To supplement our
be tapped
:
information,
children,
that
they
project
into
the
twilit
intelligence,
within them, V
the
external
502
vi
INTRODUCTION
and people the universe, especially the beings and objects that surround them, with a life and sentiment
world,
Poetry,
is
monism
which
discerns
The higher animals not only obey that residuum of they have ancestral experience known as instinct scruples. Hawks do curbed by energies their physical and not pike out hawks' een,' says the homely adage
;
'
may
not be primitive
whose young need to be suckled or protected, it is a vital condition of its preservation. Where no such scruple
existed, the species has quickly
natural
primitive
^/
selection
is
powerless
With
blood
or
savage humanity,
less
the
scruple
certain
of
would seem
general than
among
animals.
Homo homini
it is
On
of consanguinity
that
is
to say, in clans
is
an heritage transmitted to
man from
are as
animals.
Scruples,
natural to
scruples
him as the religious sentiment itself. In fact, and animism combined are the starting-point of
INTRODUCTION
religion.
vii
For
lie
if
animism
is
scruples
and
piety.
comes
state,
in.
Many
Man, however,
is
he
is also,
in the Aristotelian
a political
fall
animal
into the
single
i^dov
ttoXitikov.
;
Possibly,
same category
but among
is
man
to seek the
company,
But he
actual or imaginary.
The savage
of
him to give them place in the group formed by the members of the clan. Soon he infers that animal and plant must spring from a common origin with
himself,
and he proceeds
to apply the
same scruple
to
them
1900
as to his
life is
own
people.
animal
I
the
it
germ
of dendrolatry
and zoolatry.
In
called
instinct,
and
The
in
all
up
at
to a blank, unreasonis
death,
periods.
is
found These
all
interdictions, in their
explicit form,
Polynesia,
where they no
name
of Taboo.
have acquiesced
I
see
viii
INTRODUCTION
it.
Taboo
is
it is
taboo,
and con-
classical
It
of the eighteenth
Hence^via
which the
the missionaries
has
totern,
red
man
and a
rallying symbol.
The
any kind
that
of
anthropomorphism,
is
totemism.
It
may
tribal
exists,
or has existed,
among numerous
A
the
historians
and
ethnologists,
of
by
this
enabling
them
to
hypertrophy
this
I
morbid exaggeration
of
the
social
instinctwhich
It is
from mere
^
curiosity,
It
is
populaires (1904, p. 323), that to discuss the subject is tantamount to ploughing the sands, as there is not one totemism but many totemisms.
The remark
is
yet
it is
both our right and our duty to disengage their essential principles.
INTRODUCTION
him, and the sympathy or respect
ix
the
poles
removed
If
from fear
with
this tangled
complex
totemism
in
embryo,
then twentieth-century
man is
womb
The animal
is it
fable
is
beloved by children.
For
dim ages
links
when the
and the
fact,
In
germ
of every social
compact,
The totem
logical
is
outcome
else
if
anything
than a totem.
Again,
we knew nothing
and nothing
of
the
many
quarters of
among
some
It is
under his
man.
and
destitute of food-reserves,
and perpetually
enough
to save
X
from destruction.
to
entail,
INTRODUCTION
That influence was a
of
religious scruple
animal or plant
and the animal or plant, which a clan respects and keeps in its immediate neighbourhood as a protector and friend,
is
the totem.
Thus we can
of taboos
and totems
in countries
and
cereals
Now, on
to the
is
perfectly certain
thanks
and
his
note-book
that
by
their
:
if
totemism has
rites of
no perceptible trace
its
in the ideas
is
and
a given locality,
surest
monument
that very
civilisation
It is to
the
of
first
to
throw into
totemism
consequences
modern
which
still
persist
rule, the
in
the
heart of our
civilisation.
As a
animal
live in
and ate
it
as a
means
As these
religious
banquets became
;
more
the sacrosanct
its
self-
But
Theophagy
;
relics of this
savage creed
and with
INTRODUCTION
tive
xi
every fresh insight into the genuinely popular and primielements of ancient religions,
it
more obvious how many votaries that creed must have had even in the Old World. Man is never seriously attracted by fire-new ideas, but by modifications of those
old ideas which are insensibly fructifying within him.
4c
4:
*
will
4:
be found
many
and confirmations
anticipated
I
and
developed
to
by
different
I
Had
been the
first
first
formulate them,
thinkers of
my
day,
and
As a matter
Smith,
of fact, I
who made
Lennan,
themselves not myself.
ideas of
the discoveries.
Lang,
;
^^^
<a^
c^
I'tont^Cj
that
it
was
,
Jam V,
;
lowlier part,
to grasp the
I
my
and
to diffuse
them
as widely as
might,
in the
first in
my
du Louvre, then
in
I
Academic des
Inscriptions,
and again
many
began
popular and
scientific reviews.
fields,
In France,
when
my
ask
word totemism, before I dealt with phenomena in the Revue Scientifique} At the Academic des Inscriptions, in igoo, the only members who did not doubt my sanity, when I read some lucubrato explain the
me
that group of
tions
on the
biblical taboos
of the Celts,
were
whom
'
The
forms chapter
xii rest,
INTRODUCTION
had never heard
Bible,
of a totem.
of
the
interdictions
One
of
them
dealt
faithfully
with
me as me by my
an anti-semite, an
distinguished friend
to
had ventured
impugn,
in the
pages of the Mirage Oriental, the antiquity and omnipresence of Phoenician commerce.
of
ignorance
is
Thanks
to
in
some
degree, to
with the
who once
is
'
that
the
something
may
characteristic
sign
of
that
certain
latter-day
writers
on Greek
mythology
thus,
religiously
eschew
which
me
by a
is
This reaction
which
birth.
It
seems to
Man, 1901, p. 12. But the same scholar justly remarks Without totemism one can hardly see how eaily 1902, p. 86) human society was ever organised at all.'
'
A. Lang,
{ibid.
'
INTRODUCTION
doned.
to
fit
xiii
The system
every
lock.
of taboos
and totems
there are
is
not a key
religious
many
things
In mythology,
by
irrefragable arguments,
some few
of
myself.
of true believers, or
an alimentary
is
prohibition, the
of a scholarly interpreter
to read
To do
to turn
say,
upon
scientific honesty.
Max
Miiller,
common
or, it
may
will-o'-the-wisp.
lies
The great
superiority
sum
human
it is
faculties
of civilisation of
The primitive
off,
life
humanity,
Religion
art,
is religious.
one by one,
agriculture, law,
must eliminate all religions. For the original function of rationalism was to devise a ritual capable of breaking the fetters in which man had bound
which sooner or
xiv
himself,
INTRODUCTION
and
to
Nor was By fixing ritual while belief was still this its only merit. fluid, it rendered the antagonism between those two elements of religion more sensible and, in the long run, more intolerable. The careful reader, if this book should find any, will
cause of freedom before
it
turned oppressor.
observe that
it
is
Repetition
was
inevitable,
since
sell-contained
whole.
any
case,
that
vice
which
Villemain preached
is
day
who aims
liberal
at familiarising the
man
Philosophy aforetime,
both
and
liberatress.
S.
R.
Paris.
CONTENTS
Introduction
I.
.....
PAGE
V
I
II.
26
36 43
III.
IV.
V.
......
80
93
105
VI.
VII.
VIII.
.....
124
138
IX.
X.
....
XI.
XII.
XIII.
167
172
180
197
XIV.
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
I
CHAPTER
At
the
it
may
be advisable to recall
that
the
word totem
native
sign,
mark,
family
interdiction,
The two
is
to
Polynesia.
appear
later, is
The totem,
a
an animal
less
frequently
is it
vegetable
only in exceptional
instances
an
it
inorganic
object.
The
:
radical
distinction
is
between
and the
fetish is this
is
the fetish
the totem
by members
in
of
protective,
call
the widest
totem
the
members
themselves
Serpents,
by the
aid of serpents,
believe themselves
immune from
serpent-bites
and
so
on
indefinitely.
'
Revue
scientifique,
October
13, 1900.
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
from the totem constitutes what for the last thirty years has been known as Totemism. From the beginning of
the eighteenth century, French missionaries were struck
social,
and
One
of
the Chimaera.
During the
missionaries
first
and
travellers in
eighteenth-century
America.
More
than
this,
it
similar
phenomena
writers
themselves
&c.
in
Herodotus,
Diodorus,
Pausanias,
of the
Aelian,
In
1869
MacLennan
author
a
proposed
large
;
number
of
civilisations
modern
Towards 1885
and greater
Frazer.
critical
Since then
of
attention
science,
England,
where
are
still
The fundamental
characteristic of animal
totemism
is
men and
certain species
of animals.
Although
authenticated,
cases
of
totemic
the
survival
have
be laid
been
during
eighteenth
it
and
nineteenth
may
down
where
civilisation has
especially in countries
has
that
made but
if
little
headway.
We may
say,
it.
savour of paradox
but
in reality,
is
Jevons well
perfectly clear
and natural.
>
For example
serpents,
or
eagles,
because
the}-
credit
them
:
No
doubt,
if
one of
them were
edible,
it
to be eaten at
man and
beast
by a
species of
communion.
1
For the sake of brevity, I have dealt with animal totemism alone. Vegetable totemism, though rarer, lends itself to the same comparative method. See Frazer's Totemism, pp. 91-95 {Geogyaphical Distribution I am aware that the author's ideas were considerably of Totemism). modified in 1899 (v. Annie Sociologique, iii. 217) but the facts which he has so ably classified and to which I must perpetually refer in the course of this work outweigh any theory on the primitive character of totemism.
^Jevons,
following.
Introduction
to
the
History of Religion,
pp.
114 and
AND RELIGIONS
these
4
little
CULTS, MYTHS.
temptation
to
multiply
sacred
banquets
be
unduly, for wild animals could not be had for the asking,
of
of necessity
Now
totems the
A
As
few half-
a result,
those
sacrifices,
will
tend
to
increase
in
frequency, until
in
less
the
long run
their character
be-
comes
less
and
sacramental
the
gastronomic.
When
animals
question
are
thoroughly domesticated,
by
of
and constantly in touch with man, the tradition periodic sacrifices and banquets will still be retained
dogs,
;
as a religious form
will
be
and look on
decadence
of
totemism
of
is
which we need only turn to oldanimal clan is no longer the The world civilisations. what remains of the primitive sentiment object of a cult mena,
for
examples
is
such as
Mendes, the
crocodile of
lion of Leontopolis in
Egypt.^
animals
that
is
2
;
to say, as
or, at
most,
Diodorus Siculus,
i.
80.
tribes are
known who
are not
justified
with motives (hygienic, for instance) which belong to an absokitely different order of thought and are merely
of
a later age.
The
Mussulman and
point.
But the
is
in other words,
mythology.
of personal
The idea
of divine clans
is
replaced
by that
and
family-histories, fixed
by poets and
atmospheric
occasionall}'
priests, reflect in
phenomena,
for there
is
spnbolic
all
and
truth in
Religion
that she
heaven,
but
for
all
never loses
his
touch of earth.
with
his
league
the
animal
clientele
man
distributes
them among
gods
tism
new
of
gods.
With these
animals
are
whose
and
is
selection
certain
:
species
of
in
some
instances,
the same
several
connected by
ritual
gods, because
have each
the
attributed
to
Thus,
according to
in
lizard,
Turner, one
the
owl,
incarnate
another in
and
form
wolf
so forth.
is
represented in the
Conversely, the
;
an
eagle,
the bull
is
the
emblem both
is
of Apollo
and Posidon.
To multiply
examples
useless.
CULTS, MYTHS,
Before going further,
it
AND RELIGIONS
may
be well to note that,
till
the
companions,
mounts,
or
favourite
victims
gods
;
retain
totemism
distributed
phrase
to
it,
for
was transplanted
the
Olympus.
It
eagle which
of Zeus,
was
every
companion
an
Ares
it
was
the
eagle,
wolf,
animal
species
for
each
individual
sanctity
of
god.
notion,
as
in
to
of
the
lived
on
the
shadow
to
the
sanctity of God.^
If
mythology, by absorption,
it
tends
cause
the
that,
disappearance of totemism,
to
some
extent,
it
owes
its
origin to totemism.
In Greek
the
transformation
of
gods into
animals.
swan
who
world.
of tribes
among
a group
human
clan,
no
'
Even to-day the Russian peasant never kills a dove, because it and children are still taught in France the bird of the Holy Ghost not to crush the insects called betes du bon Dieu (lady-birds).
is
;
verging
but
if
the swan-
Leda was
to
was bound
god.
of
represent
him
is
as
the incarnation of a
Thus metamorphosis
but
a
of
mythology,
semi-rationalistic
reconcile
the relics
totemism
to
the
nascent anthropomorphism.
The
among
day
the tribal
:
of a
it
must
is
amalgamations
One
which,
eminently conservative.
its
of a clan
it
at intervals.
;
ushered in
up
to
him
in sacrifice
yet the
more or
own
divinity.
From
this
combination of the
new
destined to
pla}''
no
mankind
god.
the
This
conception
especially
noticeable
in
the
the form of a
pieces,
young
bull,
and devoured.
As long
godhead dwelt
in
'
Mendesian canton had open commerce with a certain woman' (ii. 46). These vagaries of superstition were natural enough, when the myths were swarming with parallels.
that, in his day, a goat of the
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
:
was
slain,
and
limb
by bleeding limb
divided
among
new
which
still left
in the species A
him became
find
in
inadmissible, except
on condition
is
of his
subsequent resurrection.
And
this
precisely
what we
after
Zagreus,
who,
being
devoured by the
Titans
life
(the ancestors of
by
Jove.
Generally, however, the effect of anthropomorphism
was
gift
and
not
god as a
is
or
an expiation.
;
This
latter
conception
of
primitive primitive
for
it
implies
the
existence
the
non-
individual
god,
it is
tolerably
so
Still,
unof
questioned was
its
vogue
Greece,
that
except
in
the
no other form of
'
sacrifice
rites
was dreamed
'
of.
An
totemic sacrament
'
was observed,
in 1899, by Messrs. B. Spencer and Tribes of Central Australia, p. 204 cf. Hubert, Annee sociologique, vol. iii. pp. 208-215). Among certain tribes of Central Australia,
;
F. Gillen (Native
the totem is solemnly eaten by the members of the totemic group, Not only have at the end of certain ceremonies called Intichiuma.
'
they must eat of it first. Then, and then only, the members of other totemic groups have the right to eat as much as they choose.' they the right to eat of
it
;
death
of
god,
accompanied
easily
by
face with
be
shown by an
was done
to
less
totem
slain
the
totemic
or
their
period,
priests,
man
offers
gods
because
he knows neither
gods nor
priests.
The
its
accurate, renews
store
sanctity
to be by eating an
or,
rites.
This
need was
still
felt
after
It
had passed
awa}'.
Some-
now
of
mystic conventicles
Jerusalem,
(Ixvi. 17)
to
in
the
They
that sanctify
and
the
abomination
and
magic potions
to be
found
in all
popular phar-
macopoeias
the
still
efftcac}^ of
their repulsiveness.
fication
is
clearly indicated
by the prophet
and
is
the
10
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
to the
decadence
totemism,
it
man
result
should turn
to
man
homo
res sacra
The
was human
;
sacrifice
accompanied by acts
of cannibalism
in
which
of
Robertson
totemic
authors
;
Smith
rightly
saw an aftermath
the
sacrifice.
References
abound
is
in
the
classical
usually limited
deity
who
with
the
Phoenician
Baal.i
This
cult
succeeded
by a banquet,
in virtue of
which the
sanctit}^ of
When
by the
As
man
still
by
name
of Xvkol
;
exactly as the
of
initiates of
Bacchus became
^cLKxoi
Bassarids
Arcti.
and those
{dpKTO'i),
There
is
civilisation
however slow
people,
may
yesterday.
us, primitive
Consequently,
it
must be confessed
that, for
totemism
is
is
our knowledge
to survivals,
more
or less corrupt, of
applies
a vanished creed.
'
The description
equally to
ii
accounts
of
the
travellers
who have
;
modern savage
And
yet,
if
we
phenomena
is
of
rence
among
savages,
it
possible to
many
and
non-classical religions.
may
be
for
if
the tree
is
known by
his fruits, it
We
I.
should
be
inclined
to
formulate
the
code
of
totemism as follows
:
are
neither
killed
Certain animals
nor eaten,
hut
man
rears specimens and tends them. Examples are the cow, the cat, the sheep, the hawk, the goose, hen, and hare among the Celts &c., in Egypt
;
of
Britain
the
bear
among
;
the
Ainos (whose
women sometimes
in
;
the eel
Samoa the dog among the Kalangs of Java and the eagle among the Moquis of Arizona.^ In Hellenic countries we find many cases of tabooed animals,
and the crayfish
;
god
in Epirus
^
;
Hamaxitus
v. 12.
in
the Troad
''
the
^
''
of
the-
Semites, p. 173.
153.
p.
>
Anim.
xii.
5.
12
bears,
CULTS, MYTHS,
eagles,
AND RELIGIONS
oxen at Hierapolis
;
horses,
and
the
Rome, &c.
is
It is
evident
it
secondary, as
could
in
its
own
Originally
Kalangs of Java.
II.
Mourning
is
worn
for
the
accidental
;
death of a
it
member
of a particular
animal species
and
is
buried
This was the case with a crab at Seriphos,- with the wolf
at Athens,^ the heifer in Egypt, ^ the goat at Mendes,'^ the
gazelle in Arabia, the owl in
Wanikah of West Africa, the cobra at Travancore,^ and the hen among certain Indian tribes in South America.'' The fact that several of these animals are not domestic,
but dangerous even, excludes the hypothesis
able enough on a priori grounds
gratitude.
III.
improbapplies
of
Occasionally
the
alinicntary
interdiction
only
to
Genesis mentions
and
explains
by
a
:
legend^
^
the
of the thigh
Herodotus
the Egyptians
Among
the
Omahas
Lucian,
Aelian, Hist.
Schol. Apoll.
124.
Herodotus,
Ibid.
ii.
ii.
;
'"
46
Diodorus,
i.
83, 84.
^
'
Frazer, Totemism, pp. 22 5^. Jevons, Introduction to the History of Religions, p. iiS.
'"^
13
the clan of
;
Black Shoulders
the
'
may
not eat
its
Eagles
'
cannot touch
Hangas
its ribs.^
needs of
IV.
When
to
The
ox,
cakes,
was supposed
trial
to go
mock
held after
At Tenedos,
Dionysus was
who
offered
up a young
bull to
way
seemed
to kill itself
by
accident.'^
In the tribe of
Mount
totem
South
Gambier (Southern
in case of famine,
Australia), a
man
only
kills his
his grief at
having to eat
its
Some
to
tribes
of
New
Wales do not
Corinthians,
kill
employ strangers
do so
after
which they
The Bechuanas never kill a lion they have made their apologies, and the slayer must
Frazer, Totemism, p. ii. Cf. Robertson Smith, Religion of the Semites, pp. 304 sqq. Ihid. pp. 305, 306. Frazer, Totemism, p. 7.
Ibid. p. 19.
'"
14
CULTS, MYTHS,
purification.^
AND RELIGIONS
for
undergo a
of the
having
been forced to
are hungry.
is
mourned
for after
it
has been
The Thebans,' says Herodotus,-' do not sacrifice rams but hold them sacred. On one day in the year,
'
'
its
This done,
all
who
are
in
in a sacred tomb.'
According
to
Frazer,^
Californian
tribe,
which
buzzard
;
killing of a
It
blood.
make
holy ground, to
women.
is
The
the god
similarity
striking.
the equivalent
women
of the Californian
medicine-man.
The mourning
Adonis
is
of the Syrian
for the
death of
'
'
(Macaulay's translation.)
p. 15.
15
of
obscure.
The object
However
of
certain,
the
god,
his
VI.
in
Men
religious
Where
totemism
exists,
these
Among
solemn occasions,
The Condor
ment themselves with the bird's feathers. Among the Omahas, whose totem is the buffalo, the boys arrange
their hair in
two
curls,
in imitation of buffalo
horns.
Among
is
woman
sallies
out of
It
was enveloped
totem
men
by howling and
is
walking on
fours.
Classical antiquity
is
fruitful of
examples
only conjectural.
fawn
"'
the
Robertson Smith,
op.
cit.
p. 412.
what
still
occurs on
The
joy of
votaries of a dead
all
He
hearts.
'
Frazer, Totemism, pp. 27-33. Ibid. pp. 32-33. Demosthenes, De Corona, p. 260.
i6
CULTS, MYTHS,
girls of Attica,
AND RELIGIONS
ol five
young
part
and
ten,
took
the
^
cult
of
bear-goddess,
starting
the
for
Brauronian
Hierapolis
Artemis
while
the
it,
pilgrims
We
rite
a sacrificed ram
it
was covered.
of a sacrificed
of
the
animal-headed
Egyptian
gods
Bast,
Sekhet,
Khnum, &c.-^ His hypothesis is the more probable since the passage of Herodotus allows us to assume a period of transition, during which the skin was placed,
not on the
sacrificer,
supposed to be present.
VII. Clans and individuals take the names of animals.
Where totemism
exists, these
is
;
The habit
of
almost universal
among
the Indians
and examples are also numerous in it seems as though the animal names bestowed on the nomes, or cantons, must have been totemic. In the Hellenic world we meet clans like
North America
Australia.^
In Egypt
the
Cynadae
of
along with nations Hke Hirpi (wolves) of Samnium the Myrmidons (ants), the Mysians (mice), the Lycians
Frazer, Totemism, p. 40. Lucian, De Dea Syria, c. 55.
Cf.
'
2 3
2, vol.
ii.
p.
129.
17
(i.q.
Arctadians, bears).
The
case
of
pecuHarly interesting, as
we
by
know
Hera.'
Artemis, Callisto,
into
bear
to
the view
had
its
origin in the
weakness of primitive
;
man
for
so,
the grand-
children of the warrior Serpent might convince themselves that they were descended
reptile.
the
idea of descent
is
it is
his
own.
The
facility of
an
effect,
not a cause,
of totemism.
VHL
In many
its
image
of
an animal on
ensigns
and arms.
of
animal
both wolf and boar were once totems among the two
peoples.
In Egypt the
hawk blazoned on
It
is
the king's
between the
'
Egypt,
i8
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
and the choice of animals for ensigns. We read in The second explanation which they give Diodorus
:
'
is
couched thus
oft
beaten
by
their enemies,
Now
them
of
the
animals
affixed
and the
chiefs
view of each
rank
of soldiers.
The
said
salvation,
and
for
any
of
an
article of religion.'
none
rational
of
Upper Darling engrave their totem on and as several American tribes in time
sticks
of
war carry
surmounted by pieces
of
is
the
animal-augur or animallittle
guide which we
(see XI).
have to consider a
dangerous,
later
if
is
supposed
to
spare the members of the totemic clan, but only when they
belong to
it
by birth.
lies
This
belief
at
the root
of
In
Diodorus,
i.
86,
Frazer, op.
cit.
p. 30.
19
the
Psyllians
of
Marniarica
of
Parium,
^
bites.
