Grice e Colli: la ragione
conversazionale e l’implicatura conversazionale dell’espressione – scuola di
Torino –filosofia torinese – filosofia piemontese -- filosofia italiana – Luigi
Speranza (Torino).
Filosofo torinese. Filosofo piemontese. Filosofo
italiano. Torino, Piemonte. Grice: “I love Colli – his ‘filosofia
dell’espressione’ is much more serious than my ramblings, well meant, though,
on Peirce! I was only trying to be fashionable! At Oxford, they loved my
lecture on ‘meaning,’ which got me into ‘implying,’ and eventually,
‘expressing.’ – My unity developed – Colli was born with it!” Insegna a Pisa. Di
una facoltosa famiglia, il padre amministra “La Stampa”, incarico dal quale fu
poi estromesso all'indomani della marcia su Roma, su ordine di Mussolini.
Studia a Torino, laureandosi sotto Solari con “Politicità ellenica e Platone”.
Scorse nella tradizione filosofica classica greco-romana l'autentico
"logos" a cui ritornare. Lo stile di scrittura, profondo e
costellato di aforismi taglienti, si caratterizza da un'attenzione maniacale
alla musicalità del discorso. Questa dote musicale emerge con chiarezza dalle
letture di alcuni passi di Colli recitati da Bene. Il suo saggio principale è
“Filosofia dell'espressione” che fornisce, mediante una complessa teoria delle
categorie e della deduzione, un'interpretazione della totalità della
manifestazione come “espressione” di qualcosa (l'immediatezza) che sfugge alla
presa della conoscenza. Comunque, ritiene che sia possibile riguadagnare il
fondamento metafisico del mondo portando il discorso filosofico ai suoi estremi
limiti e "(di)mostrando" la natura derivata del logos. Importante il
suo contributo su i filosofi italici Gorgia, Zenone, e Girgentu, e le figure di
Bacco ed Apollo, dismisura e misura. Al tentativo di interpretare gli enigmi di
questi culti a-logici, fra i quali quelli oracolari, viene fatta risalire
l'origine remota della dialettica. Altre opere: “Filosofia dell'espressione” (Adelphi,
Milano); “Dopo Nietzsche” (Adelphi, Milano); “La nascita della filosofia.
Adelphi, Milano); “La sapienza greca” “Dioniso, Apollo, Eleusi, Orfeo, Museo,
Iperborei, Enigma” (Adelphi, Milano); “La sapienza greca” “Epimenide, Ferecide,
Talete, Anassimandro, Anassimene, Onomacrito” (Adelphi, Milano); “La sapienza
greca”; “Eraclito” (Adelphi, Milano); “Nietzsche” (Adelphi, Milano); “La ragione
errabonda” (Adelphi, Milano); “Per una enciclopedia di autori classici” (Adelphi,
Milano); “La Natura ama nascondersi” (Adelphi, Milano); “Zenone di Velia” (Adelphi,
Milano); “Gorgia e Parmenide” (Adelphi, Milano); “Introduzione a Osservazioni
su Diofanto di Pierre de Fermat. Bollati Boringhieri, Torino); “Platone
politico” (Adelphi, Milano); “Il sovro-umano” (Adelphi, Milano); “Apollineo e
dionisiaco” (Adelphi, Milano); “Girgentu” (Adelphi, Milano); “Platone: la lotta
dello spirito per la potenza, Einaudi, Torino); Da Hegel a Nietzsche, Einaudi,
Torino); Organon, Einaudi, Torino); Critica della ragion pura, a cura e tr. di
Giorgio Colli, Einaudi, Torino); “Simposio” (Adelphi, Milano); Parerga e
paralipomena” (Adelphi, Milano); Nietzsche (Classici Adelphi) Scritti giovanili; La nascita della tragedia;
Considerazioni inattuali; La filosofia nell'epoca tragica dei Greci; Frammenti
postumi; Wagner a Bayreuth; Considerazioni inattuali, Umano, troppo umano,
Aurora; Idilli di Messina; Così parlò Zarathustra; Al di là del bene e del
male; Genealogia della morale; Wagner; Crepuscolo degli idoli; L'anticristo; Ecce
homo; Nietzsche contra Wagner, Ditirambi di Dioniso e Poesie postume;
Epistolario (Adelphi, Milano); Sull'utilità e il danno della storia per la vita
(Adelphi, Milano); Sull'avvenire delle nostre scuole” (Adelphi, Milano); La mia vita (Adelphi, Milano); La nascita
della tragedia” Adelphi, Milano); L'uomo di fede e lo scrittore, Adelphi,
Milano); Schopenhauer come educatore, tr. di Mazzino Montinari, Adelphi,
Milano); “Lettere da Torino” (Adelphi, Milano); “Il servizio divino dei greci”
(Adelphi, Milano); Lo Specchio di Dioniso” (Dedalo, Bari); Dizionario
biografico degli italiani, Implicazioni estetiche
in C.; Misura e dismisura. Per una rappresentazione di C., ERGA, Genova);
L’enigma greco; Apollineo e dionisiaco in C., in Clemente Tafuri e David
Beronio, Teatro Akropolis. Testimonianze ricerca azioni, vol II,
AkropolisLibri, Genova); I Greci: annotazioni su alcune traduzioni, in
"Episteme", Mimesis Edizioni, Milano); Il Girgentu di Colli, Luca
Sossella Editore, Roma. Wikipedia Ricerca Prosimno pastore della
mitologia greca Lingua Segui Modifica Prosimno o Polimno (Πρόσυμνος/Πόλυμνος)
nella mitologia greca era un pastore che viveva nei pressi del sacro lago di
Lerna (in Argolide, sulla costa del golfo di Argo), reputato essere senza fondo
e pertanto assai pericoloso per tutti quelli che vi si volevano avventurare in
acqua. Quando il dio del vino Dioniso andò nell'Ade per salvare sua madre
Semele, Prosimno lo guidò verso l'ingresso - conducendolo nella sua barca a
remi - posto al centro del lago. Il premio richiesto da Prosimno per questo
servizio sarebbe stato il diritto a giacere con il giovane Dio. Tuttavia,
quando Dioniso tornò sulla terra per una strada diversa, trovò che Prosimno era
nel frattempo morto. Dioniso volle comunque mantenere la sua promessa;
intagliò un pezzo di legno di ficus a forma di falloutilizzandolo per adempiere
ritualmente all'accordo che aveva in precedenza stipulato con Prosimno: si
posizionò sulla sua tomba e ci si sedette sopra, auto-sodomizzandosi. Questo,
si dice, è stato dato come spiegazione della presenza di falli di legno di fico
tra gli oggetti segreti che venivano "rivelati" nel corso dei Misteri
dionisiaci. Questa storia non è raccontata in pieno da una delle consuete
fonti di racconti mitologici greci, anche se molti di loro accennano ad essa.
Il fatto si è ricostruito sulla base di dichiarazioni di autori cristiani;
questi devono essere trattati quindi con riserva in quanto il loro obiettivo
era essenzialmente quello di screditare la mitologia pagana[1]. Riti
notturni annuali hanno avuto luogo presso il lago sacro, sulle rive della
palude alcionia, ancora in età classica; Pausania il Periegeta si rifiuta però
di descriverceli. Il mito di Prosimno è stato studiato da Bernard Sergentin
"L'omosessualità nella mitologia greca", ristampato nella sua
"Omosessualità e iniziazione tra i popoli indo-europei". Questo mito
è comunque considerato essere il risultato dell'importanza del simbolismo
fallico all'interno del culto dionisiaco. Igino, Astronomy; Clemente di Alessandria, Protreptikos; Arnobio, Against
the Gentiles; Dalby, Pausania, Guide to Greece; Plutarco, Iside e Osiride 35;
Dalby, Dionisio-Baco, su geocities.com Mitos del cielo: Dioniso, su
mitosdelcielo.iespana. Susana Quintanilla, Dioniso en México o cómo leyeron
nuestros clásicos a los clásicos griegos. De op. cit.:
Calasso "Las bodas de Cadmo y Harmonía", Barcelona, Anagrama( PDF )
[collegamento interrotto], su redalyc.uaemex. Dalby, The Story of Bacchus,
London, British Museum Press, Pederastia Pederastia greca Temi LGBT nella
mitologia FontiModifica Arnobio, Contro i pagani, Clemente di Alessandria ,
Esortazione ai Greci (Protrettico). Igino , Astronomia. Pausania, Descrizione
della Grecia, Plutarco , Iside e Osiride. Portale LGBT Portale
Mitologia greca Dioniso dio greco del vino, della vendemmia, dei teatri, della
fertilità e dell'ubriachezza Canopo (mitologia) Pederastia tebana. Che
l'esclusione di queste potenze ben presenti e Bi distinte dalla comunità
delle figure dominanti, ed .il sus É sistere della loro venerabilità, pur
tacendo .la vastità É e profondità loro e più ch’ogni altra cosa,
l’orrendo fi mistero del loro essere, provengano da una particola
rissima valutazione e da una volontà risoluta, si app* lesa evidentissimo
nella figura dominante di tutto que sto ciclo: Dioniso. La sua virilità,
come osserva .J. J. Bachhofen in modo eccellente, trascina
irresistibilmente seco. l’eterno femminino di questa sfera e ne
rimane assolutamente presa. Il suo spirito s’arroventa nell’inebriante
beveraggio, che venne chiamato il sangue della terra. Istinti elementari,
frenesie, dissolvimenti della co- scienza nello sconfinato, assalgono
tempestosamente i suoi adoratori e agli estasiati si schiudon i tesori
del regno. terrestre. Anche intorno a Dioniso accorrono i morti,
che lo seguono a ‘primavera quand’egli porta i fiori. Amore e
selvaggia ebbrezza, gelidi brividi e beatitudini si ten- gon per mano e
gli fan corteo; ciascuno degli antichis- simi tratti essenziali della
divinità della Terra son in lui accresciuti a dismisura," ma pure
infinitamente ap- profonditi, Questa figura divina che tutto trascina
con sè è ben nota ad Omero, che chiama il dio « forsennato >, e
ha vivo davanti agli occhi l’andar selvaggio delle sue accompagnatrici
che agitano il tirso. Ma tutto. ciò non è che similitudine, come quando
paragona ad una Menade Andromaca, la quale presa da oscuro presentimento
si precipita fuor dalle sue stanze (Iliade; cfr. Inno Omer. a
Dem.), come pure quando occasional- mente narra memorabili storie (Iliade.;
Odissea). Nel vivo mondo di Omero le Menadi non trovan posto e pure
invano si cerca Dioniso, che non vi ha parte veruna. Dioniso «
dispensator di gioia » (Esio- do, Erga 614) gli è altrettanto estraneo
quanto l’uomo doloroso annunziatore dell’al di là. L’eccesso, che gli
è proprio, non s’accorda con la chiarezza che contraddi- stingue
qui tutto ciò ch’è realmente divino. Da questa chiarezza sono assai
lontane anche le al- tre figure del ciclo della Terra. Sian pure
intessute. di dolcissimo incanto, e portin sulla fronte la più
sublime gravità. Il sapere e la sacra legge stanno loro al fianco.
