READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECELegendary Greece:FROM THE GODS AND HEROES TO THE FOUNDATION OF THE OLIMPIC GAMES (776 BC)
CHAPTER 1.LEGENDS RESPECTING THE GODS, HEROES AND MEN
ZEUS AND HERA
THE
mythical world of the Greeks opens with the gods, anterior as well as superior
to man: it gradually descends, first to heroes, and next to the human race.
Along with the gods are found various monstrous natures, ultra-human and
extra-human, who cannot with propriety be called gods, but who partake with
gods and men in the attributes of freewill, conscious agency, and
susceptibility of pleasure and pain,—such as the Harpies, the Gorgons,
the Graeae, the Sirens, Scylla and Charybdis, Echidna,
Sphinx, Chimaera, Chrysaor, Pegasus, the
Cyclopes, the Centaurs, etc. The first acts of what may be termed the great
mythical cycle describe the proceedings of these gigantic agents, the crash and
collision of certain terrific and overboiling forces, which are
ultimately reduced to obedience, or chained up, or extinguished, under the more
orderly government of Zeus, who supplants his less capable predecessors, and
acquires precedence and supremacy over gods and men—subject however to certain
social restraints from the chief gods and goddesses around him, as well as to
the custom of occasionally convoking and consulting the divine agora.
I
recount these events briefly, but literally, treating them simply as myths
springing from the same creative imagination, addressing themselves to
analogous tastes and feelings, and depending upon the same authority, as the
legends of Thebes and Troy. It is the inspired voice of the Muse which reveals
and authenticates both, and from which Homer and Hesiod alike derive their
knowledge—the one, of the heroic, the other, of the divine, foretime. I
maintain, moreover, fully, the character of these great divine agents as
Persons, which is the light in which they presented themselves to the Homeric
or Hesiodic audience. Uranos, Nyx,
Hypnos and Oneiros (Heaven, Night, Sleep
and Dream), are Persons, just as much as Zeus and Apollo. To resolve them into
mere allegories, is unsafe and unprofitable: we then depart from the point of
view of the original hearers, without acquiring any consistent or philosophical
point of view of our own. For although some of the attributes and actions
ascribed to these persons are often explicable by allegory the whole series and
system of them never are so: the theorist who adopts this course of explanation
finds that, after one or two simple and obvious steps, the path is no longer
open, and he is forced to clear a way for himself by gratuitous refinements and
conjectures. The allegorical persons and attributes are always found mingled
with other persons and attributes not allegorical; but the two classes cannot
be severed without breaking up the whole march of the mythical events, nor can
any explanation which drives us to such a necessity he considered as
admissible. To suppose indeed that these legends could be all traced by means
of allegory into a coherent body of physical doctrine, would be inconsistent
with all reasonable presumptions respecting the age or society in which they
arose. Where the allegorical mark is clearly set upon any particular character,
or attribute, or event, to that extent we may recognize it; but we can rarely
venture to divine further, still less to alter the legends themselves on the
faith of any such surmises. The theogony of the Greeks contains
some cosmogonic ideas; but it cannot be considered as a system of
cosmogony, or translated into a string of elementary, planetary, or physical
changes.
In the
order of legendary chronology, Zeus comes after Kronos and Uranos; but in the order of Greek conception, Zeus is the
prominent person, and Kronos and Uranos are
inferior and introductory precursors, set up in order to be overthrown and to
serve as mementos of the prowess of their conqueror. To Homer and Hesiod, as
well as to the Greeks universally, Zeus is the great and predominant god, “the
father of gods and men”, whose power none of the other gods can hope to resist,
or even deliberately think of questioning.
All the
other gods have their specific potency and peculiar sphere of action and duty,
with which Zeus does not usually interfere; but it is he who maintains the
lineaments of a providential superintendence, as well over the phenomena of
Olympus as over those of earth. Zeus and his brothers Poseidon and Hades have
made a division of power: he has reserved the ether and the atmosphere to
himself —Poseidon has obtained the sea—and Hades the underworld or infernal
regions; while earth, and the events which pass upon earth, are common to all
of them, together with free access to Olympus.
Zeus,
then, with his brethren and colleagues, constitute the present gods, whom Homer
and Hesiod recognize as in full dignity and efficiency. The inmates of this
divine world are conceived upon the model, but not upon the scale, of the
human. They are actuated by the full play and variety of those appetites,
sympathies, passions and affections, which divide the soul of man; invested
with a far larger and indeterminate measure of power, and an exemption as well
from death as (with some rare exceptions) from suffering and infirmity. The
rich and diverse types thus conceived, full of energetic movement and contrast,
each in his own province, and soaring confessedly above the limits of
experience, were of all themes the most suitable for adventure and narrative,
and operated with irresistible force upon the Greek fancy. All nature was then
conceived as moving and working through a number of personal agents, amongst
whom the gods of Olympus were the most conspicuous; the reverential belief in
Zeus and Apollo being only one branch of this omnipresent personifying faith.
The attributes of all these agents had a tendency to expand themselves into
illustrative legends —especially those of the gods, who were constantly invoked
in the public worship. Out of this same mental source sprang both the divine
and heroic myths — the former being often the more extravagant and abnormous in
their incidents, in proportion as the general type of the gods was more vast
and awful than that of the heroes.
As the
gods have houses and wives like men, so the present dynasty of gods must have a
past to repose upon; and the curious and imaginative Greek, whenever he does
not find a recorded past ready to his hand, is uneasy until he has created one.
Thus the Hesiodic theogony explains, with a certain degree of
system and coherence, first the antecedent circumstances under which Zeus
acquired the divine empire, next the number of his colleagues and descendants.
Gaea (GAIA) mother of the Titans
First
in order of time (we are told by Hesiod) came Chaos; next Gaea, the broad,
firm, and flat Earth, with deep and dark Tartarus at her base. Eros
(Love), the subduer of gods as well as men, came immediately
afterwards.
From
Chaos sprung Erebos and Nyx; from these latter Ether and Hemera.
Gaea also gave birth to Uranos, equal in breadth
to herself, in order to serve both as an overarching vault to her, and as a
residence for the immortal gods; she further produced the mountains,
habitations of the divine nymphs, and Pontus, the barren and billowy sea.
Then
Gaea intermarried with Uranos, and from this
union came a numerous offspring —twelve Titans and Titanides,
three Cyclopes, and three Hekatoncheires or
beings with a hundred hands each. The Titans were Oceanus, Koeos, Krios,
Hyperion, Iapetos, and Kronos: the Titanides, Theia,
Rhea, Themis, Mnemosyne, Phoebe, and Tethys. The Cyclopes were Brontes,Steropes, and Arges,—formidable
persons, equally distinguished for strength and for manual craft, so that they made
the thunder which afterwards formed the irresistible artillery of Zeus.
The Hekatoncheires were Kottos, Briareus,
and Gyges, of prodigious bodily force.
URANOS
AND KRONOS
Uranos contemplated this
powerful brood with fear and horror; as fast as any of them were born, he
concealed them in cavities of the earth, and would not permit them to come out.
Gaea could find no room for them, and groaned under the pressure: she produced
iron, made a sickle, and implored her sons to avenge both her and themselves
against the oppressive treatment of their father. But none of them,
except Kronos, had courage to undertake the deed: he, the youngest and the
most daring, was armed with the sickle and placed in suitable ambush by the
contrivance of Gaea. Presently night arrived, and Uranos descended
to the embraces of Gaea: Kronos then emerged from his concealment,
cut off the genitals of his father, and cast the bleeding member behind him far
away into the sea. Much of the blood was spilt upon the earth, and Gaea in
consequence gave birth to the irresistible Erinnys, the vast and
muscular Gigantes, and the Melian nymphs. Out of the genitals
themselves, as they swam and foamed upon the sea, emerged the goddess
Aphrodite, deriving her name from the foam out of which she had sprung. She
first landed at Cythera, and then went to Cyprus: the island felt her benign
influence, and the green herb started up under her soft and delicate tread.
Eras immediately joined her, and partook with her the function of suggesting
and directing the amorous impulses both of gods and men.
Uranos being thus
dethroned and disabled, Kronos and the Titans acquired their liberty
and became predominant: the Cyclopes and the Hekatoncheires had
been cast by Uranos into Tartarus, and
were still allowed to remain there.
Each of
the Titans had a numerous offspring: Oceanus, especially, marrying his sister
Tethys, begat three thousand daughters, the Oceanic nymphs, and as many sons:
the rivers and springs passed for his offspring. Hyperion and his sister Theia
had for their children Helios, Selene, and Eos; Koeos with Phoebe begat Leto and Asteria ; the children of Krios were Astraeos, Pallas, and Perses , from Astraeos and Eos sprang the winds Zephyrus,
Boreas, and Notus. Iapetos marrying the Oceanic nymph
Clymene, counted as his progeny the celebrated Prometheus, Epimetheus,
Menoetius, and Atlas. But the off spring of Kronos were the most powerful and
transcendent of all. He married his sister Rhea, and had by her three
daughters—Hestia, Demeter, and Here—and three sons, Hades, Poseidon, and Zeus,
the latter at once the youngest and the greatest.
But
Kronos foreboded to himself destruction from one of his own children, and
accordingly, as soon as any of them were born, he immediately swallowed them
and retained them in his own belly. In this manner had the first five been
treated, and Rhea was on the point of being delivered of Zeus. Grieved and
indignant at the loss of her children, she applied for counsel to her father
and mother, Uranos and Gaea, who aided her to conceal
the birth of Zeus. They conveyed her by night to Lyktus in Crete, hid the new-born child in a woody cavern on Mount Ida, and gave to
Kronos, in place of it, a stone wrapped in swaddling clothes, which he greedily
swallowed, believing it to be his child. Thus was the safety of Zeus ensured.
As he grew up his vast powers fully developed themselves: at the suggestion of
Gaea, he induced Kronos by stratagem to vomit up, first the stone which had
been given to him,—next, the five children whom he had previously devoured.
Hestia, Demeter, Here, Poseidon and Hades, were thus allowed to grow up along
with Zeus; and the stone to which the latter owed his preservation was placed
near the temple of Delphi, where it ever afterwards stood, as a conspicuous and
venerable memorial to the religious Greek.
THE
TITANS
We have
not yet exhausted the catalogue of beings generated during this early period,
anterior to the birth of Zeus. Nyx, alone and without any partner, gave birth
to a numerous progeny: Thanatos, Hypnos and Oneiros;
Momus and Oizys(Grief); Klotho, Lachesis and Atropos,
the three Fates; the retributive and equalizing Nemesis;Apate and Philotes;(Deceit and amorous Propensity), Germ
(Old Age) and Eris (Contention). From Eris proceeded an abundant offspring, all
mischievous and maleficent: Ponos(Suffering), Lethe, Limos (Famine),Phonos and Macke (Slaughter and Battle),Dysnomia and Ate
(Lawlessness and reckless Impulse), and Horkos, the
ever-watchful sanctioner of oaths, as well as the
inexorable punisher of voluntary perjury
Gaea,
too, intermarrying with Pontus, gave birth to Nereus, the just and righteous
old man of the sea; to Thaumas,Phorkys and Keto. From
Nereus and Doris, daughter of Oceanus, proceeded the fifty Nereids or
Sea-nymphs. Thaumus also married Elektra daughter of
Oceanus, and had by her Iris and the two Harpies, Allo and Okypete—winged and swift as the winds. From Phorkys and Keto sprung the Dragon of the Hesperides, and
the monstrous Graeae and Gorgons: the blood of Medusa, one of the Gorgons, when
killed by Perseus, produced Chrysaor and the horse
Pegasus: Chrysaor and Kallirrhoe gave birth to Geryonas well as to Echidna—a creature half-nymph and
hall-serpent, unlike both to gods and to men. Other monsters arose from the
union of Echidna with Typhaon,—Orthros, the
two-headed dog of Geryon; Cerberus, the dog of Hades, with fifty heads, and the
Lernaean Hydra. From the latter proceeded the Chimaera, the Sphinx of Thebes,
and the Nemean lion.
A
powerful and important progeny, also, was that of Styx, daughter of Oceanus, by
Pallas; she had Zelos and Nike
(Imperiousness and Victory), and Kratos and Bia (Strength
and Force). The hearty and early cooperation of Styx and her four sons with
Zeus was one of the main causes which enabled him to achieve his victory over
the Titans.
Zeus
had grown up not less distinguished for mental capacity than for bodily force.
He and his brothers now determined to wrest the power from the hands of Kronos and
the Titans, and a long and desperate struggle commenced, in which all the gods
and all the goddesses took part. Zeus convoked them to Olympus, and promised to
all who would aid him against Kronos, that their functions and privileges
should remain undisturbed. The first who responded to the call, came with her
four sons, and embraced his cause, was Styx. Zeus took them all four as his
constant attendants, and conferred upon Styx the majestic distinction of being
the Horkos, or oath-sanctioner of
the Gods— what Horkos was to men, Styx was
to the Gods.
Still
further to strengthen himself, Zeus released the other Uranids who
had been imprisoned in Tartarus by their father—the Cyclopes and
the Centimanes—and prevailed upon them to take
part with him against the Titans. The former supplied him with thunder and
lightning, and the latter brought into the fight their boundless muscular
strength. Ten full years did the combat continue; Zeus and the Kronids occupying Olympus, and the Titans being
established on the more southerly mountain-chain of Othrys.
All nature was convulsed, and the distant Oceanus, though he took no part in
the struggle, felt the boiling, the noise, and the shock, not less than Gaea
and Pontus. The thunder of Zeus, combined with the crags and mountains torn up
and burled by the Centimanes, at length
prevailed, and the Titans were defeated and thrown down into Tartarus. Iapetos, Kronos,
and the remaining Titans (Oceanus excepted) were imprisoned, perpetually and
irrevocably, in that subterranean dungeon, a wall of brass being built around
them by Poseidon, and the three Centimanes being
planted as guards. Of the two sons of Iapetos, Menoetius was
made to share this prison, while Atlas was condemned to stand for ever at the
extreme west, and to bear upon his shoulders the solid vault of heaven.
Thus
were the Titans subdued, and the Kronids with
Zeus at their head placed in possession of power. They were not, however, yet
quite secure; for Gaea, intermarrying with Tartarus, gave birth to a new
and still more formidable monster called Typhoeus,
of such tremendous properties and promise, that, had he been allowed to grow
into full development, nothing could have prevented him from vanquishing all
rivals and becoming supreme. But Zeus foresaw the danger, smote him at once
with a thunderbolt from Olympus, and burnt him up: he was cast along with the
rest into Tartarus, and no further enemy remained to question the
sovereignty of the Kronids.