In
the
Psyllians
and to-day
the
their
]\Ioxos of Peru,
whose totem
is
medicine-men to a similar
is
ordeal.-
Among
the
Bechuanas there
member who
as
much
exposure
Mars),
(sons
of
whom the she- wolf by sparing recognises offspring, may also be classed as a kind of totemic
X. Animal totems help ami protect
totemic clan.
the
ordeal.
of the
members
There
w^as
a tale in
of the ancient
by a
crocodile,
who
The
him
across
of
Lake Moeris on
his
back.^
Greek legends
animal preservers,
like Arion's
dolphin
of Aristcmienes,
Both
when they
Strabo mentions a tribe of Ophiogenes at Parium on the Propontis. They believed themselves akin to serpents and descended from a The males were credited with the power of curing viper snake-hero. bites by the laying-on of hands (Strabo, xiii. 58S). A slip of Pliny's locates them in Paros in insula Paro (xxviii. 30), and the variant Cypro has led some of the moderns to assign them to Cyprus. Elsewhere (vi. 2, 2), Pliny citing Crates of Pergamus says the Ophiogenes lived on the Hellespont around Parium (in Hellesponto circa Parium) and in this he coincides with Varro. Aelian also speaks
'
"
of a tribe of
Ophiogenes in Phrygia, claiming descent from Halia, who became pregnant to a sacred serpent.
-
Frazer, p. 20.
Ibid. p. 21.
Diodorus,
i.
89.
c 2
20
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
first
;
animals.
In
the
place,
most totems
domes-
by
manowe
domestication to totemism
The idea
of gratitude,
and
them as guides.
In Greece and
Rome we
augural
but, in
Egypt,
foretold the
In Australia and Samoa the kangaroo, the crow, and the owl premonish their fellow clansmen of events At one time the Samoan warriors went so far to come.
as to rear owls for the sake of their vaticinatory qualities
in war,-
In this connection
the
British
we may
hare of
queen
Boadicea
(Budicca),
who
eaten,
which
'^
is
tantamount
to saying
is
Another instance
is
the
more
It
interesting
that
themselves
is,
Hirpini
from
word
for wolf.^
upon
Diodorus,
i.
87.
Ixii.
Frazer, op.
cit.
p. 23,
'
Dion Cassius,
9.
'
Compare the
pillar of
cloud or
lire
(Exodus
xiv. 21).
21
in
of great antiquity.
own
their
nor
is it
totems
that
to
say,
their
natural
allies
to
nature,
wells
especially,
which animals
seem
also explains
why
seem
to
and totems
so
at one
often
on ancient Greek
part of guide and
double
augur.
common
I
descent.
last,
in
it
it
To
my
mind
is
b}'
totemic
man,
his
is
name
of
own
clan.
Still,
this
attempt at an explanation
it
very
old,
and traces
of
of
believed
as
their
name
indicates
that
they
men
after a plague
Tacitus, translating an Alexandrine author, will have it that the Jews adored the ass because wild asses had re\-ealed to Moses the existence of a spring {Histories, v. 3).
-
s.v.
22
island.^
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
(ant) itself
;
on the other
hand, Ophiogenes (the serpent-born) must be the translation of a genealogical legend coined to explain the tribal
of
The Gaulish patronymics beginning with the name an animal, and terminating in genos, which indicates
a divine filiation
(crow-son), &c.
are
e.g.
an animal with
a certain family.
The Semitic
beast.
It
tribes
have furnished
totemic
man and
are
Among modern
is
;
legion.
enough
to
to refer the to
it,
add
though
would be labour
lost.^
From
it
follows conclusively
show unequivocal traces of taboos and customs analogous The one thing to those of modern totemic religions. lacking is a clear and definite statement of that compact,
It
even
in
totemic
is
the
idea
distinctly
formulated.
Almost everywhere
it
Strabo,
able from
it (cf.
Annee
Sociologiqiie, vol.
iii.
p. 218).
23
in other words,
by a
later
meaning
Still,
is
for
all
the
phenomena
logically
of
totemism,
to start
remains both
possible
and
sound
and reascend
in the
We
have shown
it
them
dried,
of a train of
Oceania.
cast-iron
least,
is
but, at
the
any investigation
of religious
and
social data.
We may
also
and show
facts
even
if
we had
neither ethnological
it.
the
formula
is
' :
Man
is
religious
animal.'
The
definition
scrupulously exact
for
we take religion in its widest sense, and not as a s^Tionym Primarily religion is modern theological doctrines.
a system of taboos
energies
spiritual
man.
of
on the brute
religious codes
and
instincts of
of
The
first
were
oldest
collections
blood.
24
all
CULTS, MYTHS,
the energies of man.
AND RELIGIONS
The taboos applied
;
alike to
between
an
animist by nature
was incapable
man
to
Now,
man,
it
and
and
of
politics
so far,
however, as
it
concerned the
totemism.
curbing
constituted
Totemism
or
the whole
body
of prohibitions
human
life
and plant
is
in
their infancy
it
is
with
both,
just
as,
in
the
eyes
of
primitive
man
plants
vital
and
the
child,
human
beings,
animals,
and
We
even in the Decalogue, the words members of a clan Thou shall not kill have not the universal force with which, theoretically, at least, we credit them. But, at the time of the Commandments, the clan had already
tribal,
stage,
and
was now a
people.
Clan-alliances, the
germ
of a larger
by the
struggle
of a
Now, with the haziest of boundary-lines between the kingdoms of nature plant, animal, and man it was natural
alliances,
not
human
species
As a result, the protective taboos in the came to include the animal or vegetable with which it was leagued and on whose aid and
clan
25
called
relied. ^
an a
priori
explanation of the
fundamental compact
constituting
totemism
of
compact
and
which
is
simply
taboo,
an extension
the
universal
primitive
Thou
'
Truth to say, these primitive alliances are no more strange than the well-known covenant, between Israel and Jehovah, on which the Mosaic religion is based. Judging from experience, men could no more expect succour from Jehovah than from an animal or vegetable
clan.
Yet they believed they could, and from that belief drew an enduring force which to this day sustains them in their trials.
CHAPTER
II
^
all cults,
the essential
it is is
bond
between
man and
;
deity.
In this respect
the
latter
comparable to prayer
but
whereas
a
of
employment
in
material
substance
forfeited
or
destroyed
the
sacrificial act.
The general conception of sacrifice is that offered by man to the divinity in order to
his favour
;
of a gift
conciliate
in other
words,
of
it is
a purchase of friendship
'
by
the
'
mammon
prevail
in the
unrighteousness.
Gifts,'
says
Hesiod,
kings.'
'
The
de-
abbe Bergier
it
Dictionnaire de Theologie
to
defines
is
as
'
the offering
up
God
If
of
an object which
dominion over
closely,
all
things.'
we analyse
is
this sentence
:
the
underlying
absurdity
apparent
how
person
'
:
It
is
anomalous
to a rich
poor
man
to
make some
man who
he considers
Richer.
26
27
gift,
still
though
his benefactor
may
to please him.'
Here
in the eyes
Its principle
most
that
critics is
man
to-
seek
aid
it
were
ill
to
If it
form
of sacrifice, it
would
also
beings,
upon
whom
;
they
that
men
writ large
same
limitations
and
as
man, but
In
that
more
active
faculties.
we should
find
them
shown
to
it
wit,
and
chiefs.
Now,
the
etiquette
man
to
approach
his chief
without a present.
If
This constitutes
the propitiatory
sacrifice.
shows
called
chief
is
his gratitude
by
a fresh
and
this
may
be
Or he thinks the
and
of pacification or expiation.^
All the
above
is
true,
but
it
is
true only of a
com-
is
' Goblet d'Alviella, Revue dc runiversitc de Bnixelles, 1897-S9, I have more than once borrowed textually from this pp. 499-500. excellent article.
28
CULTS, MYTHS,
It
is
AND RELIGIONS
all
evolution.
things are in
by
One of the axioms which should guide the sociologist who accepts this doctrine is that our modern ideas,
because they are modern, cannot have been the ideas of
primitive man, but
his
by
Now
made
an
to
the
immortal
and
therefore
formidable
man
it still
Open one of the recent books the of Stheno, the Cordicoles Romaines
'
'
Chinoiseries
'
'
of
Tery,
or
the
the
'
Dossier
des
Pelerinages
'
of
Noel
the
Parfait,
excellent
articles
published in
Semaine Religieuse
will
and
you
find
that the
Anthony of Padua, lies in the idea of exchange Good Saint, let me pass my examination, gif-gaf.
'
me
find
my
umbrella and
according
to the state of
sous.
my
purse, a
that will
weigh
my
favour.'
I
Gentlemen,
or
this
is
either
good
not
we
are
students,
tractarians.
own
times, ob-
inflicts
upon himI
more mysterious
:
rite,
mean
the
THE THEORY OF SACRIFICE
these.
29
The
priest,
impersonating
the
community,
absorbs, under the form of bread and wine, the tlesh and
At
participate
in
this sacrifice
Voltairean
he
rite
calls
;
who
jests at this
its origin
and development.
or
is
godhead
question
opinion,
is
;
not a scientific
is
the
only
an
and admits
is
no discussion.
The problem we
have to solve
there
this
Why,
two forms
of sacrifice
one
of course,
the gift-sacrifice)
shrouded
that the
in mysticism,
and so peculiar
is
in its character
communicant himself
?
none too
sure
what
he
is
doing
If
we concede
it
is
certain
that
by
gift
must be a
remote.
But
it
may
how
can the
sacrifice of
when the Mass was two thousand years ago, whereas the Greeks, Romans, and Egyptians knew and practised the
three
?
gift-sacrifice
or
four
birth of Christ
The Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans were highly civilised nations, and thereThat
is
30
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
But,
also
its
thousand years
Take an Australian savage of the present him with one of those Greeks who,
ago,
monuments
primitive
of
?
Athens.
Which
of
the
two
would
is
the
man
Which
the
two
have
on
the
;
more primeval
notions
The savage, obviously. The savage, then, our principal witness and for the last hundred
this
is
Now
tells
what happens.
tale.
An
to
Australian aboriginal
for
you a strange
is
He
says,
example, that
animal,
he
absolutely
forbidden
is
if
eat
certain
is
his ancestor.
This
surprising
enough at
that
the
all
first
but,
you
Greeks,
testified
the
to
Egyptians, and
similar
beliefs
have
lingering
among
moderns
in
them
have
survivals as the
You
a
resembles
bed
of
If
limestone
dig to
cropping
out
an
alluvial country.
we
a sufficient
depth under
;
the gravel,
we
if
strike
the
and
analogously
civilisation,
we
from three
thousand
years before
Christ,
we
Thus, the
catch a glimpse
of our far-off
us to
more than a glimpse of the opinions ancestors, members of races that ripened
or
31
remains.
If it
To return
to the gift-sacrifice.
were a primitive
the belief in one
;
firstly,
more gods
men
and, secondly,
the existence
of priests
there
is
no
gift-sacrifice
always necessary
is
not
so.
On
know
made
but
in
as an exception
if
knows nothing
of the priest.
The
priest
is
a late-
comer
And
pomorphic deity
of the Pentateuch, he
B.C.,
barely older
millen-
nium before Christ is little more than the day before yesterday and the proof is easy. We all know now that there was a long period in the history of man when he knew neither metals, domestic animals, nor cereals.
Now
period
the
redactor
of
Genesis
is
so
comparatively
Adam
men from
trees
the
first
must have
Therefore
Genesis
is
fruit
and
the
cereals.
whom we owe
his
biblical
modern, and
primitive.
idea
of
be
32
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
On
or animal-headed
Egypt carry us back to a much earlier epoch, anywhere between 5000 B.C. and 6000 B.C. Thus we may plausibly conclude that long before the divinity was indeities of
vested with
human
traits
striking
coincidence.
Go
to
to
modern savages and you find a which the man-god is unknown, and the
all in all.
It
is
;
not an individual
it
is
a particular
^animal
or
vegetable
the
and immemorial
protectors,
tie.
These,
are
the
More
than
this,
and proceed,
logically enough, to
adopt
its
name.
call
They hold that their ultimate ancestor was a beaver, who miraculously brought forth they will not pass a beaver without some a man
;
fertile in
who saved
beavers
them
all
fords
beavers
who
did
From time
is
afflicted
it
beaver has withdrawn its countenance and protection. To effect a reconciliation, two
methods
will
say, the
be employed.
On
33
its
tutelar
animal
remedy
more
The
;
first
to
convene
finally,
every
man
present eats
flesh.
The point
it is
of this
ceremony
is
supposed to
tion,
lie
a sort of self-deifica-
inasmuch as
In a word,
it is
a communion
in
which the
all
sacrifice of
it.
that eat of
of Professor
Robertson Smith,
who
by communion was older and more primitive than the sacrifice by gift that it was, in
sacrifice
;
form of
sacrifice
that traces of
it
are
Hebrews
churches
rite.
communion
in Christian
sacrificial
is
The communion did not originate with Christianity. On the contrary, it was a time-honoured and widely
among
the half-civilised
communities
of Asia,
where
it
the lower classes, as the more enlightened section the population had been
of
won over
the gift-sacrifice.
To-day, then,
we may
call
it
survival
a
And
survival
of
the
world.
here
we have
:
satisfactory
solution to
two problems
firstly,
why
this extraordinary
form
of sacrifice should
better half of
mankind
and, secondly,
why
its
primary
in
significance should
the
34
CULTS. MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
In the
first
man
was
past
;
predisposed
favour by
its
his
own
religious
and
in
the
second,
it
obliterated
because
was
still
stronger
tie.
of its
by
and not
there
and was
his
Thus
all
of a
in the
primitive
community was
sacrifice of a god.
And now
which fused
sacrifice
let
this primitive
gift.
type of
sacrifice
with that of
by
When
had
tication of animals
dispelled the
mystery surrounding
life,
familiarity
Little
by
little
the idea of a
to create the
godhead
in his
own
likeness.
of animals sacrificed
and
in
the
god-
smelt
smoke
of the burnt-offering.
35
and banquet
inverted.
still
was wholly
difficult
Gentlemen,
stop here.
The question
is
enough without
problem.
my
is
this
communion
glance
howfirst
ever
modem
it
may
appear at the
first
is
a factor
of prime
importance.
The English
scholar,
who
He built, so to speak, a solid bridge between own our day and those dim ages when man bowed down and adored the beast. And this he accomplished by
throwing into
its
and eaten by
its
worshippers.
venture to
you
will
made
it
CHAPTER
III
that of
kill
powers
as he
the stronger.
Driven
by his needs and his passions, he stops only before a power superior to his own, and nothing but outside force
can restrain or repress his energy.
But
the past
this
state of
absolute independence
far
is
purely
theoretical.
as well as to
them
names
precisely
political
And
and
exercise their
human
activity, so
they existed
earliest of
politics,
communities.
Morality,
religion,
and
as
we
much
taken
man
submitted to
which,
of
restraints,
a whole,
37
called the
is
:
system
of taboos.
this,
The
do not
'Do not do
touch
that.'
It is
The
may
characteristic, that
sets a
bound
human
activity.
is
This path
is
This fruit
This
field is
Thus, unlike
civil, religious,
abstention
I
it is
have said
if
this
and, in fact,
it is difficult
we
opposed to
force,
to see
what could
is
man
lion's
except
scruple.
fear,
which
the
sentiment
that
fears
engenders
the
by the angry
spirits
Man
is
at every stage of
civilisation
community
as himself,
and by a natural
he
feels to
phenomena without him. Before he rises to a definite and consistent idea of godhead, he feels himself surrounded by gods, fears them, and strives to
in the infinite
live at
The
If
man civilised
to steel
hand
him
still falls
have been
act,
be taken as
38
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
day everlastingly tempted to
with
him
Are we not to
temporal
ergo
this
confuse
sequence
hoc
Post hoc,
is
propter
causal
connection
follows
is
A, therefore
the cause of
B the
fallacy
daily
committed by
alike.
of cause
and
effect
of ten the
on such or such a
because, when I went out in the snake. If all these hasty generalisations saw I a had taken root in any one community, fear would have suspended all action, and the community would have
day
I fell
morning,
perished.
part.
But
The
fears experienced
by the
tribal
magnates
and
priests
were
and
file,
and gave
:
rise to
various scruples
more
or less
widely diffused
They cannot be
as, that
fire
have
interdict
Nor yet
and
facts.
effect.
to
fears,
and the
from isolated
We have
when we
all
39
modem
;
superstition.
month
it
is
have thirteen
at table.
Now
this prejudice is
based on a generalisation
the Last
down with
Two
of the thirteen
died before the year was out, and this one accident has
effects of
which
will
long to come.
gives
his
Even when he
primitive
imagination
free
play,
man
loves
realistic
is
explanation.
essentially
To the
object
savage
dangerous
object
an
contact.
intangible in
contact
of
is
But
why
should
be dangerous
physical
science
dangerous contact
passes from an alien
body
taboo or tabooed as so
forces,
reservoirs of dangerous
electrical
and
devastating results.
This
not only
employed
effects.
in
Polynesia,
and elsewhere,
to
annul their
Thus, a
man who
a
he
tabooed
object absorbs
by
his
act a dangerous
all
element,
whom
may
To
in the system,
reducible, however, to
40
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
;
more powerful taboo, and thus passes on the danger sometimes, by without prejudice to its recipient
bathing, he transmits the taboo to the water, which can
absorb
it
with impunity.
by pressing it against his stomach. Now, this guileless method of curing a malady by contact with some great one
of the earth has
been held
efficacious
almost to our
own
of
day.
Only by the
light of the
France
though
healed
From
by
known
the
the fact
it
his
just as crucifixes
have been
Guillaume de Nangis
patients,
Louis XIV, at
St. -Germain,
were
still
asked to touch
of a taboo, discharged
on a person
What
Louis
had
it
another question.
desire
to
The
to restore the
41
of a
men and
which
things,
in
special science,
Greece and
Rome was
called the
science of lustration
and
purification.
him
restraint
and moderation.
the taboo,
corrective
criticism
to
the savage,
and enamoured
life
of the marvellous,
would have
it,
so enchained his
civilisation
that
The
priestly purification
of freedom,
judiciously restricted
by the dread
of contracting
new
of
Now,
as far
back as we can
go, the
duty
was
to purify.
To
is
man owes
it
which paralysed
;
him.
worthy
of notice
for
shows
by the purely
If
selfish
motive
of deceiving
men and
con-
own
behoof.
it
very thought of
no thought
were,
the crime
itself
begot
the penalty.
it
To
to
though
In
the
was
expose
oneself
to
death.
civilisations
and society
as
represented
by the
chiefs
has
42
CULTS, MYTHS,
itself to
if
AND RELIGIONS
the
taken upon
make hard
way
of transgressors.
And
indeed,
and
may
also
provoke
the anger of
spirits, drastic
by way of example, and to appease the irate powers. But clearly punishment by the community is not primitive it begins in the period when respect for the taboo
;
is
code to
reinforce
'
CHAPTER
TARPEIA
IV
^
'
'
Roman
all
Questions,' 'should
that,
out of
of
the offerings
left
we make
?
"
war should be
to the mercies of
moth and
rust,
lost the
century
solutions
of
comfeats
arms
or,
memory
i.
pp. 42-74.
The text is uncertain on one 37, p. 2376. point {irpoaKvvi'iv in the sense of taking care ') but the general sense
-
Rom.
c.
'
is
not in doubt.
43
44
of spilt
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
fields
precisely
first
as
Greek
reared trophies
stone or bronze. ^
:
To-day the
class
custom
were
if
the
Romans
did
with a sanctity of
own which
of the
rendered
contact perilous.
is
Covenant, to go no further,
the
enemy was an
stances which
combat.
II
Among
on the
who
erected no trophies
field of battle, ^
we
hung
in temples trees
and public
and on
particularly oaks.
This last
mode
of exposure, to
is
which
first
obviously the
Nor had
its
;
in the
^
leafless
spoils,
still
remains an
Plut. Alcib. 29.
;
'
De
Invent,
ii.
23, 69
Diod.
Sic. xiii.
24
in
The use of metal trophies was general Macedonians never raised trophies of any
'
later
on
Greece
but the
Florus,
Virg.
iii.
2.
A en.
xi. 5 sqq.
i.
Stat. Theb.
sqq.
ii.
707
sqq.
Lucan,
Phcii's.
136
TARPEIA
object of adoration.
45
Now,
if
burden
:
inviolate,
there
is
protected from
them.
Conversely,
hang on the
man dreamt
them
to a sounder stem,
it
of time
and
them
to dust
the hand of
man
must on no account
Equally intangible,
word,
in the
home
of a successful
commander.
secure from
Generation
after
generation
injury -patents
they hung
the house,
of nobility to
and sources
aster at Cannae,
to
fill
up the gaps
hewn
of
In
was
still
ships
when
fire
it
later,
by
Gordian.'^
the great
the mansions
of old-world
'
'
still
ornamented with
(vi.
They arrange
39),
'
in
the
them palpable
i,
own
prowess.'
Similarly,
TibuUus
(i.
'
54)
admits
ii.
may well become Messala to war by sea and land, may flaunt it in hostile spoils.' Compare also Li v. x.
28
;
Cic. Phil.
Sil.
"
^
It.
Pun.
vi.
: '
Liv. xxiii. 23
domi haberent.'
28, 68.
Capitolinus, Gordian, 3
cf.
Cic. Phil.
ii.
46
CULTS, MYTHS,
spoils.'
^
AND RELIGIONS
Even when a house passed by sale to another family, the new owner might not touch the spolia, still less remove them.- There is a shade of
the enemies'
guilelessness in the notion that this prohibition of touching,
tending
lest
or
fear
spoil
the unscrupulous
their houses
in
much
old
The scruple, proof of which we have already adduced, was purely religious, and the Romans continued to act in conformity with it long after they had lost all real comprehension
portraits are
bought at a price
to-day.-^
of its character.
In
the
temples
the
habitation
of
the
gods
the
removed.
Only
in
when
it
quished enemy.
After Cannae, at a
Livy,
in hot haste,
and
A
by
to religious law,
men
in the
of Flaminius.'^
same time and opened the ranks of the Roman army to slaves. They were, he says, the last resources
'
'
Suet. Nero, 38
Pliny, XXXV.
'
'
hostilil^us
adhuc
spoliis ornatae.'
7.
The
pretenders.'
*
object being doubtless to guard against the frauds of false Smith, Diet, of Ant., s.v. Spolia,' p. 691.
'
"
TARPEIA
of
47
an almost desperate
state, driven to
^
make convention
in
give
way
to necessity.'
The use
it
of
arms taken
war
but a
*
gift.
armed citizens mustered in the public squares, while the unarmed flocked to the shrine of Olympian Jove in search of the Gallic and lUyrian spoils which Rome had bequeathed to Hiero. Let Heaven be gracious, they every blow prayed, and lend them these sacred arms
the
;
private houses of
Rome.
war
exuviae.
By
and became
theoretically,
untouchable
just as
we have
when they simply hung on tree-branches or house-walls. The religious character of the temples where they were lodged added nothing to the sanctity inherent in them
;
the most
it
rendering
it
apparent to
all
eyes.
Ill
This
example,
of
after
so
many
others,
shows the
perversity
certain
historians,
still
inspired
who
or
Cf. the
speech of
598
517^.
48
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
Two
is
poverty-
war
an engagement
fought,
and
of the vanquished.
Common sense,
initial
Unfortunately, the
winning
by an
religion.
