Latest Mythology Forum Topics:

  • A zombie question? (20 posts)
  • Is Satanism a myth? (8 posts)
  • what castle has the whispering dungeon? (5 posts)
  • what was hitlers favourite band? (11 posts)
  • Psychic, Will I pass the test today? (4 posts)
  • If ghost haunt the places where they died, are there ghosts in underwater wrecks, walking around underwater? (7 posts)
  • Any one knows anything about Saint Onofer? most probably born in Spain.? (2 posts)
  • What mythological creature or character do you most identify with? (21 posts)
  • Why is the Devil's number 666? (7 posts)
  • What the name of the Magistrate in the American Colonies that released a woman found guilty of being a Witch? (5 posts)
  • Does have anyone have any inspirational stories they know of that involve surpassing one's limits? (4 posts)
  • looking for a fairytale website/book? (3 posts)
  • I am really into demons, vampires,etc. but I cannot find any canadian colleges that offer it? (6 posts)
  • Ghost or Spirits? (6 posts)
  • is there any ghost named scar in a legend? (3 posts)
  •  

    Greek Myths Of The Origin Of The World And Man

    The Greeks practically civilised when we first meet them in Homer--
    Their mythology, however, is full of repulsive features--The
    hypothesis that many of these are savage survivals--Are there other
    examples of such survival in Greek life and institutions?--Greek
    opinion was constant that the race had been savage--Illustrations
    of savage survival from Greek law of homicide, from magic,
    religion, human sacrifice, religious art, traces of totemism, and
    from the mysteries--Conclusion: that savage survival may also be
    expected in Greek myths.


    The Greeks, when we first make their acquaintance in the Homeric
    poems, were a cultivated people, dwelling, under the government of
    royal families, in small city states. This social condition they
    must have attained by 1000 B.C., and probably much earlier. They
    had already a long settled past behind them, and had no
    recollection of any national migration from the "cradle of the
    Aryan race". On the other hand, many tribes thought themselves
    earth-born from the soil of the place where they were settled. The
    Maori traditions prove that memories of a national migration may
    persist for several hundred years among men ignorant of writing.
    Greek legend, among a far more civilised race, only spoke of
    occasional foreign settlers from Sidon, Lydia, or Egypt. The
    Homeric Greeks were well acquainted with almost all the arts of
    life, though it is not absolutely certain that they could write,
    and certainly they were not addicted to reading. In war they
    fought from chariots, like the Egyptians and Assyrians; they were
    bold seafarers, being accustomed to harry the shores even of Egypt,
    and they had large commercial dealings with the people of Tyre and
    Sidon. In the matter of religion they were comparatively free and
    unrestrained. Their deities, though, in myth, capricious in
    character, might be regarded in many ways as "making for
    righteousness". They protected the stranger and the suppliant;
    they sanctioned the oath, they frowned on the use of poisoned
    arrows; marriage and domestic life were guarded by their good-will;
    they dispensed good and evil fortune, to be accepted with humility
    and resignation among mortals.

    The patriarchal head of each family performed the sacrifices for
    his household, the king for the state, the ruler of Mycenae,
    Agamemnon, for the whole Achaean host encamped before the walls of
    Troy. At the same time, prophets, like Calchas, possessed
    considerable influence, due partly to an hereditary gift of second-
    sight, as in the case of Theoclymenus,[1] partly to acquired
    professional skill in observing omens, partly to the direct
    inspiration of the gods. The oracle at Delphi, or, as it is called
    by Homer, Pytho, was already famous, and religion recognised, in
    various degrees, all the gods familiar to the later cult of Hellas.
    In a people so advanced, so much in contact with foreign races and
    foreign ideas, and so wonderfully gifted by nature with keen
    intellect and perfect taste, it is natural to expect, if anywhere,
    a mythology almost free from repulsive elements, and almost purged
    of all that we regard as survivals from the condition of savagery.
    But while Greek mythology is richer far than any other in beautiful
    legend, and is thronged with lovely and majestic forms of gods and
    goddesses, nymphs and oreads ideally fair, none the less a very
    large proportion of its legends is practically on a level with the
    myths of Maoris, Thlinkeets, Cahrocs and Bushmen.


    [1] Odyssey, xx. 354.


    This is the part of Greek mythology which has at all times excited
    most curiosity, and has been made the subject of many systems of
    interpretation. The Greeks themselves, from almost the earliest
    historical ages, were deeply concerned either to veil or explain
    away the blasphemous horrors of their own "sacred chapters," poetic
    traditions and temple legends. We endeavour to account for these
    as relics of an age of barbarism lying very far behind the time of
    Homer--an age when the ancestors of the Greeks either borrowed, or
    more probably developed for themselves, the kind of myths by which
    savage peoples endeavour to explain the nature and origin of the
    world and all phenomena.

    The correctness of this explanation, resting as it does on the
    belief that the Greeks were at one time in the savage status, might
    be demonstrated from the fact that not only myths, but Greek life
    in general, and especially Greek ritual, teemed with surviving
    examples of institutions and of manners which are found everywhere
    among the most backward and barbarous races. It is not as if only
    the myths of Greece retained this rudeness, or as if the Greeks
    supposed themselves to have been always civilised. The whole of
    Greek life yields relics of savagery when the surface is excavated
    ever so slightly. Moreover, that the Greeks, as soon as they came
    to reflect on these matters at all, believed themselves to have
    emerged from a condition of savagery is undeniable. The poets are
    entirely at one on this subject with Moschion, a writer of the
    school of Euripides. "The time hath been, yea, it HATH been," he
    says, "when men lived like the beasts, dwelling in mountain caves,
    and clefts unvisited of the sun. . . . Then they broke not the
    soil with ploughs nor by aid of iron, but the weaker man was slain
    to make the supper of the stronger," and so on.[1] This view of
    the savage origin of mankind was also held by Aristotle:[2] "It is
    probable that the first men, whether they were produced by the
    earth (earth-born) or survived from some deluge, were on a level of
    ignorance and darkness".[3] This opinion, consciously held and
    stated by philosophers and poets, reveals itself also in the
    universal popular Greek traditions that men were originally
    ignorant of fire, agriculture, metallurgy and all the other arts
    and conveniences of life, till they were instructed by ideal
    culture-heroes, like Prometheus, members of a race divine or half
    divine. A still more curious Athenian tradition (preserved by
    Varro) maintained, not only that marriage was originally unknown,
    but that, as among Australians and some Red Indians, the family
    name, descended through the mother, and kinship was reckoned on the
    female side before the time of Cecrops.[4]


    [1] Moschion; cf. Preller, Ausgewahlte Aufsatze, p. 206.

    [2] Politics, ii. 8-21; Plato, Laws, 667-680.

    [3] Compare Horace, Satires, i. 3, 99; Lucretius, v. 923.