POSEIDON,
HADES
With
Zeus begins a new dynasty and a different order of beings. Zeus, Poseidon, and
Hades agree upon the distribution before noticed, of functions and localities:
Zeus retaining the Ether and the atmosphere, together with the general
presiding function; Poseidon obtaining the sea, and administering subterranean
forces generally; and Hades ruling the underworld or region in which the
half-animated shadows of departed men reside.
It has
been already stated, that in Zeus, his brothers and his sisters, and his and
their divine progeny, we find the present Gods; that is, those, for the most
part, whom the Homeric and Hesiodic Greeks recognized and worshipped.
The wives of Zeus were numerous as well as his offspring. First be
married Metis, the wisest and most sagacious of the goddesses; but Gaea
and Uranos forewarned him that if he
permitted himself to have children by her, they would be stronger than himself
and dethrone him. Accordingly when Metis was on the point of being
delivered of Athena, he swallowed her up, and her wisdom and sagacity thus
became permanently identified with his own being. His head was subsequently cut
open, in order to make way for the exit and birth of the goddess Athena.
By Themis, Zeus begat the Horae, by Eurynome,
the three Charities or Graces; by Mnemosyne, the Muses; by Leto (Latona), Apollo and Artemis; and by Demeter, Persephone.
Last of all he took for his wife Hera, who maintained permanently the dignity
of queen of the Gods; by her he had Hebe, Ares, and Eileithyia. Hermes
also was born to him by Maia, the daughter of Atlas: Hephaestus was born to
Hera, according to some accounts, by Zeus; according to others, by her own
unaided generative force. He was born lame, and Hera was ashamed of him: she
wished to secrete him away, but he made his escape into the sea, and found
shelter under the maternal care of the Nereids Thetis and Eurynome. Our enumeration of the divine race, under the
presidency of Zeus, will thus give us:
1. The
twelve great gods and goddesses of Olympus— Zeus, Poseidon, Apollo, Ares,
Hephaestus, Hermes, Hera, Athena, Artemis, Aphrodite, Hestia, Demeter.
2. An
indefinite number of other deities, not included among the Olympic, seemingly
because the number twelve was complete without them, but some of them not
inferior in power and dignity to many of the twelve:—Hades, Helios, Hekate, Dionysos, Leto,
Diane, Persephone, Selene, Themis, Eos, Harmonia, the Charities, the
Muses, the Eilaithyia, the Moerae, the Oceanids and the Nereids,
Proteus, Eidothea, the Nymphs, Leukothea, Phorkys,
Eolus, Nemesis, etc.
3. Deities
who perform special services to the greater gods:— Iris, Hebe, the Horae,
etc.
4. Deities
whose personality is more faintly and unsteadily conceived:—Ate, the Litae, Eris, Thanatos, Hypnos, Kratos, Bia,
Ossa, etc. The same name is here employed sometimes to designate the person,
sometimes the attribute or event not personified—an unconscious transition of
ideas, which, when consciously performed, is called Allegory.
5.
Monsters, offspring of the Gods:—the Harpies, the Gorgons, the Graeae,
Pegasus, Chrysaor, Echidna, Chimaera, the
Dragon of the Hesperides, Cerberus, Orthros, Geryon, the Lernaean Hydra,
the Nemean lion, Scylla and Charybdis, the Centaurs, the
Sphinx, Xanthos and Balios the immortal horses, etc.
HESIODIC
THEOGONY
From
the gods we slide down insensibly, first to heroes, and then to men; but before
we proceed to this new mixture, it is necessary to say a few words on the theogony generally.
I have given it briefly as it stands in the Hesiodic Theogonia, because that poem—in spite of great
incoherence and confusion, arising seemingly from diversity of authorship as
well as diversity of age—presents an ancient and genuine attempt to cast the
divine foretime into a systematic sequence. Homer and Hesiod were the grand
authorities in the pagan world respecting theogony; but in the Iliad and
Odyssey nothing is found except passing allusions and implications, and even in
the Hymns (which were commonly believed in antiquity to be the productions of
the same author as the Iliad and the Odyssey) there are only isolated,
unconnected narratives. Accordingly men habitually took their information
respecting their theogonic antiquities from
the Hesiodic poem, where it was ready laid out before them; and the
legends consecrated in that work acquired both an extent of circulation and a
firm hold on the national faith, such as independent legends could seldom or
never rival. Moreover the scrupulous and skeptical Pagans, as well as the open
assailants of Paganism in later times, derived their subjects of attack from
the same source; so that it has been absolutely necessary to recount in their
naked simplicity the Hesiodic stories, in order to know what it was
that Plato deprecated and Xenophanes denounced. The strange proceedings ascribed
to Uranos, Kronos and Zeus, have been
more frequently alluded to, in the way of ridicule or condemnation, than any
other portion of the mythical world.
But
though the Hesiodic theogony passed as orthodox among the later
Pagans, because it stood before them as the only system anciently set forth and
easily accessible, it was evidently not the only system received at the date of
the poem itself. Homer knows nothing of Uranos,
in the sense of an arch-God anterior to Kronos. Uranos and
Gaea, like Oceanus, Tethys and Nyx, are with him great and venerable Gods,
but neither the one nor the other present the character of predecessors
of Kronos and Zeus. The Cyclopes, whom Hesiod ranks as sons of Uranos and fabricators of thunder, are in Homer
neither one nor the other; they are not noticed in the Iliad at all, and in the
Odyssey they are gross gigantic shepherds and cannibals, having nothing in
common with the Hesiodic Cyclops except the one round central eye.
Of the
three Centimanes enumerated by
Hesiod, Briareus only is mentioned in Homer, and to all appearance,
not as the son of Uranos, but as the son of
Poseidon; not as aiding Zeus in his combat against the Titans, but as rescuing
him at a critical moment from a conspiracy formed against him by Hera, Poseidon
and Athena. Not only is the Hesiodic Uranos (with
the Uranids) omitted in Homer, but the relations between Zeus and Kronos are
also presented in a very different light. No mention is made of Kronos swallowing
his young children: on the contrary, Zeus is the eldest of the three brothers
instead of the youngest, and the children of Kronos live with him and
Rhea: there the stolen intercourse between Zeus and Hera first takes place
without the knowledge of their parents. When Zeus puts Kronos down
into Tartarus, Rhea consigns her daughter Hera to the care of Oceanus: no
notice do we find of any terrific battle with the Titans as accompanying that
event. Kronos, Iapetos, and the remaining Titans are down in Tartarus,
in the lowest depths under the earth, far removed from the genial rays of
Helios; but they are still powerful and venerable, and Hypnos makes Hera swear
an oath in their name, as the most inviolable that he can think of.
HOMERIC THEOGONY
In
Homer, then, we find nothing beyond the simple fact that Zeus threw his
father Kronos together with the remaining Titans into Tartarus;
an event to which he affords us a tolerable parallel in certain occurrences
even under the presidency of Zeus himself. For the other gods make more than
one rebellious attempt against Zeus, and are only put down, partly by his
unparalleled strength, partly by the presence of his ally the Centimane Briareus. Kronos, likeLaertes or Peleus, has become old, and has
been supplanted by a force vastly superior to his own. The Homeric epic treats
Zeus as present, and, like all the interesting heroic characters, a father must
be assigned to him: that father has once been the chief of the Titans, but has
been superseded and put down into Tartarus along with the latter, so
soon as Zeus and the superior breed of the Olympic gods acquired their full
development.
That
antithesis between Zeus and Kronos—between the Olympic gods and the
Titans—which Homer has thus briefly brought to view, Hesiod has amplified into
a theogony, with many things new, and some things contradictory to his
predecessor; while Eumelus or Arktinus in the poem called Titanomachia (now
lost) also adopted it as their special subject). As Stasinus, Arktinus, Lesches, and others, enlarged the Legend of
Troy by composing poems relating to a supposed time anterior to the
commencement, or subsequent to the termination of the Iliad,—as other poets
recounted adventures of Odysseus subsequent to his landing in Ithaca,—so Hesiod
enlarged and systematized, at the same time that he corrupted, the
skeleton theogony which we find briefly indicated in Homer. There is
violence and rudeness in the Homeric gods, but the great genius of Greek epic
is no way accountable for the stories of Uranos and Kronos—the
standing reproach against Pagan legendary narrative.
How far
these stories are the invention of Hesiod himself is impossible to determine.
They bring us down to a cast of fancy more coarse and indelicate than the
Homeric, and more nearly resembling some of the Holy Chapters of the more
recent mysteries, such (for example) as the tale of Dionysos Zagreus.
There is evidence in the Theogony itself that the author was acquainted with
local legends current both at Crete and at Delphi; for he mentions both the
mountain-cave in Crete wherein the new-born Zeus was hidden, and the stone near
the Delphian temple—the identical stone which Kronos had
swallowed—“placed by Zeus himself as a sign and wonder to mortal men”. Both
these two monuments, which the poet expressly refers to, and had probably seen,
imply a whole train of accessory and explanatory local legends — current
probably among the priests of Crete and Delphi, between which places, in
ancient times, there was an intimate religious connection. And we may trace
further in the poem, that which would be the natural feeling of
Cretan worshippers of Zeus, an effort to make out that Zeus was
justified in his aggression on Kronos, by the conduct of Kronos himself
both towards his father and towards his children: the treatment of Kronos by
Zeus appears in Hesiod as the retribution foretold and threatened by the
mutilated Uranos against the son who had
outraged him. In fact the relations of Uranos and
Gaea are in almost all their particulars a mere copy and duplication of those
between Kronos and Rhea, differing only in the mode whereby the final
catastrophe is brought about. Now castration was a practice thoroughly
abhorrent both to the feelings and to the customs of Greece; but it was seen
with melancholy frequency in the domestic life as well as in the religious
worship of Phrygia and other parts of Asia, and it even became the special
qualification of a priest of the Great Mother Cybele, as well as of the
Ephesian Artemis. The employment of the sickle ascribed to Kronos seems
to be the product of an imagination familiar with the Asiatic worship and
legends, which were connected with and partially resembled the Cretan. And this
deduction becomes the more probable when we connect it with the first genesis
of iron, which Hesiod mentions to have been produced for the express purpose of
fabricating the fatal sickle; for metallurgy finds a place in the early legends
both of the Trojan and of the Cretan Ida, and the three Idaean Dactyls, the legendary inventors of it, are
assigned sometimes to one and sometimes to the other.
As
Hesiod had extended the Homeric series of gods by prefixing the dynasty
of Uranos to that of Kronos, so the
Orphic theogony lengthened it still further. First came Chronos,
or Time, as a person, after him Ether and Chaos, out of whom Chronos produced
the vast mundane egg. Hence emerged in process of time the first-born god
Phone’s, or Metis, or Herikapaeos, a person of double sex, who first
generated the Cosmos, or mundane system, and who carried within him the seed of
the gods. He gave birth to Nyx, by whom he begat Uranos and
Gaea; as well as to Helios and Selene.
From Uranos and Gaea sprang the three Moerae, or Fates, the three Centimanes and
the three Cyclopes: these latter were cast by Uranos into Tartarus,
under the foreboding that they would rob him of his dominion. In revenge for
this maltreatment of her sons, Gaea produced of herself the fourteen Titans,
seven male and seven female: the former were Kaeos, Krios, Phorkys, Kronos,
Oceanus, Hyperion and Iapetos; the latter were Themis, Tethys,
Mnemosyne, Thera, Dione, Phoebe and Rhea. They received the name of Titans
because they avenged upon Uranos the
expulsion of their elder brothers. Six of the Titans, headed by Kronos the
most powerful of them all, conspiring against Uranos,
castrated and dethroned him: Oceanus alone stood aloof and took no part in the
aggression. Kronos assumed the government and fixed his seat on Olympos;
while Oceanus remained apart, master of his own divine stream. The reign
of Kronos was a period of tranquility and happiness, as well as of
extraordinary longevity and vigor.
ORPHIC
THEOGONY
Kronos and
Rhea gave birth to Zeus and his brothers and sisters. The concealment and
escape of the infant Zeus, and the swallowing of the stone by Kronos, are
given in the Orphic Theogony substantially in the same manner as by Hesiod,
only in a style less simple and more mystified. Zeus is concealed in the cave
of Nyx, the seat of Phanes himself,
along with Ride and Adrasteia, who nurse and preserve him, while the armed
dance and sonorous instruments of the Kuretes prevent
his infant cries from reaching the ears of Kronos. When grown up, he lays
a snare for his father, intoxicates him with honey, and having surprised him in
the depth of sleep, enchains and castrates him. Thus exalted to the supreme
mastery, he swallowed and absorbed into himself Metis, or Phanes, with all the preexisting elements of things, and
then generated all things anew out of his own being and conformably to his own
divine ideas. So scanty are the remains of this system, that we find it
difficult to trace individually the gods and goddesses sprung from Zeus beyond
Apollo, Dionysos, and Persephone,—the latter being confounded with Artemis
and Hekate.
But
there is one new personage, begotten by Zeus, who stands preeminently marked in
the Orphic Theogony, and whose adventures constitute one of its peculiar
features. Zagreus, “the horned child”, is the son of Zeus by his own
daughter Persephone: he is the favorite of his father, a child of magnificent
promise, and predestined, if he grow up, to succeed to supreme dominion as well
as to the handling of the thunderbolt. He is seated, whilst an infant, on the
throne beside Zeus, guarded by Apollo and the Kuretes.
But the jealous Hera intercepts his career and incites the Titans against him,
who, having first smeared their faces with plaster, approach him on the throne,
tempt his childish fancy with playthings, and kill him with a sword while he is
contemplating his face in a mirror. They then cut up his body and boil it in a
caldron, leaving only the heart, which is picked up by Athena and carried to
Zeus, who in his wrath strikes down the Titans with thunder into Tartarus;
whilst Apollo is directed to collect the remains of Zagreus and bury
them at the foot of Mount Parnassus. The heart is given to Semele,
and Zagreus is born again from her under the form of Dionysos.
Such is
the tissue of violent fancies comprehended under the title of the Orphic
Theogony, and read as such, it appears, by Plato, Isocrates and Aristotle. It
will be seen that it is based upon the Hesiodic Theogony, but according to
the general expansive tendency of Greek legend, much new matter is added: Zeus
has in Homer one predecessor, in Hesiod two, and in Orpheus four.