Ma sono.legate alla materia terrestre e partecipano della sua oscura
pesantezza e necessità. La loro benevolenza è quella dell’elemento
materno, ed il loro diritto ha la rigidità di tutti i legami del sangue.
Tutte arrivano nella notte della morte, o meglio: la morte ed il
passato risalgono grazie a loro nel presente e nell’esistenza dei
viventi. Non v'è un ritrarsi dal teatro del mondo, nè il trapassare
dall’esistenza oggettiva in una sfera inferiore nè una liberazione del
campo di vita e d’azione da ciò che una volta fu. Tutto ciò che fu rimane
per sempre, ed. eleva la sua esigenza, sempre con la medesima ron.
cretezza, dalla quale non c’è via di scampo. Ed è solo una conferma di
codesto carattere, il predominio ch’'ha nel mondo delle divinità di
questa sfera, il sesso femmi. nile. Nella cerchia celeste della religione
omerica invece sì trae in disparte in modo tale, che non può essere
ca. suale. | I . Gli dèi che dominano colà, non solo: son di
sesso maschile, sibbene rappresentano decisamente lo spirito
virile. Ed anche quando Atena si unisce ad Apollo e-a Zeus in suprema
trinità, è lei a rinnegare esplicitamente il femmineo e a farsi genio del
mascolino. I -m Dirisioti ^LT^b !-' 0' 25outonV
%tt^^\t Hitiratp. THE ELEUSINIAN AND BACCHIC
MYSTERIES. A DISSERTATION. TAYLOR, TXANSL4TOH OF PLATO."
" PLOTINTJS," " POEPITIllY," " lAMBLICHCS."
"PEOCI-nS,' * ABISTOTLE," ETC., ETC. EDITED,
WITH INTRODUCTION, NOTES, EMENDATIONS, AND GLOSSARY. WILDER. Ev Tats
TEAETAI2 KaOapcrei'; rjyoyi'Tai (cai ncpip- pai'TTjpia (Cat ayviiTfjiOL,
a nof (v aTTOpprjToi; Spuiixeviav, (tat TT)! TOD Oeiov |U.€T0U(rias
yviJifauiiaTa etaiv. Pkoclus ; Manuscript Commentary upon Plato, I.
AMbiadet. WITH 85 ILLUSTRATIONS RAWSON. by BulI TDN. The
DeVinne Press. TO MY OLD FRIEND ^cniarti OSuatitcl)
THE GREATEST BOOKSELLER OF ANCIENT OR MODERN TIMES CbiB
Dolttme is reBpcctfuIl? Jeiiicateli BY THE PUBLISHER Bacchic
Ceremonies. Bacchus ami Nymphs. Pluto, Prosevpiua, aud Furies.
Eleusinian Prieatesses.
Bacchante and Faun. Faun and Bacchus. Fable is
Love's World, Poem by Schiller. Eleusinian Mysteries. Bacchic Mysteries. Hymn
to Minerva; Orphic Hymns. Hymn of Cleanthes Klensiiiiiiii
Mj'steriea. '"Tis not merely The human breing's pride that
peoples space With life and mystical predominance, Since likewise
for the stricken heart of Love This visible nature, and this common
world Is all too narrow ; yea, a deeper import Lurks in the legend
told my infant years That lies upon that truth, we live to learn,
For fable is Love's world, his home, his birthplace ; Delightedly he
dwells 'mong fays and talismans, And spirits, and delightedly
believes Divinities, being himself divine. The intelligible forms
of ancient poets. The fair humanities of Old Religion, The Power,
the Beauty, and the Majesty, That had their haunts in dale or piny motmtain, Or
forests by slow stream, or pebbly spring. Or chasms or wat'ry depths; —
all these have vanished. They live no longer in the faith of
Eeason, But still the heart doth need a language ; still Doth the
old instinct bring back the old names." Schiller : The
Piccolomini, Act. ii. Scene 4. 9 Apollo autl
Muaes. ITolM.'tll.MlS. In offering- to the public Taylor's admirable
treatise upon the Elensiidan and Bacchic Mysteries, it is proper to
insert a few words of explanation. These observances once represented the
spiritual life of (Ireeee, and were considered for two thousand years and
more the appointed means for regeneration through an interior union with
the Divine Essence. However absurd, or even offensive they may seem
to us, we should therefore hesitate long before we venture to lay desecrating
hands on what others have esteemed holy. We can learn a valuable
lesson in this regard from the Roman philosophers, who had learned to
treat the popular religious rites with mirth, but always considered the
Eleusinian Mysteries with the deepest reverence. It is ignorance
which leads to profanation. Men ridicule what they do not properly
understand. Alci- biades was drunk when he ventured to touch what
his countrymen deemed sacred. The undercurrent of this worhl is set
toward one goal; and inside of human credulity — call it human weakness,
if you please — is a power almost infinite, a holy faith capa))le
of apprehending the siipremest truths of all Existence. The veriest
dreams of life, pertaining as they do to " the minor mystery of
death," have in them more than external fact can reach or explain;
and Myth, how- ever much she is proved to be a child of Earth, is
also received among men as the child of Heaven. The Cinder- Wench
of the ashes will become the Cinderella of the Palace, and be wedded to
the King's Son. The instant that we attempt to analyze, the
sensible, palpable facts upon which so many try to build disappear
beneath the surface, like a foundation laid upon quicksand. " In the
deepest reflections," says a dis- tinguished writer, '' all that we
call external is only the material basis upon which our dreams are built
; and the sleep that surrounds life swallows up life, — all but a
dim wreck of matter, floating this way and that, and forever evanishing
from sight. Complete the anal- ysis, and we lose even the shadow of the
external Present, and only the Past and the Future are left us as
our sure inheritance. This is the first initia- tion, — the vailing
[mnesis] of the eyes to the external. But as epo])fm, by the synthesis of
this Past and Future in a living nature, we obtain a higher, an
ideal Present, comprehending within itself all that can be real for
us within us or without. This is the second initiation in which is uuvailed to
us the Present as a new birth from our own life. Thus the great
problem of Idealism is symbolically solved in the Eleusinia. These were
the most celebrated of all the sacred orgies, and were called, by way of
eminence. The Mysteries. Although exhibiting apparently the fea-
tures of an Eastern origin, they were evidently copied from the rites of
Isis in Egypt, an idea of which, more or less correct, may be found in
The Mefamotyhoses of APULEIO and The Epicurean by Moore. Every act,
rite, and person engaged in them was symbolical; and the individual
revealing them was put to death without mercy. So also was any
uninitiated person who happened to be present. Persons of all ages and
both sexes were initiated ; and neglect in this respect, as in the
case of Socrates, was regarded as impious and atheistical. It was
required of all candidates that they should be first admitted at the
MiJo'a or Lesser Mysteries of Agree, by a process of fasting called ^j«f/'/-
ficafion, after which they were styled mysfce, or initi- ates. A year
later, they might enter the higher degree. In this they learned the
aporrheta, or secret meaning of the rites, and were thenceforth
denominated ephori, or epoptm. To some of the interior mysteries, however,
only a very select number obtained admission. From these were taken all
the ministers of holy rites. The Hierophant who presided was bound to
celibacy, and requii'ed to devote his entire life to his sacred
office. Atlantic Monthly, He had three assistants, — the torch-bearer,
the lierux or crier, and the minister at the altar. There were also
a hasileus or king, who was an archon of Athens, four curators,
elected by suffrage, and ten to offer sacrifices. The sacred Orgies were
celebrated on every fifth year ; and began on the 15th of the month
Boedromiau or September. The first day was styled the agurmos or
assembly, because the worshipers then convened. The second was the day of
purification, called also alacU mystaij from the proclamation : ''To the
sea, initiated ones ! " The third day was the day of sacrifices ;
for which purpose were offered a mullet and barley from a field in
Eleusis. The officiating persons were for- bidden to taste of either ;
the offering was for Achtheia (the sorrowing one, Demeter) alone. On the
fourth day was a solemn procession. The JcalafJios or sacred basket
was borne, followed by women, ciske or chests in which were sesamum,
carded wool, salt, pomegran- ates, poppies, — also thyrsi, a serpent,
boughs of ivy, cakes, etc. The fifth day was denominated the day of
torches. In the evening were torchlight processions and much
tumult. The sixth was a great occasion. The statue of
lacchus, the son of Zeus and Demeter, was brought from Athens, by the laccJiogoroi,
all crowned with myrtle. In the way was heard only an uproar of
sing- ing and the beating of brazen kettles, as the votaries danced
and ran along. The image was borne " through the sacred Gate, along