The
and must be
called in
may
be hung
man makes war long before temples, porticoes, and houses they may be thrown into water, or destroyed by Finally, if the tribe is sedentary, they may be fire.
upon a consecrated part prohibition attached that none
piled
of its territory, with the
shall lay a
hand on them.
in
rites
suspension
is
com-
The
four elements,
water,
fire,
and
earth,
of
this
combine to rescue
world
man from
he
is
the
dangers
not
with
we
of
which
to conciliate
find the
work
of
destruction arrested.
Man no
whole of
his capture
he surrenders
who
him
The bulk
yet on the
what were
become
booty.
And
entirely lost
TARPEIA
the sacred character with
.
49
invested
to
treat
them
as
for
any
purpose.
At a period when
and
tithes of the
by the Grande Armee cast into a triumphal column, instead of adding them to his batteries or keeping them in his arsenals to fight another day.
the cannon captured
IV
We
of their
have spoken
immersion
by
fire,
;
in water, of their
exposure on land
we have now
rites.
to collect a
seized in the
two
Roman
camps.
men and
In the conduct of
'
extravagant
'
he naturally considers
of execration.'
2
Orosius sees
'
To the Danish
Worsaae
only the
'
new
'
or
'
unusual
'
simple performance of a
rite familiar to
the barbarian
Orosius, V. 16.
'.
. .
insolita execratione.'
50
in
CULTS, MYTHS,
the
;
AND RELIGIONS
turf-pits
of
lakes
Age.i
In
all
the the
from our
of
turf-pits,'
said
Engelhardt
'
at
Congress
Copenhagen
is
(1869),-
there
is
imperfect,
is,
and
these
The
fact
all
deposits
and the
whom
:
this point,
and mixed with them, have thoroughly cleared up which but lately seemed inexplicable.'
in
France by Alex-
dieux.'
recapitulates,
marred by several
though
it
anachronisms
indeed,
one.
the
title
felicitous
may seem
of the
is itself
In the days
antiquity behind
them,
the
classical
writers
believed
vowed
in
'
to
or
reduced to nothingness
their
honour.
to spoils burnt
to
Worsaae,
du Nord, 1S66,
8.
p.
61
cf.
p.
Congres d'archeol. prehistorique (Copenhagen), 1869, p. 200. See Bertrand, Archeol. celtique et gauloise, ed. 2, 5, 1872. 221. Cf. S. Miiller, Mem. de la Soc. des antiquaires du Nord, 1884'
August
1SS9, p. 225.
TARPEIA
Vulcan
gods to
'
51
Elsewhere we find
'
Lua Mater,
whom
by
fire
of hostile spoils.'
rest of the
It
was
to Mars, Minerva,
own hands,
to
upon
it.
believed
or feigned
Macedonian arms
constitution of the
in
honour
of the gods
in realit}^
he
of earlier date
than the
Roman
Pantheon.
Of
all
the divinities
whom
Livy names
in similar circumstances,
this
is
related to lues,
To vow
is all
to
'
Lua
to destroy,
and
'
To recognise the
The portion
and the
have made
when
it.
and priests
to receive
whom
46
;
Liv.
i.
37
viii.
ii.
10
xxiii.
xxx. 6
xli.
cf.
Preller-Jordan,
Rom. Mythalogie,
'
'
p. 162.
.
Liv. x. 29, lovi victori spolia cum vovisset cremavit ibid. Marti, Minervae, Luaeque Matri et ceteris deis quibus spolia hostium dicare fas est succensi.'
.
. ' :
xlv. 33,
'
CULTS, MYTHS,
52
AND RELIGIONS
temple
from the
litter or
feretrum
appear in history
it
till
a trophy
primitive
visible
rite,
"'
in
the
time of Augustus. 2
The
burn
of
Roman
as Virgil knew,
was
either to
or to
an
oak
tree raised
upon a
hillock
thus Aeneas
'
reared
and clothed
I
it
in shining arms,'
am
Romans,
yet
I
in the
marshes,
so
shape of
stipites,
by
old
in ancient
custom,
ordered
the
flame-scorched
of
the
I.ivy,
i-
10,
5.
the one
v. 10, 46).
Cj. the art. 'Jupiter' in Roscher's Lexikon, pp. 671, 674. Cf.
Hermes,
^
^ i.
is
'
sublime
'
136).
'"
Ingentem quercum decisis undique ramis constituit tumulo fulgentiaque induit arma' {Aen.
xi. 5).
'
'"'
'
Ut
(Tac.
Hisl.
iv. 53)-
TARPEIA
53
Romans may well have vowed the spoils of the enemy to a particular deity beforehand, as did Fabius at the moment of his attack on the Samnites.i But when, by way of fulfilling their
In the historical period, the
by
time.
When,
for
again, they
likewise,
they had
lost
have
felt
seized an
'
enormous amount
and destroyed
it.
They
and
finally, after
a carnage of
all living
things,
Vases of
especially
^
than ornament.'
as
Thus
the
Ligurians
behaved
precisely
did
the
Cimbrians
and
Teutons
seventy
years
afterwards,
trucidant veriiis
quam
sacrificant.
And, indeed,
Livy,
' . . .
X. 29,
14-18.
. . .
pecora in fanis foeda laceratione interficiunt trucidant verius passim quam interficiunt.' Livy, xli. 18: Satiati caede animantium, quae inanima erant parietibus adfligunt, vasa omnis generis usui magis quam ornamento in speciem facta. ..." (An allusion to the destruction of the precious vases of Corinth by Mummius ?)
'
cum
'
54
to
call
is
CULTS, MYTHS,
it
AND RELIGIONS
of
sacrifice
would be an abuse
of a gift-sacrifice,
;
words
there
no question here
none
of a
sacrifice of expiation or
communion
it
is
simply and
solely
Before passing to
ceedingly instructive,
I
those
examples,
must touch
is
briefly
whose
left
distinctive feature
have
practice in Italy
it
but a very
to the Gauls,
whose
civilisation
at
the time of
Mars,' more than one analogy to that of primitive Italy. and as a general rule, he says,^ is their arbiter of war
'
;
if
spoils.
animals that
fall
into
hands and deposit the remainder of their prizes in in many districts the some one determinate place
:
far defies
in his
house
the penalty
death, preceded
it
Other
texts
tell
us
Gauls
sometimes
it
On
in
or ponds
those,
the
vi.
instance,
around Toulouse,
Q. Servilius Caepio
where, in 105
*
B.C.,
Romans under
17.
This must undoubtedly be Florus' meaning, when he says the Boii vowed the Roman arms to Vulcan (i. 20, 5). Cf. Waltzing, Rev. des itudes anciennes, vol. iv. p. 53.
-
TARPEIA
reaped
55
an
ample harvest
of
gold
and
silver. '
The
commonly
Not
Tectosages
is
obviously inadmissible.
though there
is
legend
have
or
consequences
to
those
who touched
-an
opinion
in
through to
Italy,
where
fatal,
and
'
their fallen
and
fastening
them
necks,
they
booty carry
of
off
victory.'
M. d'Arbois justly
feasible
*bheiidt,
how
13
;
Strabo,
iv. i,
At a
Died.
Romans, preserved
their
booty
^
in temples.
Sic. V.
Revue des itiidcs anciennes, vol. iv. pp. 280 sq. Cf. d'Arbois, Comptes rendus de I' Acad, des 24, 4.
Inscr.
1907, p. 172.
56
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
booty.
;
Diodorus omits
contradicts the
However,
it
may
be retained
the mere
to be misled
;
by the
influence
modern
ideas
made by
who
lakes.
of ethics.
and tangible gains took the upper hand, did the dread
touching the booty give
way
officers of
And
yet these
their ancestors'
Rome
for
Tacitus,
Ibid.
^ WW.
i.
37
'
praedae data.'
i.
^ ^
Ibid.
i.
TARPEIA
VI
57
now with
in warfare,
and the
to scour
no need
is
North America
for
examples
the
Bible
sufficient.
The theory
the spoil of the
which condemns
few reservain
enemy
to destruction, with a
is
:
found
two
Numbers
When
God
it ... and when the them before Lord thy God thee thou shalt thou shalt make smite them, and utterly destroy them no covenant with them, nor shew mercy unto them:
neither
shalt
them
turn
thy
daughter thou shalt not give unto his son, nor his daughter
shalt thou take unto thy son.
For they
will
away
Only the
gold,
and the
silver,
tin,
and the
may
and
abide the
it
fire,
ye
:
shall
make
and
it
go through the
shall
fire,
shall
be clean
nevertheless
tion
:
it
all
ye shall
make go
And now
all
theory.
We
'
find
it
in
the
book
of
Joshua.-'
The
I
Jericho,
And
Deuteronomy
vii.
Numbers
Joshua
vi.
2 sqq.
58
CULTS. MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
thereof,
of valour.
And ye And
shall
compass
city
ye
men
of war,
seven priests
:
and the
priests shall
And
shall
come
all
to pass, that
a long blast
with the ram's horn and when ye hear the sound of the
trumpet,
the people shall shout with a great shout
of the city shall fall
;
down
'
fiat.'
Joshua
circle
and
'
cut
it
off
that
is,
virtually
On
when
the seventh
for the
Lord hath
And
and
all
only
Rahab
the
and
all
house,
And
ye, in
thing lest ye
make
But
yourself accursed,
when ye take
of the
make
the
camp
of Israel a curse,
and
all
they shall
come unto the treasury of the Lord.' The walls fell, Jericho was taken, and the Hebrews applied the interdict, killing both man and woman, young and old, and ox,
'
ass,
The}^
contained except
'
the silver,
'
and the
gold,
and the
vessels of brass
and
of iron
which
And
in this
manner
'
Cursed be the
TARPETA
man
before the Lord, that riscth
:
59
city Jericho
first-born,
and
gates of
it.'
The
borne
mouth appears
to
have
fruit
for centuries
none dare
to rebuild Jericho.
The extensive excavations, recently carried out on the site by MM. Sellin and Niemann, have brought to light
the remains of the walls and of two
great
forts,
along with a
number
;
of
broken
articles, especially
fragments of
vases
almost
all
Hebrew
supremacy.
described,
Once
Jericho
'
cut
off
'
ceased
to
destruction of the
town and
strangely
its
contents,
of
animate
Livy's
and
inanimate,
is
reminiscent
with
the Cimbrians
it
but
light
the sequel
is
throws
stricken
on the contagion
immanent
the
in
objects
of
by the herem.
its
Even though
book
Joshua, in
the
Exile,
present form,
may
thought
everywhere apparent
of
the narrative
The first book of Kings (xvi. 34) relates that, in the time of Ahab, Hiel the Bethelite rebuilt Jericho, but at the price of the lives of his he laid the foundation thereof on Abiram his firstborn, and two sons set up the gates thereof in his youngest son Segub, according to the word of the Lord, which he spake by Joshua the son of Nun.' This
' :
of a foundation-sacrifice, designed to
buy
off or
it is,
hints rather at an
p. 485).
life of Kiel's two sons (Reuss, La Bible, vol. i. Reuss remarks on the point Jericho had long been rebuilt, and is mentioned as an existing and inhabited town in the story of David.' This inference is in no way to be drawn from the text cited (2 Samuel x. 5).
6o
belongs
CULTS, MYTHS,
to
AND RELIGIONS
past,
the
remote
when
still
rudi-
mentary
scruples.i
civilisation
religious
VII
In spite of the interdict a Hebrew by the name of Achan appropriated some of the objects that came from The sanction of the violated taboo soon made Jericho.
itself felt
:
by
Then the Lord said to Israel hath sinned, and they have also transJoshua gressed my covenant which I commanded them for
to the Lord.
'
: :
they have even taken of the accursed thing, and have also
stolen,
and dissembled
their
also,
it
even
of
among
their
own
stuff.
the
children
but turned
accursed
neither will
among
you.'
and
this crime
had
to be expiated, for
'
there
is
an accursed
follows
it is
Israel.'
What
;
but
seems
an
The
:
lot
fell
guilt
'
a goodly Babylonish
Joshua makes Jahveh intervene historians spoke of the spoils as consecrated to the gods but the taboo of the spoils with all its consequences appears to have been much earlier than the constitution of Hebraic monotheism, as well as anterior to that of Roman polytheism. It belongs to the period of magic and djinn (polydemonism).
'
The redactor
book
'
of
Roman
'
TARPKIA
garment, and two hundred shekels of
of gold of fifty shekels weight, then
I
6i
silver,
and a wedge
took them
midst of
my
and the
silver
under
it.'
Joshua sent
Then, acting upon the express commands he seized Achan, together with the
silver,
of the Lord,
the garment, the wedge of gold, his sons and his daughters,
his
oxen and
;
his asses,
his sheep,
all
his tent
and
'
all
his
goods
and, followed
by
Israel,
valley of Achor.
And Joshua
?
said to
shall
him
Why
hast
thou troubled us
day.
The Lord
And
all Israel
fire,
them with
after they
stones.
And
name
this
of that place
was
Achor
{trouble),
Comparing
understand
we now
torture.
why
a Gaul
who
heap
of spoils
community to the contagion of his own pollution. It was imperative, therefore, in the public interest, to strike
terror
into
potential
evil-doers
;
by Caepio,
annihilated,
who was
and
his
killed
by the Cimbrians,
army
62
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
The moral and
intellectual
who
little
different
dilates
from that
who calmly
on the sufferings
of his sons
and daughters,
lifeless
germ
Of
may have
been fabricated to
of
body
is
of a criminal
who had
for the
and morals
but that
it
Theology,
and professor
de
'
of
Holy Writ
in
Seminaire
episode
:
Chartres,
thus
summarised
Achan
town
This
of Joshua,
who had
it
with
all
that
contained
first
both
men and
in
booty.
annihilation of the
town conquered
Canaan was
acknowledgment
Jehovah, and
Hence
by an emasculation and
;
is
vexatious anachronism
'
nor
is
Vigouroux, Dictionnalre de
Akhan.'
TARPEIA
by the philosophers
of the eighteenth century,
63
on the
spirit.
At a certain moment
the Ligurians,
other nations as well,
evolution,
the Hebrews,
all
Their deeds,
may
fill
outcome
of their ideas
and
if
we
feel
some pride
in
of the laying
down
of
an
and
also
of its violation.
Thus
infant
word
kill
of the Lord,
'
both
stopped
butchering the
Saul's defence
is
have utterly
spoil,
Lord
it
whatever
in
common
first
and
and
the unclean
must undergo a
its
purification
by
fire
in the treasure-house of
Here, in
'
Samuel xv.
ii.
23.
64
CULTS, MYTHS.
the rite of
'
AND RELIGIONS
and
we have
half
we meet
the
anthropomorphised
in
pages of
historians.
When
these
tell
the battle,
vowed the
fruits of his
approaching victory
it
was
sacrifice,
but of extermination.
VIII
Now
and
its
we have established the nature of the herein equivalents among other nations of antiquity,
that
to the second part of our inquiry.
we come
What was
and immediate
tribes
which
:
it
if
secular,
axiom
What
is
good
to
There
semblage of
In certain
cases,'
wiites M. I'abbe
with a horror of
God commanded
fire,
that
all
what
. . .
could be purified by
metal objects
for instance.
for
of the
The notion
inspired
and water
physical
town was
'
by
be
to
a solicitude
for
'
hygiene
may
possibly
As
the
'
moral hygiene
1
'
of the Israelites,
it is
open to question
'
Vigouroux, Dictionnaire de
la Bible,
art.
Butin.'
TARPEIA
whether the massacre of children at the breast and
Moreover, in such cases
65
women
it.
is
commonly honest
by
is
As the
Biblical herem.
spread
if
not universal, no
historian
though
he be an
orthodox theologian
has
any
good
of Divine
Wisdom against the contagion of idolatry. A German scholar, Herr Schwally, who has
interdict
recently
'
the
in-
dividual greed
of the loot.'
He
sian use of the taboo for protecting the fruits before the
and hunting
is
manuat
factured
superstition invented to
regulations
Here,
ready as
whom
they
classified as
M. Fauconnet justly
of the herem,
I.
this
view
'
:
The theory
Cf.
proposed
Krieg
F.
alten
Der
heilige
im
'
Leipzig,
1901.
Fauconnet, Annee
sociologiqtte,
602 sq. The analogy between the herem Fauconnet, loc. laud. p. 605. and the taboo had been already recognised by Rob. Smith {Religion Ein solcher Bann ist ein Tabu, das durch die der Ssmiten, p. iiS) Furcht vor iibernatiirlichen Strafen veranlasst ist.'
vol. V. pp.
'
:
66
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
by M. Schwally, must apparently be consigned to the same category as those other theories which would explain the rules of exogamy by the drawbacks attend.
.
.
And,
less.
in
fact,
I
the
But
fancy
M. Fauconnet's resignation
says
'
is
little
premature, when he
To me With primitive mankind, war is an essentially religious phenomenon. Peace itself, not only between clansman and clansman but between clan and clan or tribe and neighbouring tribe, is based exclusively on religious ideas and religious ties.
destruction of the booty remain to be discovered.'
To break
man
against
man to
be authorised
detriment of a given
blood
of
of
human
you must
power.
phenomenon
is is his.
equal
And
the
enemy and
that
we
cut
of
of the
it
ideally,
course
before
committed.
dropped,
destroy
the
walls
and it only remained for the Israelites to by fire and sword what they had already virtually annihilated. There was no question, I repeat, of a sacrifice for only things clean can be offered to the gods, and a formal purification was necessary before the gold and
silver of Jericho could
be placed
On
laid
becomes impure
with
an impurity that
is
dangerous,
witness
the story of
TARPEIA
Achan
67
to
From
and extermination
is
It is
likely to
run
amok than
to ab-
explain
the systematic
objects.
destruction
of
cattle
religion.
Tantum
:
rclligio
potuit suadere
To conclude
conqueror's
alike
virus
communicated by the
' '
own wizardry. Logic and magical hygiene demanded their destruction but covetousness
;
the
excommunication.
hfe,
And,
first,
with regard to
;
human
girls,
women,
As
for animals
and
recourse was
had
or
to
two expedients.
it
surrendered a part
in
The
priesthood
omnipotent
in the sphere of
magic
deter-
mined
be enfranchised
to the conqueror,
68
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
to the gods
priated.
Of
either to be destroyed
in a
by
fire
or water, or to be exposed
the
arms and
personal
factor
equipment
of
the vanquished.
;
But another
into
had
to be reckoned with
away through
When we
look at the
column,
it is
not amiss to
monuments
of
enemy
seques-
by
scruples eminently
and exclusively
enable
The
offer
foregoing developments
I
at
last
me
to
what
venture to think
is
Rome
mean
IX
Livy's story
is
common
knowledge. ^
The
Sabines,
the
Roman
However, the moment she gave them entry, they buried her under their shields, either (says Livy) to create an
'
'
'
Livy,
i.
II (after
TARPEIA
discourage treason
69
by a memorable example.' ^ Many variants of the tale have come down to us some transmitted directly, others mentioned, only to be discarded, by the historians in general and Dionysius and Plutarch in particular. Schwegler and, more recently,
;
show
that,
even
in antiquity,
Tarpeia
to
some
of
my
same phenomenon
is
whose theme
the violent
death of a hero
forced
like
The conclusion is upon us from the outset these stories and the have their origin in self-conscious combination, and
:
is
the one
a
:
cult or a ritual.
A
I.
reign
The majority of writers place the heroine in the of Romulus but the Greek poet Simylus would
;
have
it
Brennus.Obrutam armis necavere, seu ut vi capta potius arx videretur, seu prodendi exempli causa, ne quid unquam fidum proditori esset (Livy, i. II, 7). Analogous reflections in Plut. Rom. xvii. 7, and Prop. v. 4, 89.
'
'
'
Ap.
Plut.
Rom.
xvii.
70
2.
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
Most historians make her a Roman, but some say that she was a Sabine.
3.
According
;
to
some,
her
father,
Tarpeius,
was
absent
others describe
him
by
Romulus.
4.
The custody
to
some,
Tarpeius
according
to
others,
to
Tarpeia
herself.^
5. 6.
'->
according to Propertius,
Brennus
according
to
Antigonus of Carystus,
The Sabines
(or
had penetrated
to
by
for
force, or
deceiving
or
or
their
golden ornaments,
the secrets of
All are
reveal
(Plut.
Rom.
-
Opinion of Sulpicius Galba combated by Plut. Rom. xvii. Another opinion refuted by Plutarch [l.l.). She was a Vestal Virgin according to Varro (L. Lat. v. 41), Propertius (v. 4, 18), and tha chronographer of 354 [Chron. Min. i. p. 144, 8). Those who say that she met the Sabines while going out to draw water
^
i.
11
Val.
Max.
ix. 6, i, &c.).
9
1' '-
Livy, i. II. The version of L. Calpurnius Piso, adopted by Dionysius Plut. Rom. xviii. Prop. iv. 4, 39. ^" Livy, i. 11. Ibid.
**
(ii.
50).
The
ii.
3S).
Chron. Min.
p. 144.
TARPEIA
Almost
all,
71
;
in this connection,
bracelets
and
rings
worn by the
There
is
Roman
families
On
is
by the
she
Roman and
a Sabine warrior
who threw
a young
On
is
Thus the opinion, that Tarpeia was a Sabine and not Roman, had its adherents in the sixth century a.u.c. The explanation is possibly to be found in the incona
testable traces of a Sabine domination on the Capitol
^
;
of Tatius
shown,
but
it
to exaiiguratc
But
it
into a Sabine
positive knowledge
According to Plutarch {Rom. xvii.) Tatius was the first to throw and bracelet on Tarpeia and the same version given by Piso is familiar to Dionysius (ii. 38). In a fragment of Appian {De Re. 4), quoted by Suidas and perhaps incomplete, she is buried (Ka.Tix<^<^Ori) under ornaments of gold. A similar account, from the suspect Aristides of Miletus, is preserved by Plutarch [Par all. xv.). - Babelon, Monnaies de la Rep. rom. ii. pp. 301, 498 Pais, Ancient Legends of Roman History, p. 97. ^ Liv. i. 32 Tac. Ann. xii. 24 Dionys. ii. 50. * Plut. Rom. 20 Solin. i. 21.
his shield
'"
Livy,
i.
55.
Cf. Schwegler,
Rom.
Gesch.
i.
p. 484.
72
of her
CULTS, MYTHS.
there was none,
AND RELIGIONS
facts
:
was
in
by Calpurnius Piso, who held that Tarpeia had not betrayed the Romans, but attempted to deceive their enemies. The sequel of the
version given in the Gracchan period
'
incident,'
says Dionysius, ^
;
'
Piso's
view
for
a magnificent
tomb was
Hills, at
erected to
the place
to repeat Piso
in the act of
the
Now,
selling
Romans make
it
libations
is
certain that,
who
killed
whom
tomb was a cenotaph, or, strictly speaking, an altar more than a tomb. Tarpeia,' he says,- was buried in this very place and the hill took its name Tarpeian
' '
from
her, until
it
to Jupiter
^
;
when her remains were transferred elsewhere, and her name disappeared [koI rovvo/xa r/}? TapTrrjia'i i^eXLire). One trace, however, was left and the rock on the Capitol, from which condemned criminals arc hurled to their death, is still known as the Tarpeian Rock.' Now, if Tarpeia's remains had really been transferred
;
'
" Phit. Rom. xvii. Dionysius, ii. 38. Mr. Pais thinks the name Tarpeia identical with Tarquin, and considers the Vestal Tarpeia and the Vestal Tarquinia, who gave the plain of the Tiber to the Romans, to be one and the same person [Legends of Roman History, p. 105). The theory seems
'
to
me
inadmissible.