The Hesiodic Theogony,
though later in date than the Iliad and Odyssey, was coeval with the earliest
period of what may be called Greek history, and certainly of an age earlier
than 700 BC. It appears to have been widely circulated in Greece, and being at
once ancient and short, the general public consulted it as their principal
source of information respecting divine antiquity. The Orphic Theogony belongs
to a later date, and contains the Hesiodic ideas and persons,
enlarged and mystically disguised: its vein of invention was less popular,
adapted more to the contemplation of a sect specially prepared than to the
taste of a casual audience, and it appears accordingly to have obtained
currency chiefly among purely speculative men. Among the
majority of these latter, however, it acquired greater veneration,
and above all was supposed to be of greater antiquity, than the Hesiodic.
The belief in its superior antiquity (disallowed by Herodotus, and seemingly
also by Aristotle, as well as the respect for its contents, increased during
the Alexandrine Age and through the declining centuries of Paganism, reaching
its maximum among the New-Platonists of the third and fourth century after
Christ: both the Christian assailants, as well as the defenders, of paganism,
treated it as the most ancient and venerable summary of the Grecian faith.
Orpheus is celebrated by Pindar as the harper and companion of
the Argonautic maritime heroes: Orpheus and Musaeus, as well as Painphos and Olen, the great supposed authors of theogonic, mystical, oracular, and prophetic verses and
hymns, were generally considered by literary Greeks as older than either Hesiod
or Homer: and such was also the common opinion of modern scholars until a
period comparatively recent. It has now been shown, on sufficient ground, that
the compositions which passed under these names emanate for the most part from
poets of the Alexandrine Age, and subsequent to the Christian Era; and that
even the earliest among them, which served as the stock on which the later additions
were engrafted, belong to a period far more recent than Hesiod; probably to the
century preceding Onomakritus (BC 610-510).
It seems, however, certain, that both Orpheus and Musaeus were names
of established reputation at the time when Onomakritus flourished;
and it is distinctly stated by Pausanias that the latter was himself the author
of the most remarkable and characteristic myth of the Orphic Theogony
—the discerption of Zagreus by the Titans, and his
resurrection as Dionysos.
FOREIGN
RELIGIOUS INFLUENCE
The
names of Orpheus and Musaeus (as well as that of Pythagoras, looking
at one side of his character) represent facts of importance in the history of
the Greek mind—the gradual influx of Thracian, Phrygian, and Egyptian,
religious ceremonies and feelings, and the increasing diffusion of special
mysteries schemes for religious purification, and orgies (I venture to anglicize the
Greek word, which contains in its original meaning no implication of the ideas
of excess to which it was afterwards diverted) in honor of some particular
god—distinct both from the public solemnities and from the gentile solemnities
of primitive Greece,—celebrated apart from the citizens generally, and
approachable only through a certain course of preparation and initiation—sometimes
even forbidden to be talked of in the presence of the uninitiated, under the
severest threats of divine judgment. Occasionally such voluntary combinations
assumed the form of permanent brotherhoods, bound together by periodical
solemnities as well as by vows of an ascetic character: thus the Orphic life
(as it was called) or regulation of the Orphic brotherhood, among other
injunctions partly arbitrary and partly abstinent, forbade animal food
universally, and on certain occasions, the use of woolen clothing. The great
religious and political fraternity of the Pythagoreans, which acted so
powerfully on the condition of the Italian cities, was one of the many
manifestations of this general tendency, which stands in striking contrast with
the simple, open-hearted, and demonstrative worship of the Homeric Greeks.
Festivals
at seed-time and harvest—at the vintage and at the opening of the new wine—were
doubtless coeval with the earliest habits of the Greeks; the latter being a
period of unusual joviality. Yet in the Homeric poems, Dionysos and
Demeter, the patrons of the vineyard and the cornfield, are seldom mentioned,
and decidedly occupy little place in the imagination of the poet as compared
with the other gods: nor are they of any conspicuous importance even in
the Hesiodic Theogony. But during the interval between Hesiod
and Onomakritus, the revolution in the religious
mind of Greece was such as to place both these deities in the front rank.
According to the Orphic doctrine, Zagreus, son of Persephone, is destined
to be the successor of Zeus, and although the violence of the Titans intercepts
this lot, yet even when he rises again from his discerption under the
name of Dionysus, he is the colleague and coequal of his divine father.
This
remarkable change, occurring as it did during the sixth and a part of the
seventh century before the Christian Era, may be traced to the influence of
communication with Egypt (which only became fully open to the Greeks about BC
660), as well as with Thrace, Phrygia, and Lydia. From hence new religious
ideas and feelings were introduced, which chiefly attached themselves to the
characters of Dionysius and Demeter. The Greeks identified these two deities
with the great Egyptian Osiris and Isis, so that what was borrowed from the
Egyptian worship of the two latter naturally fell to their equivalents in the
Grecian system. Moreover the worship of Dionysus (under what name cannot be
certainly made out) was indigenous in Thrace, as that of the Great Mother was
in Phrygia, and in Lydia — together with those violent ecstasies and
manifestations of temporary frenzy, and that clashing of noisy instruments,
which we find afterwards characterizing it in Greece. The great masters of the
pipe—as well as the dithyramb, and indeed the whole musical system
appropriated to the worship of Dionysus, which contrasted so pointedly with the
quiet solemnity of the Paean addressed to Apollo were all originally Phrygian.
POST-HOMERIC
CHANGES IN RELIGION
From
all these various countries, novelties, unknown to the Homeric men, found their
way into the Greek worship: and there is one amongst them which deserves to be
specially noticed, because it marks the generation of the new class of ideas in
their theology. Homer mentions many persons guilty of private or involuntary
homicide, and compelled either to go into exile or to make pecuniary
satisfaction; but he never once describes any of them to have either received
or required purification for the crime. Now in the time subsequent to Homer,
purification for homicide comes to be considered as indispensable: the guilty
person is regarded as unfit for the society of man or the worship of the gods
until he has received it, and special ceremonies are prescribed whereby it is
to be administered.
Herodotus
tells us that the ceremony of purification was the same among the Lydians and
among the Greeks: we know that it formed no part of the early religion of the
latter, and we may perhaps reasonably suspect that they borrowed it from the
former. The oldest instance known to us of expiation for homicide was contained
in the epic poem of the Milesian Arktinus,
wherein Achilles is purified by Odysseus for the murder of Thersites:
several others occurred in the later or Hesiodic epic—Heracles, Peleus, Bellerophon, Alkmeon, Amphiktyim, Poemander, Triopas,—from whence they probably passed through the hands of the logographers to
Apollodorus, Diodorus, and others. The purification of the murderer was
originally operated, not by the hands of any priest or specially sanctified
man, but by those of a chief or king, who goes through the appropriate
ceremonies in the manner recounted by Herodotus in his pathetic narrative
respecting Croesus and Adrastus.
The
idea of a special taint of crime, and of the necessity as well as the
sufficiency of prescribed religious ceremonies as a means of removing it,
appears thus to have got footing in Greek practice subsequent to the time of
Homer. The peculiar rites or orgies, composed or put together by Onomakritus, Methapus, and
other men of more than the ordinary piety, were founded upon a similar mode of
thinking, and adapted to the same mental exigencies. They were voluntary
religious manifestations, superinduced upon the old public
sacrifices of the king or chiefs on behalf of the whole society, and of the
father on his own family hearth — they marked out the details of divine service
proper to appease or gratify the god to whom they were addressed, and to
procure for the believers who went through them his blessings and protection
here or hereafter—the exact performance of the divine service in all its
specialty was held necessary, and thus the priests or Hierophants, who alone
were familiar with the ritual, acquired a commanding position. Generally
speaking, these peculiar orgies obtained their admission and their influence at
periods of distress, disease, public calamity and danger, or religious terror
and despondency, which appear to have been but too frequent in their
occurrence.
The
minds of men were prone to the belief that what they were suffering arose from
the displeasure of some of the gods, and as they found that the ordinary
sacrifices and worship were insufficient for their protection, so they grasped
at new suggestions proposed to them with the view of regaining the divine
favor. Such suggestions were more usually copied, either in whole or in part,
from the religious rites of some foreign locality, or from some other portion
of the Hellenic world; and in this manner many new sects or voluntary religious
fraternities, promising to relieve the troubled conscience and to reconcile the
sick or suffering with the offended gods, acquired permanent establishment as
well as considerable influence. They were generally under the superintendence
of hereditary families of priests, who imparted the rites of confirmation and
purification to communicants generally; no one who went through the prescribed
ceremonies being excluded. In many cases, such ceremonies fell into the hands
of jugglers, who volunteered their services to wealthy men, and degraded their
profession as well by obtrusive venality as by extravagant promises: sometimes
the price was lowered to bring them within reach of the poor and even of
slaves. But the wide diffusion, and the number of voluntary communicants of
these solemnities, proves how much they fell in with the feeling of the time
and how much respect they enjoyed—a respect, which the more conspicuous
establishments, such as Eleusis and Samothrace, maintained for several
centuries. And the visit of the Cretan Epimenides to
Athens—in the time of Solon, and at a season of the most serious disquietude
and dread of having offended the gods—illustrates the tranquillizing effect of
new orgies and rites of absolution, when enjoined by a man standing high in the
favor of the gods and reputed to be the son of a nymph. The supposed Erythraean Sibyl, and the earliest collection of
Sibylline prophecies, afterwards so much multiplied and interpolated, and
referred (according to Greek custom) to an age even earlier than Homer, appear
to belong to a date not long posterior to Epimenides.
Other oracular verses, such as those of Bakis, were treasured up in Athens
and other cities: the sixth century before the Christian Era was fertile in
these kinds of religious manifestations.
Amongst
the special rites and orgies of the character just described, those
which enjoyed the greatest Pan-Hellenic reputation were attached to the Idaean Zeus in Crete, to Demeter at Eleusis, to
the Kabeiri in Samothrace, and to Dionysus
at Delphi and Thebes. That they were all to a great degree analogous, is shown
by the way in which they unconsciously run together and become confused in the
minds of various authors: the ancient inquirers themselves were unable to
distinguish one from the other, and we must be content to submit to the like
ignorance. Bet we see enough to satisfy us of the general fact, that during the
century and a half which elapsed between the opening of Egypt to the Greeks and
the commencement of their struggle with the Persian kings, the old religion was
largely adulterated by importations from Egypt, Asia Minor and Thrace. The
rites grew to be more furious and ecstatic, exhibiting the utmost excitement,
bodily as well as mental: the legends became at once more coarse, more tragical,
and less pathetic. The manifestations of this frenzy were strongest among the
women, whose religious susceptibilities were often found extremely
unmanageable, and who had everywhere congregative occasional ceremonies of
their awn, part from the men — indeed, in the ease of the colonists, especially
of the Asiatic colonists, the women had been originally women of the country,
and as such retained to a great degree their non-Hellenic manners and feelings.
The god Dionysus, whom the legends described as clothed in feminine attire, and
leading a troop of frenzied women, inspired a temporary ecstasy, and those who
resisted the inspiration, being supposed to disobey his will, were punished
either by particular judgments or by mental terrors; while those who gave full
loose to the feeling, is the appropriate season and with the received
solemnities, satisfied his exigencies, and believed themselves to have procured
immunity from such disquietudes for the future. Crowds of women, clothed with
fawn-skins and bearing the sanctified thyrsus, flocked to the solitudes of
Parnassus, or Kithaeron, or Taygetus, during the consecrated triennial period, passed
the night there with torches, and abandoned themselves to demonstrations of
frantic excitement, with dancing and clamorous invocation of the god: they were
said to tear animals limb from limb, to devour the raw flesh, and to cut
themselves without feeling the wound. The men yielded to a similar impulse by
noisy revels in the streets, sounding the cymbals and tambourine, and carrying
the image of the god in procession. It deserves to be remarked, that the
Athenian women never practiced these periodical mountain excursions, so common
among the rest of the Greeks: they had their feminine solemnities of the Thesmophoria,
mournful in their character and accompanied with fasting, and their separate
congregations at the temples of Aphrodite, but without any extreme or unseemly
demonstrations. The state festival of the Dyonysia,
in the city of Athens, was celebrated with dramatic entertainments, and the
once rich harvest of Athenian tragedy and comedy was thrown up under its
auspices. The ceremonies of the Kuretes in
Crete, originally armed dances in honor of the Idaean Zeus,
seem also to have borrowed from Asia so much of fury, of self-infliction, and
of mysticism, that they became at last inextricably confounded with the
Phrygian Korybantes or worshippers of the
Great Mother; though it appears that Greek reserve always stopped short of the
irreparable self-mutilation of Atys.
The
influence of the Thracian religion upon that of the Greeks cannot be traced in
detail, but the ceremonies contained in it were of a violent and fierce
character, like the Phrygian, and acted upon Hellas in the same general
direction as the latter. And the like may be said of the Egyptian religion,
which was in this case the more operative, inasmuch as all the intellectual
Greeks were naturally attracted to go and visit the wonders on the banks of the
Nile; the powerful effect produced upon them is attested by many evidences, but
especially by the interesting narrative of Herodotus. Now the Egyptian
ceremonies were at once more licentious, and more profuse in the outpouring
both of joy and sorrow, than the Greek: but a still greater difference sprang
from the extraordinary power, separate mode of life, minute observances, and
elaborate organization of the priesthood. The ceremonies of Egypt were
multitudinous, but the legends concerning them were framed by the priests, and
as a general rule, seemingly, known to the priests alone: at least they were
not intended to be publicly talked of, even by pious men. They were “holy
stories”, which it was sacrilege publicly to mention, and which from this very
prohibition only took firmer hold of the minds of the Greek visitors who heard them.
And thus the element of secrecy and mystic silence — foreign to Homer, and only
faintly glanced at in Hesiod — if it was not originally derived from Egypt, at
least received from thence its greatest stimulus and diffusion. The character
of the legends themselves was naturally affected by this change from publicity
to secrecy: the secrets when revealed would be such as to justify by their own
tenor the interdict on public divulgation: instead of being adapted, like the
Homeric myth, to the universal sympathies and hearty interest of a crowd of
hearers, they would derive their impressiveness from the tragical,
mournful, extravagant, or terror-striking character of the incidents. Such a
tendency, which appears explicable and probable even on general grounds, was in
this particular case rendered still more certain by the coarse taste of the
Egyptian priests. That any recondite doctrine, religious or philosophical, was
attached to the mysteries or contained in the holy stories, has never been
shown, and is to the last degree improbable though the affirmative has been
asserted by many learned men.