    [4] Suidas, s.v. "Prometheus"; Augustine, De Civitate Dei, xviii. 9.


    While Greek opinion, both popular and philosophical, admitted, or
    rather asserted, that savagery lay in the background of the
    historical prospect, Greek institutions retained a thousand birth-
    marks of savagery. It is manifest and undeniable that the Greek
    criminal law, as far as it effected murder, sprang directly from
    the old savage blood-feud.[1] The Athenian law was a civilised
    modification of the savage rule that the kindred of a slain man
    take up his blood-feud. Where homicide was committed WITHIN the
    circle of blood relationship, as by Orestes, Greek religion
    provided the Erinnyes to punish an offence which had, as it were,
    no human avenger. The precautions taken by murderers to lay the
    ghost of the slain man were much like those in favour among the
    Australians. The Greek cut off the extremities of his victim, the
    tips of the hands and feet, and disposed them neatly beneath the
    arm-pits of the slain man.[2] In the same spirit, and for the same
    purpose, the Australian black cuts off the thumbs of his dead
    enemy, that the ghost too may be mutilated and prevented from
    throwing at him with a ghostly spear. We learn also from
    Apollonius Rhodius and his scholiast that Greek murderers used
    thrice to suck in and spit out the gore of their victims, perhaps
    with some idea of thereby partaking of their blood, and so, by
    becoming members of their kin, putting it beyond the power of the
    ghosts to avenge themselves. Similar ideas inspire the worldwide
    savage custom of making an artificial "blood brotherhood" by
    mingling the blood of the contracting parties. As to the
    ceremonies of cleansing from blood-guiltiness among the Greeks, we
    may conjecture that these too had their primitive side; for
    Orestes, in the Eumenides, maintains that he has been purified of
    his mother's slaughter by sufficient blood of swine. But this
    point will be illustrated presently, when we touch on the mysteries.


    [1] Duncker, History of Greece, Engl. transl., vol. ii. p. 129.

    [2] See "Arm-pitting in Ancient Greece," in the American Journal of
    Philology, October, 1885, where a discussion of the familiar texts
    in Aeschylus and Apollonius Rhodius will be found.


    Ritual and myth, as might be expected, retained vast masses of
    savage rites and superstitious habits and customs. To be "in all
    things too superstitious," too full of deisidaimonia, was even in
    St. Paul's time the characteristic of the Athenians. Now
    superstition, or deisidaimonia, is defined by Theophrastus,[1] as
    "cowardice in regard to the supernatural" ([Greek text omitted]).
    This "cowardice" has in all ages and countries secured the
    permanence of ritual and religious traditions. Men have always
    argued, like one of the persons in M. Renan's play, Le Pretre de
    Nemi, that "l'ordre du monde depend de l'ordre des rites qu'on
    observe". The familiar endurable sequence of the seasons of
    spring, and seed-sowing, and harvest depend upon the due
    performance of immemorial religious acts. "In the mystic
    deposits," says Dinarchus, "lies the safety of the city."[2] What
    the "mystic deposits" were nobody knows for certain, but they must
    have been of very archaic sanctity, and occur among the Arunta and
    the Pawnees.


    [1] Characters.

    [2] Ap. Hermann, Lehrbuch, p. 41; Aglaophamus, 965.


    Ritual is preserved because it preserves LUCK. Not only among the
    Romans and the Brahmans, with their endless minute ritual actions,
    but among such lower races as the Kanekas of New Caledonia, the
    efficacy of religious functions is destroyed by the slightest
    accidental infraction of established rules.[1] The same timid
    conservatism presides over myth, and in each locality the mystery-
    plays, with their accompanying narratives, preserved inviolate the
    early forms of legend. Myth and ritual do not admit of being
    argued about. "C'etait le rite etabli. Ce n'etait pas plus
    absurde qu'autre chose," says the conservative in M. Renan's piece,
    defending the mode of appointment of


    The priest who slew the slayer,
    And shall himself be slain.


    [1] Thus the watchers of the dead in New Caledonia are fed by the
    sorcerer with a mess at the end of a very long spoon, and should
    the food miss the mouth, all the ceremonies have to be repeated.
    This detail is from Mr. J. J. Atkinson.


    Now, if the rites and myths preserved by the timorousness of this
    same "cowardice towards the supernatural" were originally evolved
    in the stage of savagery, savage they would remain, as it is
    impious and dangerous to reform them till the religion which they
    serve perishes with them. These relics in Greek ritual and faith
    are very commonly explained as due to Oriental influences, as
    things borrowed from the dark and bloody superstitions of Asia.
    But this attempt to save the native Greek character for
    "blitheness" and humanity must not be pushed too far.[1] It must
    be remembered that the cruder and wilder sacrifices and legends of
    Greece were strictly LOCAL; that they were attached to these
    ancient temples, old altars, barbarous xoana, or wooden idols, and
    rough fetish stones, in which Pausanias found the most ancient
    relics of Hellenic theology. This is a proof of their antiquity
    and a presumption in favour of their freedom from foreign
    influence. Most of these things were survivals from that dimly
    remembered prehistoric age in which the Greeks, not yet gathered
    into city states, lived in villages or kraals, or pueblos, as we
    should translate [Greek text omitted], if we were speaking of
    African or American tribes. In that stage the early Greeks must
    have lacked both the civic and the national or Panhellenic
    sentiment; their political unit was the clan, which, again,
    answered in part to the totem kindred of America, or Africa, or
    Australia.[2] In this stagnant condition they could not have made
    acquaintance with the many creeds of Semitic and other alien
    peoples on the shores of the Levant.[3] It was later, when Greece
    had developed the city life of the heroic age, that her adventurous
    sons came into close contact with Egypt and Phoenicia.


    [1] Claus, De Antiq. Form. Dianae, 6,7,16.

    [2] As C. O. Muller judiciously remarks: "The scenes of nine-tenths
    of the Greek myths are laid in PARTICULAR DISTRICTS OF GREECE, and
    they speak of the primeval inhabitants, of the lineage and adventures
    of native heroes. They manifest an accurate acquaintance with
    individual localities, which, at a time when Greece was neither
    explored by antiquaries, nor did geographical handbooks exist, could
    be possessed only by the inhabitants of these localities." Muller
    gives, as examples, myths of bears more or less divine. Scientific
    Mythology, pp. 14, 15.

    [3] Compare Claus, De Dianae Antiquissima Natura, p. 3.