the sacred way, halting by the sacred fig-tree (all sacred, mark you, from
Eleiisinian associations), where the procession rests, and then
moves on to the bridge over the Cephissns, where again it rests, and
where the expression of the wildest grief gives place to the trifling
farce, — even as Demeter, in the midst of her grief, smiled at the levity
of lambe in the palace of Celeus. Through the 'mystical en- trance
' we enter Eleusis. On the seventh day games are celebrated; and to the
victor is given a measure of barley, — as it were a gift direct from the
hand of the goddess. The eighth is sacred to ^sculapius, the Divine
Physician, who heals all diseases; and in the evening is performed the
initiatory ritual. " Let us enter the m3\stic temple and be
initiated, — though it must be supposed that, a year ago, we were
initiated into the Lesser Mysteries at Agrae. We must have been mystm
(vailed), before we can become epoptce (seers) ; in plain English, we
must have shut our eyes to all else before we can behold the
mysteries. Crowned with myrtle, we enter with the other initiates
into the vestibule of the temple, — blind as yet, but the Hierophaut
within will soon open our eyes. But first, — for here we must do nothing
rashly,— first we must wash in this holy water; for it is with pure
hands and a pure heart that we are bidden to enter the most sacred
enclosure [(xu(rTuoff (f-nxog, tnusfijios seJcos]. Then, led into the
presence of the Hierophaut, In the Oriental countries the designation nns Peter
(an in- terpreter), appears to have been the title of this personage ;
and he reads to us, from a book of stone [jreTpajfjia, petroma]^
tliiuii's which we must not divulge on pain of death. Let it suffice that
they fit the place and the occasion ; and though you might laugh at them,
if they were spokiMi outside, still you seem very far from that
mood now, as you hear the words of the old man (for old he he
always was), and look upon the revealed symbols. And very far, indeed,
are you from ridicule, when Demeter seals, by her own peculiar utterance
and sig- nals, by vivid coruscations of light, and cloud piled upon
cloud, all that we have seen and heard from her sacred priest; and then,
finally, the light of a serene wonder fills the temple, and we see the
pure fields of Elysium, and hear the chorus of the Blessed; — then,
not merely by external seeming or philosophic inter- pretation, but in
real fact, does the Hierophant become the Creator [(hi-^'ovpyo;,
demiourgos] and revealer of all things; the Sun is but his torch-bearer,
the Moon his attendant at the altar, and Hermes his mystic herald *
[>c7]pu|, kerux]. But the final word has been uttered ' Conx Om pax.'
The rite is consummated, and we are vpoptit forever ! " Those
who are curious to know the myth on which the petroma consisted,
notably enougli, of two tablets of stone. There is in these facts some
reminder of the peculiar circum- stances of the Mosaic Law which was so
preserved ; and also of the claim of the Pope to be the successor of
Peter, the hierophant or interpreter of the Christian religion. *
Porphyry. Introduction. 19 the " mystical
drama " of the Eleusinia is founded will find it in any Classical
Dictionary, as well as in these pages. It is only pertinent here to give
some idea of the meaning. That it was regarded as profound is
evident from the peculiar rites, and the obligations im- posed on every
initiated person. It was a reproach not to observe them. Socrates was
accused of atheism, or disrespect to the gods, for having never been
initiated.* Any person accidentally guilty of homicide, or of any
crime, or convicted of witcihcraft, was excluded. The secret doctrines,
it is supposed, were the same as are expressed in the celebrated Hymn of
Cleanthes. The philosopher Isocrates thus bears testimony : "
She [Demeter] gave us two gifts that are the most excellent ; fruits,
that we may not live like beasts ; and that initiation — those who have
part in which have sweeter hope, both as regards the close of life and
for all eternity." In like manner, Pindar also declares : "
Happy is he who has beheld them, and descends into the Under-
world: he knows the end, he knows the origin of life." The Bacchic
Orgies were said to have been instituted, Ancient Sijmhol-Worsliip.
"Socrates was not initiated, yet after drinking the hemlock, he
addressed Crito : ' We owe a cock to ^sculapius.' This was the peculiar
offering made by initiates (now called kerJcnophori) on the eve of the
last day, and he thus symbolically asserted that he was about to
re- ceive the great apocalypse." See, also, "
Progress of Religious Ideas," by Child; and " Discourses on the
Worship of Priapus," by EiCHARD Payne Knight. or iiy)re
probably reformed T)y Orpheus, a mythical personage, supposed to have
flourished in Thrace.* The Orphic associations dedicated themselves to
the worship of Bacchus, in which they hoped to find the
gratification of an ardent longing after the worthy and elevating
influences of a religious life. The worshipers did not indulge in
unrestrained pleasure and frantic enthnsiasni, but rather aimed at an
ascetic purity of * Euripides : Ehaesns. "Orpheus showed forth
the rites of the hidden Mysteries." Plato : ProUifforas.
" The art of a sophist or sage is ancient, but tlie men who proposed
it in ancient times, fearing the odium attached to it, sought to conceal
it, and vailed it over, some under the garb of poetry, as Homer, Hesiod,
and Simonides : and others under that of the Mysteries and prophetic manias,
such as Orpheus, Musseus, and their followers."
Herodotus takes a different view — ii. 49. "Melampus, the son
of Amytheon," he says, "introduced into Greece the name of
Dionysus (Bacchus), the ceremonial of his worship, and the pro- cession
of the phallus. He did not, however, so completely ap- prehend the whole
doctrine as to be able to communicate it entirely : but various sages,
since his time, have carried out his teaching to greater perfection.
Still it is certain that Melampus introduced the phallus, and that the
Greeks learnt from him the ceremonies which they now practice. I
therefore maintain that Melampus, who was a sage, and had acquired the
art of divina- tion, having become acquainted with the worship of
Dionysus tln-ough knowledge derived from Eg>ijt, introduced it into
Greece, with a few slight changes, at the same time rhat he brought
in various other practices. For I can by no means allow that it is
by mere coincidence that the Bacchic ceremonies in Greece are so
nearly the same as the Egyptian." y
r^isi Etruscan Kleusiniau
Ci-renionies. life and manners. The worship of Dionysus \yas
the center of their ideas, and the starting-point of all their
speculations upon the world and human nature. They believed that human souls
were confined in the body as in a prison, a condition which was
denominated genesis or generation; from which Dionysus would
liberate them. Their sufferings, the stages by which they passed to
a higher form of existence, their lafharsis or purification, and their
enlightenment constituted the themes of the Orphic writers. All this was
represented in the legend which constituted the groundwork of the
mystical rites. Dionysus-Zagreus was the son of Zeus, whom he
had begotten in the form of a dragon or serpent, upon the person of
Kore or Persephoneia, considered by some to have been identical with
Ceres or Demeter, and by others to have been her daughter. The former
idea is more probably the more correct. Ceres or Demeter was called
Kore at Cnidos. She is called Phersephatta in a fragment by Psellus, and
is also styled a Fury. The divine child, an avatar or incarnation of
Zeus, was denominated Zagreus, or Chakra (Sanscrit) as being
destined to universal dominion. But at the instigation of Hera* the
Titans conspired to murder him. Ac- * Hera, generally regarded as
the Greek title of Juno, is not the definite name of any goddess, but was
used by ancient writers as a designation only. It signifies doniina or
lady, and appears to be of Sanscrit origin. It is applied to Ceres or
Demeter, and other divinities. cordingly, one day while he was
contemplating a mir- ror,* they set upon him, disguised under a coating
of plaster, and tore him into seven parts. Athena, how- ever,
rescued from them his heart, which was swallowed by Zeus, and so returned
into the paternal substance, to be generated anew. He was thus destined
to be again born, to succeed to universal rule, establish the reign
of happiness, and release all souls from the dominion of death.