TARPEIA
elsewhere,'
73
dis;
covered somewhere
Rome.
not so
for
the
Festus
puts
it
on
by Metellus
to
[in
no
detail,
have
latter, then, is
and we may
what the ancients definitely knew or believed themselves to know upon the subject, and to unravel the
X
Tarpeia was the local divinity of the Tarpeian Rock
;
altar
where her
it
cult
was
Tradition had
death by shields
Sabine
in
some
non-Roman.
The engraver of the coin represented her agony, while she was still writhing under the weight of the arms accumua moment later, and nothing would have lated upon her been visible but a heap of shields in the form of a mound. Now, this mound of shields, which quite possibly was interspersed with a few rings, bracelets, and armlets of and after what gold, is the root of the whole legend
; ;
it is
its
existence.
'
Festus, p. 363,
74
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
still
to seek at
Rome, and
noticed by Caesar
must the Gaulish trophies have been piled on some plot conlike
of
immune from
its
touch.
;
origin
and
'
mound
and
of weapons.'
of
temples
comparatively
spoil
dwelling-houses
on the Tarpeian
as well as certain to
lies
Hill
became an enigma.
belief
sight of a
that
an important personage
as
generally
is
punishment
for
some
could cite
latter-day folktexts.
but there
classical
An
Virgil,
'
Under
lies.'
a heap of stones. ^
of the
book
*
of Joshua, the
under which
Achan
slept
was
still
that stoning to death was the usual penalty for the most
serious
crimes
;
may have
legends
is
purely
Tac. Ann.
'
"
'Congeriemarmorum struxit superbo cum titulo.' ii. 22: Serv. ad Aen. Monte sub hoc lapidum tegitur Balista sepultus
' :
vol.
^
i.
p. I, ed. Thilo.
8.
''
Joshua
vii. 26.
'"
TARPETA
of a cult, but are ahnost
75
and so
forth.
Speci-
legend, are
The
sight of a
heap of
forming a tumulus
cult of the
eponymous heroine
shields.
is
bound
to death
?
under the
such a punishment
;
Popular imagination
it is
just,
corresponding crime.
by
arms
foreign.
women
of
treason
conjecture facilitated
traitors
(as
by the knowledge
fail
that
condemned
to
recall)
it
Why,
is
then,
may
The answer
that
nymph,
was buried.
If at
Rome by
the Gauls,
there existed a
mound
of Sabine shields
little later,
by Gaulish weapons.
'
my
mind, the
//.
ii.
811-814.
Plut.
Rom.
xvii.
Syll. x.
Livy, xxv.
7, 14,
&c.
76
CULTS, MYTHS.
AND RELIGIONS
in love
Gauls,
and
is
whelmed under
their arms.
is
Nor
is
this
connected both
differ
The little gate of the had always to be left as to whether this was a
~
or
an
detail
and beauty
Sabines
the
;
Gauls,
whose weakness
for
decorative
effect
was
notorious.*
by pointing
B.C.,
and
am
inclined
worn by the
tion,
on their campaigns.
But, as a tradi-
which we
GaUic
are justified in
considering historical,
the
'
invasion,
two
;
rival
legends
Gaulish
42
;
and
i.
Paulus Diaconus,
iv. 3.
' :
p.
220
cf.
Varr. Ling.
lat. v.
Solinus,
13
Arnobius,
- Festus, p. 363 When making peace, Tatius insisted that the gate should always be open to the Sabines ut ea Sabinis semper
'
pateret.
^ *
^
Polyaen. viii. 25, i. Livy, vii. 10 Gell. ix. 11, 5 Pais, Ancient Legends, p. 298
;
xiii. 3,
cf.
Pliny, xxiii.
ii.
5, 15,
40
x. 39.
TARPEIA
Sabine
^^
sprang
won
the
more
referred to a
more
and
'
:
painful
memories at Rome.
death assigned to
Schwegler writes
The nature
has,
of the
be divined,'
the
more
I
recently,
come
to
same
conclusion.
believe
problem
may be
XI
When
literary
it
was a question
of of
of crystallising
and
fixing the
form
the Tarpeian
legends,
;
the historians
Greek fable
In the
place,
who betrayed
their relatives, or
who
delivered
up
affections."
to the one
which
finally
Tarpeia.
The
most
interesting
that
of
Pisidice,
was besieging the town, when the princess, catching sight of him from the battlements, lost her heart, and sent out her nurse, offering to sell the town in exchange
Achilles
for his love.
all
of
Methymna, bade
this
In
connection,
repeats
the
as
lines
of
K. Miiller
i.
p. 487.
i.
*
'
cf.
p. 484.
78
CULTS. MYTHS,
who sang
There
is
AND RELIGIONS
to think the legend
of course, excludes of
conjectured),
hexameters.
some reason
This
falsely attributed
'
on
'
History of
the Galatians
{rakaTiKo) by Clitophon.-
The Gaulish
girl,
of a
young Greek
who promised
Ephesus
collars
to
if
comply with
his
desires
and betray
his
to boot,
and ornaments.
all
Brennus ordered
men
to
throw
light-of-love
the gauds.
The
and
absurd
the
girl
there
in
must
which
But
well
known how
'
little
the
Parallelae Minores
The story of Polycrite of Naxos inspires more confidence, as it was known already to Aristotle.^ Polycrite won the
love of Diognetus, the chief of the Erythraeans besieging
her
countrymen.
After
the
slaughter,
she
2 ^
Cf. Hofer, in Roscher's Lexikon, art. 'Peisidike,' p. 1793 Pseudo-Plut. Payall. Min. c. xv. Cf. Hofer's article 'Polykrite,' in Roscher's Lexikon, p. 2650.
TARPEIA
citizens,
79
who then
four
erected a
all
tomb
in her
honour.
this
Though
story
the
circumstances are
different,
siege,
pretty
comprises
betrayal,
elements
love
intrigue,
a
are
of the traitress
which
found in at
XII
Thus, once again, though by devious waj's,
I
have
rite
shown how a
is
rite
Here the
war
them was
The myth
says)
for
is is
the
is
no place without
under
this
pile
its
genius, as
Servius
to
suffocated
its
of
weapons
the
atone
Euhemerism
;
right,
root in reality
it
but
if
legend
old,
life is
not an
a cult-practice.
CHAPTER V
THE DOMESTICATION OF ANIMALS
^
The domestic
animals
the
are such
their
in fact,
it
requires
some
effort
of thought to
that
it
linked.
That
a
effort
of Genesis.
is
In his
dominion
animals
God-given
man's nature
man
watches them
file
and learns
(ii.
their
of the living
God
there
ig).
Adam
soil
:
Adam
begins to
till
the
no hint
of the
man
lived
by hunting
alone,
or
by gathering the
is
fruits of earth.
a shepherd, Cain
as
well,
we Nimrod
find
;
a hunter,
in
address given, in 1902, at the Univcrsite Populaire (8inp arronAn extremely instructive development of the same subject is to be found in Jevons, Introduction to the History of Religion,
dissement, Paris).
pp. 113 sq.
An
80
8i
and seems
to
have hunted
is
for pleasure,
Hke the
kings of Assyria.
There
nothing
of
Then came the Noah Of every clean beast thou shalt take to thee by sevens, the male and and of beasts that are not clean by twos, his female Of fowls also of the air by the male and his female.
that he did so as a
means
Hvehhood.
:
'
to
upon the
face of all the earth.' Beasts and birds alike showed themselves complacent and entered the Ark, though the Biblical historian forgets to say how, for the
eight long
months
of the Flood,
Noah
contrived to feed
this menagerie,
or accomplished the
still
more
difficult
wolf to
lie
down with
the lamb.
light of the
French clergy decided that the narrative need not be taken literally, a concession for which we
owe him much thanks. The Greek had less childlike ideas on the past of mankind. He knew perfectly well that men had been
hunters before they were shepherds, and shepherds before
whom
taming wild animals or inventing the plough. During whole of the Middle Ages the in fact, down to our own
time
of disputing
though the
theme might be. The nineteenth century, however, made up for lost time. Archaeology has shown that the oldest human habitations, the caverns of the quaternary
period,
82
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
all
wild.
The proof
whereas
pastoral
killing
refrain, as a rule,
from
young beasts. The exploration of the lake dwellings of Switzerland and France, huts built on piles at a little distance from
the water-edge, has demonstrated that domestic animals
were known
interval
of
which
after a long
five to
transition
succeeded
the
quaternary era.
Similarly, in
exhumed dead
animals are missing, but others, notably the dog and the
ox, are
earliest periods.
may
ob-
of
have neither
When
the
New World
single
domestic animal, the llama, and that was confined to In Peru. Cattle, dogs, and horses were all unknown.
North America the only wild cattle were bison, and the Indians had as yet made no attempt to domesticate
them.
to exist in
any country,
that,
of domestication.
Now,
in
83
and
in neither of
men
first
to
domesticate.
But even
do
or,
if
exist,
man
if
is
will
open
his
eyes.
But
how
?
could he,
try
any experiment
domestic presupposes
education by man.
Up
enough.
to live
da}^
on an assumption which at
of a savage
who makes
is
shift
One
he happens to
cow which
suckling two
The sentiment of compassion, which is natural to man, moves him to spare these little animals, and to give them to his children as playfellows. They grow up, pair, have young in their turn, and, at
calves of different sexes.
with
man
has
transformed
the
breed
into
domestic
animals.
It is a pretty
less
In the
spear
has no food-reserves.
lives
his
bow and
suffers
agriculturist,
but
hunger
We
have
still
people, in our
communities,
who both
suffer
is
from hunger.
a social
84
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
of existence,
starvation
faculty
and
his every
was strained
it
daily bread.
young bull and a young heifer hard hand outside his hut, would not be tempted a hundred times to kill and eat them before they obtained the age
of this type, with a
at
of reproduction
Any
and would
Will
it
the hope
species,
The
idea
is
sheer folly
a savage
cannot dream
know what
herd means
^that
There
is
At the present day we are acquainted with peoples in South Africa, and elsewhere, who know nothing of agriIf culture, and live entirely on their flocks and herds.
it
for the
sake
reach,
we should
great flesh-eater.
is
the case.
fru-
herdsmen are
yields.
They
them save
especially
careful never
to destroy
them
to give milk.
The
Kaffirs
only
kill
their cattle as a
85
wedding.
A
ill,
close
Africa never
kill
if
one
falls
she
is
Should an epidemic
Dinka
tribe,
As similar all the members show the greatest sorrow. phenomena have been observed among pastoral peoples elsewhere, it would seem that the herdsman in other
words,
the
man who
animals
thought
native wilds
always with
us.
? ?
Now what
I
is it
we
mean
strong
and healthy
to
eat
The
:
natural instinct of
man
is
to use,
the
gourmand
is
first
To persuade
likes,
a savage, or a child to abstain from food which he a strong deterrent must be urged,
of all deterrents, fear.
or, rather,
the strongest
To
If
no restraint were
it
in the
open
air,
he
;
in his
neighbourhood
plain,
and
hill
bound
to disappear after
either in
Europe or
86
CULTS, MYTHS,
;
AND RELIGIONS
man
has domesticated
Asia or Africa
a certain
and we
see that
number
of species.
him
was
to
kill
That
sunk
fear
religion.
Fear,'
plummet
as
and
it
first-
The
himself
all
the powers of
all
Nature,
comparatively modern.
all
Not
;
communities
is
have a
it is
religion
religion
older
she
who
is
the daughter of
Rehgion
is
the
name
Thus it may be said with perfect truth that morality, law, and civilisation Without it man would itself, are the outcome of religion.
free exercise of his physical faculties.
when he most
of
he would
The point
religion
in
;
perhaps comprehensible
but
it
oldest
of
the reluctance to
scruple which
is
and
far
eat
animal
still
tinction.
eat no pork
the
Russian
at
Europeans
in general,
;
any rate
87
many
cases,
and eating
believes
is
The savage
for
certain animal,
its
the bear
instance,
its
the
It
sworn
ally,
and
is
protector.
whole animal
we may
seems
And,
show that
tribes,
it
literally is
two
one composed
first
of
men and
of a
the
is
other
of
animals.
The
condition
treaty
that the
imagines
they
faith,
own
clan
daughter of
Totemism
distinctive
from
or
mark
is
the
name
given to that
is
primitive
tribe of
form of
religion
whose essence
that
men
by an enduring pact
all
to a species of animals.
religions.
gods,
At the root
of this
phenomenon, and
ex-
savage and a
fear
Children are
still
feelings.
To the
child, the
88
CULTS, MYTHS,
is
AND RELIGIONS
see the lions
fear of a wolf
policeman
and he had
and
fine ladies
in
primitive
Hyde Park or the Allee des Acacias. Once admit that man was totemistic and the domestication of
is
animals
and wolves
to
go no further.
little its
These hunters
are
tribes,
ancestor.
The and
wolf-clan believes
to
itself to
it
wolf.
The
horse-clan
kill
thinks
itself
one without
and
is
so on.
Each
clan,
killing
patron animal.
But that
Since the
it
in its
by
cries or
by
signs of uneasiness,
two or more
of the
species
of
sentinels.
which
naturally have to be
grow accustomed to
;
in the
must be
understood that
all
this
possesses
when the animal chosen as totem the attributes which make for domestication.
is
not a domestic
cart,
it
nor
upon the
herds.
THE DOMESTICATION OF ANIMALS
few species of wolves or jackals,
first
89
after-
tamed and
man
still,
quite intractable,
foe of
thfc
humanity.
On
to domestication.
animals
first
achieved
We
do not know.
;
Possibly,
same time
for
it is
the product
to
of
two
factors,
one of which
was
in
human
we
find the
bones of the
common
huge
pile of relics
edible
killed
of deer,
boars,
and
birds,
It is also
incisions in
them
But
for dogs to
gnaw
the bones
from the
m^eals of
these
village
lived with
them
in other words,
dogs.
us
to
judge,
the
;
first
animal domesticated in
met with on the shores of Denmark and his domestication must date from the long period some five or six thousand years between the end of the
90
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
flint
land.
we know it from the lake dwellings of SwitzerThe question remains What is the origin of the
:
domestic dog
Is it
Europe and
Asia, or
which
is
almost
? The experts are still at variance. Under any circumstances, it would be decidedly singular if the domestic dog came from Asia, and Asiatic tribes had taken the road, with their dogs, to catch shell-fish
confined to Asia
on the coasts
of
Denmark.
dog
is
Common
a descendant, domesticated
by
many
varieties of dogs
in several
same
or different times.
'
The most
recent of these
is
Buffon's phrase,
none the
:
less instructive
because
it is
The
it
cat
is
still
hunts,
hunts on
its
own account
even
and
its
instincts
of independence
of
revolt,
are
often
only too
patent
The domestic
cat
of the fifth
In Pompeii,
of
For a recent discussion, see L'Anthropologie, 1904, p. 41, where the whole question has been well summed up by M. U. Duerst.
f)i
it
abounded,
and had
There
it
was Egypt.
in
the
nome
by
of
may
be counted
tens of thousands.
crime.
To
kill
a cat
was considered a
later
monstrous
In
fact,
Ptolemies, a
in this respect,
Roman, who had unwittingly transgressed was torn to pieces by the crowd, despite
of
The
IMore,
exportation
cats
was
strictly
forbidden.
into desuetude.
to
monks began
Its
leave the
;
and
cat.
equally
unknown
rats
to the ancient
world
appeared
no
less
from Asia
Huns
so
and
had
their stricken
Thus the
cat,
all
the
The theory
have
later
just
it
expounded, was
developed by
Compare Engelmann,
92
CULTS, MYTHS.
AND RELIGIONS
I
published in 1896.
to
In France,
in
think, I
was the
first
advocate
it,
both
my
It is
du
Louvre and
plant-life
in the press.
and
it
seems to
me
form of
all religion, it
CHAPTER
VI
^
Towards the close of the year 1900, there appeared a new edition of Mr. Frazer's celebrated work, The Golden
*
Bough.'
The
result
scandalous.
others, pro-
posed
though
to recognise
an
element of
The sequel
discussion,
myth and ritual in the tragedy of Golgotha. among English scholars has been a prolonged
though the echoes
of
it
France.
The gravity
of the question
such,
and
a
its
that
fairly
summary
of
it
will
Many
same
similar to the
Roman
Saturnalia and
marked by the
and moral
laws.
with
'
seed-time
or
harvest.
At
Rome,
the
93
94
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
commemorate
class
the blissful
when
distinction
between
and
class,
nor
any shape.
Over
this
hung one
sinister
shadow
trace.
human
sacrifice.
But
in the
Roman
rite
had
no
The outstanding
characteristic
of the feast
was
who,
of
became masters
lot,
One
them, chosen by
In
Roman
of royalty.
but
cast.
we meet
of
features of an apparently
more archaic
by a troop
Roman
soldiers
a Greek manuscript
in
the
Bibliotheque
Nationale.i
lot
handsome youth, whom they dressed in royal robes and hailed as the representative of good king Saturn. Surrounded by a brilliant escort, he paraded the streets, with full authority to use and abuse his power, until, on the thirtieth day, he was compelled to kill himself on the
altar of the Saturn
lot
fell
whom
he personified.
soldier Dasius,
In 303 the
who
refused
Cumont, Analecta Bollandiana, vol. xvi., and Man, 1901, p. 66; Parmentier, Revue de Philologie, 1897, p. 143 A. Lang, Man, 1901,
' ;
p. 83.
95
which he
\v(nild
He was
20,
which
moon.
an inoffensive clown
human
day when he
traces of
and
sacrifices,
authorities.^
Further
and
an essential point
of a god.
the man-victim
is
The Carnival
nor
less
of
Christian nations
Saturnalia.
of
neither
more
than the
Roman
In Italy, Spain,
Rome
has been
which
is
term of glory,
When
when
it
the
Roman
December
earlier,
remains
Matronalia, in
privileges as
March and this The feast of the which the female slaves enjoyed the same
;
1 On the supposition, of course, that the rite of Durostolum was an old custom revivified. It is, however, quite possible that it was only a more barbarous form of an originally harmless practice. In the
Roman
empire, after the second century, there are many traces of moral brutalisation and mental retrogression a phenomenon, which may, to a large extent, be explained by the invasion of oriental cults.
96
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
It
was
god
{sata
crops).
Rhodes,
Crete,
Thessaly,
Olympia,
called
and elsewhere.
;
Kronos
his
cult with
human
honour
Every year the Rhodians slew a man in his man was a criminal
condemned by common law exactly as among the Celts The procedure was to lead the victim in Caesar's lifetime. outside the city, make him drunk, and then cut his
throat.
Even more
for
curious
was the
which lasted
five
days in Babylon.
;
As
and
in
Rome,
in every
Nor was
the
close
this
all.
as a king
and authorised
At the
and
either
hanged
were
The Babylonian
took place at
It
may, perhaps, be identified with one in honour of the great god Marduk, which is mentioned in the earliest
Babylonian
texts.
In 1891 Herr
origin
of
Zimmern
in
the
first
the
of
it
The
which
mention
the book of
Esther,
was
97
The book of Esther is a novel with a purpose, and the object is to supply a motive for the Purhn. This was a bacchanalian fete, which lasted two days, and was still, in the eighteenth century, celebrated with scandalous freedom and uproar. The story of Esther is well known. The king of Persia has a vizier, Haman, who has been offended by the Jew, Mordecai. The vizier prepares a gallows on which he hopes to hang
century B.C.
his
through the
horse.
Thanks
to Esther,
Here we have a
divided
(so
reminiscence
of
the
Sacaean
;
Zoganes,
to
one of
whom
hopes to play
is
who
does play the part, escapes the fate intended for him.
The Babylonian affinities of the tale are for Mordecai accentuated by the names
:
still
is
further
evidently
is
the
An
it
attempt
made
Haman
it
with an Elamite
is
god
of the
same name.
first
Be
this as
may,
certain
the habit of
an
effigy of
Haman.
was regarded as an
communities
the
representation of
insult to Christianity
but in Jewish
or
custom
of
hanging
burning
Haman
We know
98
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
also that a feast similar
at
Babylon and
in Persia.
At the beginning of spring, a beardless man was perched on an ass and triumphantly paraded through the town. He carried a fan and complained of the heat, while the people threw snow or cold water upon him. In the
course of his promenade, he stopped at the doors of the
rich
and
levied
contributions
in
a word,
till
the clown
At sunset
unless
sticks
in earlier times,
no doubt,
'
beardless
is
suspiciously
it is
Mordecai, as
II
In an article in
scholar,
'
Herr Wendland,
emphasised
of Christ
the
points
of
similarity
by the Roman
soldiers at Jerusalem,
of the Saturnalian
The analogy, he considered, might explain the royal robe and crown which the soldiery put on Jesus, on the ground that he claimed to be King of
King
at
Durostolum.
the Jews.
The
great
difhculty
is
the
date,
as
the
Roman
was put
con-
December and
It is
Christ
that the
Roman
garrison at Jerusalem
may have
formed to the ancient custom, placing the Saturnalia at the beginning of the year, which, under the old system,
fell
in
March.
In
any
case, the
99
still
more
Saturnalia.
'
Take
St.
Matthew's account
(xxvii.
:
26-31)
Then
them
and when he
had scourged Jesus, he delivered Him to be crucified. Then the soldiers of the governor took Jesus into the common hall, and gathered unto Him the whole band of
soldiers.
And
Him
scarlet robe.
plaited a crown of
upon His head, and a reed in His right hand, and they bowed the knee before Him, and mocked Him, saying, " Hail, King of the Jews " And
thorns, they put
!
they spit upon Him, and took the reed, and smote
Him
on the head.
And
own raiment
Him away
to crucify Him,'
Now
compare
this passage
meted out
the Sacsea
'
Taking one
they
seat
him on the
for several
throne, clothe
him
in royal vestments,
and
and
But
at the
end
of his
term, they strip off his garments, and scourge and crucify
him.'
It is quite true
and
it
that this
robe, the
may
be only a coincidence.
(for
the scarlet
crown
the
to a majesty that
was soon
to be insulted
like
to death
all
this
is
remarkably
an act of
Would a Roman
?
100
CULTS, MYTHS,
Mr. Frazer again asks
if
AND RELIGIONS
Christ
was not
crucified in
the character of
Haman,
in
mentioned
of
Purim.
But the
;
feast
Purim
fell
on the fourteenth
of
Adar
that
is
to say,
exactly a
month
the crucifixion.
In
fact,
we may say
Haman and
The
on"e
Mordecai, to
whom
is
there
is
thing certain
in clarity,
if,
would gain
disguising
was
him as a king. By the received account, Pilate was more sympathetic than hostile to Christ. Then why, all-powerful as he was, did he not spare him ?
On
is
easy
custom
must
also
had the
cross
surmounted by an
In the reign of so
Roman
it
jest,
condemned malefactor,
unless
singular.
for the
We
are told
was usual
governor to
Pilate tried
:
to persuade the
mob
they, on
loi
who was
it
and
murder.
at
all ?
freed
man
Haman.
;
There
it
is
nothing to authorise
such a supposition
as
but
is
we have
it
in
that the
name Barabbas
father
:
composed
of
Barabbas, therefore, is The Son of the Father or exactly what Christ believed himself to be. Barabbas was to have been executed, Christ was executed in his stead
;
consequently,
it
as
Son
of the
is
Father that
disposed to
Mr. Frazer
perhaps, because
by the
father.
will
soil
ground
hand.