    In the colonising time, still later--perhaps from 900 B.C.
    downwards--the Greeks, settled on sites whence they had expelled
    Sidonians or Sicanians, very naturally continued, with
    modifications, the worship of such gods as they found already in
    possession. Like the Romans, the Greeks easily recognised their
    own deities in the analogous members of foreign polytheistic
    systems. Thus we can allow for alien elements in such gods and
    goddesses as Zeus Asterios, as Aphrodite of Cyprus or Eryx, or the
    many-breasted Ephesian Artemis, whose monstrous form had its exact
    analogue among the Aztecs in that many-breasted goddess of the
    maguey plant whence beer was made. To discern and disengage the
    borrowed factors in the Hellenic Olympus by analysis of divine
    names is a task to which comparative philology may lawfully devote
    herself; but we cannot so readily explain by presumed borrowing
    from without the rude xoana of the ancient local temples, the wild
    myths of the local legends, the sacra which were the exclusive
    property of old-world families, Butadae or Eumolpidae. These are
    clearly survivals from a stage of Greek culture earlier than the
    city state, earlier than the heroic age of the roving Greek
    Vikings, and far earlier than the Greek colonies. They belong to
    that conservative and immobile period when the tribe or clan,
    settled in its scattered kraals, lived a life of agriculture,
    hunting and cattle-breeding, engaged in no larger or more
    adventurous wars than border feuds about women or cattle. Such
    wars were on a humbler scale than even Nestor's old fights with the
    Epeians; such adventures did not bring the tribe into contact with
    alien religions. If Sidonian merchantmen chanced to establish a
    factory near a tribe in this condition, their religion was not
    likely to make many proselytes.

    These reasons for believing that most of the wilder element in
    Greek ritual and myth was native may be briefly recapitulated, as
    they are often overlooked. The more strange and savage features
    meet us in LOCAL tales and practices, often in remote upland
    temples and chapels. There they had survived from the society of
    the VILLAGE status, before villages were gathered into CITIES,
    before Greeks had taken to a roving life, or made much acquaintance
    with distant and maritime peoples.

    For these historical reasons, it may be assumed that the LOCAL
    religious antiquities of Greece, especially in upland districts
    like Arcadia and Elis, are as old, and as purely national, as free
    from foreign influences as any Greek institutions can be. In these
    rites and myths of true folk-lore and Volksleben, developed before
    Hellas won its way to the pure Hellenic stage, before Egypt and
    Phoenicia were familiar, should be found that common rude element
    which Greeks share with the other races of the world, and which
    was, to some extent, purged away by the genius of Homer and Pindar,
    pii vates et Phaebo digna locuti.

    In proof of this local conservatism, some passages collected by K.
    F. Hermann in his Lehrbuch der Griechischen Antiquitaten[1] may be
    cited. Thus Isocrates writes,[2] "This was all their care, neither
    to destroy any of the ancestral rites, nor to add aught beyond what
    was ordained". Clemens Alexandrinus reports that certain
    Thessalians worshipped storks, "IN ACCORDANCE WITH USE AND
    WONT".[3] Plato lays down the very "law of least change" which has
    been described. "Whether the legislator is establishing a new
    state or restoring an old and decayed one, in respect of gods and
    temples, . . . if he be a man of sense, he will MAKE NO CHANGE IN
    ANYTHING which the oracle of Delphi, or Dodona, or Ammon has
    sanctioned, in whatever manner." In this very passage Plato[4]
    speaks of rites "derived from Tyrrhenia or Cyprus" as falling
    within the later period of the Greek Wanderjahre. On the high
    religious value of things antique, Porphyry wrote in a late age,
    and when the new religion of Christ was victorious, "Comparing the
    new sacred images with the old, we see that the old are more simply
    fashioned, yet are held divine, but the new, admired for their
    elaborate execution, have less persuasion of divinity,"--a remark
    anticipated by Pausanias, "The statues Daedalus wrought are
    quainter to the outward view, yet there shows forth in them
    somewhat supernatural".[5] So Athenaeus[6] reports of a visitor to
    the shrine of Leto in Delos, that he expected the ancient statue of
    the mother of Apollo to be something remarkable, but, unlike the
    pious Porphyry, burst out laughing when he found it a shapeless
    wooden idol. These idols were dressed out, fed and adorned as if
    they had life.[7] It is natural that myths dating from an age when
    Greek gods resembled Polynesian idols should be as rude as
    Polynesian myths. The tenacity of LOCAL myth is demonstrated by
    Pausanias, who declares that even in the highly civilised Attica
    the Demes retained legends different from those of the central
    city--the legends, probably, which were current before the villages
    were "Synoecised" into Athens.[8]


    [1] Zweiter Theil, 1858.

    [2] Areop., 30.

    [3] Clem. Alex., Oxford, 1715, i. 34.

    [4] Laws, v. 738.

    [5] De. Abst., ii. 18; Paus., ii. 4, 5.

    [6] xiv. 2.

    [7] Hermann, op. cit., p. 94, note 10.

    [8] Pausanias, i. 14, 6.


    It appears, then, that Greek ritual necessarily preserves matter of
    the highest antiquity, and that the oldest rites and myths will
    probably be found, not in the Panhellenic temples, like that in
    Olympia, not in the NATIONAL poets, like Homer and Sophocles, but
    in the LOCAL fanes of early tribal gods, and in the LOCAL mysteries,
    and the myths which came late, if they came at all, into literary
    circulation. This opinion is strengthened and illustrated by that
    invaluable guide-book of the artistic and religious pilgrim written
    in the second century after our era by Pausanias. If we follow him,
    we shall find that many of the ceremonies, stories and idols which
    he regarded as oldest are analogous to the idols and myths of the
    contemporary backward races. Let us then, for the sake of
    illustrating the local and savage survivals in Greek religion,
    accompany Pausanias in his tour through Hellas.

    In Christian countries, especially in modern times, the contents of
    one church are very like the furniture of another church; the
    functions in one resemble those in all, though on the Continent
    some shrines still retain relics and customs of the period when
    local saints had their peculiar rites. But it was a very different
    thing in Greece. The pilgrim who arrived at a temple never could
    guess what oddity or horror in the way of statues, sacrifices, or
    stories might be prepared for his edification. In the first place,
    there were HUMAN SACRIFICES. These are not familiar to low
    savages, if known to them at all. Probably they were first offered
    to barbaric royal ghosts, and thence transferred to gods. In the
    town of Salamis, in Cyprus, about the date of Hadrian, the devout
    might have found the priest slaying a human victim to Zeus,--an
    interesting custom, instituted, according to Lactantius, by Teucer,
    and continued till the age of the Roman Empire.[1]


    [1] Euseb., Praep. Ev., iv. 17, mentions, among peoples practising
    human sacrifices, Rhodes, Salamis, Heliopolis, Chios, Tenedos,
    Lacedaemon, Arcadia and Athens; and, among gods thus honoured,
    Hera, Athene, Cronus, Ares, Dionysus, Zeus and Apollo. For
    Dionysus the Cannibal, Plutarch, Themist., 13; Porphyr., Abst., ii.
    55. For the sacrifice to Zeus Laphystius, see Grote, i. c. vi.,
    and his array of authorities, especially Herodotus, vii. 197.
    Clemens Alexandrinus (i. 36) mentions the Messenians, to Zeus; the
    Taurians, to Artemis, the folk of Pella, to Peleus and Chiron; the
    Cretans, to Zeus; the Lesbians, to Dionysus. Geusius de Victimis
    Humanis (1699) may be consulted.