The hypothesis of Mi-. Taylor is the same as was maintained by the
philosopher Porphyry, that the Mysteries constitute an illustration of
the Platonic * The mirror was a part of the symbolism of the
Thesmophoria, and was iised in the search for Atmu, the Hidden One,
evidently the same as Tammuz, Adonis, and Atys. See Exodus xxxviii. 8
; 1 Samuel ii. 22 ; and Esekiel viii. 14. But despite the assertion
of Herodotus and others that the Bacchic Mysteries were in reality
Egyptian, there exists strong probability that they came originally from
India, and were Sivaic or Buddhistical. Core-Persephoneia was but the
goddess Parasu-pani or Bhavani, the patroness of the Thugs, called also
Goree ; and Zagi'eus is from Chakra, a country extending from ocean to
ocean. If this is a Turanian or Tartar Story, we can easily recognize the
"Horns" as the crescent worn by lama-priests : and translating
god-names as merely sacerdotal designations, assume the whole legend to
be based on a tale of Lama Succession and transmigration. The Titans
would then be the Daityas of India, who were opposed to the faith of the
north- ern tribes ; and the title Dionysus but signify the god or
chief- priest of Nysa, or Mount Meru. The whole story of Orpheus, the
institutor or rather the reformer of the Bacchic rites, has a Hindu ring
all through. FILOSOFIA. At first sight, this may l)e hard to believe
; but we must know that no pageant could hold place so long,
without an under-meaning. Indeed, Herodotus asserts that " the rites
called Orphic and Bacchic are in reality Egyptian and Pythagorean. The
influence of the doctrines of Pythagoras upon the Platonic system
is generally acknowledged. It is only important in that case to
understand the great philosopher correctly ; and we have a key to the
doctrines and symbolism of the Mysteries. The first
initiations of the Eleusinia were called Telefce or terminations, as
denoting that the imperfect and rudimentary period of generated life was
ended and purged off ; and the candidate was denominated a mijsfa,
a vailed or liberated person. The Greater- Mysteries completed the work ;
the candidate was more fully instructed and disciplined, becoming an epopta
or seer. He was now regarded as having received the arcane principles of
life. This was also the end sought by philosophy. The soul was believed
to be of com- posite nature, linked on the one side to the eternal
world, emanating from God, and so partaking of The Divine (IL DIVINO). On the
other hand, it was also allied to the phenomenal or external world, and
so liable to be subjected to passion, lust, and the bondage of
evils. This condition is denominated genemtion ; and is sup- posed
to be a kind of death to the higher form of life. Evil is inherent in
this condition ; and the soul dwells * Herodotus: ii. 81 in the body
as in a prison or a grave. In this state, and previous to the discipline
of education and the mysti- cal initiation, the rational or intellectual
element, which Paul denominates the spiritual, is asleep. The
earth- life is a dream rather than a reality. Yet it has longings
for a higher and nobler form of life, and its affinities are on high.
"All men yearn after God," says Homer. The object of Plato is
to present to us the fact that there are in the soul certain ideas or
princi- ples, innate and connatural, which are not derived from
without, but are anterior to all experience, and are developed and
brought to view, but not produced by experience. These ideas are the most
vital of all truths, and the purpose of instruction and discipline
is to make the individual conscious of them and willing to be led and
inspired b}^ them. The soul is purified or separated from evils by
knowledge, truth, expiations, sufferings, and prayers. Our life is
a discipline and preparation for another state of being; and resemblance
to God is the highest motive of action.* * Many of the early
Christian writers were deeply imbued with the Eclectic or Platonic
doctrines. The very forms of speech were almost identical. One of the
four Gospels, bearing the title " ac- cording to John,'''' was the
evident product of a Platonist, and hardly seems in a considerable degree
Jewish or historical. The epistles ascribed to Paul evince a great
familiarity with the Eclec- tic philosophy and the peculiar symbolism of
the Mysteries, as well as with the Mithraic notions that had penetrated
and permeated the religious ideas of the western
countries. Proclus does not hesitate to identify the
theological doctrines with the mystical dogmas of the Orphic
system. He says : '' What Orpheus delivered in hidden allegories,
Pythagoras learned when he was initiated into the Orphic Mysteries.; and
Plato next received a perfect knowledge of them from the Orphean
and Pythagorean writings." Mr. Taylor's peculiar style
has been the subject of repeated criticism ; and his translations are not
accepted by classical scholars. Yet they have met with favor at the
hands of men capable of profound and recondite thinking ; and it must be
conceded that he was endowed with a superior qualification, — that of an
intuitive per- ception of the interior meaning of the subjects
which he considered. Others may have known more Greek, but he knew
more Plato. He devoted his time and means for the elucidation and
dissemination of the doctrines of the divine philosopher ; and has rendered
into English not only his writings, but also the works of other
authors, who affected the teachings of the great master, that have
escaped destruction at the hand of Moslem and Christian bigots. For this
labor we can- not be too grateful. The present treatise has
all the peculiarities of style which characterize the translations. The
principal diffi- culties of these we have endeavored to obviate — a
labor whicli will, we trust, be not unacceptable to readers. The
book has been for some time out of print ; and no later writer has
endeavored to replace it. There are many who still cherish a regard, almost
amounting to veneration, for the author; and we hope that this
repro- duction of his admirable explanation of the nature and
object of the Mysteries will prove to them a welcome undertaking. There
is an increasing interest in philo- sophical, mystical, and other antique
literature, which will, we believe, render our labor of some value to
a class of readers whose sympathy, good-will, and fellow- ship we
would gladly possess and cherish. If we have added to their enjoyment, we
shall be doubly gratified. A. W. V'euus ami Proserpina iu
Hailes. Rape of Proserplua. As there is nothing more celebrated than
the Mys- ^l\^ teries of the ancients, so there is perhaps nothing-
which has hitlierto been less solidly known. Of the trnth of this
observation, the liberal reader will, I per- snade myself, be fully
convinced, from au attentive perusal of the following sheets; in which
the secret meaning of the Eleusinian and Bacchic Mysteries is un-
folded, from authority the most respectable, and from a philosophy of all
others the most venerable and august. The authority, indeed, is
principally derived from manuscript writings, which are, of course, in
the possession of but a few; but its respectability is no more
lessened by its concealment, than the value of a diamond when secluded
from the light. And as to the philosophy, by whose assistance these
Mysteries are de- veloped, it is coeval with the universe itself ; and,
how- ever its continuity maybe broken by opposing systems, it will
make its appearance at different periods of time, as long as the sun
himself shall continue to illuminate the world. It has, indeed, and may
hereafter, be violently as- saulted l)y delusiv^e opinions; but the
opposition will be just as imbecile as that of the waves of the sea
against a temple built on a rock, which majestically pours them
back, Broken and A^anquish'd, foaming to the main.
Pallas, Venus, aud Diaua. THE ELEUSINIAN AND BACCHIC. Dionysus
as God of the Sun. a. SECTION I. SJ WARBURTON,
in Ms Divine Legation of Moses, has ingeniously proved, that the
sixth book of Virgil's ^neid represents some of the dramatic
exhibitions of the Eleusinian Mysteries ; but, at the same time, has
utterly failed in attempting to unfold their latent mean- ing, and
obscure though important end. By the assistance, howevei", of the
Pla- tonic philosophy, I have been enabled to correct his errors,
and to vindicate the wisdomof antiquity from his aspersions The
profounder esoteric doctrines of the ancients were denominated wisdom,
and attevwnrd philosophy, and also the [piosis or knowledge. They related
to the human soul, its divine parent- Eleiisinian and by a
genuine account of this sublime institution; of which the foUowing obser-
vations are designed as a comprehensive view. In the fii'st
place, then, I shall present the reader with two superior
authorities, who perfectly demonstrate that a part of the shows (or
dramas) consisted in a representation of the infernal regions; au-
thorities which, though of the last conse- quence, were unknown to Dr.
Warbiu'ton himself. The first of these is no less a person than the
immortal Pindar, in a fragment preserved by Clemens Alexan- drinus
: ^' 'A/J.a %at IJtvoapo^ Trspi xcov sv EXsa- acvt {Jiua'CTjpuov Xsycov
STrcrpspsL OXpcoc, oart? But Pindar, speaking of the Eleusinian
Mysteries, says : Blessed is he who, having age, its supposed
degradation from its high estate by becoming connected with "
generation " or the physical world, its onward progi-ess and
restoration to God by regenerations, popularly sup- posed to be
transmigrations, etc. — A. W. " Stroma la, book iii. Bacchic
Mysteries. seen those common concerns in the underworld, knows both the end of
hfe and its divine origin from Jupiter." The other of these is
from Prochis in his Commentary on Plato's Politicus, who, speaking
concern- ing the sacerdotal and symbolical mythol- ogy, observes,
that from this mythology Plato himseK establishes many of his own
peculiar doctrines, " since in the Phcedo he venerates, mtli a
becoming silence, the assertion delivered in the arcane discourses,
that men are placed in the body as in a prison, secured by a guard, and
testifies^ accordlny to the mystic cerem^onies, the dif- ferent
allotments of purified and unpuri- fied souls in Hades, their severed
conditions, and the three-forJicd path from the pecidiar places
where they tcere ; and this was shown accordiny to traditionary
institutions ; every part of which is full of a symbolical repre-
sentation, as in a dream, and of a descrip- tion which treated of the
ascending and descending ways, of the tragedies of Dio- nysus
(Bacchus or Zagreus), the crimes of the Titans, , the three ways in
Hades, and Eleusinian and the wandering of everything of a
similar hind.^^ — "Ar/Aot 5s sv <l>7.too)vt xov ts sv
6'. avi^pcoTTOi, aiyirj xtj Trps'iro'jar^ cs^3(ov, xai ■:7.c
-csXsrac (lege y.7.o %7.-'y. -ac tsXs-c/.) (JLCtp- -:'jpo{Ji£voc xcov
^La'^optov Xr^^scov -r^; ^^T^'^ %£%ai)-ap|i.£VTj; TS %7.c a^a^aptoy zic,
o/joo rj.lZirjOQ1]Z, r.rjX ZIQ ZS GySGSlC, WJ, V:7.C Xa?