THE
WORSHIP OF DIONYSUS
Herodotus
seems to have believed that the worship and ceremonies of Dionysus generally
were derived by the Greeks from Egypt, brought over by Cadmus and
taught by him to Melampus: and the latter appears in
the Hesiodic Catalogue as having cured the daughters of Proteus of
the mental distemper with which they had been smitten by Dionysus for rejecting
his ritual. He cured them by introducing the Bacchic dance and
fanatical excitement: this mythical incident is the most ancient mention of
the Dionysiac solemnities presented in the same character as they
bear in Euripides. It is the general tendency of Herodotus to apply the theory
of derivation from Egypt far too extensively to Greek institutions: the
orgies of Dionysus were not originally borrowed from thence, though they may
have been much modified by connection with Egypt as well as with Asia. The
remarkable myth composed by Onomakritus respecting
the dismemberment of Zagreus was founded upon an Egyptian tale very
similar respecting the body of Osiris, who was supposed to be identical with
Dionysus: nor was it unsuitable to the reckless fury of the Bacchanals during
their state of temporary excitement, which found a still more awful expression
in the myth of Pentheus— torn in pieces by his own mother Agave at
the head of her companions in the ceremony, as an intruder upon the feminine
rites as well as a scoffer at the god. A passage in the Iliad (the authenticity
of which has been contested, but even as an interpolation it must be old) also
recounts how Lycurgus was struck blind by Zeus for having chased away with a
whip “the nurses of the mad Dionysos” and frightened the god himself into
the sea to take refuge in the arms of Thetis: and the fact, that Dionysus is so
frequently represented in his myths as encountering opposition and punishing
the refractory, seems to indicate that his worship under its ecstatic form was
a late phenomenon and introduced not without difficulty. The mythical Thracian
Orpheus was attached as Eponymous to a new sect, who seem to have
celebrated the ceremonies of Dionysus with peculiar care, minuteness and
fervor, besides observing various rules in respect to food and clothing. it was
the opinion of Herodotus, that these rules, as well as the Pythagorean, were
borrowed from Egypt. But whether this be the fact or not, the Orphic
brotherhood is itself both an evidence, and a cause, of the increased importance
of the worship of Dionysus, which indeed is attested by the great dramatic
poets of Athens.
The
Homeric Hymns present to us, however, the religious ideas and legends of the
Greeks at an earlier period, when the enthusiastic and mystic tendencies had not
yet acquired their full development. Though not referable to the same age or to
the same author as either the Iliad or the Odyssey, they do to a certain extent
continue the same stream of feeling, and the same mythical tone and coloring,
as these poems—manifesting but little evidence of Egyptian, Asiatic, or
Thracian adulterations. The difference is striking between the god Dionysus as
he appears in the Homeric hymn and in the Bacchae of
Euripides. The hymnographer describes him as standing on the sea-shore,
in the guise of a beautiful and richly-clothed youth, when Tyrrhenian pirates
suddenly approach: they seize and bind him and drag him on board their vessel.
But the bonds which they employ burst spontaneously, and leave the god free.
The steersman, perceiving this with affright, points out to his companions that
they have unwittingly laid hands on a god—perhaps Zeus himself; or Apollo, or
Poseidon. He conjures them to desist, and to replace Dionysus respectfully on
the shore, lest in his wrath he should visit the ship with wind and hurricane:
but the crew deride his scruples, and Dionysus is carried prisoner out to sea
with the ship under full sail. Miraculous circumstances soon attest both his
presence and his power. Sweet-scented wine is seen to flow spontaneously about
the ship, the sail and mast appear adorned with vine and ivy-leaves, and the
oar-peas with garlands, The terrified crew now too late entreat the helmsman to
steer his course for the shore, and crowd round him for protection on the poop.
But their destruction is at hand: Dionysus assumes the form of a lion—a bear
is seen standing near him—this bear rushes with a loud roar upon the captain,
while the crew leap overboard in their agony of fright, and are changed into
dolphins. Then remains none but the discreet and pious steersman, to whom
Dionysus addresses words of affectionate encouragement, revealing his name,
parentage and dignity.
This hymn, perhaps produced at the Naxian festival of Dionysus, and earlier than the time when the dithyrambic chorus became the established mode of singing the praise and glory of that god, is conceived in a spirit totally different from that of the Bacchic Telattae, or special rites which the Bacchae of Euripides so abundantly extol,—rites introduced from Asia by Dionysus himself at the head of athiasus or troop of enthusiastic women,—inflaming with temporary frenzy the minds of the women of Thebes,—not communicable except to those who approach as pious communicants,—and followed by the most tragical results to all those who fight against the god. The Bacchic Teletae, and the Bacchic feminine frenzy, were importations from abroad, as Euripides represents them, engrafted upon the joviality of the primitive Greek Dionysia; they were borrowed, in all probability, from more than one source and introduced through more than one channel, the Orphic life or brotherhood being one of the varieties. Strabo
ascribes to this latter a Thracian original, considering Orpheus, Musaeus,
and Eumolpus as having been all Thracians. It is curious to observe
how, in the Bacchae of Euripides, the two distinct and even
conflicting ideas of Dionysus come alternately forward; sometimes the old Greek
idea of the jolly and exhilarating god of wine—but more frequently the recent
and imported idea of the terrific and irresistible god who unseats the reason,
and whose power can only be appeased by a willing, though temporary obedience.
In the fanatical impulse which inspired the votaries of the Asiatic Rhea or
Cybele, or of the Thracian Kotys, there was
nothing of spontaneous joy; it was a sacred madness, during which the soul
appeared to be surrendered to a stimulus from without, and accompanied by
preternatural strength and temporary sense of power,—altogether distinct from
the unrestrained hilarity of the original Dionysia, as we see them in the
rural Attica, or in the gay city of Tarentum. There was indeed a side on which
the two bore some analogy, inasmuch as, according to the religious point of
view of the Greeks, even the spontaneous joy of the vintage feast was conferred
by the favor and enlivened by the companionship of Dionysus. It was upon this
analogy that the framers of the Bacchic orgies proceeded but they did
not the less disfigure the genuine character of the old Greek Dionysia.
Dionysus
is in the conception of Pindar the Paredros or
companion in worship of Demeter: the worship and religious estimate of the
latter has by that time undergone as great a change as that of the former, if
we take our comparison with the brief description of Homer and Hesiod: she has
acquired much of the awful and soul-disturbing attributes of the Phrygian
Cybele. In Homer, Demeter is the goddess of the corn-field, who becomes
attached to the mortal man Jason; an unhappy passion, since Zeus, jealous
of the connection between goddesses and men, puts him to death. In
the Hesiodic Theogony, Demeter is the mother of Persephone by Zeus,
who permits Hades to carry off the latter as his wife: moreover Demeter has,
besides, by Jason a son called Pintos, born in Crete. Even from Homer
to Hesiod, the legend of Demeter, has been expanded and her dignity exalted;
according to the usual tendency of Greek legend, the expansion goes on still
further. Through Jason, Demeter becomes connected with the mysteries of
Samothrace; through Persephone, with those of Eleusis. The former connection it
is difficult to follow out in detail, but the latter is explained and traced to
its origin in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter.
Though
we find different statements respecting the date as well as the origin of the
Eleusinian mysteries, yet the popular belief of the Athenians, and the story
which found favor at Eleusis, ascribed them to the presence and dictation of
the goddess Demeter herself; just as the Bacchic rites are, according
to the Bacchae of Euripides, first communicated and enforced
on the Greeks by the personal visit of Dionysus to Thebes, the metropolis of
the Bacchic ceremonies. In the Eleusinian legend, preserved by the
author of the Homeric Hymn, she comes voluntarily and identifies herself with
Eleusis; her past abode in Crete being briefly indicated. Her visit to Eleusis
is connected with the deep sorrow caused by the loss of her daughter
Persephone, who had been seized by Hades, while gathering flowers in a meadow
along with the Oceanic Nymphs, and carried off to become his wife in the
underworld. In vain did the reluctant Persephone shriek and invoke the aid of
her father Zeus: he had consented to give her to Hades, and her cries were
heard only by Hekate and Helios. Demeter was inconsolable at the
disappearance of her daughter, but knew not where to look for her: she wandered
for nine days and nights with torches in search of the lost maiden without
success. At length Helios, the “spy of gods and men”, revealed to her, in reply
to her urgent prayer, the rape of Persephone, and the permission given to Hades
by Zeus. Demeter was smitten with anger and despair: she renounced Zeus and the
society of Olympus, abstained from nectar and ambrosia, and wandered on earth
in grief and fasting until her form could no longer be known. In this condition
she came to Eleusis, then governed by the prince Keleos.
Sitting down by a well at the wayside in the guise of an old woman, she was
found by the daughters of Keleos, who came
hither with their pails of brass for water. In reply to their questions, she
told them that she had been brought by pirates from Crete to Thorikos, and had made her escape; she then solicited from
them succor and employment as a servant or as a nurse. The damsels prevailed
upon their mother Metaneira, to receive her, and
to entrust her with the nursing of the young Demophoon,
their late–born brother, the only son of Keleos.
Demeter was received into the house of Metaneira,
her dignified form still borne down by grief: she sat long silent and could not
be induced either to smile or to taste food, until the maid-servant Iambe, by jests and playfulness, succeeded in amusing and
rendering her cheerful. She would not taste wine, but requested a peculiar
mixture of barley-meal with water and the herb mint.
The
child Demophoon, nursed by Demeter, throve and
grew up like a god, to the delight and astonishment of his parents: she gave
him no food, but anointed him daily with ambrosia, and plunged him at night in
the fire like a torch, where he remained unburnt. She would have rendered
him immortal, had she not been prevented by the indiscreet curiosity and alarm
of Metaneira, who secretly looked in at night,
and shrieked with horror at the sight of her child in the fire. The indignant
goddess, setting the infant on the ground, now revealed her true character
to Metaneira: her wan and aged look disappeared,
and she stood in the genuine majesty of her divine shape, diffusing a
dazzling brightness which illuminated the whole house. “Foolish mother” she
said, “thy want of faith has robbed thy son of immortal life. I am the
exalted Demeter, the charm and comfort both of gods and men: I was preparing
for thy son exemption from death and old age; now it cannot be but he must
taste of both. Yet shall he be ever honored, since he has sat upon my knee and
slept in my arms. Let the people of Eleusis erect for me a temple and altar on
yonder hill above the fountain; I will myself prescribe to them the orgies
which they must religiously perform in order to propitiate my favor”.
The
terrified Metaneira was incapable even of
lifting up her child from the ground; her daughters entered at her cries, and
began to embrace and tend their infant brother, but be sorrowed and could not
be pacified for the loss of his divine nurse. All night they strove to appease
the goddess.
Strictly
executing the injunctions of Demeter, Keleos convoked
the people of Eleusis and erected the temple on the spot which she had pointed
out. It was speedily completed, and Demeter took up her abode in it,—apart from
the remaining gods, still pining with grief for the loss of her daughter, and
withholding her beneficent aid from mortals. And thus she remained a whole
year,— a desperate and terrible year: in vain did the oxen draw the plough, and
in vain was the barley-seed cast into the furrow, Demeter suffered it not to
emerge from the earth. The human race would have been starved, and the gods
would have been deprived of their honors and sacrifice, had not Zeus found
means to conciliate her. But this was a hard task; for Demeter resisted the
entreaties of Iris and of all the other goddesses and gods whom Zeus
successively sent to her. She would be satisfied with nothing less than the
recovery of her daughter. At length Zeus sent Hermes to Hades, to bring
Persephone away: Persephone joyfully obeyed, but Hades prevailed upon her
before she departed to swallow a grain of pomegranate, which rendered it
impossible for her to remain the whole year away from him.
With
transport did Demeter receive back her lost daughter, and the faithful Hekate sympathized
in the delight felt by both at the reunion. It was now an easier undertaking to
reconcile her with the gods. Her mother Rhea, sent down expressly by Zeus,
descended from Olympus on the fertile Rharan plain,
then smitten with barrenness like the rest of the earth: she succeeded in
appeasing the indignation of Demeter, who consented again to put forth her
relieving hand. The buried seed came up in abundance, and the earth was covered
with fruit and flowers. She would have wished to retain Persephone constantly
with her, but this was impossible; and she was obliged to consent that her
daughter should go down for one-third of each year to the house of Hades,
departing from her every spring at the time when the seed is sown. She then revisited
Olympus, again to dwell with the gods; but before her departure, she
communicated to the daughters of Keleos, and
to Keleos himself; together with Triptolemus, Diokles and Eumolpus, the
divine service and the solemnities which she required to be observed in her
honor. And thus began the venerable mysteries of Eleusis, at her special
command: the lesser mysteries, celebrated in February, in honor of Persephone;
the greater, in August, to the honor of Demeter herself. Both are jointly
patronesses of the holy city and temple.
Such is
a brief sketch of the temple legend of Eleusis, set forth at length in the
Homeric Hymn to Demeter. It is interesting not less as a picture of the Mater
Dolorosa (in the mouth of en Athenian, Demeter and
Persephone were always the Mother and Daughter, by excellence), first an
agonized sufferer, and then finally glorified,—the weal and woe of man being
dependent upon her kindly feeling,—than as an illustration of the nature and of
Greek legend generally. Though we now read this Hymn as pleasing poetry, to
the Eleusinians, for whom it was composed, it
was genuine and sacred history. They believed in the visit of Demeter to
Eleusis, and in the mysteries as a revelation from her, as implicitly as they
believed in her existence and power as a goddess. The Eleusinian psalmist
shares this belief in common with his countrymen, and embodies it in a
continuous narrative, in which the great goddesses of the place, as well as the
great heroic families, figure in inseparable conjunction Keleos is the son of the Eponymous hero Eleusis, and
his daughters, with the old epic simplicity, carry their basins to the well for
water. Eumolpus, Triptolemus, Diokles,
heroic ancestors of the privileged families who continued throughout the
historical times of Athens to fulfill their special hereditary functions in the
Eleusinian solemnities, are among the immediate recipients of inspiration from
the goddess; but chiefly does she favor Metaneira and
her infant son Demophoon, for the latter of whom
her greatest boon is destined, and intercepted only by the weak faith of the
mother. Moreover, every incident in the Hymn has a local coloring and a special
reference. The well, overshadowed by an olive-tree near which Demeter had
rested, the stream Kallichorus and the
temple-hill, were familiar and interesting places in the eyes of every
Eleusinian; the peculiar posset prepared from barley-meal with mint was
always tasted by the Mysts (or
communicants) after a prescribed fast, as an article in the ceremony, —while it
was also the custom, at a particular spot in the processional march, to permit
the free interchange of personal jokes and taunts upon individuals for the
general amusement. And these two customs are connected in the Hymn with the
incidents. that Demeter herself had chosen the posset as the first
interruption of her long and melancholy fast, and that her sorrowful thoughts
had been partially diverted by the coarse playfulness of the servant-maid Iambe. In the enlarged representation of the Eleusinian
ceremonies, which became established after the incorporation of Eleusis with
Athens, the part of Iambe herself was
enacted by a woman, or man in woman’s attire, of suitable wit and imagination,
who was posted on the bridge over the Kephissos,
and addressed to the passers-by in the procession, especially the great men of
Athens, saucy jeers, probably not less piercing than those of Aristophane’s on
the stage. The torch-bearing Hekate received a portion of the worship
in the nocturnal ceremonies of the Eleusinia:
this too is traced, in the Hymn, to her kind and affectionate sympathy with the
great goddesses.