    At Alos in Achaia Phthiotis, the stranger MIGHT have seen an
    extraordinary spectacle, though we admit that the odds would have
    been highly against his chance of witnessing the following events.
    As the stranger approaches the town-hall, he observes an elderly
    and most respectable citizen strolling in the same direction. The
    citizen is so lost in thought that apparently he does not notice
    where he is going. Behind him comes a crowd of excited but silent
    people, who watch him with intense interest. The citizen reaches
    the steps of the town-hall, while the excitement of his friends
    behind increases visibly. Without thinking, the elderly person
    enters the building. With a wild and un-Aryan howl, the other
    people of Alos are down on him, pinion him, wreathe him with
    flowery garlands, and, lead him to the temple of Zeus Laphystius,
    or "The Glutton," where he is solemnly sacrificed on the altar.
    This was the custom of the good Greeks of Alos whenever a
    descendant of the house of Athamas entered the Prytaneion. Of
    course the family were very careful, as a rule, to keep at a safe
    distance from the forbidden place. "What a sacrifice for Greeks!"
    as the author of the Minos[1] says in that dialogue which is
    incorrectly attributed to Plato. "He cannot get out except to be
    sacrificed," says Herodotus, speaking of the unlucky descendant of
    Athamas. The custom appears to have existed as late as the time of
    the scholiast on Apollonius Rhodius.[2]


    [1] 315, c.; Plato, Laws, vi. 782, c.

    [2] Argonautica, vii. 197.


    Even in the second century, when Pausanias visited Arcadia, he
    found what seem to have been human sacrifices to Zeus. The passage
    is so very strange and romantic that we quote a part of it.[1]
    "The Lycaean hill hath other marvels to show, and chiefly this:
    thereon there is a grove of Zeus Lycaeus, wherein may men in nowise
    enter; but if any transgresses the law and goes within, he must die
    within the space of one year. This tale, moreover, they tell,
    namely, that whatsoever man or beast cometh within the grove casts
    no shadow, and the hunter pursues not the deer into that wood, but,
    waiting till the beast comes forth again, sees that it has left its
    shadow behind. And on the highest crest of the whole mountain
    there is a mound of heaped-up earth, the altar of Zeus Lycaeus, and
    the more part of Peloponnesus can be seen from that place. And
    before the altar stand two pillars facing the rising sun, and
    thereon golden eagles of yet more ancient workmanship. And on this
    altar they sacrifice to Zeus in a manner that may not be spoken,
    and little liking had I to make much search into this matter. BUT
    LET IT BE AS IT IS, AND AS IT HATH BEEN FROM THE BEGINNING." The
    words "as it hath been from the beginning" are ominous and
    significant, for the traditional myths of Arcadia tell of the human
    sacrifices of Lycaon, and of men who, tasting the meat of a mixed
    sacrifice, put human flesh between their lips unawares.[2] This
    aspect of Greek religion, then, is almost on a level with the
    mysterious cannibal horrors of "Voodoo," as practised by the secret
    societies of negroes in Hayti. But concerning these things, as
    Pausanias might say, it is little pleasure to inquire.


    [1] Pausanias, viii. 2.

    [2] Plato, Rep., viii. 565, d. This rite occurs in some African
    coronation ceremonies.


    Even where men were not sacrificed to the gods, the tourist among
    the temples would learn that these bloody rites had once been
    customary, and ceremonies existed by way of commutation. This is
    precisely what we find in Vedic religion, in which the empty form
    of sacrificing a man was gone through, and the origin of the world
    was traced to the fragments of a god sacrificed by gods.[1] In
    Sparta was an altar of Artemis Orthia, and a wooden image of great
    rudeness and antiquity--so rude indeed, that Pausanias, though
    accustomed to Greek fetish-stones, thought it must be of barbaric
    origin. The story was that certain people of different towns, when
    sacrificing at the altar, were seized with frenzy and slew each
    other. The oracle commanded that the altar should be sprinkled
    with human blood. Men were therefore chosen by lot to be
    sacrificed till Lycurgus commuted the offering, and sprinkled the
    altar with the blood of boys who were flogged before the goddess.
    The priestess holds the statue of the goddess during the flogging,
    and if any of the boys are but lightly scourged, the image becomes
    too heavy for her to bear.


    [1] The Purusha Sukhta, in Rig-Veda, x. 90.


    The Ionians near Anthea had a temple of Artemis Triclaria, and to
    her it had been customary to sacrifice yearly a youth and maiden of
    transcendent beauty. In Pausanias's time the human sacrifice was
    commuted. He himself beheld the strange spectacle of living beasts
    and birds being driven into the fire to Artemis Laphria, a
    Calydonian goddess, and he had seen bears rush back among the
    ministrants; but there was no record that any one had ever been
    hurt by these wild beasts.[1] The bear was a beast closely
    connected with Artemis, and there is some reason to suppose that
    the goddess had herself been a she-bear or succeeded to the cult of
    a she-bear in the morning of time.[2]


    [1] Paus., vii. 18, 19.

    [2] See "Artemis", postea.


    It may be believed that where symbolic human sacrifices are
    offered, that is, where some other victim is slain or a dummy of a
    man is destroyed, and where legend maintains that the sacrifice was
    once human, there men and women were originally the victims.
    Greek ritual and Greek myth were full of such tales and such
    commutations.[1] In Rome, as is well known, effigies of men called
    Argives were sacrificed.[2] As an example of a beast-victim given
    in commutation, Pausanias mentions[3] the case of the folk of
    Potniae, who were compelled once a year to offer to Dionysus a boy,
    in the bloom of youth. But the sacrifice was commuted for a goat.


    [1] See Hermann, Alterthumer., ii. 159-161, for abundant examples.

    [2] Plutarch, Quest. Rom. 32.

    [3] ix. 8, 1.


    These commutations are familiar all over the world. Even in
    Mexico, where human sacrifices and ritual cannibalism were daily
    events, Quetzalcoatl was credited with commuting human sacrifices
    for blood drawn from the bodies of the religious. In this one
    matter even the most conservative creeds and the faiths most
    opposed to change sometimes say with Tartuffe:--


    Le ciel defend, de vrai, certains contentements,
    Mais on trouve avec lui des accommodements.


    Though the fact has been denied (doubtless without reflection), the
    fact remains that the Greeks offered human sacrifices. Now what
    does this imply? Must it be taken as a survival from barbarism, as
    one of the proofs that the Greeks had passed through the barbaric
    status?