xpio^oDc 7.7:0 x(ov ooGKov 7,7/. x(ov (lege %ai %7.x7. t(ov),
Traipi^cov {)-£a{i(ov ':£7,{i7.ipo[icVOc. a 5'^ z-qc, ao{JL[3o)d%7jc
dTuavta ^stopta; sari {xsara, 7,7.L t(OV 7C7.p7. TOIC TZOl'flZrjlC,
{)-p'jXXo?J{J.£V(OV rj.yo^my zs 7.7.t 7,ai)-ooo)v, tcov ts
$iovyai7.7C(ov 3'jvi)"^{Ji7.tcov, y.rj.1 xcov TiTy-vizfov
onxapiYjixa- -(OV XSYOJXSVCOV, 'X.7.1 X(OV sv 4^^'->
TpCOOCOV, 7,7.!. XT^C TZKrjyr^C, Y,rjx X(OV T&tOUTCOV d'7L7.VXa)V."
* Ha^dllg iDremised thus much, I now pro- ceed to prove that
the th'amatic spectacles .of the Lesser Mysteries f were designed by
the ancient theologists, their founders, to signify occultly the
condition of the unpurified soul * Commentary on the Statesman of
Plato, page 374. t The Lesser Mysteries were celebrated at Agrse ;
and the persons there initiated were denominated Mi/sta: Only such could
be received at the sacred rites at Eleusis. Bacchic Mysteries. invested
with an earthly body, and envel- oped in a material and physical nature ;
or, in other words, to signify that such a soul in the present life
might be said to die, as far as it is possible for a soul to die, and
that on the dissolution of the present body, while in this state of
impuiity, it would experience a death still more permanent and
profound. That the soul, indeed, till purified by phi- losophy,*
suffers death through its union with the body was obvious to the
philologist Macrobius, who, not penetrating the secret meaning of
the ancients, concluded from hence that they signified nothing more
than the present body, by their descriptions of the infernal
abodes. But this is manifestly absurd ; since it is universally agreed,
that all the ancient theological poets and philos- ophers
inculcated the doctrine of a future state of rewards and punishments in
the most full and decisive terms ; at the same time occultly
intimating that the death of the soul was nothing more than a
profound union with the ruinous bonds of the body. FILOSOFIA here
relates to discipline of the life. Eleusinian and Indeed, if
these wise men believed in a future state of retribution, and at the
same time considered a connection with the body- as death of the
soul, it necessarily follows, that the soul's punishment and
existence hereafter are nothing more than a continu- ation of its
state at present, and a transmi- gration, as it were, from sleep to
sleep, and from dream to dream. But let us attend to the assertions
of these divine men concerning the soul's union with a material nature.
And to begin with the obscure and profound Heracleitus, speaking of
souls imembodied: "We live their death, and we die their
life." Z(o{j.£v tov sxslvcov i)-7.v7.':ov, TsO-vT/Aajisv OS xov
£%£lv(ov jiLov. And Em- pedocles, deprecating the condition termed
" generation," beautifully says of her : The aspect
changing with destruction dread, She makes the Uv'okj pass into the
dead. Ex \i.z\i yx^ Cojtuv zv.%-1'. VcXpa siOi a|JLj'.j3ojv.
And again, lamenting his connection with this corporeal world, he
pathetically exclaims: Bacchic Mysteries. 37 For
this I weep, for this indulge my woe, That e'er my soul such novel
realms should know. KXauaa te v.ai xiuxuaot, lowv «afjv*r]i)'sry.
ytupov. * Plato, too, it is well known, considered the body
as the sepulchre of the soul, and in the Crcifijlus concurs with the
doctrine of Orpheus, that the soul is x>^niished through its
union with body. This was likewise the opinion of the celebrated
Pythagorean, Phi- lolaus, as is evident from the following re-
markable passage in the Doric dialect, pre- served by Clemens
Alexandrinus in Strom at. book iii. " Map-cupsovra 5s %c/.t oi
TcrjXaifx. tJ-soXoyoc IS y.r/.i \w,vzzic., 6)C, ^la ziyac,
xqj-copiac, £V a(o{i7.ic XGIJ-Ki) zzd-aizza.i.^'' i. e. " The
ancient theologists and priests * also testify that the soul is
united with the body as if for the sake of punishment ; f and so is
buried in body as in a sepulchre." And, lastly, Py- *
Greek it-ayxsiq mantels — more properly proi)hets, those filled by the
prophetic mania or eutheasm. t More correctly — '* The soul is
yoked to the body as if by way of punishment," as culprits were fastened
to others or even to corpses. See PauVs Epistle to the liomans, vii,
25. 38 Eleusinian and thagoras himself confii'ms
the above senti- ments, when he beautifully observes, accord- ing
to Clemens in the same book, " that wild fever tee see when airali'e
is death ; and when asleep,- a dreamt brj^rxio;^ sa-rcv, oxoaa
But that the mysteries occultly signi- fied this sublime truth,
that the soul by being merged in matter resides among the dead both
here and hereafter, though it fol- lows by a necessary sequence from the
preced- ing observations, yet it is indisputably con- firmed, by
the testimony of the great and truly divine Plotinus, in Ennead I., book
viii. ''When the soul," says he, '*has descended into generation
(from its first divine condition) she partakes of evil, and is carried a
great way into a state the opposite of her first purity and
integrity, to he entirely merged in ivhich, is nothing more than to
fall into dark mire.^^ And again, soon after. The soul therefore dies as much
as it is pos- sible for the soul to die : and the death to her is^
while Mptized or immersed in the present Bacchic Mysteries.
39 hocly^ to descend into matter * and he wholly subjected hy
it ; and after departing thence to lie there till it shall arise and
turn its face away from the abhorrent filth. This is what is meant
hy the falling asleep in Ifades, of those who have come there.''''
j * Greek ^^>^'<], matter supposed to contain all the
principles the negative of life, order, and goodness. tThis
passage doubtless alludes to the ancient and beautiful story of Cupid and
Psyche, in which Psyche is said to fall asleep in Hades ; and this
through rashly attempting to behold corporeal beauty : and the
observation of Plotinus will enable the profoimd and contemplative reader
to unfold the greater part of the mys- teries contained in this elegant
fable. But, prior to Plotinus, Plato, in the seventh book of his Republic,
asserts that such as are unable in the present life to apprehend the idea
of the good, will descend to Hades after death, and fall asleep in its
dark abodes. 'Oq av |n-r] syrj o'.op:::aj9'a', xto Xo-|'to, c/.tzo twv
aXXtov Ttavxojv a-^jXiuv ttjv too a-irj.x}oj) torav, v.r/'. inzr.zp £v
It-'^'/'fJ 5oa Tcavtcov sXsY/tuv o'.tt,nuy, jj.s v.ata oo^av aXka v.ax'
ouatav npofl'U^oofjLsvo? eXeY/s'.v, £V Traat. xooto'-c anxcoT: x«) Xo'^w
oioi-opsufjxa'., ooxs awzo xo cnY'/O'CiV rj'jozv cpYjas'.^ e'.osva: xov
o'ixiui^ s^ovxa. oozz aWo o.-^rj.^-rr^ ooojv; a),),' s: TC'f] ^iocuXo'j
x'.vo; fiiaz.xz'Z'j:., ooJ-/j o'jy. £i:'.-rf|iJ.-(^ c'^aTiXja&ai ;
xoci xov vjv fy.vj ovsipciTCoXouvxa, v.ao ijiivtoxovxa, Tip'.v jvO'ao'
E^spY''^^'*' 5 ^-^ aocio TipoxEpov acp:y.o|Ji.svov xsXscoi;
ETTixaxaSapO-aviiv ; ». e. "He who is not able, by the exercise of
his reason, to define the idea of the good, separating it from all other
objects, and piercing, as in a battle, through every kind of argument ;
endeavoring to confute, not according to opinion, but according to
essence, and proceeding through all these dia- lectical energies with an
unshaken reason; — he who can not 40 Bacchic
Mysteries. TLVojisvcp 5s Yj [i£taAT;'|L;; rjjjxrjj^ Fcrpvciac
yap '^lavta^raacv sv ^(p rr^c avc/{xoco-Y^T;oc zotzco,
evd-rj. ooQ BIZ r/jizr^y siz 'p^ij^o^joy axorstvov SGzrji 'jisacov. —
A'JToD-VTjay.cc o'jv, (o;; 'j'''>Z''i '^•'^ iJ-avof xctL 6 ^avoLTO?