But that
these
myth and ritual. To complicate matters still more, Herr Wendland has
Philo,
it
is
well
known,
the
lived
at Alexandria in
He
relates that
when Agrippa,
Rome
way
to his
new
capital.
The populace
102
CULTS, MYTHS,
target
for
AND RELIGIONS
Accordingly, they
of Carabas,
fair
their
buffoonery.
by the name
wander the
streets,
They put a crown on his head, him in sham robes of state, and surrounded him with a guard of honour. To make it more obvious that their satire was levelled at the princeling Agrippa, the crowd shouted Marin I Marin ! a Syriac word for Lord.' Here, again, we
attentions of small boys.
for sceptre, clothed
'
in
which
a
this
fresh
Jerusalem was no
trary,
whim
of the
a normal feature
of
customs.
is is
luckless
Carabas
whom
up in opposition to the despised Jewish monarch, must himself have been a Jew. It is tempting to take Carabas as a clerical error for Barabbas, which would be,
not a proper name, but the stock
title of
the stage-king
who
strutted his
little
hour
same type as the Saturnalia and Sacaea. Now comes another fact which intensifies the obscurOrigen, ity and makes confusion doubly confounded. writing about the year 250 a.d., was familiar with manu^
scripts of St.
'
(xxvii.
16)
Barabbas.'
of Greek,
first
mention
6
words
'
\6y6fj,evo<i
'
In
or
surnamed,
These
Biblica.
103
Can it be that this man was also called Jesus, and was given the surname Barabbas as a means of distinguishing him from Christ ? The assumption that two condemned criminals were both called Jesus is
so improbable that
then,
it
would seem
to
and
in
an
old source,
to St.
known
Matthew,
this
Jesus,
the
Son
;
an
which
An
part,
for
my
to see
my way
clearly
point
out
undoubtedly
As early
as the
we
see
from Pliny's
letter to
Trajan what
in
already
made
Asia
Minor.
tion,
If
we
we
are forced to
assume^in view
soil
of this bewildering
spirit of Grgeco;
Roman
culture
that the
in
Knowing
104
this,
CULTS, MYTHS,
we know
AND RELIGIONS
were predis-
man,
in
whom
there
was no
guilt,
by hands which a
'
little
regal purple.
life
him in and
could never
is
have had
if
commonly
shed round
It
afar off
and
risen God.'
It is to
proofs,
and potential
Wendland, Cumont, and Frazer, may induce more than a few scholars to prosecute the question. For the moment
nothing has been absolutely demonstrated beyond the
and
work.
this
It is
and
original narrative
which
subsequent
but whoever
may
eventually succeed in
2, vol.
iii.
p. 197.
CHAPTER
VII
^
FusTEL DE CouLANGES, at the beginning of his Cite Antique/ shows by conclusive citations that, in Roman,
'
eyes, the
whom
descendants
paid homage,
besought in prayer.
Choephoroe
as
of Aeschylus,
Agamemnon,
he
lies
in the
tomb
'
And
I,
" Pity me, Kindle thovi And A light within this palace. For we're sold By her that bare us outcast on the earth While he that in thy blood dipped murderous hands Slave and worse Sleeps in her bed. What am I ? Thy son strays beggared and the adulterers Sit hugely merry on thy ravished throne. I pray thee, send Orestes hitherward
Tims pray,
my
Sire invoking
lead back his wandering feet. Sweeten his cup Give ear, and grant me. Father, to become Sounder of mind by far than is my mother, With hands more pure."
;
'
Revue des iLtiides juives, 1900, pp. 161-173. A short sketch of appeared in the Strcna Helbigiana, Leipzig, 1900. - Aeschylus, reading (pws a.va\pou ii Choephoroe, 129-140 (Weil) ho/xois (131), and eV TOitn (to7s dpovota-t (i37)'
1
this article
105
io6
CULTS, MYTHS,
This solitary example
is
AND RELIGIONS
proof enough that the ancients
prayed
to
according
to their lights
man became a familiar god. The pagan worship of the dead, rendered impartially to rich and poor, was sharply reprobated by St. Augustine, who contrasted the humble honours shown by the
the dead
Christians to their martyrs
'
:
We
have
in
honour
of the
priests,
neither ceremony
for
we have
But who
standing
relics
God.
tombs
among the
priest,
say
in his
?
prayer
For the
the
though
it
be
offered
on the tomb
of
martyrs,
nevertheless
offered to
God who made them men and martyrs and hath placed them among His
God
alone, even to that
angels.'
St.
i
by the Christian
Saints.
close
to his
dead and
intercessors, the
analogies
;
with
the
is,
Grseco-Roman
that in
cult
of
the
the
dead
the difference
modern
prayer
is
religions
whom
;
made.
The
heroes
idea of an intercession
is
foreign to
'
paganism
men
St.
vi. 27.
107
God may
is
Old Testament.
Thus, in Genesis
Abraham,
them
off
In Jeremiah
(xv. i)
will
He
not
or
by Moses
Samuel
yet
'
:
before me,
my mind could not be toward this people cast them out of my sight, and let them go forth.' The passage
is
rank
saints
Almighty.
therefore,
its
is
possibility
and
its efficacy.
What
it is
general in Christianity
him in the presence of God. The prayers Hebrew ascend directly to the Supreme Being,
'
De
are not
One
is
of
these
in
offerings
for
'
the
Certainly,' he says,
the
custom
tradi-
tion authorises
custom confirms
it,
and
will
faith observes
A number
Tertullian,
of
be found in the
De
io8
it.
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
of
it
reason
if
yourselves, another
who
of
is
The
of
passage, for
all
its
custom
making
offerings
on behalf
the dead
what they
in
among
secondly, objections
had already
Law
and
insisted
upon
all rites
thirdly,
interpreted
by
The same author, in his treatise De Monogamia,' " speaks of a widow who prayed for her husband's soul,
'
to
him
in
the
first
resurrection,
of his
and made
These
on
each
anniversary
death.
argument against
second marriages.
If
he
will
and one
first
in the
offer
spirit.
and
in
known
that
December
-
14,
1896).
Tertullian, Tertullian,
x.
xi.
109
The bishop Acrius, about 355 a.d., and the priest Vigilantius, some forty-five years later, declared war on
the custom of prayers for the dead and the appeal to the intercession of Saints.
these controversies,
There
is
no need to
dilate
on
The Reformers
and established
nations.
still
up the
thesis of Vigilantius
On
in the
Orthodox Greek Church and among the Jews.The pagans, then, prayed to the dead, and the
In the eyes of the former, the
least,
at the
demigods or heroes
in the
to
it
God
and
of the
was hoped
to conciliate
prayed
for.
Even the most virtuous must be Thus, more than fifteen years after the
St.
Augustine, on
own
So
admission, was
striking
is
still
a
well
contrast
between
the
two
religious
conceptions
worth
historian's
attention.
There
is
^ As far as the fourth and fifth centuries are concerned, a host of quotations will be found in M. Isr. Levi's article on the Commemoration of Souls [Revue des Etudes juives, 1894, vol. xxix. pp. 55, 56). - That the custom is independent of the belief in Purgatory is proved by the fact that the Orthodox Greeks, who deny the existence of Purgatory, nevertheless pray for the dead (cf. Revue anglo-vomaine,
'
'
For the ' Commemoration of the Dead among the Jews 1895, p. 156). of the Middle Ages, see M. Levi's study quoted above [Revue, &-.,
'
1894, vol. xxix. pp. 44 sqq.). ^ St. Augustine, Confess, ix. 13.
no
a
different
CULTS, MYTHS,
of
AND RELIGIONS
monopoly
such problems
theirs.
:
our
sets
task
is
essentially
from
Theology
is
out to assail or
dis-
defend an opinion
entangling the
history
and
starts,
not
the genesis
of ideas,
like
world
is
continuity.
To begin
the Old
Gospels,
with,
we have
by
Law
prescribe
mention prayers
for
the
dead.
The accounts
If
make no
women
'
was
to carry
came simply
fact,
to
see
the sepulchre.'
As a matter
;
of
the
the origin
and authority
Tertullian.
by
Bossuet,
whose
discussions
with
the
Protestant
divines brought
to the question of
may
Testament
unbroken
the
and
of the Gospels,
religion
for
Two
'
Protestants,
xxiv.
i
;
MM.
xvi.
de
i.
la
Roque and
-
Blondel,
xxviii.
had
Luke
Mark
Matthew
viii. p.
10.
301.
iii
to the
unknown
Jews before the time of Rabbi Akiba, who hved in the and that the Christians borrowed reign of Hadrian
;
them, not from the Jews, but from the Sibylhne Books,
forged
by an impostor
firstly,
in the reign of
Antoninus Pius.
Bossuet answers,
that there
is
nothing in Akiba's
;
words
book
of Maccabees.
We
must pause
for
pieces of evidence
and determine
and date.
The following is the tradition with regard to Akiba, by Bossuet from a Latin translation i One day, Rabbi Akiba, while walking, met a man laden with wood and the burden was so heavy that it exceeded the load Rabbi Akiba asked him if he were of an ass or a horse.
as given
'
:
man or a ghost the other answered that he was a man who had died some time ago, and that he was obliged
a
;
The Rabbi inquired if he had any what was his wife's name, and where they lived. When the ghost had answered all these questions, Rabbi Akiba sought out the son of the dead man and taught him the prayer beginning with the word Kadisch (that is to say, saint) which is to be found
committed
left
in this world.
not
children,
Bossuet quotes La Gcmara du Talmud, au traite Calla.' The is exact cf. Hamburger, Real-Encyklop. fiiy Talmud, art. Kaddisch,' p. 607. The treatise, however, is not a part of the Talmud. For the passages of the Talmudists which imply the idea of an intercession by the living in favour of the dead, I refer the reader to the article of M. Isr. Levi, quoted above. - M. Isr. Levi tells me that this expression is not in the Hebrew.
'
reference
'
112
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
him that
if
his father
it
he recited
every
dream day. to Rabbi Akiba, thanked him, and told him that by this means he had been freed from Purgatory and was now
in a
man appeared
in
(adds Bossuet)
is
the
But Bossuet was wrong in omitting to inform us that the legend requisitioned by him dates from the Middle Ages only, and that no hint of it is discoverable in any of the earlier and more authoritative accounts of Akiba in our He was equally wrong in claiming that possession.
prayers for the dead
'
immemorial, in
gratuitous,
to refute
it.
all
synagogues.'
silence of the
The
assertion
is
perfectly
is
and the
Old Testament
enough
on a
We now
solitary
come
passage
Maccabees.
it
inclusion.
it
Laodicea threw
out
of Carthage accepted
it.
under Pope
two books
of
It is useless to object,'
xii.
pp. 221-222.
113
it
is
non-canonical
is
than
The remark
just
but
it
the doctrine
it
Herr Niese,
critics,
in
opposition
to
a few over-sceptical
which
It
is
not to be
must have
a work in
Jason of
least
The author professes to summarise five books, by another hellenised African Jew, This latter must have written at Cyrene.'^
after the time
(ca.
;
twenty years
175-160
B.C.)
of
and
old,
his
version
already contains a
the work
at a
admixture of
fable.
it
But,
if
we
possess
late
comparatively
it
was only
distinctly
period that
began to exercise
first
any
The
writer
who
the Egyptian
Jew
Philo,
who was
about
thirty
years of age at
the
time of
nor
is
there
from
The
is
allusion
in
to the
book
of
literature
is
found
Hebrews, which
'
work
Bossuet, Oeuvves, ed. 1846, vol. viii. p. 301. B. Niese, Kritik der beiden Makkabderbiicher, Berlin, 1900 (extr.
fr,
Hermes, vol. xxxv. pp. 268, 453). ^ 2 Mace. ii. cf. ii. 26, 28. 23
;
*
ii.
p. 740.
I
114
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
back to Egypt
AH
in
general,
and
Alexandria
in
particular.
We
shall
the
little
work
in question reflect
not so
much
the
Alexandrine clique.
few companions
who had
fallen in
number
of
amulets
As
these articles
'
were forbidden by
this transgression
prayed that
might be blotted
out,'
of silver
to Jerusalem as a sin-offering.
author,
'
for
if
had been superfluous and vain to pray for the This commentary is evidently prejudiced
:
the
work
that
of a
in the resurrection
and
His
who
desires to prove
Judas
held
the
same views.
argument, however,
worthless. ^
Among
all
peoples
a violation of religious law on the part of individuals has been regarded as a danger to the community at large
a
for
'
an act
of idolatry,
and
altchyistl. Literatiir,
A. Harnack,
p. 479.
This opinion
is
115
army
The
story,
thought
that in
Had
those doctrines
by which he hoped
and
to place
them under distinguished patronage. The action of Judas,' Bossuet missed the point.
'
he remarks,
'
in those
the dead.'
fallen into
the
same
on the passage as
The only
is
valid
drawn from
it
saving
grace of prayer for the dead, but that, by the time of the
epitomator
believe in
it,
(ca.
120
B.C.),
a sect
had
arisen
which did
of its contemporaries.
Pharisees,
for
according
to
Josephus,
The
earliest
Biblical
text,
re-
surrection
Daniel,'
book
of
which
now
period
about
'
165 B.C.
certain
amount
and have
viii. p.
ii.
301.
p. 4O0.
Daniel
xii.
cf.
Schiirer, ibid.
ii6
CULTS, MYTHS.
definite
AND RELIGIONS
men
could realise the
assumed
shape,
before
by the
God.
custom
first
It
had not
it,
although very
Even
Egypt, where
great .^
There
about 130
prevent
A.D.,
ritual of the
synagogues
but neither
it.
is
there anything
to
our admitting
belief
speak of
it
custom
antiquity and
is
universality
remains to be seen
how
the living for the dead penetrated into the Jewish thought
In the fourth book of Esdras, which probably dates from the year 97 A.D. and is the work of an Alexandrine Jew, the doctrine of interI,ord,' cession is mentioned as an ill-defined theological novelty. says Esdras to the angel, at the Day of Judgment shall the just be
'
'
'
And able to intercede for the unjust in the eyes of the Most High ? the Angel answers, There shall be none who shall cast his burden on for every man shall suffer what he hath merited and shall his fellow be held accountable for his own doings.'
'
' :
117
As the second book of Maccabees is the work of an Alexandrine Jew, and the first two authors who quote
from
it
it
is
only natural
that our
Egypt
hellenised
Egypt
which sheltered
Alexandria.
and
Hebrew colony
of
in
we have
50
is
He
says
'
:
When
to give
on
the nether
him
crowd cry
and pray
in
may
enjoy eternal
Hades
be
the
of
This passage
may
compared with
Egyptian
ritual
certain
prayers,
forming part
and designed
to assist the
dead
*
in his
is
It
the
'
when
had
journey
The multitudes assembled on the " May you reach banks salute him with good wishes In peace, in peace to in peace the West of Thebes Go down in peace to Abydos, toward the Abydos Western Sea " s Even if the Egyptian texts so
another world.
:
'
far,
at
least,
as
my
knowledge goes
offer
no exact
not
the
faintest
'
Diodorus Siculus,
gr.
'
ii8
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
who was
also
statement of an historian
Moreover, the statement
of
is
an eye-witness
series
'
Serapis, grant
enemies,'
enemies,
his
that
is,
whom
'
man
might encounter on
'
bliss,
give
M. Revillout,
Egypt, prayer
for the
dead
on the part
of the survivors
in
if
is
menon than
countries
the
contemporary epitaphs
other
as
The same
scholar, however,
:
'
Prayers for
only
make
their appearance
among the
Jews
Egyptian influence.
We
must not
Jews against the Seleucidse, precisely as the Pharaohs had once been their mainstay against the
the
Assyrian satraps.'
in question did not
come
into
until
some
fifty
influence exercised
the
The
At the time
were a
million
Jews
in
1
in Asia
Minor
119
Rome
and he
tells
us that at Alexandria
have developed a centrifugal tendency, and that its ideas tinctured as they were by Graeco-Roman speculation
onl}^ into
seems to
a
me
to\vn
there
is
at
Corinth,
whose commercial
Here
St.
with
an imrite of
Baptism
for the
species of inter-
same order
Maccabees.
as that referred to
the second
book
of
This baptism,
it
must be observed, was not the Christian baptism but Greeks who had been the baptism of the Proselytes converted to Judaism and thus paved the way for the
"
From
all
these data
we may take
in
it
so
much
But Egypt as
may
not
on the
efficacy
Philo, in Flacc. 6
and
8.
Cf.
Th. Reinach,
art.
'
Judaea/ in Saglio's
ii.
p. 369.
detailed discussion of
Baptism
for the
Dead would
lead
us
too far. I shall only point out that Epiphanes ascribes the practice (which, by the way, St. Paul does not condemn) to the Cerinthians. Now, Cerinthus seems to have been an Egyptian Jew.
120
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
classical antiquity
knew
side
Roman
by
dead
man became
a god.
Still,
side
much
more modern
with their
The dead were judged in accordance conduct in this life some were sent incontinent
cast.
;
others
of the
and
of
still
it.
Between
this point
religions of Greece
is
obviously an ab-
solute incompatibihty.
man
is
and he must
by
suffering before
Even
Agamemnon
It is
to
whom
beliefs
has
been observed
countries,
Egypt,
Italy,
and Gaul.
dead
In these three
is
as
in
Greece,
the
man
sometimes
he receives
homage
oracles
in
Greece,
any
rate
appears
to be
In the course of
time the
official religion
of science
and conscience
in
121
is
simply
itself
creed
in philosophic or
was
called Orphism.
it
found
a deep
it
a legislator in Pythagoras
in the fourth
;
it left
who
in the fourth
Eclogue
'
book
of the
century later
it
began to exercise
its
influence
as
precursor of Jesus
paintings
of
in the
the
mysticism
of
of
name
Gnosticism,
is
paganism was
filled
imbued with Orphic elements.- Dying with it. Even in the third century
Now
there
is
is
though
We
our
information
distressingly scanty
subject, one
Both
relate to cere-
men
of
believed
their
it
possible to
:
redeem the
however,
or
crimes
ancestors
both,
Cf. A.
1893.
-
and passim.
122
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
it
seems useless
upon them
here.
What
to
my
mind
is
more
is
the fact that Herodotus and Diodorus have remarked the analogy between the Orphic, Pythagorean, and
Egyptian doctrines
stress
his
theories
come.^
'
According to the
his
Egyptians,' he writes,
travels the ceremonies
rites
When an
ancient
historian
disposes
of
the analogies
need be attached to
his explanation.
is
infinitely better
rites
and doctrines under comparison. We shall admit, then, not an Egyptian influence upon primitive Orphism which is possible but non-proven but a close similarity
rites.
On
one point
and discovered
tombs dating from the third and second centuries in Southern Italy and Crete, frag-
ments have been found of a little Orphic poem engraved on golden tablets, which was designed to guide the dead on his journey beyond the tomb, and to forewarn him of
Orphica, ed. Abel, p. 237. I have discussed Plato, pp. 364 E-365 A these passages in the Revue de Philologie, 1899, p. 228, in answer to
1
;
ibid. p. 126.
'
Diod.
i.
96.
123
Allowing
Greek thought,
'
this guide is
Book
in
selfsame object of protecting the dead waj'farer against the perils besetting his pilgrimage to the Better Land.-
Our
of pra}Tr
and
Orphic both. From Egypt it penetrated into the Jewish community of Alexandria, and thence into the vast region dominated by Alexandrian commerce through Orphism it spread into Greece, Asia Minor, and Italy. The soil was well prepared by a double ploughing for the spiritual
;
revolution,
which,
in
place
of
sub-
and
goes
up
to
God, that
He would
hellen.
-
Bull, de Corresp.
The
parallelism
was
first
Orphicis, Marburg, 1891, p. 41), and has been ingeniously developed by M. Foucart in his first monograph on the mysteries of Eleusis (Paris,
1895)-
CHAPTER
VIII
1
At
we
some ten
caves
the Pyrenees
sculptures
historic art
the
and
paintings.-
and
of
full
of
the nineteenth
the
cave-dwellings
it
the
Reindeer Age.
said, are also
Most
found
of these cave-dwellings,
may be
in Perigord
of this paper in
In Maj', at a meeting of the Academic des Inscriptions, Dr. Capitan made some remarks on totemism and magic in their relations He did so, however, with reference to my to the cave-paintings. and in the course of the article, which I had brought to his notice Certain newspapers the sitting I enlarged on some of its conclusions. reported the facts in such a Petit Temps of May 20, for instance fashion that it might easily be imagined I was here reproducing Dr.
year, p. 290.
;
Capitan's ideas,
myself.
"
which I am sure he would regret even more than hope the present note will avert any misunderstanding.
v.
L'Anthropologie, 1901,
p.
671
1902, p. 348.
124
125
of
no complete catalogue
these different
:
M. Piette's
is
to
include the most important, but has not yet been given
to the public. 1
At the lowest estimate, there must be 150 and sculptures, each treating a
To
made
at the
Musee de Saint-Germain
The
fac-
arranged and
in the first
now on
first
view,
is
room
of the
it
Museum.
The
collection
of
distinct interest, as
is
now
time
to appreciate
of designs,
on the
of cave-
staffs of office.'
I
As the publication
to
cases,
pictures
advances,
propose
place
photographic
will
reproductions of
on the walls
of
which
be hung
Both the
large
same civilisation and the same period. The by the presence, in each series, of the
for instance, the
proved
characteristic
;
mammoth,
reindeer,
and European
bison.
them
in the
same group,
'
or in
related groups.
In 1904.
AND RELIGIONS
use a
of
list,
126
CULTS, MYTHS,
In drawing up for
my own
necessarily
art,
I
incomplete, of the
quaternary
first
kingdom are
novel
in
upon which
other
and fishermen
animals
In
for
words,
only
desirable
were taken
models.
The
undesirable,
and unrepresented,
as the lion
different
species
tiger
such
am
and
varieties
of
and
so forth.
which one
been represented
is
for the
supposed
Bruniquel
probably a
and Montgaudier
"
are
enormous
eels.*
It
may
animals,
;
and yet
it
is
knew them,
feared them,
Birds,
question
mention the
'
See the excellent engraving published by M. Cartailhac in L' AnThe hind-quarters are distinctly bovine. S. Reinach, Alluvions et Cavernes, fig. go, p. 228.
Ibid.
fig.
135, p. 266.
In objection to this M. Piette produces a few drawings of serpents {L' Anthropologic, 1904, p. 174), together with a carving which he takes to represent a wolf. But the wolf is very doubtful, and the serpents might belong to an edible species. Besides, M. Piette himself acknowledges that quaternary man almost invariably limited his artistic efforts to animals which he could eat.
M. Piette writes {loc. laud. p. 175) They rarely drew birds, and yet the bones found prove they ate them, ... so that it is not easy to see a satisfactory reason for the abstention.'
'"
' :
127
of these
was un-
Now,
if
to accident.
This granted,
that,
we
conclusion
when
away
his
time or to impress
companions by an exhibition
of his
own
dexterity.
The
cramped
for
that activity
The
chance-suggested
silhouette,
with
no graver
did
it.
artistic
number
in the
of present-day tribes,
still
in the
savage
or barbarous stage.
are
common
among
of
the Eskimos,
wall-painting.