    The answer is less obvious than might be supposed. Sacrifice has
    two origins. First, there are HONORIFIC sacrifices, in which the
    ghost or god (or divine beast, if a divine beast be worshipped) is
    offered the food he is believed to prefer. This does not occur
    among the lowest savages. To carnivorous totems, Garcilasso says,
    the Indians of Peru offered themselves. The feeding of sacred mice
    in the temples of Apollo Smintheus is well known. Secondly, there
    are expiatory or PIACULAR sacrifices, in which the worshipper, as
    it were, fines himself in a child, an ox, or something else that he
    treasures. The latter kind of sacrifice (most common in cases of
    crime done or suspected within the circle of kindred) is not
    necessarily barbaric, except in its cruelty. An example is the
    Attic Thargelia, in which two human scape-goats annually bore "the
    sins of the congregation," and were flogged, driven to the sea with
    figs tied round their necks, and burned.[1]


    [1] Compare the Marseilles human sacrifice, Petron., 141; and for
    the Thargelia, Tsetzes, Chiliads, v. 736; Hellad. in Photius, p.
    1590 f. and Harpoc. s. v.


    The institution of human sacrifice, then, whether the offering be
    regarded as food, or as a gift to the god of what is dearest to man
    (as in the case of Jephtha's daughter), or whether the victim be
    supposed to carry on his head the sins of the people, does not
    necessarily date from the period of savagery. Indeed, sacrifice
    flourishes most, not among savages, but among advancing barbarians.
    It would probably be impossible to find any examples of human
    sacrifices of an expiatory or piacular character, any sacrifices at
    all, among Australians, or Andamanese, or Fuegians. The notion of
    presenting food to the supernatural powers, whether ghosts or gods,
    is relatively rare among savages.[1] The terrible Aztec banquets
    of which the gods were partakers are the most noted examples of
    human sacrifices with a purely cannibal origin. Now there is good
    reason to guess that human sacrifices with no other origin than
    cannibalism survived even in ancient Greece. "It may be
    conjectured," writes Professor Robertson Smith,[2] "that the human
    sacrifices offered to the Wolf Zeus (Lycaeus) in Arcadia were
    originally cannibal feasts of a Wolf tribe. The first participants
    in the rite were, according to later legend, changed into wolves;
    and in later times[3] at least one fragment of the human flesh was
    placed among the sacrificial portions derived from other victims,
    and the man who ate it was believed to become a were-wolf."[4] It
    is the almost universal rule with cannibals not to eat members of
    their own stock, just as they do not eat their own totem. Thus, as
    Professor Robertson Smith says, when the human victim is a captive
    or other foreigner, the human sacrifice may be regarded as a
    survival of cannibalism. Where, on the other hand, the victim is a
    fellow tribesman, the sacrifice is expiatory or piacular.


    [1] Jevons, Introduction to the Science of Religion, pp. 161, 199.

    [2] Encyc. Brit., s. v. "Sacrifice".

    [3] Plato, Rep., viii. 565, D.

    [4] Paus., viii. 2.


    Among Greek cannibal gods we cannot fail to reckon the so-called
    "Cannibal Dionysus," and probably the Zeus of Orchomenos, Zeus
    Laphystius, who is explained by Suidas as "the Glutton Zeus". The
    cognate verb ([Greek text omitted]) means "to eat with mangling and
    rending," "to devour gluttonously". By Zeus Laphystius, then,
    men's flesh was gorged in this distressing fashion.

    The evidence of human sacrifice (especially when it seems not
    piacular, but a relic of cannibalism) raises a presumption that
    Greeks had once been barbarians. The presumption is confirmed by
    the evidence of early Greek religious art.

    When his curiosity about human sacrifices was satisfied, the
    pilgrim in Greece might turn his attention to the statues and other
    representations of the gods. He would find that the modern statues
    by famous artists were beautiful anthropomorphic works in marble or
    in gold and ivory. It is true that the faces of the ancient gilded
    Dionysi at Corinth were smudged all over with cinnabar, like
    fetish-stones in India or Africa.[1] As a rule, however, the
    statues of historic times were beautiful representations of kindly
    and gracious beings. The older works were stiff and rigid images,
    with the lips screwed into an unmeaning smile. Older yet were the
    bronze gods, made before the art of soldering was invented, and
    formed of beaten plates joined by small nails. Still more ancient
    were the wooden images, which probably bore but a slight
    resemblance to the human frame, and which were often mere
    "stocks".[2] Perhaps once a year were shown the very early gods,
    the Demeter with the horse's head, the Artemis with the fish's
    tails, the cuckoo Hera, whose image was of pear-wood, the Zeus with
    three eyes, the Hermes, made after the fashion of the pictures on
    the walls of sacred caves among the Bushmen. But the oldest gods
    of all, says Pausanias repeatedly, were rude stones in the temple
    or the temple precinct. In Achaean Pharae he found some thirty
    squared stones, named each after a god. "Among all the Greeks in
    the oldest times rude stones were worshipped in place of statues."
    The superstitious man in Theophrastus's Characters used to anoint
    the sacred stones with oil. The stone which Cronus swallowed in
    mistake for Zeus was honoured at Delphi, and kept warm with wool
    wrappings. There was another sacred stone among the Troezenians,
    and the Megarians worshipped as Apollo a stone cut roughly into a
    pyramidal form. The Argives had a big stone called Zeus Kappotas.
    The Thespians worshipped a stone which they called Eros; "their
    oldest idol is a rude stone".[3] It is well known that the
    original fetish-stone has been found in situ below the feet of the
    statue of Apollo in Delos. On this showing, then, the religion of
    very early Greeks in Greece was not unlike that of modern Negroes.
    The artistic evolution of the gods, a remarkably rapid one after a
    certain point, could be traced in every temple. It began with the
    rude stone, and rose to the wooden idol, in which, as we have seen,
    Pausanias and Porphyry found such sanctity. Next it reached the
    hammered bronze image, passed through the archaic marbles, and
    culminated in the finer marbles and the chryselephantine statues of
    Zeus and Athena. But none of the ancient sacred objects lost their
    sacredness. The oldest were always the holiest idols; the oldest
    of all were stumps and stones, like savage fetish-stones.


    [1] Pausanias, ii. 2.

    [2] Clemens Alex., Protrept. (Oxford, 1715). p. 41.

    [3] Gill, Myths of South Pacific, p. 60. Compare a god, which
    proved to he merely pumice-stone, and was regarded as the god of
    winds and waves, having been drifted to Puka-Puka. Offerings of
    food were made to it during hurricanes.


    Another argument in favour of the general thesis that savagery left
    deep marks on Greek life in general, and on myth in particular, may
    be derived from survivals of totemism in ritual and legend. The
    following instances need not necessarily be accepted, but it may be
    admitted that they are precisely the traces which totemism would
    leave had it once existed, and then waned away on the advance of
    civilisation.[1]


    [1] The argument to be derived from the character of the Greek
    [Greek text omitted] as a modified form of the totem-kindred is too
    long and complex to be put forward here. It is stated in Custom
    and Myth, "The history of the Family," in M'Lennan's Studies in
    Early history, and is assumed, if not proved, in Ancient Society by
    the late Mr. Lewis Morgan.