ao'Tj, xai szl sv ^(o GOiixazi p£J37.7uua{JL£VY^, sv 6Xy^ sarc
y-c/.-aoovac, 7C/.C 7tXYjai)"^vac aozr^Q. Kai si^s/a^oaaYj;
sxst %£iai)'7.L, £(oc av7.opa{ji'(j y,c/.t rj/^2kr^ tzcoc, xy^v
G?J;tv £% ZOO fiopjSopo'j. Kac to'jto sb-'. to sv 4*^00 sXiJ-ovra
sTzi'/.rj.za SapiJ-stv. Here the aeeomplisli this, would j^ou not
say, that he neither knows the good itself, nor anything which is
pi'operly denominated good? And would you not assert that such a one,
when he apprehends any certain image of reality, apprehends it rather
through the medium of opinion than of science ; that in the present life
he is sunk in sleep, and conversant with the delusion of dreams ;
and that before he is roused to a vigilant state he will descend to
Hades, and be overwhelmed with a sleep perfectly profound." Henry
Davis ti-anslates this passage more critically: "Is not the ease the
same with i"eference to the good ? Whoever can not logically define
it, abstracting the idea of the good from all others, and taking, as in a
fight, one opposing argument after another, and can not proceed with
unfailing proofs, eager to rest his ease, not on the ground of opinion,
but of true being, — such a one knows nothing of the r/ood itself, nor of
any good whatever ; and should he have attained to any knowledge of the
(jood, we must say that he has attained it by opinion, not by science
{sKizzfiiirj) ; that he is sleeping and dreaming away his present life ;
and before he is roused will descend to Hades, and there be profoundly
and perfectly laid asleep." vii. 14. Bacchic Mysteries. 43
reader may observe that the obsciu'e doc- trine of the Mysteries
mentioned by Plato in the Phcedo^ that the nnpurified soul in a
future state lies immerged in mire, is beauti- fully explained; at the
same time that our assertion concerning their secret meaning is not
less substantially confirmed.* In a similar manner the same divine
philosopher, in his book on the Beautiful, Ennead^ I., book vi.,
explains the fable of Narcissus as an em- blem of one who rushes to the
contempla- tion of sensible (phenomenal) forms as if they were
perfect realities, when at the same time they are nothing more than
Uke beautiful images appearing in water, falla- cious and vain.
" Hence," says he, " as Nar- cissus, by catching at the
shadow, plunged himself in the stream and disappeared, so he who is
captivated by beautiful bodies, and does not depart fi'om their
embrace, is precipitated, not with his body, but with *
Phcedo, 38. " Those who instituted the Mysteries for us ap- pear to
have intimated that whoever shall arrive in Hades un- ptirified and not
initiated shall lie in mud ; but he who arrives there purified and
initiated' shall dwell with the gods. For there are many hearers* of the
wand or thyrsus, but few who are inspired." 44
Eleusiniari and his soul, into a darkness profound and repug-
nant to intellect (the higher soul),* through which, remaining bhnd both
here and in Hades, he associates with shadows." Tov
T(ov, Tcai [j--^ ojjfiEiQ^ 00 t(o (j{\)\w-i.^ zr^ os '\'y/ri
-iX.rjXOL^O'jezrM^ BIC, axOTTStVa 7.rj.l azsrj'K'fj TO) vco
[5ai)-Tj, SvO-a T'JCpXo? SV O^d^JJ {JL£V(0V, /.oll sv- taoi^a
%q:x£t a%iat? oovsaTL And what still farther confirms our exposition is
that mat- ter was considered by the Egyptians as a certain mire or
mud. " The Egyptians," says Simplicius, " called matter,
which they symbolically denominated water, the dregs or sediment of
the first life ; matter being, as it were, a certain mire or mud.f Aco
xat AiyuTTtioi TTjV Z'qc, xpcoxr^c C(t)'^/C, y^v 'jdcop Gtj\i-
|5oAt%(oc sxaXofjv, 67roaxai)-{jLT;v rr^v 'jXtjv sXs- yov, oiov ihjv ziya
ooaav. So that fi*om all * Intellect, Greek vouc, nous, is the
higher faculty of the mind. It is substantially the same as the pncH))ia,
or spirit, treated of in the New Testament; and hence the term '^
iiifcUectual," as used in Mr. Taylor's translation of the Platonic
writers, may be pretty safely read as spiritual, by those familiar with
the Chris- tian cultus. * A. W. t Physics of Aristotle.
Bacchic Mysteries. 45 tliat has been said we may
safely conclude with Ficinus, whose words are as express to our
purpose as possible. " Lastly," says he, "that I may
comprehend the opinion of the ancient theologists, on the state of the
soul after death, in a few words : tlieij considered^ as we have
elsewhere asserted, things divine as the only realities^ and that all
others were only the images and shadows of truth. Hence they
asserted that prudent men, who earnestly employed themselves in
divine concerns, were above all others in a vigilant state. But that
imprudent [/. e. without foresight] men, who pursued objects of a
different nature, being laid asleep, as it were, were only engaged in the
delusions of dreams ; and that if they happened to die in this
sleep, before they were roused, they would be afflicted with similar
and still more dazzling visions in a future state. And that as he
who in this life pursued realities, would, after death, enjoy the
high- est truth, so he who pursued deceptions would hereafter be
tormented with fallacies and delusions in the extreme : as the one
46 Eleusinian and would be delighted with true objects
of enjoyment, so the other would be tor- mented with delusive
semblances of reali- ty." — Denique ut priscormn theologorum
sententiam de statu animae post mortem paucis comprehendam : sola di\ina
(ut alias diximus) arbitrantur res veras existere, re- hqua esse
rerum verarum imagines atque umbras. Ideo prudentes homines, qui divi- nis incumbunt, prae ceteris
vigilare. Impm- dentes autem, qui sectantur alia, insomniis omnino
quasi dormientes illudi, ac si in hoc somno priusquam expergefacti
fuerint moriantur similibus post (hscessum et acri- oribus
visionibus angi. Et sicut emn qui in vita veris incubuit, post mortem
summa veritate potiri, sic eum qui falsa sectatus est, fallacia
extrema torqueri, ut ille rebus veris oblectetur, hie falsis vexetur
simu- lachris." * But
notwithstanding this important truth was obscurely hinted by the Lesser
Myster- ies, we must not suppose that it was gen- *FiciNUs:
De ImmortaL Aniin. book xviii. Bacchic Mysteries. 47 erally
known even to the initiated persons themselves : for as individuals of
almost all descriptions were admitted to these rites, it would have
been a ridiculous prostitution to disclose to the multitude a theory so
ab- stracted and sublime.* It was sufficient to instruct these in
the doctrine of a future state of rewards and punishments, and in
themeans of returning to the principles from which they originally fell :
for this * We observe in the Netv Testament a like disposition on
the part of Jesns and Paul to classify their doctrines as esoteric and
ex- oteric, ''the Mysteries of the kingdom of God" for the
apostles, and "pai'ables" for the multitude. "We speak
wisdom," says Paul, "among them that are perfect" (or
initiated), etc. 1 Cor- intliians, ii. Also Jesus declares : "It is
given to you to know the Mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, but to them
it is not given; therefore I speak to them in parables : because they
seeing, see not, and hearing, they hear not, neither do they
understand." — Matthew xiii., 11-13. He also justified the
withholding of the higher and interior knowledge from the untaught and
ill-disposed, in the memorable Sermon on the Mount. — Matthew vii.
: Give ye not that which is sacred to the dogs, Neither cast ye your
pearls to the swine ; For the swine will tread them under their
feet And the dogs will turn and rend you." This same
division of the Christians into neophytes and perfect, appears to have
been kept up for centuries ; and Godfrey Higgins asserts that it is maintained
in the Roman Cliurch. — A. W. Eleusinian and last piece of
information was, according to Plato in the PJuedo, the ultimate design
of the Mysteries ; and the former is necessarily infeiTed from the
present discourse. Hence the reason why it was obvious to none hut
the Pythagorean and Platonic philosophers, who derived their theology
from Orpheus himseK,* the original founder of these sacred
institutions; and why we meet with no in- formation in this particular in
any writer prior to Plotinus ; as he was the first who, having
penetrated the profound interior wis- dom of antiquity, delivered it to
posterity without the concealments of mystic symbols and fabulous
narratives. VIBGIL NOT A PLATONIST. Hence too, I think, we may infer,
with the greatest probabihty, that this recondite meaning of the
Mysteries was not known * Herodotus, ii. 51, 81.