Engraving
general
in
Africa
most of
all in
Bushmen, who
also
M. Piette has published two rhinoceros heads (Tich. de Gourdan), Is the determination of this engraved on stalagmite {ibid. p. 147).
'
species certain
-
?
I' cut,
sqq.
128
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
or, at least,
carving tribes must have lived at the same time and in the
same
place.
of discovering
why the
of to-day,
whose conditions
been put
As a matter
may
him
his ancestors
have bequeathed
of
him a legacy
of tradition,
may understand
when
a savage
no reason at
all,
it
no longer
But, should
on
it
common
to
mankind
at
Of those
following
:
ideas,
The representation
an object, animate or
;
in other words,
is
is,
superstition,
older
human mind
religions
that
it
has held
spite
of
its
own
side
by
side
with
often
in
them
and
seems
129
man
is
effigy.
That
fear
and
in
some
for-
had
into account
by
human form
in either
of cnvoutcmcnt,
which was
carried out
still
and was
by breaking
an image
in order to
harm
or
kill
the original,
among
effects
there
network
of portraiture
by the
fluencing things
and beings.
pantomimic or dramatic representations, intended to provoke similar movements or phenomena in the animate
or inanimate world.
We
many
need only
prevalent
among
so
by
by
The Australians
have numbers
known being
by the savage's
others consider
means
man-
Australian
See the examples collected by Hirn, Origins of Art, p. 287, and the bibliography which he quotes. The custom of executing absent criminals in effigy still survived in medieval Perigord (Tarde, lUudes
penales, p. 241).
-
I'art,
French edition,
r.
p. 165.
130
CULTS, MYTHS,
if
AND RELIGIONS
Neither explanation
it
must hunt,
is
he
is
to hve.
is
valid
is
now
recognised,
kangaroo.!
is
acquired by pantomime
is
sculpture or painting.
among
Some exceedingly
same order
of ideas,
of Central Australia
tribes
by
The
name
of
udnirringita
otherwise,
witchetty grub
feed.
When
is,
performs the
ceremony
of rock
painted.
The purpose
of the
ceremony
is
to assure,
by
The
of eggs.^
This
the invariable
to the
any intichiuma.
special
ceremony
no two are
identical,
but
all
to
by stimulating
which gives
that this
known
it
cult
is
due to the
was
- Ibid. p. 287. See Y. Hirn, The Origins of Art, p. 285. Spencer and Gillen, The Native Tribes of Central Australia, 1899^
p. 171.
Ibid. p. 172.
131
clan, the
Emu
same
on
the
to a
soil is well
As soon
as the blood
is
dry, they
emu, with
circles of
yellow
The clansmen
in-
chorus,
we have here an indisputable example of the magical employment of a painted image to promote the
reproduction of the model.
to
me
1903
I find
a description
designs,
drawn on the
ritual.'
At the end
several
volume
in
In their opinion, a
must be
related to
totemic worships,
:
that, in
many
on walls
This
in
curiously analogous to
phenomenon observed
France
that
the paintings
is
at
the
end
of
long
and
hardly
accessible
corridors.
'
Ibid. p. 179,
fig.
29.
Ibid. pp.
614
5^.
132
CULTS, MYTHS,
As soon
AND RELIGIONS
MM.
it
seemed
'
to
me
'
pastime
theory,
and estab-
rashness in
postulating,
the
cave-dwellers
of
the
but, unless
it is
we
are
to
all
attempt at an explanation,
populations
better to seek
among
among
the
agricultural
I
Gaul
or
historic
France.
Now,
accounted
for,
if
the
troglodytes
were
who were
magic
studied
by
On
that
was the
multiplication,
by
holy
The
executed by
artificial
light (though
,
no traces
smoke
be visible under
the same conditions unless the habit of living in darkness had developed in the men of that age an acuteness of sight Those paintings were the distinctly superior to ours.^
In 1903 I ventured the suggestion that, by spending a considerable part of their hfetime in caves, the troglodytes might have acquired the faculty of seeing in the dark, in cases where a modern man would be incapable of distinguishing anything [Chroniqiie des Arts, Feb. 7, Certainty, however, is impossible, without data as to the 1903).
'
power
in
do not
possess.
133
individual members.
If
our cave-
men resembled
rites
way
of thinking, the
which
must
have been destined to replenish the stock of the elephants, wild bulls, horses, and deer, which constituted their
staple food.
Beyond
this there
of decoying
them
hope founded on
it
the principle of savage physics, which lays a spirit or an animal can be forced to
fix its
down
its
that
habitation in
body
is
name homoeoThus we
similia similibus.^
there are
still
country-folk
who
fear to
name
the wolf,
lest
troglodyte's dread
portraying
his
the
ravenous beasts
life
which
life
threatened
the
?
impartially
own
and
the
of
herbivorous
creatures
that
gave
him
sustenance
Is
it
engraved on stone,
which
?
relief-
One
isolated scholar
the
proposed, about the year 1876, to assume a connection between these figures and those of
clans with totemic cults
;
'
134
CULTS, MYTHS,
at the present
AND RELIGIONS
to
it is
and
day no reference
ever seen.^
in
Age
as the
for existence
It
in
primitive mankind.-
livelihood
and
a certain
amount
it
of leisure,
have found
luxury of
impossible to give
art.
much
time to that
objects
life
staffs of office
fastening
garments,
and
I
hunting
trophies.
;
This
held in i88g
but, as I
who was
In an article of the Revue Savoisienne (Feb. 1876), Bernardin, the conservator of the Musee de Melle in Belgium, compared the genealogical staffs of the Maoris not only with the staffs of office,' The instruments but with the incised reindeer bones and antlers. Could called staffs of office are often marked with regular notches. not these have been intended to recall the chief's genealogy ? On one This looks as side, there is usually the drawing of an animal. though it might be a tribal badge. For instance, we should have a
^
'
'
Belgium, and tribes of the Wild Goat, Ram, and Beaver So, the North American Indians had animalIn 1S78 {l.l. p. 12). figures for the symbols or totems of their tribes Revon alluded to the theory {La Haute-Savoie avant les Remains, p. 13)Before If there has been any other notice of it, it lies outside my ken. coming upon these passages, I had written in the Revue Archeologiqiie (1S99, ii. p. 478), with reference to MM. Girod and Massenat's book
Trout tribe
or
in
Otter, in Savoy.
'
have always insisted on the religious character of t;he and Mortillet's opinion notwithstanding I think we staffs of office are fully justified in crediting the cave-men with a well-developed Perhaps the animal pictures, which bulk so largely in religious sense. their art, are evidence of some form of totemism.' - E. Grosse, Les debuts de I'art, French edition, p. 151.
'
Personallv,
S.
Reinach, Alluvions
et
Cavernes, p. 234.
135
added
'
:
It is
To-day
seems to
me more
than probable.
shall
We do
:
not
know
part, I
is
in all likelihood
we never
know the
part played
by the
staffs of oftice in
true
must
;
and
sculptured objects
though
it
may
well be that
a few
simply prentice
the carvings
ritually.
Among
problem.
like
the
modern
work from
This explanation
is
obviously inadmissible,
Now, when the wild horse, killed at a distance from the cave, was brought back by the hunters, it is probable they had already skinned it
perhaps dismembered
it
on
the
spot
where
it
fell
home
as a trophy of victory.
of all eyes,
was
this that
and was
To
call
that copy a
is
work
of art, in the
:
modern sense
of the term,
a clear
anachronism
this idea of a
or relief
the
word
is
That
art, then,
was
was the
religion,
intensely
136
earnest
CULTS, MYTHS.
AND RELIGIONS
of
religion
built
up
votaries.
vital to
A
or
barbed harpoon.
more
of religion
They
has no
were
gods,
still
in that
man
he believes that,
own
them
by
by magic.
it is
evident that
cave-men had
no form
to
whatever
them a rudimentary sun-worship, with the appropriate symbols and amulets. The intellectual level of the
was too
low either for a theology
an essential part of
cult,
all
modern
which
is
suited only to an
sun
is
;
a
^
earth
The Aruntas believe that the night by night to rest on the represent it by a circle, nor offer
Though the question is still obscure, it would seem that the most backward primitive peoples look upon the heavenly bodies as animals or men, and only by slow degrees rise to any conception of their nature or their influence upon the world. By a hackneyed figure of speech, we talk of the magic
prayers to
'
Cf.
spencer and Gillen, op. cit. p. 561. Lang, Myth, Ritual, and Religion,
vol.
i.
pp. 122
sq.
137
In the literal
will of
brush or
by the
man
upon an alien will or an inanimate object, the phrase is but we have seen that time was no longer admissible when it was rigorously true at least, in the artist's
;
opinion.
We
if
we claimed
the dis-
in
movement
as
it
much
the
same form
retains
among
tribes of to-day.
CHAPTER IX
THE APOSTLES AMONG THE ANTHROPOPHAGI
In the year
'
known
of
Bithynia
the
He
was hardly
the complaints of
animals.
called Christians,
had multiplied
losing
their
to such
worshippers
desertion.-
Eighty
years
about
200
a.d.,
the
filled
sumus
et
vestra
omnia implcvimus.'^
The
but
'
The dissemina-
Address at the Musee Guimet, Jan. 17, 1904. This ingenious explanation of the motives which led Pliny to occupy himself with the Christians, and to draw Trajan's attention to them, is due, I believe, to Mr. Ramsay. Moor, Marcoman, or Parthian, Tertull. Apol. xxxviii. whatever nation 3'ou will, is it more populous than one which is bounded only by the universe ? We are the children of yesterda}', and already we fill everything, your towns, your islands, your boroughs your municipalities, your comitia, your camps, your tribes the palace, the senate, the forum. We leave you only your temples.'
^
'
'
138
139
Roman
of
world was
the second
extraordinarily rapid.
At the beginning
century,
its
at the
end
of the
;
Empire.
How
was
this
progress achieved
texts begin to be
plentiful an
is
a period in
attempted
and
decisive,
almost complete.
Christ
had
whom
he commanded to
Now,
Peter
St.
of these
St.
and
St.
To
these, of course,
we must add
Paul, the
own
all.
Epistles
is
On
the
know
of
of
Philip
and Andrew,
five
others
Nor
second century
Eusebius,
down
to
us in
its
entirety.
knew
little
and
Thomas,
have taught
us, received
Andrew
140
Scythia,
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
'
:
and John Asia.' Then, with reference to the missions of Peter and Paul, he adds All this may be found in the third book of Origen's commentary on
Genesis.'
Now
Origen,
and
if it is
from him
he knew of no
of belief.
him worthy
want
of knowledge.
in fact
lowly
the people,
were not so
;
and
in all countries
where
and
what founders more illustrious than those Apostles who had received the teachings of Christ direct from the sacred
lips
?
of the Apostles,
Paul and
St.
Peter
In the absence of
all
had
free play
and the
was a
sort of competition in
of these
all
;
the miraculous.
the
every
many from
Christianity,
had
its
own
and
Epistles
all
spirit.
And
yet
Church,
after
her victory
over
in
any case
141
wide was
Nothing was
the stories themselves were Of these apostolic biographies, known as the 'Apocryphal Acts,' many specimens have
considered inoffensive.
survived
Syriac,
in
many
languages
Greek,
Latin,
Coptic,
Hardly a year passes without new fragments being discovered and not all we possess have
;
and Arabic.
It
is
bypath
of
of literature.
Needless to say,
we
learn nothing
;
what the
and thought
but, at
least,
we
among
and
piety and romance which beguiled the religious imagination of the fourth century.
So much by way of preface. I shall now give a summary of one of these narratives entitled The Acts of Andrew and Matthias in the City of the Cannibals.' To
'
throw
the
its
I shall
simply
tell
tale,
without interrupting
course
by a commentary.
few remarks
in the
Only
hope
mous
Saxon drew
'
come down
to us in
many
The
lots to decide
There is a recent study of this apocryphal work by Dobschiitz, Deutsche Rundschau, April 1902, pp. 87-107. My own memoir was written before I saw that of the German scholar.
142
CULTS, MYTHS.
AND RELIGIONS
and preach the Gospel. The country of the Cannibals fell to Matthias, who had been chosen to fill the place of
Judas after the great betrayal. These Cannibals were a they ate no bread and drank no wine, terrible people
:
flesh
and blood
of
men.
When
a stranger
entered their town, they seized him, put out his eyes, and
of a
his
The moment Matthias stepped within their him to drink the potion, blinded him, threw him into prison, and brought him grass to eat. But Matthias ate none, and
in his tribulation
sudden
And immediately he
him
end
could
see.
to take courage,
of captivity.
Matthias
executioners
sat
in
his
prison
and sang.
the victims
When
the
entered,
seeking
appointed
might
think him
still
blind.
To
his
right
ment
after
he was to wait,
like a beast
slain,
and carved
On
'
This label is called rdfiXa the same term which was applied to the name-plates affixed to the Egyptian mummies (Le Blant, Rev.
arched. 1874,
i.
p. 244).
APOSTLES AMONG ANTHROPOPHAGI
Andrew and bade him
this
set
143
The
Anthropophagi was
far distant,
and
it
were better
'
Obey,'
'
arise early,
to the shore
And,
blessed Andrew,
He ascended
first
into heaven.
at the
hour,
Andrew and
ye,
his disciples
'
them.
'
men
seated.
'
'
Whither go
We
go,'
said
Andrew.
:
all
answered the
'
that land
why
thou go
'
have business
answered Andrew,
my
comrades.'
and
would
fain
'
Come,
'
Before
thee
so
is
fitting I
should
tell
to
much as bread to eat.' ' Why then think ye of embarking, and how will ye make the journey?' demanded the
Pilot.
'
Listen, brother,
Jesus Christ,
forth
the Lord
us to go
money
thou
wilt receive us as
we
are, tell us
If that,' said the Pilot, must search otherwhere.' be the order which ye have received and to which ye are obedient, I am most willing to take you on board yea,
' '
if
'
Matt. X. 10
' :
silver,
two
yet staves
for the
workman
is
worthy
of his meat.'
Mark
vi. 9.
144
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
gold and silver
:
me
for
it is
joy to
me
to behold in
my
and
all
went on
of
Go
our passengers
must
may
and the
thou art
sea-sickness.'
'
may
'
!
bread of heaven
'
the
'
If
tell
may
The
of the sea.'
the shore
day,
who were distraught and ill at when he was on the Lake with Jesus, a
which the Master had quickly
said a prayer,
how one
Then
fall
great tempest
stilled.
had
arisen,
Andrew
upon
his disciples.
like
oily sea.
'
How
I
said
Andrew
to the Pilot,
have been
skill
seen
'
like thine.'
nor have
yet
We,
likewise,'
answered the
;
Pilot,
many
it
dangers
knoweth thou
a just
man, and
therefore
remaineth calm.'
art
'
return
Thee thanks,
caused me to
'
Lord
' !
cried
fall in
with one
Andrew,
'
'
Tell
me, disciple of Jesus, did not thy Master work men speak ? 'Andrew
145
arise
One
of these
He bade
with a
The Sphinx obeyed, and spoke Then said Jesus to the Sphinx Go thou to the Land of Canaan, even to the field of Mamre, and awaken in their sepulchres Abraham and Isaac and
human
voice.
to
the temple.
Again the
and ordered by the temple-door. Many other miracles He wrought,' added Andrew, but were I to tell them all, thy patience would be overPatriarchs,
its
place
'
borne.'
'
'
Not
so,'
answered the
Pilot,
'
for
it is
always
pleasing to
me
The
of
one of the
silent
sailors,
and held
his peace.
Andrew,
too,
was
and
his
When
The and
sailors
then, obeyed
returned.
Then Jesus
for,
as
may
be divined, the
certainly
wonderful
picture.
If
Benozzo
known
!
* And there are also many other things which John xxi. 25 Jesus did, the which, if they should be written everyone, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be
'
:
written.'
146
CULTS. MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
his
'
around him.
Awake,' he
said,
'
and
learn that
Then he prayed and supplicated the Lord to manifest Himself and Jesus appeared as a child of wondrous beauty. Andrew craved His forgiveness because he had not known Him. Thou hast not sinned,' said
:
'
Jesus,
'
it
were possible
for thee to
pophagi
come in three days to the land of the Anthroand I have shown thee that to Me all things
are possible.
deliver him,
Now go
and
to the prison
where Matthias
is
is,
and
with him.
shall
it
Thou
gush out
for
is
become
believers.'
And having
so spoken.
He
ascended
into heaven.
Andrew and
Andrew
offered
without
being discovered.
and
at
once
cell
swung open.
They found
they embraced
singing
hymns
one another
and
so
Matthias was
eating
strangers
reason,
whom
and
Andrew
by touching
;
147
Andrew
counselled
fig-tree,
them
whose
to leave the
fruit,
under a large
miracu-
lously multiplied,
ment
where
which carried
St.
was a
it
befell.
The
the
cells
for victims,
all
empty.
On
this,
Return
to
the
'
we may
eat
Then
lots
we call together all the aged people and draw from among them in order that we may have seven
will
That
time
meanshall
while
set
we
will
our young
men
may
eat
and be
filled.'
The executioners did as they were told and began the task of cutting up the seven guards but suddenly their knives fell and their hands became as stone. Woe is
;
'
us
' !
'
there
!
is
wizardry at work
for our
undoing
'
!
But, quick
beards
No
appointed
One
of
own
The magistrates agreed but the poor children wept piteously and begged that they might be allowed to grow up. None the less, they were haled
;
148
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
Then Andrew,
himself, prayed to the Lord.
of the doomsmen. must we then perish
fell
Woe
is
us
'
!
from hunger
As they were thus lamenting, the devil appeared to Search the town,' them in the guise of a little old man.
'
by the name of for it is he who has Andrew, and put him to death delivered your prisoners, and whose spells reduce you But Andrew was invisible. They closed the to famine.' everywhere, but in vain. Then the ferreted they gates, Arise now and Lord appeared to Andrew and said
he said to them,
'
'
show
*
th^^self to
I
these men.'
'
Here
am
I,'
cried
Andrew,
whom you seek.' In a twinkling the multitude round and began to deliberate what manner of him ringed he must death he should die. Killing was all too little into long. A man, whom devil suffer the and suffer
it
is
had and
entered, advised
them
when he was
The
Andrew began the Apostle's flesh was horribly bruised by the stones, and the blood flowed from his body like But he could not die, and, when evening fell, water.
:
he was thrown into the prison, with his hands tied behind him. The next morning they dragged him through the
streets
;
but, for
'
all
his torments,
to the Lord.
'
Hit him on the mouth,' said the devil, his breath.' The night came, and spare him and let once more he was led back to prison. The devil, likewise, with seven others, repaired thither to insult him and to compass his death, but they were not able to draw
149
his fore-
The
third
day
his torture
He
:
but
Andrew
arose,
and
This,
is
generally
in
The
is
type, which
represented
by
a host of examples
mouth
The statue
of
and began
to
a respite.
At
flooded,
daybreak
and began
refuge elsewhere.
'
Then Andrew
Forsake
me
not,
may draw
by
flames,
a circle of
fire
it.'
around
this city,
so that
none
girt
Woe
is
us
'
!
they cried,
all
these calamities
!
have
fallen
upon us because
else
we
They ran
'
and main
!
God of the stranger, deliver us from this water Andrew heard them, and, seeing their affliction, said to
the statue
:
'
'
judge the
150
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
here will
Andrew
as he
left
them
feet.
and
The
those
who thus
supplicated
his
How
my
said
?
Andrew,
I
'
who
for thine
this
own
children
say to thee,
when
thou shalt go with it, and with thee also the fourteen headsmen who were content to spill blood every day.' Then Andrew raised his eyes to heaven the earth
:
it
the old
man and
'
This
kill
' !
he
will
all,
'
consume us
children
'
he
will
make
afraid,
the
to descend
and
Be not
my
children,'
answered
to
life all
the men,
the flood.
drew up a plan for a church and caused it to be built and he baptised every living soul, and preached the
Gospel of Jesus.
town.
'
to leave the
must go,' said Andrew, to find my disciples,' and he went his way, leaving his new converts in great sorrow
I
him
so soon.
Thereupon, Jesus,
to
in the
form of a
'
little child,
appeared
Andrew.
'
Why,' he
said,
151
ascended to
Me
in
heaven.
Return
to the
Thou
shalt
preach
My
Gospel,
lead
back
pit.'
them
to the
He
sped
him on
his journey,
'
:
from the
is
little
men, saying
There
'
!
whom
Amen
And now
tale.
to clear
up the geography
title
'
of this strange
In a sequel to
it,
The Martyrdom
Anthroit
pophagi
is
called
Myrmene
recognised,
or
are
Myrmidona.
Chersonese
as
Gutschmid
a town in
corruptions of Myrmecion,
the
Tauric
the
modern
Crimea.
From
1
what
is
now
in Scythia at
' Herodot. iv. io6 The Cannibals are in their customs the savagest people on earth, neither regarding justice nor observing any form of Nomads one and all, they wear a garb resembling the Scythic, law. but speak a language proper to themselves, and are the onlv people hereabout who relish human flesh.' For the anthropophagi of Scythia and Northern Europe, see Mullenhoff, Deutsche Altertumsktmde,
vol.
ii.
p. 1S3.
152
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
is
supposed to relate
is
but
is
founded
on a
The point
probably
at
his
companions embarked
of the
Black Sea,
wind,
it
Even with
for a
favourable
would be impossible
days
whence
must be
of our narrative.
it
made
we say
statue,
Andrew,
and
supposed
have
been
founded
by
him
in
it
is
originated
there.
As a matter
in
the
is
story
which Andrew
of a
tells
made
intelli-
Egypt.'
Now,
and,
that
days of
Andrew
is
based
It is only fair, however, to mention the palace surrounded by sphinxes and griffins, which, according to Herodotus (iv. 79), was built by the Scythian king Scyles. Suvaroff claimed to have discovered a sphinx's head on the Kuban (Olenine, Tour in Tatirida,
London, 1S02,
p. 413).
153
who were
and that similar effusions devoid as yet of any Christian element must have had their vogue around
Of
all
the
nations
that
Egyptians had the oldest collection of written tales. Not to mention those garnered by Herodotus, we have an
appreciable
in
of others
translated by M. Maspero
many
a feature of those
their wa}' in
recognise
folk-stories
the world.
Some
is
of
them
Here there
One of the most curious episodes in the history of Andrew and Matthias is that of the unfortunates who have their senses drowned by a magic drug, are transformed into
brutes,
and remain
for thirty
are
is
fit
meat
Matthias himself
what
third
is
is
offered him.
Now,
this
episode
recurs
in
the
Sindbad the
Sailor,
which
collection of the
Sindbad and
an island peopled
'
b}^
Without saying a word,' Sindbad proceeds, they took possession of us and made us enter a great room, where
M. I'abbe Lejay has pointed out to me the likeness between the Andrew and that of Circe in the Odyssey. It is possible to suppose that there was a grosser form of the latter legend, in which Circe fattened up the men whom she had changed into animals, so
'
story of
as to be able to eat
-
them
at her leisure.
vol.
vi.
Mardrus' translation,
p.
137.
drawn attention
to the parallel.
154
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
The king
we found
filled
ordered us to
seen.
The
my
like
life.
appetite, as
did that of
gluttons.
laid hold of
my
madmen
and snuffing
like
animals.
all
:
over.