Though
all these incidents were sincerely believed by the Eleusinians as
a true history of the past, and as having been the real initiatory cause of
their own solemnities, it is not the less certain that they are simply myths or
legends, and not to be treated as history, either actual or exaggerated. They
do not take their start from realities of the past, but from realities of the
present, combined with retrospective feeling and fancy, which fills up the
blank of the aforetime in a manner at once plausible and impressive. What
proportion of fact there may be in the legend, or whether there be any at all,
it is impossible to ascertain and useless to inquire; for the story did not
acquire belief from its approximation to real fact, but from its perfect
harmony with Eleusinian faith and feeling, and from the absence of any standard
of historical credibility. The little town of Eleusis derived all its
importance from the solemnity of the Demetria, and the Hymn which we have
been considering (probably at least as old as 600 BC) represents the town as it
stood before its absorption into the larger unity of Athens, which seems to
have produced an alteration of its legends and an increase of dignity in its
great festival. In the faith of an Eleusinian, the religious as well as the
patriotic antiquities of his native town were connected with this capital
solemnity. The divine legend of the sufferings of Demeter and her visit to
Eleusis was to him that which the heroic legend of Adrastus and the
Siege of Thebes was to a Sikyenian, or that
of Erechtheus and Athene to an
Athenian grouping together in the same scene and story the goddess and the
heroic fathers of the town. If our information were fuller, we should probably
find abundance of other legends respecting the Demetria: the Gephyrai of Athens, to whom belonged the
celebrated Harmodios and Aristogeiton,
and who possessed special Orgies of Demeter the Sorrowful, to which no man
foreign to their Gens was ever admitted, would doubtless have told stories not
only different but contradictory; and even in other Eleusinian myths we discover Eumolpus as
king of Eleusis, son of Poseidon, and a Thracian, completely different from the
character which he bears in the Hymn before us. Neither discrepancies nor want
of evidence, in reference to alleged antiquities, shocked the faith of a
non-historical public. What they wanted was a picture of the past, impressive
to their feelings and plausible to their imagination; and it is important to
the reader to remember, while he reads either the divine legends which we are
now illustrating or the heroic legends to which we shall soon approach, that he
is dealing with a past which never was present—a region essentially mythical,
neither approachable by the critic nor mensurable by the chronologer.
The
tale respecting the visit of Demeter, which was told by the ancient Gens,
called the Phytalids, in reference to another
temple of Demeter between Athens and Eleusis, and also by the Megarians in
reference to a Demetrion near their city, acquired under the auspices
of Athens still further extension. The goddess was reported to have first
communicated to Triptolemus at Eleusis the
art of sowing corn, which by his intervention was disseminated all over the
earth. And thus the Athenians took credit to themselves for having been the
medium of communication from the gods to man of all the inestimable blessings
of agriculture, which they affirmed to have been first exhibited on the fertile
Marian plain near Eleusis. Such pretensions are not to be found in the old
Homeric hymn. The festival of the Thesmophoria, celebrated in honor of
Demeter Thesmophoros at Athens, was
altogether different from the Eleusinia, in this
material respect, as well as others, that all males were excluded, and women
only were allowed to partake in it: the surname Thesmophorus gave
occasion to new legends in which the goddess was glorified as the first
authoress of laws and legal sanctions to mankind. This festival, for women
apart and alone, was also celebrated at Paros, at Ephesus, and in many other
parts of Greece.
Altogether,
Demeter and Dionysus, as the Grecian counterparts of the Egyptian Isis and
Osiris, seem to have been the great recipients of the new sacred rites borrowed
from Egypt, before the worship of Isis in her own name was introduced into
Greece: their solemnities became more frequently recluse and mysterious than
those of the other deities. The importance of Demeter to the collective
nationality of Greece may be gathered from the fact that her temple was erected
at Thermopylae, the spot where the Amphiktyonic assemblies
were held, close by the temple of the Eponymous hero Amphiktylin himself,
and under the surname of the Amphiktyonic Demeter.
We now
pass to another and not less important celestial personage—Apollo.
HOMERIC HYMN TO APOLLOThe
legends of Delos and Delphi, embodied in the Homeric Hymn to Apollo, indicate,
if not a greater dignity, at least a more widely diffused worship of that god
than even of Demeter. The Hymn is, in point of fact, an aggregate of two
separate compositions, one emanating from an Ionic bard at Delos, the other
from Delphi. The first details the birth, the second the mature divine
efficiency, of Apollo; but both alike present the unaffected charm as well as
the characteristic peculiarities of Greek mythical narrative. The hymnographer sings,
and his hearers accept in perfect good faith, a history of the past; but it is
a past, imagined partly as an introductory explanation to the present, partly
as a means of glorifying the god. The island of Delos was the accredited
birth-place of Apollo, and is also the place in which he chiefly delights,
where the great and brilliant Ionic festival is periodically convened in his
honor. Yet it is a rock narrow, barren, and uninviting: how came so glorious a
privilege to be awarded to it? This the poet takes upon himself to
explain. Leto, pregnant with Apollo, and persecuted by the jealous Hera,
could find no spot wherein to give birth to her offspring. In vain did she
address herself to numerous places in Greece, the Asiatic coast and the
intermediate islands; all were terrified at the wrath of Hera, and refused to
harbor her. As a last resort, she approached the rejected and repulsive island
of Delos, and promised that, if shelter were granted to her in her forlorn
condition, the island should become the chosen resort of Apollo as well as the
site of his temple with its rich accompanying solemnities. Delos joyfully
consented, but not without many apprehensions that the potent Apollo would
despise her unworthiness, and not without exacting a formal oath from Leto,—who
was then admitted to the desired protection, and duly accomplished her long and
painful labor. Though Diane, Rhea, Themis and Amphitrite came to
soothe and succor her, yet Hera kept away the goddess presiding over childbirth, Eileithyia,
and thus cruelly prolonged her pangs. At length Eileithyia came, and
Apollo was born. Hardly had Apollo tasted, from the hands of Themis, the
immortal food, nectar and ambrosia, when he burst at once his infant bands, and
displayed himself in full divine form and strength, claiming his characteristic
attributes of the bow and the harp, and his privileged function of announcing
beforehand to mankind the designs of Zeus. The promise made by Leto to
Delos was faithfully performed: amidst the numberless other temples and groves
which men provided for him, he ever preferred that island as his permanent
residence, and there the Ionians with their wives and children, and all their
“bravery”, congregated periodically from their different cities to glorify him.
Dance and song and athletic contests adorned the solemnity, and the countless
ships, wealth, and grace of the multitudinous Ionians had the air of an
assembly of gods. The Delian maidens, servants of Apollo, sang hymns
to the glory of the god, as well as of Artemis and Leto, intermingled with
adventures of foregone men and women, to the delight of the listening crowd.
The blind itinerant bard of Chios (composer of this the Homeric hymn, and
confounded in antiquity with the author of the Iliad) had found honor and
acceptance at this festival, and commends himself, in a touching farewell
strain, to the remembrance and sympathy of the Delian maidens.
But
Delos was not an oracular spot: Apollo did not manifest himself there as
revealer of the futurities of Zeus. A place must be found where this beneficent
function, without which mankind would perish under the innumerable doubts and
perplexities of life, may be exercised and rendered available. Apollo himself
descends from Olympus to make choice of a suitable site: the hymnographer knows
a thousand other adventures of the god which he might sing, but he prefers this
memorable incident, the charter and patent of consecration for the Delphian temple.
Many different places did Apollo inspect; he surveyed the country of the Magnetes and the Perrhaebians, came to Iolkos, and passed over from thence to Euboea and the plain
of Lelanton. But even this fertile spot did not
please him: he crossed the Euripus to Boeotia, passed by Teumessus and Mykalessus,
and the then inaccessible and unoccupied forest on which the city of Thebes
afterwards stood. He next proceeded to Onchestos,
but the grove of Poseidon was already established there; next across the Kephissus to Okalea, Haliartus, and the agreeable plain and much-frequented
fountain of Delphusa, or Tilphusa. Pleased with the place, Apollo prepared to
establish his oracle there, but Tilphusa was
proud of the beauty of her own site, and did not choose that her glory should
be eclipsed by that of the god. She alarmed him with the apprehension that the
chariots which contended in her plain, and the horses and mules which watered
at her fountain would disturb the solemnity of his oracle; and she thus induced
him to proceed onward to the southern side of Parnassus, overhanging the harbor
of Krissa. Here he established his oracle, in the mountainous site not
frequented by chariots and horses, and near to a fountain, which however was
guarded by a vast and terrific serpent, once the nurse of the monster Typhaon. This serpent Apollo slew with an arrow, and
suffered its body to rot in the sun: hence the name of the place, Pythe, and the surname of the Pythian Apollo. The
plan of his temple being marked out, it was built by Trophonios and Agamedes,
aided by a crowd of forward auxiliaries from the neighborhood. He now
discovered with indignation, however, that Tilphusa had
cheated him, and went back with swift step to resent it.
“Thou shalt not thus”, he said, “succeed in thy fraud and retain thy
beautiful water; the glory of the place shall be mine, and not thine alone”.
Thus saying, he tumbled down a crag upon the fountain, and obstructed her
limped current: establishing an altar for himself in a grove hard by near
another spring, where men still worship him as Apollo Tilphusios,
because of his severe vengeance upon the once beautiful Tilphusa.
Apollo
next stood in need of chosen ministers to take care of his temple and
sacrifice, and to pronounce his responses at Pytho.
Descrying a ship, “containing many and good men”, bound on traffic from
the Minoian Knossos in Crete, to Pylus in Peloponnesus, he resolved to make use of the
ship and her crew for his purpose. Assuming the shape of a vast dolphin, he
splashed about and shook the vessel so as to strike the mariners with terror,
while he sent a strong wind, which impelled her along the coast of Peloponnesus
into the Corinthian Gulf, and finally to the harbor of Krissa, where she
ran aground. The affrighted crew did not dare to disembark: but Apollo was seen
standing on the shore in the guise of a vigorous youth, and inquired who they
were, and what was their business. The leader of the Cretans recounted in reply
their miraculous and compulsory voyage, when Apollo revealed himself as the
author and contriver of it, announcing to them the honorable function and the
dignified post to which he destined them. They followed him by his orders to
the rocky Pytho on Parnassus, singing the
solemn Io-Paian such as it is sung in Crete, while the god himself marched
at their head, with his fine form and lofty step, playing on the harp. He
showed them the temple and site of the oracle, and directed them to worship him
as Apollo Delphinios, because they bad first
seen him in the shape of a dolphin. “But how”, they inquired, “are we to live
in a spot where there is neither corn, nor vine, nor pasturage?”. “Ye silly mortals”,
answered the god, “who look only for toil and privation, know that an easier
lot is yours. Ye shall live by the cattle whom crowds of pious visitors will
bring to the temple: ye shall need only the knife to be constantly ready for
sacrifice. Your duty will be to guard my temple, and to officiate as ministers
at my feasts: but if ye be guilty of wrong or insolence, either by word or
deed, ye shall become the slaves of other men, and shall remain so forever.
Take heed of the word and the warning”.
Such
are the legends of Delos and Delphi, according to the Homeric Hymn to Apollo.
The specific functions of the god, and the chief localities of his worship,
together, with the surnames attached to them, are thus historically explained,
being connected with his past acts and adventures. Though these are to us only
interesting poetry, yet to those who heard them sung they possessed all the
requisites of history, and were fully believed as such, not because they were
partially founded in reality, but because they ran in complete harmony with the
feelings; and, so long as that condition was fulfilled, it was not the fashion
of the time to canvass truth or falsehood. The narrative is purely personal,
without any discernible symbolized doctrine or allegory, to serve as a supposed
ulterior purpose: the particular deeds ascribed to Apollo grow out of the
general preconceptions as to his attributes, combined with the present
realities of his worship. It is neither history nor allegory, but simple myth
or legend.
WORSHIP
OF APOLLO
The
worship of Apollo is among the most ancient, capital, and strongly marked facts
of the Greek world, and widely diffused over every branch of the race. It is
older than the Iliad or Odyssey, in the latter of which both Pytho and Delos are noted, though Delos is not named
in the former. But the ancient Apollo is different in more respects than one
from the Apollo of later times. He is in an especial manner the god of the
Trojans, unfriendly to the Greeks, and especially to Achilles; he has,
moreover, only two primary attributes, his bow and his prophetic powers,
without any distinct connection either with the harp, or with medicine, or with
the sun, all which in later times he came to comprehend. He is not only, as
Apollo Karneius, the chief god of the Doric
race, but also (under the surname of Patrous)
the great protecting divinity of the gentile tie among the Ionians: he is
moreover the guide and stimulus to Greek colonization, scarcely any colony
being ever sent out without encouragement and direction from the oracle at
Delphi: Apollo Archegetes is one of his
great surnames. His temple lends sanctity to the meetings of the Amphiktyonic assembly, and he is always in filial
subordination and harmony with his father Zeus: Delphi and Olympia are never
found in conflict. In the Iliad, the warm and earnest patrons of the Greeks are
Hera, Athena, and Poseidon: here too Zeus and Apollo are seen in harmony, for
Zeus is decidedly well-inclined to the Trojans, and reluctantly sacrifices them
to the importunity of the two great goddesses. The worship of the Sminthian Apollo, in various parts of the Troad and the neighboring territory, dates before the
earliest periods of colonization: hence the zealous patronage of Troy ascribed
to him in the Iliad. Altogether, however, the distribution and partialities of
the gods in that poem are different from what they become in later times,—a
difference which our means of information do not enable us satisfactorily to
explain. Besides the Delphian temple, Apollo had numerous temples
throughout Greece, and oracles at Abae in Phocis,
on the Mount Ptoon, and at Tegyra in Boeotia, where he was said to have been
born, at Branchidae near Miletus, at Klarus in Asia Minor, and at Patara in
Lycia. He was not the only oracular god: Zeus at Dodona and at Olympia gave
responses also: the gods or heroes Trophonius, Amphiaraus, Amphilochus, Mopsus, etc., each at his own sanctuary and in his own
prescribed manner, rendered the same service.