"What Orpheus delivered in hidden allegories Pythagoras
learned when he was initiated into the Orphic Mysteries ; and Plato next
received a knowledge of them from the Orphic and Pythagorean
writings." Bacchic Mysteries. 49 even to VIRGILIO
himself, who has so elegantly described their external form; for
notwithstanding the traces of Platonism which are to be found in the ENEIDE,
nothing of any great depth occurs throughout the whole, except what
a superficial reading of Plato and the dramas of the Mysteries might
easily afford. But this is not perceived by modern readers, who,
entirely luiskilled themselves in Platonism, and fascinated by the charms
of his poetry, imagine him to be deeply knowing in a subject with
which he was most hkely but slightly acquainted. This opinion is
still farther strengthened by considering that the doctrine
delivered in his Eclogues is perfectly that of THE GARDEN (L’ORTO), which
was the fashionable philosophy of the age of OTTAVIANO; and that there is
no trace of Platonism in any other part of his works but the present
book, which, containing a representation of the Mysteries, was
necessarily obliged to display some of the principal tenets of this FILOSOFIA,
so far as they illustrated and made a part of these mystic
exhibitions. However, on the supposition that this book presents us
with , Eleusinian and a faithful view of some part of
these sacred rites, and this accompanied with the utmost elegance,
harmony, and purity of versifica- tion, it ought to be considered as an
invalu- able rehc of antiquity, and a precious mon- ument of
venerable mysticism, recondite wisdom, and theological information.
This will be sufficiently e\ddent from what has been already
delivered, by considering some of the beautiful descriptions of this book
in their natural order; at the same time that the descriptions
themselves will corroborate the present elucidations. In the
first place, then, when he says, faeilis descensus Averno.
Noetes atque dies patet atra janua ditis : Sed
revoeare gradum, superasqiie evadere ad aiiras, Hoe opus, hie labor
est. Pauei quos sequus amavit Jupiter, aut ardens evexit ad sethera
virtus, Dis geniti potuere. Tenent media omnia silvae,
Cocytusque siuu labens, circumvenit atro 1 * Ancient
Symhol-Worship, page 11, noie. t Davidson^s Translation. — "
Easy is the path that leads down to hell ; grim Pluto's gate stands open
night and day : but to retrace one's steps, and escape to the upper
regions, this is a work, this is a task. Some few, whom favoring Jove
loved, or illustrious virtue Bacchic Mysteries. 51
is it not obvious, from tlie preceding expla- nation, that by
Avernus, in this place, and the dark gates of Pluto, we mnst
understand a corporeal or external nature, the descent into which
is, indeed, at all times obvious and easy, but to recall our steps, and
ascend' into the upper regions, or, in other words, to separate the
soul from the body by the purifying discipline, is indeed a mighty
work, and a laborious task ? For a few only, the fa- vorites of
heaven, that is, born with the true philosophic genius,^ and whom ardent
virtue has elevated to a disposition and capacity for divine
contemplation, have been enabled to accomplish the arduous design. But
when he says that all the middle regions are covered with woods,
this hkewise plainly in- timates a material nature ; the word silva^
as is well known, being used by ancient writers to signify matter,
and implies nothing more than that the passage leading to the
barafh- advaneecl to heaven, the sons of the gods, have effected
it. Woods cover all the intervening space, and Cocytus, gliding
with his black, winding flood, surrounds it." * /. e., a
disposition to investigate for the purpose of eliciting truth, and
reducing it to practice. Meusinian and rum [abyss] of body, /.
e. into profound darkness and oblivion, is throngh the me- dium of
a material nature ; and this medium is surrounded by the black bosom of
Cocytus,* that is, by bitter weeping and lamenta- tions, the necessary
consequence of the soul's union with a nature entirely foreign to
her own. So that the poet in this particular per- fectly
corresponds with EMPEDOCLE DI GIRGENTI in the line we have cited above,
where he exclaims, alluding to this union. For this I weej),
for this indulge my icoe, That e'er my soul such novel realms
should know. In the next place, he thus describes the cave,
through which ^neas descended to the infernal regions :
Spelunea alta fuit, vastoque immanis hiatu, Scrupea, tuta lacu
nigro, raemorumque tenebris : Quam super hand ulla? poterant impune
volantes Tendere iter pennis : talis sese halitus atris Faueicus
effundens supera ad eonvexa fevebat : Unde locum Graii dixerimt nomiue
Aornum 1 * Coeytus, lamentation, a river in the Underworld. \
Davidson’s Trnnslation. — "There was a cave profound and hideous,
with wide yawning mouth, stony, fenced by a black lake,
Bacchic Mysteries. 53 Does it not afford a beautiful
representation of a corporeal nature, of which a cave, de- fended
with a black lake, and dark woods, is an obvious emblem *? For it
occultly re- minds us of the ever-flowing and obscin*e condition of
such a nature, which may be said To roll incessant with
impetuous speed, Like some dai'k river, into Matter's sea.
Nor is it with less propriety denominated Aornus, i. e. destitute
of birds, or a winged nature ; for on account of its native
sluggish- ness and inactivity, and its merged condi- and the
gloom of woods ; over which none of the flying kind were able to wing
their way unliurt ; such exhalations issuing from its grim jaws ascended
to the vaulted skies ; for w^iich reason the Greeks called the place by
the name of Aornos" (without birds). Jacob Bryant says: "
All fountains were esteemed sacred, but especially those which had any
preternatural quality and abounded with exhalations. It was an universal
notion that a divine energy proceeded from these effluvia ; and that the
persons who resided in their vicinity were gifted with a prophetic
quality. . . . The Ammonians styled such fountains Ain Omphe, or
fountains of the oracle ; o|j,<pY], oniphe, signifying ' the voice of
God.' These terms the Greeks contracted to Nofj-'fY], numphe, a
nymph." — Ancient Mythology, vol. i. p. 276. The Delphic
oracle was above a fissure, (jnnnous or hocca infe- riore, of the earth,
and the pythoness inhaled the vapors. — A. W. Eleiisinian and
tion, being situated in the outmost extremity of tilings, it is
perfectly debile and languid, incapable of ascending into the regions
of reality, and exchanging its obscure and de- graded station for
one every way splendid and divine. The propriety too of
sacrificing, previous to his entrance, to Night and Earth, is
obvious, as both these are emblems of a corporeal nature. In
the verses which immediately follow, — Ecee autem, priini sub
limina solis et ortus, Sub peclibus mugire solum, et juga eaepta
movere Silvarum, visaque canes ululare per umbram, Adventante dea
* we may perceive an evident allusion to the earthquakes,
etc., attending the descent of the soul into body, mentioned by Plato
in the tenth book of his Republic ;\ since the * " So,
now, at the fii-st beams and rising of tlie sun, the earth under the feet
begins to rumble, the wooded hills to quake, and dogs were seen howling
through the shade, as the goddess came hither " i
Republic, x, 16. "After they were laid asleep, and midnight was
approaching, there was thunder and earthquake ; and they were thence on a
sudden carried upward, some one way, and some another, approaching to the
region of generation like stars." Bacchic Mysteries.