    That Greeks in certain districts regarded with religious reverence
    certain plants and animals is beyond dispute. That some stocks
    even traced their lineage to beasts will be shown in the chapter on
    Greek Divine Myths, and the presumption is that these creatures,
    though explained as incarnations and disguises of various gods,
    were once totems sans phrase, as will be inferred from various
    examples. Clemens Alexandrinus, again, after describing the
    animal-worship of the Egyptians, mentions cases of zoolatry in
    Greece.[1] The Thessalians revered storks, the Thebans weasels,
    and the myth ran that the weasel had in some way aided Alcmena when
    in labour with Heracles. In another form of the myth the weasel
    was the foster-mother of the hero.[2] Other Thessalians, the
    Myrmidons, claimed descent from the ant and revered ants. The
    religious respect paid to mice in the temple of Apollo Smintheus,
    in the Troad, Rhodes, Gela, Lesbos and Crete is well known, and a
    local tribe were alluded to as Mice by an oracle. The god himself,
    like the Japanese harvest-god, was represented in art with a mouse
    at his foot, and mice, as has been said, were fed at his shrine.[3]
    The Syrians, says Clemens Alexandrinus, worship doves and fishes,
    as the Elians worship Zeus.[4] The people of Delphi adored the
    wolf,[5] and the Samians the sheep. The Athenians had a hero whom
    they worshipped in the shape of a wolf.[6] A remarkable testimony
    is that of the scholiast on Apollonius Rhodius, ii. 124. "The
    wolf," he says, "was a beast held in honour by the Athenians, and
    whosoever slays a wolf collects what is needful for its burial."
    The burial of sacred animals in Egypt is familiar. An Arab tribe
    mourns over and solemnly buries all dead gazelles.[7] Nay, flies
    were adored with the sacrifice of an ox near the temple of Apollo
    in Leucas.[8] Pausanias (iii. 22) mentions certain colonists who
    were guided by a hare to a site where the animal hid in a myrtle-
    bush. They therefore adore the myrtle, [Greek text omitted]. In
    the same way a Carian stock, the Ioxidae, revered the asparagus.[9]
    A remarkable example of descent mythically claimed from one of the
    lower animals is noted by Otfried Muller.[10] Speaking of the swan
    of Apollo, he says, "That deity was worshipped, according to the
    testimony of the Iliad, in the Trojan island of Tenedos. There,
    too, was Tennes honoured as the [Greek text omitted] of the island.
    Now his father was called Cycnus (the swan) in an oft-told and
    romantic legend.[11] . . . The swan, therefore, as father to the
    chief hero on the Apolline island, stands in distinct relation to
    the god, who is made to come forward still more prominently from
    the fact that Apollo himself is also called father of Tennes. I
    think we can scarcely fail to recognise a mythus which was local at
    Tenedos. . . . The fact, too, of calling the swan, instead of
    Apollo, the father of a hero, demands altogether a simplicity and
    boldness of fancy which are far more ancient than the poems of
    Homer."


    [1] Op. cit., i. 34.

    [2] Scholiast on Iliad, xix. 119.

    [3] Aelian, H. A., xii. 5; Strabo, xiii. 604. Compare "Apollo and
    the Mouse, Custom and Myth, pp. 103-120.

    [4] Lucian, De Dea Syria.

    [5] Aelian, H. A., xii. 40.

    [6] Harpocration, [Greek text omitted]. Compare an address to the
    wolf-hero, "who delights in the flight and tears of men," in
    Aristophanes, Vespae, 389.

    [7] Robertson Smith, Kinship in Early Arabia, pp. 195-204.

    [8] Aelian, xi. 8.

    [9] Plutarch, Theseus, 14.

    [10] Proleg., Engl. trans., p. 204.

    [11] [Canne on Conon, 28.]


    Had Muller known that this "simplicity and boldness of fancy" exist
    to-day, for example, among the Swan tribe of Australia, he would
    probably have recognised in Cycnus a survival from totemism. The
    fancy survives again in Virgil's Cupavo, "with swan's plumes rising
    from his crest, the mark of his father's form".[1] Descent was
    claimed, not only from a swan Apollo, but from a dog Apollo.


    [1] Aeneid, x. 187.


    In connection with the same set of ideas, it is pointed out that
    several [Greek text omitted], or stocks, had eponymous heroes, in
    whose names the names of the ancestral beast apparently survived.
    In Attica the Crioeis have their hero (Crio, "Ram"), the Butadae
    have Butas ("Bullman"), the Aegidae have Aegeus ("Goat"), and the
    Cynadae, Cynus ("Dog"). Lycus, according to Harpocration (s. v.)
    has his statue in the shape of a wolf in the Lyceum. "The general
    facts that certain animals might not be sacrificed to certain gods"
    (at Athens the Aegidae introduced Athena, to whom no goat might be
    offered on the Acropolis, while she herself wore the goat skin,
    aegis), "while, on the other hand, each deity demanded particular
    victims, explained by the ancients themselves in certain cases to
    be hostile animals, find their natural explanation" in totemism.[1]
    Mr. Evelyn Abbott points out, however, that the names Aegeus,
    Aegae, Aegina, and others, may be connected with the goat only by
    an old volks-etymologie, as on coins of Aegina in Achaea. The real
    meaning of the words may be different. Compare [Greek text
    omitted], the sea-shore. Mr. J. G. Frazer does not, at present,
    regard totemism as proved in the case of Greece.[2]


    [1] Some apparent survivals of totemism in ritual will be found in
    the chapter on Greek gods, especially Zeus, Dionysus, and Apollo.

    [2] See his Golden Bough, an alternative explanation of these
    animals in connection with "The Corn Spirit".


    As final examples of survivals from the age of barbarism in the
    religion of Greece, certain features in the Mysteries may be noted.
    Plutarch speaks of "the eating of raw flesh, and tearing to pieces
    of victims, as also fastings and beatings of the breast, and again
    in many places abusive language at the sacrifices, and other mad
    doings". The mysteries of Demeter, as will appear when her legend
    is criticised, contained one element all unlike these "mad doings";
    and the evidence of Sophocles, Pindar, Plutarch and others
    demonstrate that religious consolations were somehow conveyed in
    the Eleusinia. But Greece had many other local mysteries, and in
    several of these it is undeniable the Greeks acted much as
    contemporary Australians, Zunis and Negroes act in their secret
    initiations which, however, also inculcate moral ideas of
    considerable excellence. Important as these analogies are, they
    appear to have escaped the notice of most mythologists. M. Alfred
    Maury, however, in Les Religions de la Grece, published in 1857,
    offers several instances of hidden rites, common to Hellas and to
    barbarism.