Its effect
upon
and
their
hunger increased
persisted in
my
nor would
me
:
And
these
truly
my
was wise
men were
means
eaters of
human
various
to fatten such as
fell
my companions'
growth of
their
stomachs.
brutalised,
meadow.'
beyond dispute
cidence
the
same
Andrew and
in the
155 the
we
nucleus of the
origin.
critics,
of
Hindoo
three divisions of
family-likeness.
it
in
the
of
days when
was heresy
to
Indian civilisation
of the nationalities
old
prejudice
still
survives.
we ma}' be disposed
Europe,
it is
Egypt
is still
more
ancient,
stories of
More,
we know
had
commerce
whereas Egypt,
in the
Ptolemaic and
Roman
in
soil.
more natural
to
that
the Indian
is
and
the
of the
ever-charming Arabian
Thus,
at the
b}'
two
we
arrive
same conclusion.
is
The legend
origin,
;
of Matthias
and
it
Andrew
of
Egyptian
because we find in
it is
features peculiar to
Egypt
and
of
Egyptian
origin.
156
because
of the
CULTS, MYTHS,
it
AND RELIGIONS
common
with a story
to
contains elements in
could round
my
centuries
me
too far.
My
literature
main object has been to present to you one specimen of a which was once popular, is now forgotten, but
If I
Lipsius
and Bonnet, or
in
the
convenient
ill
spent.
CHAPTER X
THE BABYLONIAN MYTHS AND THE FIRST CHAPTERS OF
GENESIS
1
The problem
now
moment
it
became
self-conscious.
Cosmogonies
down
The study
and lendings
one.
consequently a
Hebrew cosmogony,
it
in particular,
ancy which
the
to the anthropologist's
In fact,
by the enormous
influence which
it
it is
now
The
by
stimulating in others
have
Andrew
\A'hite
in
several
chapters
of
his
invaluable
157
158
work,
'
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
Warfare
of
A
^
History
of
the
Science
with
Theology.'
It is
common knowledge
and
known
re-
mighty
so
is
and Elohim
a plural form
in the other.
much
fused as juxtaposed by an
anonymous
editor,
and Judah by the Assyrians, possibly after the return in 536 B.C. Of late years it has been
them
legend,
instance,
irreconcilable
with
the
other.'-
For
by the
Elohist's account,
;
according to
later
and
The
two
Jehovist
version.
needless to insist on
The facts are notorious, and it is them here. In a word Geneses, The juxtaposition, in is the correct term. the Elohist and Jehovist versions has given
we admit
the existence
two
It
distinct traditions.
known
since 1875
thanks
to the
Smith that
poetical narra-
remarkably
Hebrew Geneses,
were current in Assyria and Babylonia as early as the second millennium before our era. Long fragments of
1
London, 1897,
vol.
i.
pp.
i,
pp.
sqq.
'
159
'
belonging to
pair
of
epics,
The
Creation
and
'
were inadequate
to the
owing
in a
measure
combined
and
in
new
fragments,
we have
Babylonian cosmogonies.
has never been
theme
an
of a
and
We
The
relation
is
not so simple as
seemed to be
in the
Biblical
and
directly
from the
We
of Genesis as a
7).
'The
accounts
are
not
mere
transcriptions.
The
of the
much
assimilation
and transformation,
much
(p.
time,
. .
.
10).
in
many
respects less
it
now
appears to be more
in particular, are
;
The
Creation,
but the
'
les
premiers chapitres de la
i6o
story of
of
life,
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
Adam and
all of
are
'
them
ii).
'The Bibhcal
have no
;
literary
de-
on a similar
of
we
foundation,
even
it
approximately
... On the
other
hand,
and the Captivity, quickened the recollection of the old traditions and supplemented them by fresh materials The easy to graft on the ancient stem (p. loi).
' ' .
.
.
of
many men
by written documents, we may well believe that the metamorphosis was complete in the oral tradition of the people before the legend was embodied
in the Biblical narrative'
(p.
171).
'
.
. .
It
would be a
sign
of
Israel's
inferiority.
and
most
borrower
(p. 10).
The
epic
itself
12).
'Israel
i6i
uncompromising
principles.
Instead of
spirit
and
and
left
unassimi-
and
conduct.
The
2ii).
was submerged
in the
Law
'
(p.
his conclusions
for the
Still,
own importance
to take in the
of our day.
especially
since
by
the
In his critical
summary
the
first
of their results,
to originality.
However, he has
French account
honour
of giving
of one of the of
most
ideas
together
with
the
consequences
which
it
implies.
As the creation
the
of
human mind
world
of the
it is
they
We may
therefore
Jewish people admitted other systems of cosmogony than those preserved in the pages of Genesis.
Now
and
of a
importance
by the
editors of the
'
i62
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
of the
Book of
Job, as though
were
perfectly
familiar
conception.
With that
through the
of a
conception we
now
well acquainted
Babylonian
very old
texts.
belief
common
and Jews of the first millennium before Christ, a belief which held its ground in Chaldaea but left only sporadic
traces in the religious literature of the Hebrews.
'
When
'
'
Athahe
He that can curb the fury of the When treachery lifts her head, is
is
wave.
strong to save,'
the allusion
which
-preserve
an echo
of the
struggle
of the
Almighty
had
With
is
Marduk,
'
free to
according to their
will.
Chaos
reduced
(p. 30).
.
to
.
Tiamat has fallen. Their auxiliaries are captivity, condemned to eternal chains
'
Even
;
after
after
Marduk has
become the firmament, and Tiamat still lives and is still to be dreaded.
For
Marduk
'
Tiamat
is
the power
(p.
86).
Now,
if
THE BABYLONIAN MYTHS
the Creator
is
163
survived in
life in
it
the
(p.
99).
The
following are
some
Jewry was considered, not as the author but as the conqueror of the elements, which are sometimes personified under the names of Rahab and Leviathan
the
of
God
same family
as Tiamat.
Job
'
ix.
13
1
:
God returneth not from his anger Before him bow down the auxiharies
;
of
Rahab.
In his power he holdeth the sea in check, In his wisdom he whelmeth Rahab. At his breath the heavens are brightened His hand pierceth the fleeing serpent.'
Job
'
vii.
12 (Job loquitur)
I
Am
That thou
Job
'
xxxviii.
Who
When When
shut up the sea with doors it burst forth from its mother's womb I traced its frontiers And set doors and bars for it Hitherto shalt thou come, and no farther Here shall thy proud waves be stayed.'
:
Isaiah
li.
9-10
(the
of
Jahveh)
'
it
And wounded
the dragon
Art thou not it which hath dried the The waters of the great deep ?
'
sea.
'
We
reproduce M. Loisy's
literal translations.
i64
CULTS, MYTHS,
Psalm Ixxxix.
:
AND RELIGIONS
'
For who in Heaven is comparable with Jahveh, For who is hke unto Jahveh among the sons of the gods It is thou who rulest the pride of the sea,
And who
It is
stillest
the fury of
its
billows,
slain
Thou hast
King
of
of the waters
in pieces
by the
Creator.
He compares Pharaoh
casts his net, as
monster over
whom Jahveh
'
(p. 87).
Again,
'
(iv.
23-26),
draws
his inspiration
He
(v.
by Jahveh
no).
:
Amos
(ix.
3)
This
'
in Christian literature
It
identified with
dragon whose
of the
the triumph
Saints.
7-9)
'
is
the
(p. 39).
we have
This restitution
of
third
cosmogony, foreign to
of Israel,
forms the
most interesting part of M. Loisy's work. But those and we hope they will be many who take the trouble
to read
it,
165
We may
who
To
'
the apologists
modern idea
(p.
56)
There
is
the narrative,
if
the expression
is
Those, again,
plural in Genesis
who
by quoting
'
:
which
may
be referred
judgment
in
The
it is
plural Let us
make man
an older source
The narrator has kept a grammatical form, the sense of which was clearer in
spoke to those around
a context that has not survived
'
(p. 57).
also a succinct
answer
for those
who
Hebrew
The Jehovist
stratum of
It is
older
'
noticeable
it is
that
the
earliest
'
Hebrew
.
writer
.
who
alludes to
(p. 169).
is
'Granting
in itself a
myth and
Neither is there any question of evolution in the Babylonian myths, though Renan has spoken of their authors as the unknown
'
Darwins.'
Vigouroux, Dictionn. de la Bible, vol. i. p. 171. is to say an account of the creation in which the gods acted in concert. One of the orthodox explanations of the passage came unwittingl}' very near the truth God the Father, at the moment of creating man, would have consulted the two other persons of the
-
Cf.
That
Trinity.
i66
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
not the form that seems
likely to
is
cannot be anything
else, it is
most
be the oldest,
is
(p.
169).
se,
The idea
of a universal deluge
is
mythological per
and without
Indeed,
relation to
any moral
conception whatever.
we
responsible for a
to explain
longer
better
than of old
and
(p.
136).
we have multipHed
the reason
is
textual
quotations
in
this
that
it is difficult,
impossible indeed,
yet
known how
between the
domain
of conscience
of historic science.
:
The
of
work
of demarcation has
become imperative
robbed
history
level
with
the ground.
* M. Georges Fonsegrive, after many others, has recently made the same claim in the Quinzainc We ask that we shall not have something imposed on us to-day which will be rejected to-morrow by the very people who imposed it as has happened in the case of the Deluge. All we desire is to follow the theologians quietly, but we should like to be told clearly what are the points on which doubt is legitimate.' Personally, I do not follow M. Fonsegrive's allusion to the Deluge, as I am unaware that the theologians have ever removed belief in the Flood from the articles of faith.
' :
'
'
CHAPTER XI
THE HEBRAIC SABBATH
Mr. Jastrow's work on the Sabbath
in
^
deserves to be
which
it
appeared seems
likely
to
condemn
it
to
obscurity.
definitively
The
'
author,
distinguished
Orientalist,
which attributes
to
'
Moses
designed
If
to
safeguard the
Hebrew
against overwork.^
the Sabbath
now
changed to Sunday^
has,
it
in the
course of centuries,
of rest,
simply
allies itself
with motives
rightly,
and often
an excellent chance
similar to that which,
of
longevity.
But
originally
the
companies.
'
The Sabbath,
was
at
first
L' Anthropologic, 1900, pp. 472-474. I have retouched the article. Morris Jastrow, The Original Character of the Biblical Sabbath. From the American Journal of Theology, vol. ii. no. 2, pp. 312-352. ^ Overwork might exist among industrial populations like our own, but not among pastoral or agricultural tribes. ^ Sunday was celebrated from the beginning of the second century as the day of the Resurrection of the Lord, KvpiaK-fi (Didache, xiv. i). Cf. Hotham, art. 'Lord's Day in the Dictionary of Christian Antiquities,
'
p. 1042.
167
i68
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
an unlucky day
Mr.
thesis in the
'
of Hesiod, a veritable
storehouse of taboos .^
and the unpropitious days, those on which work might be begun, and those on which it were better to abstain,
he adds
(v.
825)
'
:
At whiles a day
is
a stepmother to
And
the
Boeotian
*
:
poet
knows why
fifth of
certain
Avoid the
.'
. .
Thus Hesiod already knew that, in the farmer's case, the day of rest was an unlucky, a haunted and if the fact has so long been forgotten by the day
:
moderns,
critical
it
does something
less
faculty.
Moreover, the
Romans
it
left it
on record that
was
to
cooking on Saturdays.
Food had
is still
faith-
Israel.
Law who
We
have
it
of Jesus,
of a
by a passage
of
Exodus
(xvi. 29) in
and Days
Hesiod {Classiiiida'i-
2 See the texts in Th. Reinach's collection. Pontes rerum carum, vol. i. pp. 104, 243, 266, 287.
169
obviously the
Immobility
is
an animal, when
it feels itself
feigns death.
few devout
circles.
may
be urged
and moral
enjoined
rest,
Times without
philanthropist,
number
this text
modern
Pius
IX
he answered
man must
it
work
of his servant
and
that
is
will
there
is
of injury to
man and
beast, sickness,
and
Fear
must plead
ChariU juive). Neither M. Ch. Richet M. Gust le Bon whose opinions I we were three had arraigned in it saw how to unmask its folly ignorant people crying in the night. All this was not a hundred years ago, but a glance through my earlier production will show what progress science has made in the interval, thanks to the introduction into her vocabulary of a word unknown to Renan taboo. ' I am far from claiming that there is no morality, in the highest its originality and .sense of the word, in the so-called Mosaic Code grandeur lie precisely in the fact that the moral idea may be seen disengaging itself from primitive taboos. But that idea must not be sought where it does not exist, at the hazard of first putting it there, and then finding it afterwards.
Scientifique, 1888,
p.
67
{la
who answered my
article
nor
170
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
The following is Mr. Jastrow's argument, which he draws entirely from Semitic sources, without tapping
those of folklore and comparative psychology.
The
part in
certain
rites.
Both distinguish
should be taken,
on
which
measures
One
of the
Even now the countryman believes that the day of the moon's new quarter is critical, and ushers in a period of good or bad weather. This venerable
of the
moon.
superstition explains
why
in other
augury.
When
to
of
in
These
the divine wrath ?), pacification, and The old Hebrew Sabbath was marked by expiatory rites, meant to disarm or conciliate the deity it was then celebrated every seven days and coincided
thence rest}
Much
later,
the pre-
very
and was
justified
by the legend
of God's rest
on
Hebrews were
'
intent
upon
from
The proof has not yet been given that the days called sabattu by the Babylonians were the 7th, 14th, 21st and 28th of the month. On the other hand, M. Pinches has recently published a text which would seem to show that the fifteenth day of the month, that of full moon, was sapattu (cf. E. Schiirer, Zeitschrift fiir neutestamentliche
Wissenschaft, 1905, p. 14).
171
of celebrating
day
of
the
and an attempt
never
If
entirely
successful
was
of
anxious character.
made to obliterate its gloomy and The plan seems clearly indicated in
(Iviii.
Isaiah
13-14)
'
:
thou
call
;
honour
delight
modem
character to the
civilisations it
in primitive Semitic
was eminently a
critical
propitiatory ceremonies.
happy in his attempt to explain God's rest on the seventh day by a comparison with the Babylonian myths of the creation. To all
Mr. Jastrow seems to
less
me
may
be satisfactorily explained
upon the
by a
legend.
Without rejecting
fights
god Marduk
;
genii of
the storm after which his anger is appeased, for the enemies
of the cosmic order are vanquished, as the Titans
were
vanquished by Jupiter.
in the Biblical Genesis,
of
had issued
'
by E.
Schiirer,
CHAPTER
XII
spirits
in
Madame
d'Epinay's
to
all
intents
is
fortiori,
the same
for
when
studied
myself,
volume.
fed
;
on Kant,
had no suspicion that such a thing ethnical psychology existed. I had framed a theory my own, which owed much to St. Augustine and here
I
1
Madame's Memoires
'
The Prince
But
did people come to fight shy of an action which is at once so natural, so necessary, and so general ?- Saint-Lambert : And so Duclos : Because desire is a sort of taking possession. A pleasant
!
how
just as a dog who passionate man must always monopolise a woman has snatched a bone carries it in his mouth until he can devour it in a corner, and, while he is devouring it, keeps turning his head and growling for fear anyone should take it from him. Jealousy is the seed of Others, in the eighteenth century, regarded modesty as modesty.' coquetry in a mask others, again, saw in it with Parny That happy art of hiding ugliness Which wears the magic title Chastity.' These amorous futilities seem rather out of date to a reader of Lubbock
: ;
'
and Frazer.
172
173
of of
the
summary
made
ne varietur
'
:
The narrative
is full
its
consequences
namely, the
sentiment
the a
is
sentiment
of
modesty.
This
implies
Modesty
a mark pointing as
Lake Regillus
Roman
freedom.
Modesty
lower,
a cry of
herself
and
feels
rules.'
which she
I
thought
wrote
I
it
at the age of
twenty
though
all,
I
is
am
not
thankful to say
it.
After
it
famous
definition of
and human
suffering
on the
and the
I
historical
is
no salvation
friend of
had a young
some note
(one of the
poor
I sent
Guyau,
who
wrote
'
L'irreligion
I
de
I'avenir.'
him
my
me
dissertation,
and
should
like,
at this
he honoured
'
:
You seem
An
174
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
this virtue,
to attach
supreme importance to
the highest
inferior
which you
it
is
consider
of
all.
To
my
thinking,
is
immeasurably
end in nature
use
If
it
to
love.
Modesty
simply
a
its
war between
the sexes ;
But
.
to
. ,
as a
means
of
damning love
is
a great mistake.
matter
in
body
is
what divides
souls,
we may
and the
barriers fade
You are a materialist without knowing it Thus Guyau himself, in his search for a theory
'
.
of
it
exists to-day.
Like his
what
prehistoric
it
savage, gave
birth.
and a great
traveller), Gabriel
Charmes wrote
It
to
me from
much
same time
'
:
dubious a sentiment.
Renan somewhere
calls
modesty
it is
Equivocation or no,
far
too
artificial
very
much
doubt
if
;
it
existed
when the
first
communities were
formed
and even yet there are surroundings and countries in which I can detect no trace of it. Did the
?
think
so, to
look at their
monuments and
women
went about
THE SENTIMENT OF MODESTY
the minutest bodily details.
live
175
crowded together
True,
some
of the
;
women
is
when they
I
see a stranger
but this
where
civilisation
has
is
ousted nature.
human
man's
it
was a case
of
thorough-going reserve
on
woman simply
not
bear
could
that
his
should
Later,
lie
rival.
this
"
is
soon
by a sojourn among absolutely primitive or even partially civilised races. One of the things that have struck me most, since I came to the East, is the remarkable freedom of word and action which you can
dissipated
use to
women
of the
but talk with them and you find that the very warmest compliments to their beauty will not even raise a blush.
And mind
you,
it is
not vice
seems to
modesty back to the source, and show how, little by httle, under the influence of a purer light and a changed atmosphere, this
it
me
that
would be quite
feasible to trace
But grant
would
that,
budded and blossomed in our souls. alone and unaided, it has thrown out in
I
believe to be artificial
is the timidity of the
what
prove
Modesty
body and
nothing
else.
The
timidity of the
176
CULTS, MYTHS.
AND RELIGIONS
Because the body only
it
gives
itself
it
follow that
has no right
to give itself at
when he
?
and mind
beings
We
so unworthy of an
intelligent creation
that the
most legitimate
instincts
would lead
For
and
sensible impressions,
which
may and
often do
but
of so
we
nature
environment.'
In
these noble
pages
of
Gabriel
there
comes an eighteenth-century theory, false like all the psychological theories of that time, which would make
modesty a
to which
restraint
of the
male
then follows a
much more
is
modesty
while finally
we have
taboos.
the sentiment.
of
most insignificant
of anthropologists
u. Leipzig,
1894,
pp. 89>?.
177
find a theory
which
first
though
it is
not
new
he appears
to
work
is
art as a social
In his
fifth
Passing to
primitive
'
move-
ornaments,'
he
asks
if
the
loin-cloth
worn by
certain
Andaman women
evidently as
similar
decoration
not
go
veil.'
Bulmer passes a
women.
Smyth
again,
'
even where
the
girls
two
sexes
completely
naked,
the
unmarried
The women
belt
are generally
indecent
to
it
is
only
before
beginning their
of
feathers
reaching
From
that the
these
first
and
similar texts,
hope
of
drawing attention to
them.
women,
who
dress
themselves
for
their
dances.
'
It
seems the
women
of the Mincopies
do the same.
Thus
'
178
CULTS, MYTHS,
;
AND RELIGIONS
ornament
And
so,
by a
German Darwinist
that coquetry
will
may
time become
justify itself
on moral
grounds.
incest.
This
is
But
capable of trans-
opposite,
and
is,
of
I
making
think,
seems mistaken
is
for
may
immediate
the
modern savage
be slow to
we may doubt
facts
:
Herr Grosse's
above
we
shall
make them
whole
of
mankind.
Our conviction remains that the sentiment of modesty The only very old tradition
for its origin
gives
it
a religious setting
of
and even
in
modesty and
of the
religion are
As to the nature
taboo from
in his
theory
still
in3,intained in 1891
by M. Schurtz,
Gnmd-
ziige einer
179
is
derived,
still
is
his
solution,
se,
which
as
my
opinion, the
and the
least
open to
'
fatal objections.
CHAPTER
XIII
^
of Light,
was a god
of the
than
five
above him
and
more potent gods, notably the Heaven (Ahura-Mazda, Ormuzd) and the feminine deity Anahita (Anaitis) Earth
or Water.
Even
from
in those
his fellow-gods
good truth,
which
by one estimable quality goodness. means the friend. And, in he was the friend and benefactor of man. In
in Persian,
the
actual text of
shows us
am
all
creatures
am
Needless to say,
am
under
I have also borrowed largely great obligations to M. Cumont's work. sometimes textually from the articles of M. Jean Reville on the same subject e.g. Revue de I'histoire des religions, 1901, p. 184 ; and
iLtudes en
hommage
180
THE MORALITY OF MITHRAISM
To play
alert,
i8i
of Apollo
in Greece,
to fight
friendly
Another
is
hymn He
:
of the
Avesta
ever
lifted, is
a wakeful god,
is
and watcheth
grass to grow,
of
things unceasingly.
strong, but
weak
he maketh the
and he governeth the earth. He is begotten he is armed with wisdom, and no man deceiveth him
:
James Darmesteter, in comparing the conceptions of Mithra and Apollo, makes the very just observation that
the Greeks mainly developed the aesthetic side of Apollo
;
votaries,
It is
he was a
But,
if
it
was not
solely in
his capacity as
god
truth which
cipal
it
symbolises
an additional
was considered
essentially a mediatress
suffering
humanity,
evening
after
evening,
is
menaced by the
hostile
shadow
of night, and,
day
after
i82
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
Mithra
day, by storm clouds big with gloom and terrors. the Mediator
/ieo-tV'/;'?
to
it
and thanksgivings
to
diffusion.
figure of Mithra
and
without
If
gradually
took their
and worship
of the people.
we had more documents bearing on the early history of Mithraism, we should find in them a lesson of immense significance, and one which is wholly creditable to human
nature
:
transformed
simplification
by a moral idea, until the process and concentration ends in a single god
B.C.,
of of
pity
perhaps even
earlier,
Persian
Minor.
was
distinctly slower
deities
but
there
it
Men and
more or
Adonis-Atys,
which
With these
allied itself
of their characteristics.
183
felt
the influence of
was
its
From
joined
that of a river,
is
by a crowd
swells, the
of tributary streams
the more
its
volume
its
more the
waters.
At the time
end
of the
Roman republic,
by now,
The idea of mediation, immanent in his very conception, was not lost, and was destined to persist to the end but, once he became the god par excellence, the tendency was to identify him with the Sun. Such, at least, was Strabo's view, about the beginning
heaven and man.
;
Plutarch
tells
whom Pompey
;
Not
all
the conto
doubt
discreetly enough, no they introduced the worship of the new god and
seems impossible, however, that the diffusion of
of the
can
solely to the
Two more
was the
powerful agencies of a
ephemeral
dawn
of Christianity.
The
first
Roman
i84
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
of Asia Minor,
Mithraism.
of the
Graeco-
Roman
work
of schoolmasters
and
Thus, of
all
the Celtic
mouths
of
the
Danube
It
;
Epona,
was her
the
protecting
goddess
horses.
empire
invoked
and
wherever war,
to pitch their
summoned them
the
first
the slaves.