The two
legends of Delphi and Delos, above noticed, form of course a very insignificant
fraction of the narratives which once existed respecting the great and
venerated Apollo. They serve only as specimens, and as very early specimens, to
illustrate what these divine myths were, and what was the turn of Greek faith
and imagination. The constantly recurring festivals of the gods caused an
incessant demand for new myths respecting them, or at least for varieties and
reproductions of the old myths. Even during the third century of the Christian
era, in the time of the rhetor Menander, when the old forms of
Paganism were waning and when the stock of myths in existence was extremely
abundant, we see this demand in great force; but it was incomparably more
operative in those earlier times when the creative vein of the Grecian mind yet
retained its pristine and unfaded richness. Each god had many
different surnames, temples, groves, and solemnities; with each of which was
connected more or less of mythical narrative, originally hatched in the
prolific and spontaneous fancy of a believing neighborhood, to be afterwards
expanded, adorned and diffused by the song of the poet. The earliest subject of
competition at the great Pythian festival was the singing of a hymn
in honor of Apollo: other agones were
subsequently added, but the ode or hymn constituted the fundamental attribute
of the solemnity: the Pythia at Sicyon and elsewhere were
probably framed on a similar footing. So too at the ancient and
celebrated Charitesia, or festival of the Charites,
at Orchomenos, the rivalry of the poets in their various modes of
composition both began and continued as the predominant feature; and the
inestimable treasures yet remaining to us of Attic tragedy and comedy, are
gleanings from the once numerous dramas exhibited at the solemnity of the Dionysia.
The Ephesians gave considerable rewards for the best hymns in honor of Artemis,
to be sung at her temple. And the early lyric poets of Greece, though their
works have not descended to us, devoted their genius largely to similar
productions, as may be seen by the titles and fragments yet remaining.
Both
the Christian and the Mahomedan religions have begun during the
historical age, have been propagated from one common centre,
and have been erected upon the ruins of a different preexisting faith. With
none of these particulars did Greek Paganism correspond. It took rise in an age
of imagination and feeling simply, without the restraints, as well as without
the aid, of writing or records, of history or philosophy: it was, as a general
rule, the spontaneous product of many separate tribes and localities, imitation
and propagation operating as subordinate causes; it was moreover a primordial
faith, as far as our means of information enable us to discover. These
considerations explain to us two facts in the history of the early Pagan mind:
first, the divine myths, the matter of their religion, constituted also the matter
of their earliest history; next, these myths harmonized with each other only in
their general types, but differed incurably in respect of particular incidents.
The poet who sung a new adventure of Apollo, the trace of which he might have
heard in some remote locality, would take care that it should be agreeable to
the general conceptions which his hearers entertained respecting the god. He
would not ascribe the amorous influences to Athena, nor armed interference and
the aegis to Aphrodite; but, provided he maintained this general keeping, he
might indulge his fancy without restraint in the particular events of the
story. The feelings and faith of his hearers went along with him, and there
were no critical scruples to hold them back: to scrutinize the alleged
proceedings of the gods was repulsive, and to disbelieve them impious. And thus
these divine myths, though they had their root simply in religious feelings,
and though they presented great discrepancies of fact, served nevertheless as
primitive matter of history to an early Greek: they were the only narratives,
at once publicly accredited and interesting, which he possessed. To them were
aggregated the heroic myths (to which we shall proceed presently),—indeed the
two are inseparably blended, gods, heroes and men almost always appearing in
the same picture,—analogous both in their structure and their genesis, and
differing chiefly in the circumstance that they sprang from the type of a hero
instead of from that of a god.
APHRODITE
AND ATHENS
We are
not to be astonished if we find Aphrodite, in the Iliad, born from Zeus
and Dione, —and in the Theogony of Hesiod, generated from the foam on the
sea after the mutilation of Uranos; nor if in
the Odyssey she appears as the wife of Hephaestus, while in the Theogony the
latter is married to Aglaia, and Aphrodite is described as mother of three
children by Ares. The Homeric hymn to Aphrodite details the legend of Aphrodite
and Anchises, which is presupposed in the Iliad as the parentage of
Aeneas: but the author of the hymn, probably sung at one of the festivals of
Aphrodite in Cyprus, represents the goddess as ashamed of her passion for a
mortal, and as enjoining Anchises under severe menaces not to reveal
who the mother of Aeneas was; while in the Iliad she has no scruple in publicly
owning him, and he passes everywhere as her acknowledged son Aphrodite is
described in the hymn as herself cold and unimpressible, but ever active
and irresistible in inspiring amorous feelings to gods, to men, and to animals.
Three goddesses are recorded as memorable exceptions to her universal
empire,—Athena, Artemis, and Hestia or Vesta. Aphrodite was one of the
most important of all the goddesses in the mythical world; for the number of
interesting, pathetic and tragical adventures deducible from
misplaced or unhappy passion was of course very great; and in most of these
cases the intervention of Aphrodite was usually prefixed, with some legend to
explain why she manifested herself. Her range of action grows wider in the later
epic and lyric and tragic poets than in Homer.
Athena,
the man-goddess, born from the head of Zeus, without a mother and without
feminine sympathies, is the antithesis partly of Aphrodite, partly of the
effeminate or womanized god Dionysus—the latter is an importation from Asia,
but Athena is a Greek conception—the type of composed, majestic and unrelenting
force. It appears however as if this goddess had been conceived in a different
manner in different parts of Greece. For we find ascribed to her, in some of
the legends, attributes of industry and home-keeping; she is represented as the
companion of Hephaestus, patronizing handicraft, and expert at the loom and the
spindle: the Athenian potters worshipped her along with Prometheus. Such traits
of character do not square with the formidable aegis and the massive and
crushing spear which Homer and most of the myths assign to her. There probably
were at first at least two different types of Athena, and their coalescence has
partially obliterated the less marked of the two. Athena is the constant and
watchful protectress of Heracles: she is also locally identified with
the soil and people of Athens, even in the Iliad: Erechtheus,
the Athenian, is born of the earth, but Athena brings him up, nourishes him, and
lodges him in her own temple, where the Athenians annually worship him with
sacrifice and solemnities. It was altogether impossible to make Erechtheus son of Athena,—the type of the goddess
forbade it; but the Athenian myth-creators, though they found this barrier
impassable, strove to approach to it as near as they could, and the description
which they give of the birth of Erichthonios, at
once un-Homeric and unseemly, presents something like the phantom of maternity.
ARTEMIS
AND POSEIDON
The
huntress Artemis, in Arcadia and in Greece proper generally, exhibits a
well-defined type with which the legends respecting her are tolerably
consistent. But the Ephesian as well as the Tauric Artemis
partakes more of the Asiatic character, and has borrowed the attributes of the
Lydian Great Mother as well as of an indigenous Tauric Virgin:
this Ephesian Artemis passed to the colonies of Phocaea and Miletus.
The Homeric Artemis shares with her brother Apollo in the dexterous use of the
far-striking bow, and sudden death is described by the poet as inflicted by her
gentle arrow. The jealousy of the gods at the withholding of honors and
sacrifices, or at the presumption of mortals in contending with them,—a point
of character so frequently recurring in the types of the Grecian
gods,—manifests itself in the legends of Artemis: the memorable Calydonian boar is sent by her as a visitation
upon Eneus, because he bad omitted to sacrifice
to her, while he did honor to other gods. The Arcadian heroine Atalanta is
however a reproduction of Artemis, with little or no difference, and the
goddess is sometimes confounded even with her attendant Nymphs.
The
mighty Poseidon, the earth-shaker and the ruler of the sea, is second only to
Zeus in power, but has no share in those imperial and superintending capacities
which the Father of gods and men exhibits. He numbers a numerous heroic
progeny, usually men of great corporeal strength, and many of them belonging to
the Aeolicrace: the great Neleid family
of Pylus trace their origin up to him; and
he is also the father of Polyphemus the Cyclops, whose well-earned
suffering be cruelly revenges upon Odysseus. The island of Kalaureia is his Delos, and there was held in it an
old local Amphiktyony, for the purpose of
rendering to him joint honor and sacrifice: the isthmus of Corinth, Helike in Achaia, and Onchestos in Boeocia, are also residences which he much affects, and
where he is solemnly worshipped. But the abode which he originally and
specially selected for himself was the Acropolis of Athens, where by a blow of
his trident he produced a well of water in the rock: Athena came afterwards and
claimed the spot for herself, planting in token of possession the olive-tree
which stood in the sacred grove of Pandrosos:
and the decision either of the autochthonous Cecrops, or of Erechtheus, awarded to her the preference, much to the
displeasure of Poseidon. Either on this account, or on account of the death of
his son Eumolpus, slain in assisting the Eleusinians against Erechtheus, the Attic myths ascribed to Poseidon great
enmity against the Erechtheid family, which
he is asserted to have ultimately overthrown: Theseus, whose glorious reign and
deeds succeeded to that family, is said to have been really his son. In several
other places,—in Aegina, Argos and Naxos,—Poseidon had disputed the privileges
of patron-god with Zeus, Hera and Dionysus: he was worsted in all, but
bore his defeat patiently.
Poseidon
endured a long slavery, in common with Apollo, gods as they were,
under Laomedon, king of Troy, at the command and condemnation of Zeus: the
two gods rebuilt the walls of the city, which had been destroyed by Heracles.
When their time was expired, the insolent Laomedon withheld from them
the stipulated reward, and even accompanied its refusal with appalling threats;
and the subsequent animosity of the god against Troy was greatly determined by
the sentiment of this injustice. Such periods of servitude, inflicted upon
individual gods, are among the most remarkable of all the incidents in the
divine legends. We find Apollo on another occasion condemned to serve Admetus,
king of Pherae, as a punishment for having killed the Cyclops, and Heracles
also is sold as a slave to Omphale. Even the fierce Ares, overpowered and
imprisoned for a long time by the two Aloids, is
ultimately liberated only by extraneous aid. Such narratives attest the
discursive range of Greek fancy in reference to the gods, as well as the
perfect commingling of things and persons, divine and human, in their
conceptions of the past. The god who serves is for the time degraded: but the
supreme god who commands the servitude is in the like proportion exalted,
whilst the idea of some sort of order and government among these superhuman
beings was never lost sight of. Nevertheless the myths respecting the servitude
of the gods became obnoxious afterwards, along with many others, to severe
criticism on the part of philosophers.
HERA,
HEPHESTUS AND HERMES
The
proud, jealous, and bitter Hera,— the goddess of the once-wealthy Mycenae, the
fax et focus of the Trojan war, and the ever-present protectress of
Jason in the Argonautic expedition — occupies an indispensable station
in the mythical world. As the daughter of Kronos and wife of Zeus,
she fills a throne from whence he cannot dislodge her, and which gives her a
right perpetually to grumble and to thwart him. Her unmeasured jealousy of the
female favorites of Zeus, and her antipathy against his sons, especially
against Heracles, has been the suggesting cause of innumerable myths: the
general type of her character stands here clearly marked, as furnishing both
stimulus and guide to the mythopoeic fancy. The “Sacred Wedding”, or
marriage of Zeus and Hera, was familiar to epithalamic poets
long before it became a theme for the spiritualizing ingenuity of critics.
Hephaestus
is the son of Hera without a father, and stands to her in the same relation as
Athena to Zeus: her pride and want of sympathy are manifested by her casting
him out at once in consequence of his deformity. He is the god of fire, and
especially of fire in its practical applications to handicraft, and is indispensable
as the right-hand and instrument of the gods. His skill and his deformity
appear alternately as the source HERMES of mythical stories:
wherever exquisite and effective fabrication is intended to be designated,
Hephaestus is announced as the maker, although in this function the type of his
character is reproduced in Daedalos. In the Attic legends he appears
intimately united both with Prometheus and with Athena, in conjunction with
whom he was worshipped at Kolonus near Athens. Lemnos was
the favorite residence of Hephaestus; and if we possessed more knowledge of
this island and its town Hephaestias, we should
doubtless find abundant legends detailing his adventures and interventions.
The
chaste, still, and home-keeping Hestia, goddess of the family hearth, is far
less fruitful in mythical narratives, it spite of her very superior dignity,
than the knavish, smooth-torqued, keen, and acquisitive Hermes. His function of
messenger of the gods brings him perpetually on the stage, and affords ample
scope for portraying the features of his character. The Homeric hymn to Hermes
describes the scene and circumstances of his birth, and the almost
instantaneous manifestation, even in infancy, of his peculiar attributes; it
explains the friendly footing on which he stood with Apollo,—the interchange of
gifts and functions between them,—and lastly, the inviolate security of all the
wealth and offerings in the Delphian temple, exposed as they were to
thieves without any visible protection. Such was the innate cleverness and
talent of Hermes, that on the day he was born he invented the lyre, stringing
the seven chords on the shell of a tortoise: and he also stole the cattle of
Apollo in Pieria, dragging them backwards to his cave in Arcadia, so that their
track could not be detected. To the remonstrances of his mother Maia,
who points out to him the danger of offending Apollo, Hermes replies, that he
aspires to rival the dignity and functions of Apollo among the immortals, and
that if his father Zeus refuses to grant them to him, he will employ his powers
of thieving in breaking open the sanctuary at Delphi, and in carrying away the
gold and the vestments, the precious tripods and vessels. Presently Apollo
discovers the loss of his cattle, and after some trouble finds his way to
the Kyllenian cavern, where he sees Hermes
asleep in his cradle. The child denies the theft with effrontery, and even
treats the surmise as a ridiculous impossibility: he persists in such denial
even before Zeus, who however detects him at once, and compels him to reveal
the place where the cattle are concealed. But the lyre was as yet unknown to
Apollo, who has heard nothing except the voice of the Muses and the sound of
the pipe. So powerfully is lie fascinated by hearing the tones of the lyre from
Hermes, and so eager to become possessed of it, that he is willing at once to
pardon the past theft, and even to conciliate besides the friendship of Hermes.
Accordingly a bargain is struck between the two gods and sanctioned by Zeus.
Hermes surrenders to Apollo the lyre, inventing for his own use
the syrinx or panspipe, and receiving
from Apollo in exchange the golden rod of wealth, with empire over flocks and
herds as well as over horses and oxen and the wild animals of the woods. He
presses to obtain the gift of prophecy, but Apollo is under a special vow not
to impart that privilege to any god whatever: he instructs Hermes however how
to draw information, to a certain extent, from the Moerae or
Fates themselves; and assigns to him, over and above, the function of messenger
of the gods to Hades.