    There seem in the mysteries of savage races to be two chief
    purposes. There is the intention of giving to the initiated a
    certain sacred character, which puts them in close relation with
    gods or demons, and there is the introduction of the young to
    complete or advancing manhood, and to full participation in the
    savage Church with its ethical ideas. The latter ceremonies
    correspond, in short, to confirmation, and they are usually of a
    severe character, being meant to test by fasting (as Plutarch says)
    and by torture (as in the familiar Spartan rite) the courage and
    constancy of the young braves. The Greek mysteries best known to
    us are the Thesmophoria and the Eleusinia. In the former the rites
    (as will appear later) partook of the nature of savage "medicine"
    or magic, and were mainly intended to secure fertility in husbandry
    and in the family. In the Eleusinia the purpose was the
    purification of the initiated, secured by ablutions and by standing
    on the "ram's-skin of Zeus," and after purifications the mystae
    engaged in sacred dances, and were permitted to view a miracle play
    representing the sorrows and consolations of Demeter. There was a
    higher element, necessarily obscure in nature. The chief features
    in the whole were purifications, dancing, sacrifice and the
    representation of the miracle play. It would be tedious to offer
    an exhaustive account of savage rites analogous to these mysteries
    of Hellas. Let it suffice to display the points where Greek found
    itself in harmony with Australian, and American, and African
    practice. These points are: (1) mystic dances; (2) the use of a
    little instrument, called turndun in Australia, whereby a roaring
    noise is made, and the profane are warned off; (3) the habit of
    daubing persons about to be initiated with clay or anything else
    that is sordid, and of washing this off; apparently by way of
    showing that old guilt is removed and a new life entered upon; (4)
    the performances with serpents may be noticed, while the "mad
    doings" and "howlings" mentioned by Plutarch are familiar to every
    reader of travels in uncivilised countries; (5) ethical instruction
    is communicated.

    First, as to the mystic dances, Lucian observes:[1] "You cannot
    find a single ancient mystery in which there is not dancing. . . .
    This much all men know, that most people say of the revealers of
    the mysteries that they 'dance them out'" ([Greek text omitted]).
    Clemens of Alexandria uses the same term when speaking of his own
    "appalling revelations".[2] So closely connected are mysteries
    with dancing among savages, that when Mr. Orpen asked Qing, the
    Bushman hunter, about some doctrines in which Qing was not
    initiated, he said: "Only the initiated men of that dance know
    these things". To "dance" this or that means to be acquainted with
    this or that myth, which is represented in a dance or ballet
    d'action[3] ([Greek text omitted]). So widely distributed is the
    practice, that Acosta, in an interesting passage, mentions it as
    familiar to the people of Peru before and after the Spanish
    conquest. The text is a valuable instance of survival in religion.
    When they were converted to Christianity the Peruvians detected the
    analogy between our sacrament and their mysteries, and they kept up
    as much as possible of the old rite in the new ritual. Just as the
    mystae of Eleusis practised chastity, abstaining from certain food,
    and above all from beans, before the great Pagan sacrament, so did
    the Indians. "To prepare themselves all the people fasted two
    days, during which they did neyther company with their wives, nor
    eate any meate with salt or garlicke, nor drink any chic. . . .
    And although the Indians now forbeare to sacrifice beasts or other
    things publikely, which cannot be hidden from the Spaniardes, yet
    doe they still use many ceremonies that have their beginnings from
    these feasts and auntient superstitions, for at this day do they
    covertly make their feast of Ytu at the daunces of the feast of the
    Sacrament. Another feast falleth almost at the same time, whereas
    the Christians observe the solempnitie of the holy Sacrament, which
    DOTH RESEMBLE IT IN SOME SORT, AS IN DAUNCING, SINGING AND
    REPRESENTATIONS."[4] The holy "daunces" at Seville are under Papal
    disapproval, but are to be kept up, it is said, till the peculiar
    dresses used in them are worn out. Acosta's Indians also had
    "garments which served only for this feast". It is superfluous to
    multiply examples of the dancing, which is an invariable feature of
    savage as of Greek mysteries.


    [1] [Greek text omitted], chap. xv. 277.

    [2] Ap. Euseb., Praep. Ev., ii, 3, 6.

    [3] Cape Monthly Magazine, July, 1874.

    [4] Acosta, Historie of the Indies, book v. chap. xxviii. London,
    1604.


    2. The Greek and savage use of the turndun, or bribbun of Australia
    in the mysteries is familiar to students. This fish-shaped flat
    board of wood is tied to a string, and whirled round, so as to
    cause a peculiar muffled roar. Lobeck quotes from the old scholia
    on Clemens Alexandrinus, published by Bastius in annotations on St.
    Gregory, the following Greek description of the turndun, the "bull-
    roarer" of English country lads, the Gaelic srannam:[1] [Greek text
    omitted]". "The conus was a little slab of wood, tied to a string,
    and whirled round in the mysteries to make a whirring noise. As
    the mystic uses of the turndun in Australia, New Zealand, New
    Mexico and Zululand have elsewhere been described at some length
    (Custom and Myth, pp. 28-44), it may be enough to refer the reader
    to the passage. Mr. Taylor has since found the instrument used in
    religious mysteries in West Africa, so it has now been tracked
    almost round the world. That an instrument so rude should be
    employed by Greek and Australians on mystic occasions is in itself
    a remarkable coincidence. Unfortunately, Lobeck, who published the
    Greek description of the turndun (Aglaophamus, 700), was
    unacquainted with the modern ethnological evidence.


    [1] Pronounced strantham. For this information I am indebted to my
    friend Mr. M'Allister, schoolmaster at St. Mary's Loch.


    3. The custom of plastering the initiated over with clay or filth
    was common in Greek as in barbaric mysteries. Greek examples may
    be given first. Demosthenes accuses Aeschines of helping his
    mother in certain mystic rites, aiding her, especially, by
    bedaubing the initiate with clay and bran.[1] Harpocration
    explains the term used ([Greek text omitted]) thus: "Daubing the
    clay and bran on the initiate, to explain which they say that the
    Titans when they attacked Dionysus daubed themselves over with
    chalk, but afterwards, for ritual purposes, clay was used". It may
    be urged with some force that the mother of Aeschines introduced
    foreign, novel and possibly savage rites. But Sophocles, in a
    fragment of his lost play, the Captives, uses the term in the same
    ritual sense--


    [Greek text omitted].


    [1] De Corona, 313.


    The idea clearly was that by cleansing away the filth plastered
    over the body was symbolised the pure and free condition of the
    initiate. He might now cry in the mystic chant--


    [Greek text omitted].
    Worse have I fled, better have I found.