In the
after
war
in
As a
became a happy hunting-ground for the Roman slave-dealer, eager to buy his human wares in a part of Asia which had long been characterised by
gentler
in the
north and
slaves,
west of Europe.
influence
in the
on
found employment
own
but
if
been accounted
he has
Rome by
Germanic,
185
who wormed
their
way
by
alien
faiths.
Who
and
can
tell
maidens
in
Rome,
in the
and Glabriones
its
Danube
a part of
Ninety
initiated
of
had been flooded by troops of every nationality. years later the Emperor Commodus was himself
into the mysteries of
Mithra, and
by the end
its
the
Roman
votaries.
continued to spread,
For
its
stemmed
century
In the
fifth
it
in
new form
the
monuments
i86
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
statues,
bas-reliefs,
and
inscrip-
together
with
Greek,
If,
Roman, and
interest
unfortunately for us, the texts are scarce and say least
is
where the
greatest, the
monuments, on the
:
in
Rome
alone,
who
and
men
of
in
rank
the
up a
sort of alliance
metaphysic saw
or
thought
it
saw
reflection of its
it
own
sects
principles.
seemed as
and
and
Stoics
Platonists, Pythagoreans, Peripatetics, Epicureans, were breaking down under the influence of a
light,
the head of
its
ontological
conceptions.
The
deities of
Olympus
lived, as
they
live to-day,
on paper
whom
in
temple
Rome,
dominated
religion
and
sophic eye, the sun shining in the firmament was but a symbol of the heavenly light which beams upon the
hearts and minds of men.
In 362 the
:
Emperor Julian
'
He gives life to all animals and all plants ? This Sun that humanity has seen and honoured from all eternity, whose worship is the source of happiness, is the
187
he had personified
in the beginning.
But Graeco-Roman
Accordingly,
whom
it
was impossible
to depose.
described as Phaethon
which proves
become the favourite of Helios, but had temporarily replaced him as driver of the solar chariot.
This short address
Mithraic religion as
difficult,
is
no place
it.
we know
The
subject
is
peculiarly
We
their love
by doing good.
He was
One
who
Waxing
in
it
fruitful
i88
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
them that
initiated into his mysteries,
first
children of earth.
He
pray to him.
in caverns
Furthermore, he
will
resurrection.
When
and
the fate-
will cut
life
the throat of
felicity,
whose
of happiness to all
who have
believed on
Mithra.
It
is
obvious that
many
;
elements in
common
of
with Christianity.
resemblance
artifice of
a
'
to
*
an
the devil.
of doctrine, there
domains
of cult
and
little
ritual.
The
Mithraists,' says
M. Reville,
met
in
sanctuaries
hewn out
of worshippers
precisely
the
as
was
At the
for
were receptacles
water used
in
lustrations.
multitude of
threw a
brilliant light
on the centre
of the shrine.
in great profusion
which represented a
per-
Initiation
tests
into
mysteries
ascetic
of
the
;
god
involved
of
severely
character
and
189
sacra-
ments.
of a bull
One
;
them was baptism by blood the blood and there was also a baptism by pure water, as
of
Further,
by
certain
formulae,
and then
to
distribute the
of
elements
among
chief
the
faithful.
Members
was
of the
the
Mithraic
communities
took the
name
of Brethren,
and
at their
head was a
whose
title
Father.
These
coincidences
easily
less
which
them
deserve to be better
known
could
be multiplied.
The Fathers
struck by
who
told
him they adored the same god. Now, it is had to bring in the
The reason must have been that they knew the legend and ritual of Mithra to be chronofrom Christianity.
logically anterior to the preaching of Christianity.
This
fact
may
be taken as certain.
It
cannot, indeed, be
we
possess,
conclusive enough.
On
Emperor
Julian,
who was
doctrine or
We
should do well,
word
plagiar-
both
igo
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
than the literary legends
hold
their
earlier
paganism,
yet
retained
on the masses
and Mithraism
It
its
alike.
if
true enough
but
in
and paganism, we are apt to make two great mistakes. The first lies in believing that Christianity, in the days of travail when it strove for the dominion of souls, had
for its principal or only
Homer
and
Virgil
The gods
and
in
of
Olympus
republic.
still
that condition
of
the
Temples
still
paid
them
but
to
man had
love
still
ceased
them.
The residuum
of
piety
which
clung to them
was purely
intellectual.
On
the other
was flowing
Rome
and
may
be said
Christianity.
If
it
it
was un-
doubtedly because
all
was
infinitely freer
taint of
was
grafted
all
Judaism, but
refused
solidarity,
nations upon
shed.
Its
it
whom
which
triumph.
191
Helios
with
Mithra,
supreme god
of the Persians,
and others
all
of the old
syncretism,
an
they
error
is
the belief
that
the
morality
against
immorality,
chastity
against
lust, of
humanity and
and
sel-
fishness.
The Fathers
words.
Political
warfare
is
By way
of
example, one
significant
fact
may
be mentioned.
In
was
or
France
the heretics known under the name of Catharists Albigenses was everywhere said that the luckless
it
and examples
of the blackest
Now,
of
in the instructions
drawn up by the
inquisitors
pupils
is
and
this
some
it
them had ever been forthcoming. did not prevent the Church from using them
of
in order to excite
heretics.
against
the
As a matter
192
CULTS, MYTHS,
sacrifice,
AND RELIGIONS
levelled
human
by
sect
against sect, or
valueless.
historical
by orthodoxy against heresy, are totally They are weapons in an unfair campaign, not
to Mithraism,
it is
documents.
With regard
Christian
polemists
against
who mention
its
bring no definite
that,
accusation
morality.
gloom
better
of a cavern,
it
contained
obscene
elements
for
who
love
darkness
preference.
it
The argument is feeble and unconvincing. Moreover, exactly what the pagans were bound to say when they saw the Christians gathering together in the catacombs and it is what the Church says to-day of the Knights Templar and Freemasons, who exclude the
is
;
had occasion
to
combat
it
for
we may take
that
the two religions had virtually the same moral code, and
in this point
in tradition, liturgy,
and
ritual.
Mithraism,
tinence
according
to as
Porphyry,
in
imposed
con-
and
the
sometimes,
After
Christianity,
absolute
like
is
continence.
observing
that
Mithraism,
that
to
say,
communion,
crowned
its
professed
the
doctrine
of
resurrection,
same crown
its
adds
'
:
supreme
pontiff
it
men vowed
Hahet
et
virgincs, hahet et
193
enemy
of
the creed,
definitive.
we have
:
consacranei.
initiation,
Father
their fortitude in
enduring
physical suffering
their
and
inclemency of
weather
and
courage,
apparently imminent
again
Tertullian.
elements,
would he have
two
:
had a dogmatic and imperative morality, such Graeco-Roman paganism never had. At the end
beautiful work,
'
the
of that
The
Caesars,'
Roman
of the gods
Marcus Aurelius,
*
:
"
As to have
thee
caused thee to
to
observe his
It is for
that so thou
mayest have
this
life,
him an assured port and refuge in and that, when thy time is come to quit
in
194
CULTS. MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
hope,
may est,
'
with a sweet
take this
god
for guide."
is
This
Mithraism
but
it is
something
else,
who obeys
his
commandments.
a moral law
effect.
?
What are these commandments, if not And obedience to them is to have a double
life
On
lasts,
Julian,
by
gently with
by the way of wisdom on the other, death will deal him and a glorious immortality be assured
;
him
as a
recompense
thought
The
those
feeling
is
by the
tale.
light of
many documents
that
tell
the
We
his
must
moment
struggle
candour to
realise
its
truly
highest and
if
may
life
venture to say so
its
most philosophic
sense) in a
In the long
of Christian kings
St. Louis,
on the steps
of the throne,
more
He
'
:
Pittacus
Forgiveness
is
What
life ?
Whom
hast
thou aided
Whose
tears didst
195
is
loved ones
gone,
if
do honour to
of Mithra
his character
Now
this
man
his
thought
Mithraism.
On
passage
I
draw a natural enough conclusion from the preceding remarks that morahty is independent
had intended
:
some moment
of
evolution, adopts
I
of its day.
and
My
:
pro-
found
books,
'
Le
Mannequin
anything
its
d'Osier.'
search
could say
is
the
outcome neither
custom
divides
but of
the
sentiment
arguable
that
its
it
shall abstain
existence.
And
the
sum
and
community,
it is
impossible
time,
two
same
in the
same
place.
I
;
great
many examples
^
but there
Mannequin
is
none more
31S
significant
A. France, Le
d'Osier, pp.
sq.
O 2
196
CULTS, MYTHS,
AND RELIGIONS
I
have
Julian,
who
of the flesh
efficacy of fasting,
which
brings the
human
Like them,
which
purifies,
initiated into
of
God.
In
fine,
his
neo-paganism was
What
is
The two
cults
Rome and
the East.
Both corresponded to the same humane customs, the same deep-seated instincts of the ancient Latin world. Their souls were identical. But they were distinct in name and language and the difference was enough to
;
Men
It is for
one
?
CHAPTER XIV
THE PROGRESS OF HUMANITY
If, after considering
human
activity
in
essential character of that civilisation as a whole, the conception of it which presents itself to my mind is that
of
continual
progress,
facilitated
by the perpetual
act.-,
into
secondary
write
:
instincts.
is
Thus, the
modem man
his will
learns to
reflective
to do so, he
bound
to apply
and
how
to wTite,
;
effort,
the
and
find
conquest.
?
At the end
multitude
of this of
secondary
con;
in formable to man's high nature and social character and, environment, a word, the individual adapted to his
for that
is
one of
Man
;
is
to
become, a machine
but the
197
198
CULTS, MYTHS,
of his creative
AND RELIGIONS
of regulated
work
rest
on a certain substratum
activity, which,
by eliminating superfluous
would
make
it
all
'
:
waste
'
!
famous novels
Forces Perdues.'
less
it
An
uncivilised
com-
community
is
in fact,
expenditure
is
ill-regulated.
effort,
The
but
it
a capricious
there
is
Unconsciousness of
effort is at
of organised society
a rule which
Herbert Spencer
memory
that are
as the civilised
it
man
he overstocks
with lumber
especially,
with notions
now
fixed
by Writing and considered a needless The vexed problem of educaa rational solution along the same lines.
many
things to
difficult to
know
it.
that
it
is
overtaxing
The reason
is
For instance,
it
is
maps
to
for information
instead of a
199
Above
all,
interests him.
Valcke:
many
subjects
nowadays
for
any man to
know them
ledge
is
but every
to be found.'
It is
worthy.
am
study
it
has taken
me
I
and
it is
think of
all
to
which
because among
my
successive
teachers
and
some
of
them bore illustrious ical and economical guidance of effort which should be the inspiring principle of modern education.
I failed to find that
names
method-
In
the
domain
is
of
religion,
less
the tendency
towards
The savage is a economy of effort being literally paralysed by superstition, and groaning under the tyranny of the countless spirits all more or
not
obvious.
less
malevolent
first
The
step in advance
common
to a
group
of
men
or tribes.
The imaginary
terrors
on which
now more
priest
clearly
defined,
but
a
because
the
primitive
invariably
acts as
mediator
between
irascible divinity.
Among
is
whom
the greater
200
rites,
CULTS, MYTHS,
ceremonies,
AND RELIGIONS
and
purifications,
initiations,
which
demand a
muscular force
in other words, so
much
useless effort.
With the Greek and Roman, the Assyrian and Egyptian, that is to this activity was diverted into set channels say, there were days and hours reserved for communion
;
man was
free
his energies to
religious
more
practical purposes,
Unquestionably, the
its
Roman
European
contained a
little
knot of
had
liberated
;
observance
lation
them from the crushing yoke of religious but the immense majority of the popuunder the heel of a superstition, not only
Ninety-nine per cent, of
of Eastern
was
still
frittered
away
in
prayer, sacrifice,
frivolities
of
an appreciable part
St.
intelligence
they possessed.
True, a
new
the dread of
lay heavy on
The bloody
were gone
pension of civic
now
that
;
God
and
in truth
super-
and
all
;
theoretically,
cruelly
cults
at least
ali-
condemned
the
oppressive
mentary prohibitions
of
Oriental
had vanished
201
all this,
made new
professional
hierarchy
scarcely
existed,
for
life-
On
of
man's relations to
God.
even
is sterile
as far as
is
concerned.
The medieval
had no necessity to form an opinion on things divine he was supposed neither to understand them nor to discuss them the priest taught him both
:
what he should believe and what he should do. Initiative in religious matters, so far from being encouraged, was actually penalised. The heretic, says Bossuet, is he
who has an
opinion
and
At
individual opinions.
whole
Undoubtedly,
in
imposing
medieval
of useless efforts.
But
it is
of theology
humanity,
ensuing
working
its
in the
shadow
of the
Church,
was
material
emancipation
and
organising
itself for
202
of
for
CULTS, MYTHS,
souls prepared the
AND RELIGIONS
for the
way
freedom of souls
by
it
rendered possible.
a period
when
is
secular
strictly
society
distinct
was
strictly distinct
from
or
supposed to be
religious
society.
Nor
religions
;
there
any
will
continue
to
become a study
human
activity
but, side
by
who
listen to the
doctrines of the
will
be an increasing number of
To
study
the
evolutionist
of
it
is
equally
ideas
in
interesting
their
to
the genesis
moral
connec-
phenomena.
morality
is
as
she
will that
reason,
it is
the
human
nor
:
heart
to
beheves
by
That
has
instinct
that
nearer of kin
existed,
religion.
it
kinship
has always
can
the
the
here,
tie
still,
intimacy
been
has
modified,
and
into
as
elsewhere,
specialisation
come
play.
Morahty
is
the
discipline
of
custom.
discipline implies
restraint
an
influence
man
of action
restric-
203
Now
is
it
is
a characteristic
Law
in-
For proof
it
is
Deuteronomy.
1-2)
:
The
following
is
xxii.
Thou
astray,
and hide
from them
And
it
if
thy brother be
and
if
thou
know him
and
not, then
thou shall
bring
it
unto thine
own
house,
it,
and thou
to
him
again.
is
Here
a fine precept
?
all
But
what
follows
to
The woman
not
perlaineth
man
garment
an abomination unto
was
cited
Joan
there
of
good reason
is
and
it
is
easy to see
why
should hold
regulation
evident.
:
ground
it
in
modern
:
mind
prohibition
of
self-disguisement
corresponds
to
confusion or mixing.
The point
:
will
be
clear,
if
we
finish
204
CULTS, MYTHS,
Thou
shall not
AND RELIGIONS
lest
the fruit of
that
is
to say, lest
it
should be
Thou Thou
Thou
together.
wear a garment
of diverse sorts, as of
make
all
thee fringes
upon
Notice that
It is
not a
all
are equally
the
Law.
Thus commandments
of
and honesty
tillage
of his field.
moral codes
re-
govern mankind.
first
Organised sacerdotal
the
emancipatress of
man began by
:
codi-
an endless
the
Mosaic lawgiver
is
to
doubtless eliminated
many
composing
And
in
is,
goras
force to this
day
THE PROGRESS OF HUMANITY
the mint of superstition.
of heterogeneous notions, united
rationality, classification
205
Now, where we have a welter by no common bond of and selection are bound to follow.
And
here
it is
an
a
made to
establish
as
though
man were
from
his
which regulates
his conduct.
is
The
part played
by the
utilitarian principle
reducible to this.
Man
starts with
which
which
is is
accounted crime.
he
every offence
is
equally
prohibitions do
and
to all
human
society.
of social inutility
which characterises
(it
had
come
taboo
to the
of the Prophets)
when
and was
when
enforced,
left
optional.
Thus
it
way was paved, among the Jews, for that great movement of opinion which was destined to culminate Owe no man anything, hut to in the doctrine of St. Paul
:
love
one another
the law.
For
kill,
this,
Thou
shall not
commit
adultery,
Thou
shall not
false witness,
Thou shall not steal, Thou shall not bear Thou shall not covet and if there be any
;
other
in this saying,
thyself.
Love
2o6
CULTS, MYTHS,
ill
AND RELIGIONS
:
worketh no
to
his neighbour
filling of the
law}
is
And what
ethics,
eternal basis of
all
morality
?
:
For morality
the
shadow
of a
dream
man who
life,
lives in a society.
It
is,
of social
Paul sums up in
solidarity
we
have quoted, he
rises for
all
the
ages.
moment
greatest thinkers of
But he
rises at
doubtless voluntary.
and quotes from it several precepts, the moral bearing of which is undeniable. The following he does not quote
(Exodus XX.)
:
Thou
shall not
make unto
is
thee
any graven
under
in heaven above,
Thou
vain.
the
name
to
of the
Remember
All these
the
Sabbath day
keep
it
holy.
commandments
The
common
apostle, therefore,
was not
justified
'
prehended
in this saying,
as thyself.'
commandments
Romans
xiii.
8-10.
ticity.
a.d. 140.
207
is
so exalted a philosophy
words had
good
faith
and compulsory ceremonial, believed in all that it was inspired by the very apostle who
in
mutual
in
Now,
and unadulterated
legislation
was drawn by
more ado
as the
will,
between
broken
lightly
:
religion
therefore,
an error
to
speak
independent morality
:
an
historical error,
immovable morality, whose canons have been fixed once and for ever. That misapprehension is common to the
religious
for the
one looks
as an eternal code of
And
yet
it
is
clear
ideal of its
own
age, the
it
is
over-late in the
day
It is all
AND RELIGIONS
Man
2o8
CULTS. MYTHS,
shall not
political
and
social
wisdom.
he
theological prejudices to
of evolution, that, before
well emancipated
from one
another
theology, he
is
forging
fetters of
passing
orthodoxy
preach his
incessantly
become the
alone
Worst
;
of
it
all,
he
is
not content to
new
fire
recalcitrancy
correction of
must
and
steel.
and a joy
instinct
for
he reads in
of
the tenacity of
human
centuries of mistaken practice. Only long-drawn process, will men and by a reared gradually, in the atmosphere of dogmatism be changed into evolutionists,
human judgment by
and
one obsolete
orthodoxy, there
replace
of
it
is something better to be done than to by another, impressed with the same old stamp
human
It is
frailty.
call oneself
easy enough to
an evolutionist
it
is
only a word.
The
difficulty lies in
the present
political, religious,
and
of
the
evolutionist,
of the dogmatist. of
For
my own
part,
it
dogmatism towards
no pang,
the time
of
elementary schools.
generally given to the
should
feel
if
the Rights of
always
difficult
209
and the relativity of things and ideas to children, accustomed as they are at home to the unreasoning obedience which is best for the child and the savage, the case is Evoludifferent when they are ripened into manhood. tion governs the spiritual and the material world alike. No idea is better calculated to teach a man tolerance, and
to
make him
is
crimes of the past and the crimes and errors of the present.
Nor
it is
more
fruitful in consolation
for
human
suffering
and
human
heartache.
word
in conclusion
on ethnology
be taken
thing
and archaeology.
seriously,
No work on
studied in
whether
its
;
revealed on paper
or on stone
is
genesis.
The
is
first
needful
is
to
throw into
relief
the second
to trace the
itself.
it
Evolution
is the
is the
law
of
law of humanity
THE END
PRIMITIVE PATERNITY.
in Relation to the
The Myth
By
F.S.A.
2 vols.
is
certainly a most interesting contribution to the study both of primitive culture and folk-lore." Scotsman,
"The book
CELTIC LITERATURE.
Preface and Notes by Mr.
By
Matthew Arnold.
3^. 6d. net.
it
With
Alfrkd Nutt,
the great
which it was written, and of service of stating fully the circumstances correcting in footnotes those errors either of fact or impression which the great improvement of Celtic scholarship has laid open to detection.
Uniform with
the
Arthurian
net.
By W. Dinan.
authors.
2 vols.
Vol.
I.
15^-.
net.
POPULAR STUDIES
6d. net.
No.
ANIC LITERATURE.
FOLK-TALES AND LEGENDS OF THE SANTAL PARGANAS. Collected by the Rev. D. Bodding, and translated
by C. H.
Bompas, Indian
of 400 pp.
Civil
Service.
Demy
8vo.
much
instruction
EPISTLES
OF" ST.
PAUL.
By
the Rev. E. S.
Buchanan.
[/ Preparation.
F W.
Frankland.
Price Fifth and revised edition. series of short studies on theological and meta-
By
the Rev. R.
H.
Bound.
y.
dd. net.
J.
literal
Hebrew.
constituting a new THE SCIENCE OF THE SCIENCES, solves great ultimate problems.
system of the universe, which By H. JAMYN Brooks. Probable price, y. 6d. to 5.?. [/ Preparation.
study by
THE EUCHARIST. A
Price 6d. net.
Amy
Brooks.
Demy
8vo.
DAVID NUTT,
17
I.-THE ADVENTURES OF THE LAD OF THE FERULE. The Adventures of the Children of the King of
Two Irish Romantic Tales of the i6th and 17th Centuries, edited and translated for the first time by Douglas Hydk, LL.D., with Introduction, Notes and Glossary. 1899. xvi-176 pp. YOut of Print.
Norway.
Vol. II.
BRICRIU. An
Vol.
early Gaelic Saga, edited, with Translation, Introduction and Notes by George Henderson, M.A., Ph.D. lxvii-209 10 ut of Print. 1899. pp.
III.
O'RAHILLY.
Vol. Vol.
For the first time edited, with accompanying English version. Introduction, Notes and Glossary by the Rev. Father DiNEEN, S.J. 1900. lxiii-304 pp. [Out of Print.
IV.-HISTORYOF IRELAND.
ing.
By Geoffrey KeatI.
Edited by
David Comyn.
Vol.
1901.
CLAIRINGHNEACH.
lation,
M.A.
Vol.
AENEID.
first
time
J,
Calder. With
Vol.
VII. Fionn.
Irish
ios.6d.x\et.
DUANAIRE
Part
I.
FINN. The Book of the Lays of Text with Translation into English, by John
Demy
is
MacNeill.
Svo.
lxv-208 pp.
los.
6d.
net.
elucidation of the " origines " of the Ossianic cycle Irish romantic history of ihe third ceniury A.D.
and
to the criticism of
LAND.
Vol.
KEATING'S HISTORY OF
and
III.
10^. 6d.
IRE-
Vols. II.
each net.
X THE STORY OF THE CROP-EARED DOG. THE STORY OF EAGLE BOY. Two Irish Arthurian
Romances. Edited and Macalistes. ix-204 pp.
Trai slated
105. 6d. net.
by
R.
A.
Stewart
Vol.
XL -the
MacErlean,
Containing poems down to the year 1666. Part I. Introduction, Translation and Notes by the Rev.
206 pp.
III.
lOi-.
6d. net.
loj. 6^. net.
\'0L.
XII.
Reprint of Vol.
17
Catalogue on application.
DAVID NUTT,
/^
RETURN
TO#^
RETURN TO the
circulation desk of
or to the
any
FACILITY
Richmond
Field Station
University of California
Richrmond,
CA
94804-4698
ALL BOOKS MAY BE RECALLED AFTER 7 DAYS 2-month loans may be renewed by calling (510)642-6753 1-year loans may be recharged by bringing books to NRLF Renewals and recharges may be made 4 days prior to due date.
"JUL 8
1998
3 2005
SEP
12,000(11/95)
nrOliuiHJi