Although
Apollo has acquired the lyre, the particular object of his wishes, he is still
under apprehension that Hermes will steal it away from him again, together with
his bow, and he exacts a formal oath by Styx as security. Hermes promises
solemnly that he will steal none of the acquisitions, nor ever invade the
sanctuary of Apollo; while the latter on his part pledges himself to recognize
Hermes as his chosen friend and companion, amongst all the other sons of Zeus,
human or divine.
So came
to pass, under the sanction of Zeus, the marked favor shown by Apollo to
Hermes. But Hermes (concludes the hymnographer, with frankness unusual in
speaking of a god “does very little good: he avails himself of the darkness of
night to cheat without measure the tribes of mortal men”.
Here
the general types of Hermes and Apollo, coupled with the present fact that no
thief ever approached the rich and seemingly accessible treasures of Delphi,
engender a string of expository incidents cast into a quasi-historical form and
detailing how it happened that Hermes had bound himself by especial convention
to respect the Delphian temple. The types of Apollo seem to have been
different in different times and parts of Greece: in some places he was
worshipped as Apollo Nomios, or the patron of
pasture and cattle; and this attribute, which elsewhere passed over to his
son Aristaeus, is by our hymnographer voluntarily surrendered to
Hermes, combined with the golden rod of fruitfulness. On the other hand, the
lyre did not originally belong to the Far-striking King, nor is he at all an
inventor: the hymn explains both its first invention and how it came into his
possession. And the value of the incidents is thus partly expository, partly
illustrative, as expanding in detail the general preconceived character of
the Kyllenian god.
ZEUS
AND HIS ATRIBUTES
To Zeus
more amours are ascribed than to any of the other gods,—probably because the
Grecian kings and chieftains were especially anxious to trace their lineage to
the highest and most glorious of all—each of these amours having its
representative progeny on earth. Such subjects were among the most promising
and agreeable for the interest of mythical narrative, and Zeus as a lover thus
became the father of a great many legends, branching out into innumerable
interferences, for which his sons, all of them distinguished individuals, and
many of them persecuted by Hera, furnished the occasion.
But
besides this, the commanding functions of the supreme god, judicial and
administrative, extending both over gods and men, was a potent stimulus to
the mythopoeic activity. Zeus has to watch over his own
dignity—the first of all considerations with a god: moreover as Horkios, Xenios, Ktesios, Meilichios, (a
small proportion of his thousand surnames,) he guaranteed oaths and punished
perjurers, he enforced the observance of hospitality, he guarded the family
hoard and the crop realized for the year, and he granted expiation to the
repentant criminal. All these different functions created a demand for myths,
as the means of translating a dim, but serious, presentiment into distinct
form, both self-explaining and communicable to others. In enforcing the
sanctity of the oath or of the tie of hospitality, the most powerful of all
arguments would be a collection of legends respecting the judgments of Zeus Horkios or Xenios; the
more impressive and terrific such legends were, the greater would be their
interest, and the less would any one dare to disbelieve them. They constituted
the natural outpourings of a strong and common sentiment, probably without any
deliberate ethical intention: the preconceptions of the divine agency, expanded
into legend, form a product analogous to the idea of the divine features and
symmetry embodied in the bronze or the marble statue.
But it
was not alone the general type and attributes of the gods which contributed to
put in action themythopoeic propensities.
The rites and solemnities forming the worship of each god, as well as the
details of his temple and its locality, were a fertile source of myths,
respecting his exploits and sufferings, which to the people who heard them
served the purpose of past history. The exegetes, or local guide and
interpreter, belonging to each temple, preserved and recounted to curious
strangers these traditional narratives, which lent a certain dignity even to
the minutiae of divine service. Out of a stock of materials thus ample, the
poets extracted individual collections, such as the “Causes” of Kallimachus, now lost, and such as the Fasti of
Ovid are for the Roman religious antiquities.
It was
the practice to offer to the gods in sacrifice the bones of the victim only,
enclosed in fat: how did this practice arise?
The
author of the Hesiodic Theogony has a story which explains it:
Prometheus tricked Zeus into an imprudent choice, at the period when the gods
and mortal men first came to an arrangement about privileges and duties.
Prometheus, the tutelary representative of man, divided a large steer into two
portions: on the one side he placed the flesh and guts, folded up in
the momentum and covered over with the skin: on the other, he put the
bones enveloped in fat. He then invited Zeus to determine which of the two portions
the gods would prefer to receive from mankind. Zeus “with both hands” decided
for and took the white fat, but was highly incensed on finding that he had got
nothing at the bottom except the bones. Nevertheless the choice of the gods was
now irrevocably made: they were not entitled to any portion of the sacrificed
animal beyond the bones and the white fat; and the standing practice is thus
plausibly explained. I select this as one amongst a thousand instances to
illustrate the genesis of legend out of religious practices. In the belief of
the people, the event narrated in the legend was the real producing cause of
the practice: but when we come to apply a sound criticism, we are compelled to
treat the event as existing only in its narrative legend, and the legend itself
as having been, in the greater number of cases, engendered by the
practice,—thus reversing the supposed order of production.
In
dealing with Greek myths generally, it is convenient to distribute them into
such as belong to the Gods and such at belong to the Heroes, according as the
one or the other arc the prominent personages. The former class manifests, more
palpably than the latter, their real origin, as growing out of the faith and
the feelings, without any necessary basis, either of matter of fact or
allegory: moreover, they elucidate more directly the religion of the Greeks, so
important an item in their character as a people. But in point of fact, most of
the myths present to us Gods, Heroes and Men, in juxtaposition one with the other
and the richness of Grecian mythical literature arises from the infinite
diversity of combinations thus opened out; first by the three class-types, God,
Hero, and Man; next by the strict keeping with which each separate class and
character is handled. We shall now follow downward the stream of mythical time,
which begins with the Gods, to the Heroic legends, or those which principally
concern the Heroes and Heroines; for the latter were to the full as important
in legend as the former.
IIHEROES AND MEN
THE Hesiodic theogony gives no account of
anything like a creation of man, nor does it seem that such an idea was much
entertained in the legendary vein of Grecian imagination; which commonly
carried back the present men by successive generations to some primitive
ancestor, himself sprung from the soil, or from a neighboring river, or
mountain, or from a god, a nymph, &c. But the poet of the Hesiodic “Works
and Days” has given us a narrative conceived in a very different spirit
respecting the origin of the human race, more in harmony with the sober and
melancholy ethical tone which reigns through that poem.
First (he tells us) the Olympic gods made the golden
race,—good, perfect, and happy men, who lived from the spontaneous abundance of
the earth, in ease and tranquility, like the gods themselves: they suffered
neither disease nor old-age, and their death was like a gentle sleep. After
death they became, by the award of Zeus, guardian terrestrial demons, who watch
unseen over the proceedings of mankind—with the regal privilege of dispensing
to them wealth, and taking account of good and bad deeds.
Next, the gods made the silver race,—unlike and
greatly inferior, both in mind and body, to the golden. The men of this race
were reckless and mischievous towards each other, and disdainful to the
immortal gods, to whom they refused to offer either worship or sacrifice. Zeus
in his wrath buried them in the earth; but there they still enjoy a secondary
honor, as the Blest of the underworld.
Thirdly, Zeus made the brazen race, quite different
from the silver. They were made of hard ash-wood, pugnacious and terrible: they
were of immense strength and adamantine soul, neither raising nor touching
bread. Their arms, their houses, and their implements were all of brass: there
was then no iron. This race, eternally fighting, perished by each other's
hands, died out, and descended without name or privilege to Hades.
Next, Zeus made a fourth race, far juster and better than the last preceding. These were
the Heroes or demigods, who fought at the sieges of Troy and Thebes. But this
splendid stock also became extinct: some perished in war, others were removed
by Zeus to a happier state in the islands of the Blest. There they dwell in
peace and comfort, under the government of Kronos, reaping thrice in the
year the spontaneous produce of the earth.
The fifth race, which succeeds to the Heroes, is of
iron: it is the race to which the poet himself belongs, and bitterly does he
regret it. He finds his contemporaries mischievous, dishonest, unjust,
ungrateful, given to perjury, careless both of the ties of consanguinity and of
the behests of the gods: Nemesis and Edo’s (Ethical Self-reproach) have left
earth and gone back to Olympus. How keenly does he wish that his lot had been
cast either earlier or later! This iron race is doomed to continual guilt,
care, and suffering, with a small infusion of good; but the time will come when
Zeus will put an end to it. The poet does not venture to predict what sort of
race will succeed.
Such is the aeries of distinct races of men, which
Hesiod, or the author of the “Works and Days”, enumerates as having existed
down to his own time. I give it as it stands, without placing much confidence
in the various explanations which critics have offered. It stands out in more
than one respect from the general tone and sentiment of Grecian legend:
moreover, the sequence of races is neither natural nor homogeneous,—the heroic
race not having any metallic denomination, and not occupying any legitimate
place in immediate succession to the brazen. Nor is the conception of the
daemons in harmony either with Homer or with the Hesiodic theogony. In
Homer, there is scarcely any distinction between gods and daemons: farther, the
gods are stated to go about and visit the cities of men in various disguises
for the purpose of inspecting good and evil proceedings. But in the poem now
before us, the distinction between gods and demons is generic. The latter are
invisible tenants of earth, remnants of the once happy golden race whom the
Olympic gods first made: the remnants of the second or silver race are not
daemons, nor are they tenants of earth, but they still enjoy an honorable
posthumous existence as the Blest of the underworld. Nevertheless the Hesiodic
daemons are in no way authors or abettors of evil: on the contrary, they form
the unseen police of the gods, for the purpose of repressing wicked behavior in
the world.
We may trace, I think, in this quintuple succession of
earthly races, set forth by the author of the “Works and Days”, the confluence
of two veins of sentiment, not consistent one with the other, yet both
co-existing in the author’s mind. The drift of his poem is thoroughly didactic
and ethical. Though deeply penetrated with the injustice and suffering which
darken the face of human life, he nevertheless strives to maintain both in
himself and in others, a conviction that on the whole the just and laborious
man will come off well, and he enforces in considerable detail the lessons of
practical prudence and virtue. This ethical sentiment, which dictates his
appreciation of the present, also guides his imagination as to the past. It is
pleasing to him to bridge over the chasm between the gods and degenerate man,
by the supposition of previous races,—the first altogether pure, the second
worse than the first, and the third still worse than the second; and to show
further how the first race passed by gentle death-sleep into glorious
immortality; how the second race was sufficiently wicked to drive Zeus to bury
them in the underworld, yet still leaving them a certain measure of honor;
while the third was so desperately violent as to perish by its own animosities,
without either name or honor of any kind. The conception of the golden race
passing after death into good guardian daemons, which some supposed to have
been derived from a comparison with oriental angels, presents itself to the
poet partly as approximating this race to the gods, partly as a means of
constituting a triple gradation of post-obituary existence, proportioned to the
character of each race whilst alive. The denominations of gold and silver,
given to the two first races, justify themselves, like those given by Simonides
of Amorgos and by Phokylides to
the different characters of women, derived from the dog, the bee, the mare, the
ass, and other animals; and the epithet of brazen is specially explained by
reference to the material which the pugnacious third race so plentifully
employed for their arms and other implements.
So far we trace intelligibly enough the moralizing
vein: we find the revolutions of the past so arranged as to serve partly as an
ethical lesson, partly as a suitable preface to the present. But fourth in the
list comes “the divine race of Heroes” and here a new vein of thought is opened
by the poet. The symmetry of his ethical past is broken up, in order to make
way for these cherished beings of the national faith. For though the author of
the “Works and Days” was himself of a didactic cast of thought, like Phokylides, or Solon, or Theognis,
yet he had present to his feelings, in common with his countrymen, the picture
of Grecian foretime, as it was set forth in the current myths, and still more
in Homer and those other epical productions which were then the only existing
literature and history. It was impossible for him to exclude, from his sketch
of the past, either the great persons or the glorious exploits which these
poems ennobled; and even if he himself could have consented to such an
exclusion, the sketch would have become repulsive to his bearers. But the
chiefs who figured before Thebes and Troy could not be well identified either
with the golden, the silver, or the brazen race: moreover, it was essential
that they should be placed in immediate contiguity with the present race,
because their descendants, real or supposed, were the most prominent and
conspicuous of existing men. Hence the poet is obliged to assign to them the
fourth place in the series, and to interrupt the descending ethical movement in
order to interpolate them between the brazen and the iron race, with neither of
which they present any analogy. The iron race, to which the poet himself
unhappily belongs, is the legitimate successor, not of the heroic, but of the
brazen. Instead of the fierce and self-annihilating pugnacity which
characterizes the latter, the iron race manifests an aggregate of smaller and
meaner vices and mischiefs, It will not perish by suicidal extinction—but it is
growing worse and worse, and is gradually losing its vigor, so that Zeus will
not vouchsafe to preserve much longer such a race upon the earth.
The Works and Days,
earliest didactic poem.
I conceive that the series of races imagined by the
poet of the “Works and Days” is the product of two distinct and incongruous
veins of imagination,—the didactic or ethical blending with the primitive
mythical or epical. His poem is remarkable as the most ancient didactic
production of the Greeks, and as one of the first symptoms of a new tone of
sentiment finding its way into their literature, never afterwards to become
extinct. The tendency of the “Works and Days” is antiheroic: far from seeking
to inspire admiration for adventurous enterprise, the author inculcates the
strictest justice, the most unremitting labor and frugality, and a sober, not
to say anxious, estimate of all the minute specialties of the future. Prudence
and probity are his means,—practical comfort and happiness his end. But he
deeply feels, and keenly exposes, the manifold wickedness and shortcomings of
his contemporaries, in reference to this capital standard. He turns with
displeasure from the present men, not because they are too feeble to hurl
either the spear of Achilles or some vast boundary-stone, but because they are
rapacious, knavish, and unprincipled.
The daemons first introduced into the religious
atmosphere of the Grecian world by the author of the “Works and Days”—as
generically different from the gods, but essentially good, and forming the
intermediate agents and police between gods and men,—are deserving of
attention. They are the seed of a doctrine which afterwards underwent many
changes, and became of great importance, first as one of the constituent
elements of pagan faith, then as one of the helps to its subversion. It will be
recollected that the buried remnants of the half-wicked silver race, though
they are not recognized as demons, are still considered as having a substantive
existence, a name, and dignity, in the underworld.