    That this was the significance of the daubing with clay in Greek
    mysteries and the subsequent cleansing seems quite certain. We are
    led straight to this conclusion by similar rites, in which the
    purpose of mystically cleansing was openly put forward. Thus
    Plutarch, in his essay on superstition, represents the guilty man
    who would be purified actually rolling in clay, confessing his
    misdeeds, and then sitting at home purified by the cleansing
    process ([Greek text omitted]).[1] In another rite, the cleansing
    of blood-guiltiness, a similar process was practised. Orestes,
    after killing his mother, complains that the Eumenides do not cease
    to persecute him, though he has been "purified by blood of
    swine".[2] Apollonius says that the red hand of the murderer was
    dipped in the blood of swine and then washed.[3] Athenaeus
    describes a similar unpleasant ceremony.[4] The blood of whelps
    was apparently used also, men being first daubed with it and then
    washed clean.[5] The word [Greek text omitted] is again the
    appropriate ritual term. Such rites Plutarch calls [Greek text
    omitted], "filthy purifications".[6] If daubing with dirt is known
    to have been a feature of Greek mysteries, it meets us everywhere
    among savages. In O-Kee-Pa, that curiously minute account of the
    Mandan mysteries, Catlin writes that a portion of the frame of the
    initiate was "covered with clay, which the operator took from a
    wooden bowl, and with his hand plastered unsparingly over". The
    fifty young men waiting for initiation "were naked and entirely
    covered with clay of various colours".[7] The custom is mentioned
    by Captain John Smith in Virginia. Mr. Winwood Reade found it in
    Africa, where, as among the Mandans and Spartans, cruel torture and
    flogging accompanied the initiation of young men.[8] In Australia
    the evidence for daubing the initiate is very abundant.[9] In New
    Mexico, the Zunis stole Mr. Cushing's black paint, as considering
    it even better than clay for religious daubing.[10]


    [1] So Hermann, op. cit., 133.

    [2] Eumenides, 273.

    [3] Argonautica, iv. 693.

    [4] ix. 78. Hermann, from whom the latter passages are borrowed,
    also quotes the evidence of a vase published by Feuerbach,
    Lehrbuch, p. 131, with other authorities.

    [5] Plutarch, Quaest. Rom., 68.

    [6] De Superstitione, chap. xii.

    [7] O-Kee-Pa, London, 1867, p. 21.

    [8] Savage Africa, case of Mongilomba; Pausanias, iii. 15.

    [9] Brough Smyth, i. 60.

    [10] Custma and Myth, p. 40.


    4. Another savage rite, the use of serpents in Greek mysteries, is
    attested by Clemens Alexandrinus and by Demosthenes (loc. cit.).
    Clemens says the snakes were caressed in representations of the
    loves of Zeus in serpentine form. The great savage example is that
    of "the snake-dance of the Moquis," who handle rattle-snakes in the
    mysteries without being harmed.[1] The dance is partly totemistic,
    partly meant, like the Thesmophoria, to secure the fertility of the
    lands of the Moquis of Arizonas. The turndum or [Greek text
    omitted] is employed. Masks are worn, as in the rites of Demeter
    Cidiria in Arcadia.[2]


    [1] The Snake-Dance of the Moquis. By Captain Jobn G. Bourke,
    London, 1884.

    [2] Pausanias, viii. 16.


    5. This last point of contact between certain Greek and certain
    savage mysteries is highly important. The argument of Lobeck, in
    his celebrated work Aglaophamus, is that the Mysteries were of no
    great moment in religion. Had he known the evidence as to savage
    initiations, he would have been confirmed in his opinion, for many
    of the singular Greek rites are clearly survivals from savagery.
    But was there no more truly religious survival? Pindar is a very
    ancient witness that things of divine import were revealed. "Happy
    is he who having seen these things goes under the hollow earth. He
    knows the end of life, and the god-given beginning."[1] Sophocles
    "chimes in," as Lobeck says, declaring that the initiate alone LIVE
    in Hades, while other souls endure all evils. Crinagoras avers
    that even in life the initiate live secure, and in death are the
    happier. Isagoras declares that about the end of life and all
    eternity they have sweet hopes.


    [1] Fragm., cxvi., 128 H. p. 265.


    Splendida testimonia, cries Lobeck. He tries to minimise the
    evidence, remarking that Isocrates promises the very same rewards
    to all who live justly and righteously. But why not, if to live
    justly and righteously was part of the teaching of the mysteries of
    Eleusis? Cicero's evidence, almost a translation of the Greek
    passages already cited, Lobeck dismisses as purely rhetorical.[1]
    Lobeck's method is rather cavalier. Pindar and Sophocles meant
    something of great significance.


    [1] De Legibus ii. 14; Aglaophamus, pp. 69-74.


    Now we have acknowledged savage survivals of ugly rites in the
    Greek mysteries. But it is only fair to remember that, in certain
    of the few savage mysteries of which we know the secret,
    righteousness of life and a knowledge of good are inculcated. This
    is the case in Australia, and in Central Africa, where to be
    "uninitiated" is equivalent to being selfish.[1] Thus it seems not
    improbable that consolatory doctrines were expounded in the
    Eleusinia, and that this kind of sermon or exhortation was no less
    a survival from savagery than the daubing with clay, and the [Greek
    text omitted], and other wild rites.


    [1] Making of Religion, pp. 193-197, 235.


    We have now attempted to establish that in Greek law and ritual
    many savage customs and usages did undeniably survive. We have
    seen that both philosophical and popular opinion in Greece believed
    in a past age of savagery. In law, in religion, in religious art,
    in custom, in human sacrifice, in relics of totemism, and in the
    mysteries, we have seen that the Greeks retained plenty of the
    usages now found among the remotest and most backward races. We
    have urged against the suggestion of borrowing from Egypt or Asia
    that these survivals are constantly found in local and tribal
    religion and rituals, and that consequently they probably date from
    that remote prehistoric past when the Greeks lived in village
    settlements. It may still doubtless be urged that all these things
    are Pelasgic, and were the customs of a race settled in Hellas
    before the arrival of the Homeric Achaeans, and Dorians, and
    Argives, who, on this hypothesis, adopted and kept up the old
    savage Pelasgian ways and superstitions. It is impossible to prove
    or disprove this belief, nor does it affect our argument. We
    allege that all Greek life below the surface was rich in institutions
    now found among the most barbaric peoples. These institutions,
    whether borrowed or inherited, would still be part of the legacy
    left by savages to cultivated peoples. As this legacy is so large
    in custom and ritual, it is not unfair to argue that portions of it
    will also be found in myths. It is now time to discuss Greek myths
    of the origin of things, and decide whether they are or are not
    analogous in ideas to the myths which spring from the wild and
    ignorant fancy of Australians, Cahrocs, Nootkas and Bushmen.

    Sponsored Ads:

    Related Articles:

    Also In This Category:

    Currently Online :

    Search :

    No comments yet
    © Copyright Mythology-Art.com {Contact Us}