The step was easy, to treat them as demons also, but
as demons of a defective and malignant character: this step was made by
Empedocles and Xenocrates, and to a certain extent countenanced by Plato. There
came thus to be admitted among the pagan philosophizers daemons both good and
bad, in every degree: and these daemons were found available as a means of
explaining many phenomena for which it was not convenient to admit the agency
of the gods. They served to relieve the gods from the odium of physical and
moral evils, as well as from the necessity of constantly meddling in small
affairs. The objectionable ceremonies of the pagan religion were defended upon
the ground that in no other way could the exigencies of such malignant beings
be appeased. The demons were most frequently noticed as causes of evil, and
thus the name came insensibly to convey with it a bad sense,—the idea of an
evil being as contrasted with the goodness of a god. So it was found by the
Christian writers when they commenced their controversy with paganism. One
branch of their argument led them to identify the pagan gods with demons in the
evil sense, and the insensible change in the received meaning of the word lent
them a specious assistance.
For they could easily show, that not only in Homer,
but in the general language of early pagans, all the gods generally were spoken
of as demons—and therefore, verbally speaking, Clemens and Tatian seemed
to affirm nothing more against Zeus or Apollo than was involved in the language
of paganism itself. Yet the audience of Homer or Sophocles would have
strenuously repudiated the proposition, if it had been put to them in the sense
which the word demon bore in the ago and among the circle of these Christian writers.
In the imagination of the author of the “Works and
Days”, the demons occupy an important place, and are regarded as being of
serious practical efficiency. When he is remonstrating with the rulers around
him upon their gross injustice and corruption, he reminds them of the vast
number of these immortal servants of Zeus who are perpetually on guard amidst
mankind, and through whom the visitations of the gods will descend even upon
the most potent evil-doers. His supposition that the demons were not gods, but
departed men of the golden race, allowed him to multiply their number
indefinitely, without too much cheapening the divine dignity.
As this poet, enslaved by the current legends, has
introduced the heroic race into a series to which they do not legitimately
belong—so he has under the same influence inserted in another part of his poem
the myth of Pandora and Prometheus, as a means of explaining the primary
diffusion, and actual abundance, of evil among mankind. Yet this myth can in no
way consist, with his quintuple scale of distinct races, and is in fact a
totally distinct theory to explain the same problem,—the transition of mankind
from a supposed state of antecedent happiness to one of present toil and
suffering. Such an inconsistency is not a sufficient reason for questioning the
genuineness of either passage; for the two stories, though one contradicts the
other, both harmonies with that central purpose which governs the author’s
mind,—a querulous and didactic appreciation of the present. That such was his
purpose appears not only from the whole tenor of his poem, but also from the
remarkable fact that his own personality, his own adventures and kindred, and
his own sufferings figure in it conspicuously. And this introduction of
self-imparts to it a peculiar interest. The father of Hesiod came over from the
Eolic Kyme, with the view of bettering his
condition, and settled at Askra in Boeotia,
at the foot of Mount Helicon. After his death his two sons divided the family
inheritance: but Hesiod bitterly complains that his brother Perses cheated and went to law with him, and obtained
through corrupt judges an unjust decision. He farther reproaches his brother
with a preference for the suits and unprofitable bustle of the agora, at a time
when he ought to be laboring for his subsistence in the field. Askra indeed was a miserable place, repulsive both in
summer and winter. Hesiod had never crossed the sea, except once from Aulis to
Euboea, whither he went to attend the funeral-games of Amphidamas, the chief
of Chalcis: he sung a hymn, and gained as prize a tripod, which he consecrated
to the muses in Helicon.
Probable age of the poem. These particulars, scanty as they are, possess a peculiar value, as the earliest authentic memorandum respecting the doing or suffering of any actual Greek person. There is no external testimony at all worthy of trust respecting the age of the “Works and Days” Herodotus treats Hesiod and Homer as belonging to the same age, four hundred years before his own time; and there are other statements besides, some placing Hesiod at an earlier date than Homer, some at a later. Looking at the internal evidences, we may observe that the pervading sentiment, tone, and purpose of the poem is widely different from that of the Iliad and Odyssey, and analogous to what we read respecting the compositions of Archilochus and the Amorgian Simonides. The author of the “Works and Days” is indeed a preacher and not a satirist: but with this distinction, we find in him the same predominance of the present and the positive, the same disposition to turn the muse into an exponent of his own personal wrongs, the same employment of Aesopic fable by way of illustration, and the same unfavorable estimate of the female sex, all of which may be traced in the two poets above-mentioned, placing both of them in contrast with the Homeric epic. Such an internal analogy, in the absence of good testimony, is the best guide which we can follow in determining the date of the “Works and Days”, which we should accordingly place shortly after the year 700 BC. The style of the poem might indeed afford a proof that the ancient and uniform hexameter, though well adapted to continuous legendary narrative or to solemn hymns, was somewhat monotonous when called upon either to serve a polemical purpose or to impress a striking moral lesson. When poets, then the only existing composers, first began to apply their thoughts to the cut and thrust of actual life, aggressive or didactic, the verse would be seen to require a new, livelier, and smarter metre; and out of this want grew the elegiac and the iambic verse, both seemingly contemporaneous, and both intended to supplant the primitive hexameter for the short effusions then coming into vogue.
III
LEGEND OF THE IAPETIDS
THE
sons of the Titan god Iapetus, as described in the Hesiodic theogony,
are Atlas, Mencetius, Prometheus, and
Epimetheus. Of these, Atlas alone is mentioned by Homer in the Odyssey, and
even he not as the son of Iapetus: the latter himself is named in the
Iliad as existing in Tartarus along with Kronos. The Homeric
Atlas “knows the depths of the whole sea, and keeps by himself those tall
pillars which hold the heaven apart from the earth”.
As the
Homeric theogony generally appears much expanded in Hesiod, so also
does the family of Iapetus, with their varied adventures. Atlas is here
described, not as the keeper of the intermediate pillars between heaven and
earth, but as himself condemned by Zeus to support the heaven on his head and
hands; while the fierce Menoetius is pushed down to Erebus as a
punishment for his ungovernable insolence. But the remaining two brothers,
Prometheus and Epimetheus, are among the most interesting creations of Grecian
legend, and distinguished in more than one respect from all the remainder.
First,
the main battle between Zeus and the Titan gods is a contest of force purely
and simply—mountains are hurled and thunder is launched, and the victory
remains to the strongest. But the competition between Zeus and Prometheus is
one of craft and stratagem: the victor does indeed remain to the former, but
the honors of the fight belong to the latter. Secondly, Prometheus and
Epimetheus (the fore-thinker and the after-thinker) are characters stamped at
the same mint, and by the same effort, the express contrast and antithesis of
each other. Thirdly, mankind are here expressly brought forward, not indeed as
active partners in the struggle, but as the grand and capital subjects
interested,—as gainers or sufferers by the result. Prometheus appears in the
exalted character of champion of the human race, even against the formidable superiority
of Zeus.
In the
primitive or Hesiodic legend, Prometheus is not the creator or molder of man;
it is only the later additions which invest him with this character. The race
are supposed as existing, and Prometheus, a member of the dispossessed body of
Titan gods, comes forward as their representative and defender. The
advantageous bargain which he made with Zeus on their behalf, in respect to the
partition of the sacrificial animals, has been recounted in a preceding
chapter. Zeus felt that he had been outwitted, and was exceeding wroth. In his
displeasure he withheld from mankind the inestimable comfort of fire, so that
the race would have perished, had not Prometheus stolen fire, in defiance of
the Supreme Ruler, and brought it to men in the hollow stem of the plant called
giant-fennel.
Zeus
was now doubly indignant, and determined to play off a still more ruinous
stratagem. Hephaestus, by his direction, molded the form of a beautiful virgin;
Athene dressed her, Aphrodite and the Charites bestowed upon her both
ornament and fascination, while Hermes infused into her the mind of a dog, a
deceitful spirit, and treacherous words. The messengers of the gods conducted
this “fascinating mischief” to mankind, at a time when Prometheus was not
present. Now Epimetheus had received from his brother peremptory injunctions
not to accept from the hands of Zeus any present whatever; but the beauty of
Pandora (so the newly-formed female was called) was not to be resisted. She was
received and admitted among men, and from that moment their comfort and tranquility
was exchanged for suffering of every kind. The evils to which mankind are
liable had been before enclosed in a cask in their own keeping; Pandora in her
malice removed the lid of the cask, and out flew these thousand evils and
calamities, to exercise for ever their
destroying force. Hope alone remained imprisoned, and therefore without
efficacy, as before—the inviolable lid being replaced before she could escape.
Before this incident (says the legend) men had lived without disease or
suffering; but now both earth and sea are full of mischiefs. Maladies of every
description stalk abroad by day as well as by night, without any hope fox man
of relief to come.
The
Theogony gives the legend here recounted, with some variations—leaving out the
part of Epimetheus altogether, as well as the cask of evils. Pandora is the
ruin of man, simply as the mother and representative of the female sex. And the
variations are thus useful, as they enable us to distinguish the essential from
the accessory circumstances of the story.
“Thus
(says the poet, at the conclusion of his narrative) it is not possible to
escape from the purposes of Zeus”. His myth, connecting the calamitous
condition of man with the malevolence of the supreme god, shows, first, by what
cause such an unfriendly feeling was raised; next, by what instrumentality its
deadly results were brought about. The human race are not indeed the creation,
but the protected flock of Prometheus, one of the elder or dispossessed Titan
gods. When Zeus acquires supremacy, mankind along with the rest become subject
to him, and are to make the best bargain they can, respecting worship and
service to be yielded. By the stratagem of their advocate Prometheus, Zeus is
cheated into such a partition of the victims as is eminently unprofitable to
him; whereby his wrath is so provoked, that he tries to subtract from man the
use of feeling of fire. Here, however, his scheme is frustrated by the theft of
Prometheus: but his second attempt is more successful, and he in his turn
cheats the unthinking Epimetheus into the acceptance of a present (in spite of
the peremptory interdict of Prometheus) by which the whole of man’s happiness
is wrecked. This legend grows out of two feelings; partly as to the relations
of the gods with man, partly as to the relation of the female sex with the
male. The present gods are unkind towards man, but the old gods, with whom
man's lot was originally cast, were much kinder—and the ablest among them
stands forward as the indefatigable protector of the race. Nevertheless, the
mere excess of his craft proves the ultimate ruin of the cause which he
espouses. He cheats Zeus out of a fair share of the sacrificial victim, so as
both to provoke and justify a retaliation which he cannot be always at hand to
ward off; the retaliation is, in his absence, consummated by a snare laid for
Epimetheus and voluntarily accepted. And thus, though Hesiod ascribes the
calamitous condition of man to the malevolence of Zeus, his piety suggests two
exculpatory pleas for the latter; mankind have been the first to defraud Zeus
of his legitimate share of the sacrifice—and they have moreover been consenting
parties to their own ruin. Such are the feelings, as to the relation between
the gods and man, which have been one of the generating elements of this
legend. The other element, a conviction of the vast mischief arising to man
from women, whom yet they cannot dispense with, is frequently and strongly set
forth in several of the Greek poets—by Simonides of Amorgos and Phokylidis, not less than by Euripides.
Punishment
of Prometheus
But the
miseries arising from woman, however great they might be, did not reach
Prometheus himself. For him, the rash champion who had ventured “to compete in
sagacity” with Zeus, a different punishment was in store. Bound by heavy chains
to a pillar, he remained fast imprisoned for several generations: every day did
an eagle prey upon his liver, and every night did the liver grow afresh for the
next day’s suffering. At length Zeus, eager to enhance the glory of his favorite
son, Heracles, permitted the latter to kill the eagle and rescue the captive.
Such is
the Promethean myth as it stands in the Hesiodic poems; its earliest form, as
far as we can trace. Upon it was founded the sublime tragedy of Aeschylus, “The
Enchained Prometheus”, together with at least one more tragedy, now lost, by
the same author. Aeschylus has made several important alterations; describing
the human race, not as having once enjoyed and subsequently lost a state of
tranquility and enjoyment, but as originally feeble and wretched. He suppresses
both the first trick played off by Prometheus upon Zeus respecting the
partition of the victim—and the final formation and sending of Pandora—which
are the two most marked portions of the Hesiodic story; while on the other hand
he brings out prominently and enlarges upon the theft of fire, which in Hesiod
is but slightly touched. If he has thus relinquished the antique simplicity of
the story, he has rendered more than ample compensation by imparting to it a grandeur
of ideal, a large reach of thought combined with appeals to our earnest and
admiring sympathy, and a pregnancy of suggestion in regard to the relations
between the gods and man, which soar far above the Hesiodic level, and which
render his tragedy the most impressive, though not the most artistically
composed, of all Grecian dramatic productions. Prometheus there appears not
only as the heroic champion and sufferer in the cause and for the protection of
the human race, but also as the gifted teacher of all the arts, helps, and
ornaments of life, amongst which fire is only one: all this against the will
and in defiance of the purpose of Zeus, who, on acquiring his empire, wished to
destroy the human race and to beget some new breed. Moreover, new relations
between Prometheus and Zeus are superadded by Aeschylus. At the commencement of
the struggle between Zeus and the Titan gods, Prometheus had vainly attempted
to prevail upon the latter to conduct it with prudence; but when he found that
they obstinately declined all wise counsel, and that their ruin was inevitable,
he abandoned their cause and joined Zeus. To him and to his advice Zeus owed
the victory; yet the monstrous ingratitude and tyranny of the latter is now
manifested by nailing him to a rock, for no other crime than because he
frustrated the purpose of extinguishing the human race, and furnished to them
the means of living with tolerable comfort. The new ruler Zeus, insolent with
his victory over the old gods, tramples down all right, and sets at naught
sympathy and obligation, as well towards gods as towards man. Yet the prophetic
Prometheus, in the midst of intense suffering, is consoled by the foreknowledge
that the time will come when Zeus must again send for him, release him, and
invoke his aid, as the sole means of averting from himself dangers otherwise
insurmountable. The security and means of continuance for mankind have now been
placed beyond the reach of Zeus—whom Prometheus proudly defies, glorying in his
generous and successful championship, despite the terrible price which he is
doomed to pay for it.
As
the Aeschylean Prometheus, though retaining the old lineaments, has
acquired a new coloring, soul, and character, so he has also become identified
with a special locality. In Hesiod there is no indication of the place in which
he is imprisoned; but Aeschylus places it in Scythia, and the general belief of
the Greeks supposed it to be on Mount Caucasus. So long and so firmly did this
belief continue, that the Roman general Pompey, when in command of an army in
Colchis, made with his companion, the literary Greek Theophanes, a special
march to view the spot in Caucasus where Prometheus had been transfixed.
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