55 lapse of the soul, as we shall see more fully hereafter,
was one of the important truths which these Mysteries were intended to
re- veal. And the howling dogs are symbols of material * demons,
who are thus denomi- nated by the Magian Oracles of Zoroaster, on
account of then" ferocious and malevolent dispositions, ever baneful
to the felicity of the human soul. And hence Matter herseK is
represented by Synesius in his first Hymn, with great propriety and
beauty, as barking at the soul with devoimng rage : for thus he
sings, addressing himself to the Deity : Maxap 6c x:c popov
oImc, npacpUY^JV o\r/.'(ixa, v-w. yxc, AvaouCj a/.p.«tt
xoo'^po) lyyoc, £? t^sov v.xo.vjzi. Which may be thus
paraphrased : Blessed! thrice blessed! who, with winged
speed, From Hyle's t dread voracious bai'kiug flies, *
Material demons are a lower grade of spiritual essences that are capable
of assuming forms which make them perceptible by the physical senses. —
A. W. t Hijle or Matter. All evil incident to human life, as is
here shown, was supposed to originate from the connection of the
soul to material substance, the latter being regarded as the
receptacle 56 EleMsinian and And, leaving
Earth's obscnrity behind, By a light leap, directs his steps to
thee. And that material demons actually ap- peared to the
initiated previous to the lucid visions of the gods themselves, is
evident from the following passage of Proclus in his manuscript
Commentary on tlie first Alcibiades : sv zaic rj.-(iozazaic tcov
tsaskov Tzrjo zr^z GoO'j Tcapo'jaia? daqiovov /iS'Gvuov £%- poAat
xpocpacvov~ry.t, -Ani rxr.o aov aypavtcov ayai^cov zic zr^v ohriy
7ipoy,i7.Xou{JLSvaL /. e. " In the most interior sanctities of the
Mys- teries, before the presence of the god, the rushing forms of
earthly demons appear, and call the attention from the immaculate
good to matter." And Pletho (on the Oracles), expressly
asserts, that these spectres ap- peared in the shape of dogs. After
this, ^neas is described as proceed- ing to the infernal regions, through
profound night and darkness : Ibant obscixri sola sub nocte
per iimbram, Perque domos Ditis vaciias, et inania regna. of
everything evil. But why the soul is thus immerged and pun- ished is
nowhere explained. — A. W. Bacchic Mysteries. 57
Quale per ineertam lunam sub luce maligna Est iter in silvis : ubi
cfehim condidit umbra Jupiter, et rebus nox abstulit atra colorem.*
And this with the greatest propriety; for the Mysteries, as is well
known, were cele- brated by night ; and in the Republic of Plato,
as cited above, souls are described as falling into the estate of
generation at mid- night ; this period being peculiarly accom-
modated to the darkness and oblivion of a corporeal nature ; and to tliis
circumstance the nocturnal celebration of the Mysteries doubtless
alluded. In the next place, the following vivid description
presents itself to our view : Vestibulum ante ipsum, primisqiie in
faiicibus Orei Luctus, et ultrices posuere eubilia Curte :
Pallentesque habitant morbi, tristisque senectus, Et Metus, et mala suada
Fames, ac turpis egestas; *" They went along, amid the gloom
under the solitary night, through the shade, and through the desolate
halls, and empty realms of Dis [Pluto or Hades]. Such is a journey in the
woods beneath the unsteady moon with her niggard light, when
Jupiter has enveloped the sky in shade, and the black Night has
taken from all objects their color." Eleiisinian and Terribiles
visu forraje ; Lethumque Laborque ; Turn consanguineus Lethi Sopor et
mala mentis Gaudia, mortiferumqiie adverso in limine bellum
Ferreique Eumenidum thalami et Discordia demons, Vipereum crinem vittis
inuexa cruentis. In medio ramos annosaque braehia pandit Ulmus
opaca ingens : quam sedem somnia vulgo Vana tenere feruut, foliisqlie sub
omnibus ba?i'ent. Multaque prseterea variarum monstra f erarum :
Centauri in foribus stabiilant, Scyllseque biforines, Et centumgeminus
Briareus, ac bellua Lernse, Horrendum stridens, flammisque armata
Chimgera, Gorgones Hai'pyigeque, et foi'mo tricorpoi-is umbrae.* ^
And surely it is impossible to draw a more lively picture of the
maladies with wliich a * "Before the entrance itself, and in
the first jaws of Hell, Grief and vengeful Cares have placed their
couches; pale Diseases in- habit there, and sad Old Age, and Fear, and
Want, evil goddess of persuasion, and unsightly Poverty — forms terrible
to contem- plate ! and there, too, are Death and Toil ; then Sleep, akin
to Death, and evil Delights of mind ; and upon the opposite
threshold are seen death-bringing War, and the iron marriage-couches
of the Furies, and raving Discord, with her viper-hair bound with
gory wreaths. In the midst, an Elm dark and huge expands its boughs and
aged limbs ; making an abode which vain Dreams are said to haunt, and
under whose every leaf they dwell. Besides all these, are many monstrous
api^aritions of various wild beasts. The Centaurs harbor at the gates,
and double-formed Scyllas, the hun- dred-fold Briareus, the Snake of
Lerna, hissing dreadfully, and Chimasra armed with flames, the Gorgons
and the Harpies, and the shades of three-bodied form." Bacchic
Mysteries. material natui'e is connected ; of the sonl's dormant
condition tlirougli its union with body ; and of the various mental
diseases to which, through such a conjunction, it be- comes
unavoidably subject ; for this descrip- tion contains a threefold
division ; represent- ing, in the first place, the external evil
with which this material region is replete ; in the second place,
intimating that the life of the soul when merged in the body is nothing
but a dream; and, in the third place, under the dis- guise of multiform
and terrific monsters, ex- hibiting the various vices of our iiTational
and sensuous part. Hence Empedocles, in perfect conformity w^th the
first part of this descrip- tion, calls this material abode, or the
realms of generation, — a-c£p:r£.oc /(opov,* a '^joyless region^
"Where slaiighter, rage, ami countless ills reside; EvO'a
<povo5 Ts %0'zoc, tj v.rv. rj^Xtuv sftvsa llYjpWV and into which
those who fall, This and the other citations from Empedocles are to be
found in the book of Hieroeles on The Golden Verses of
Pythagoras. Bacchic Mysteries. "Through Ate's meads and
dreadful darkness stray." And hence lie justly says to
sncli a soul, that " She flies from deity and heav'nly
light, To serve mad Discord in the realms of night." iSf.v.ti
ij.a'.vo,asv(t) -tGOvo;. Where too we may observe that the Discordla
demens of Virgil is an exact translation of the Nsixst {iaivo{j.£vco of
Empeclocles. In the hues, too, which immediately suc-
ceed, the sorrows and mournful miseries attending the soul's union with a
material nature, are beautifully described. Hinc via,
Tartarei quae fert Aeherontis ad nndas; Turbidus hie caeno vastaque
voragine gurges ^stuat, atque omuem Coeyto eructat arenam.*
And when Charon calls out to ^neas to * "Here is the way
whieli leads to the surging billows of Hell [Acheron] ; here an abyss
turbid boils up with loathsome mud and vast whirlpools; and vomits all
its quicksand into Cocytus." IJiaua auct
Calisto. Bacchic Mysteries. 63 desist from
entering any farther, and tells him, " Here to reside
delusive shades delight; ''F.or nought dwells here but sleep and
drowsy night. Umbrarum hie locus est, Somni Noctisque soporse
nothing can more aptly express the condi- tion of the dark regions
of body, into which the soul, when descending, meets with no- thing
but shadows and drowsy night : and by persisting in her course, is at
length lulled into profound sleep, and becomes a true inhabitant of the
phantom-abodes of the dead. ^neas having now passed over the
Sty- gian lake, meets with the three-headed monster Cerberus,* the
guardian of these infernal abodes : Tandem trans fluvium
incolumis vatemque virumque Informi limo glaueaque exponit in
ulva. The presence of Cerberus in the ROMAN description of the underworld
shows that the ideas of the poets and mythologists were derived, not only from
Egypt, but from the Brahmans of the far East. Yama, the lord of the
Underworld, is attended by his dog Karharu, the spotted, styled also
Trikasa, the three-headed. Meusinian and Cerberus haec ingens
latratu regna trifauci Personat, adverse recubaus immanis in antro. By
Cerberus we must understand the discriminative part of the soul, of which a
dog, on account of its sagacity, is an emblem ; and the three heads
signify the triple distinction of this part, into the intellective [or
intui- tional], cogitative [or rational], and opinion- ative
powers. With respect f to the three kinds of persons described as
situated on the borders of the infernal realms, the poet doubtless
intended by this enumeration to represent to us the three most
remarkable At length across the river safe, the prophetess and the
man, he lands upon the slimy strand, upon the blue sedge. Huge Cerberus
makes these realms [of death] resound with barking from his threefold
throat, as he lies stretched at prodigious length in the opposite cave."
tin the second edition these terms are changed to dianoietic and
doxastic, words which we cannot adopt, as they are not accepted English
terms. The nous, intellect or spirit, pertains to the higher or
intuitional part of the mind; the dianoia or understanding to the reasoning
faculty, and the doxa, or opinion- forming power, to the faculty of
investigation. — Plotinus, accept- ing this theory of mind, says:
"Knowledge has three degrees — opinion, science, and illumination.
The means or instrument of the first is reception ; of the second,
dialectic ; of the third, in- tuition."— A. W. Bacchic
Mysteries. characters, wlio, though not apparently de- serving of
punishment, are yet each of them similarly im merged in matter, and
conse- quently require a similar degree of purifica- tion. The
persons described are, as is well known, first, the souls of infants
snatched away by untimely ends ; secondly, such as are condemned to
death unjustly ; and, third- ly, those who, weary of their lives,
become guilty of suicide. And with respect to the first of these,
or infants, their connection with a material nature is obvious. The
sec- ond sort, too, who are condemned to death unjustly, must be
supposed to represent the souls of men who, though innocent of one
crime for which they were wrongfully pun- ished, have, notwithstanding,
been guilty of many crimes, for which they are receiving proper
chastisement in Hades, i. e, through a profoiuid union with a material
nature.* And the third sort, or suicides, though ap- * Hades,
the Underworld, supposed by classical students to be the region or estate
of departed souls, it will have been noticed, is regarded by Taylor and
other Platonists, as the human body, which they consider to be the grave
and place of punishment of the soul. — A. W. Eleusinian and
parently separated from the body, have only exchanged one place for
another of similar nature ; since conduct of this kind, according
to the arcana of divine philosophy, instead of separating the soul from
its body, only restores it to a condition perfectly correspon- dent
to its former inchnations and habits, lamentations and woes. But if we
examine this affair more profoundly, we shall find that these three
characters are justly placed in the same situation, because the reason
of punishment is in each equally obscure. For is it not a just
matter of doubt why the souls of infants should be punished? And is
it not equally dubious and wonderful why those who have been unjustly
condemned to death in one period of existence should be punished in
another? And as to suicides, Plato in Ms PJicvdo says that the
prohibition of this crime in the aTzorjfjrfa {aporrheta) * is a
profound doctrine, and not easy to be Aporrheta, tbe areaue or confidential
disclosures made to the candidate undergoing initiation. In the
Eleusinia, these were made by the Hierophant, and enforced by him from
the Book of InterpretatInterpretation, said to have consisted of two
tablets of stone. This was the petroma, a name usuallj' derived from j^e^ra,
a rock, Bacchic Mysteries. understood.* Indeed, the true cause
why the two first of these characters are in Hades, can only be
ascertained from the fact of a prior state of existence, in surveying
which, the latent justice of punishment will be mani- festly
revealed ; the apparent inconsistencies in the administration of
Providence fully reconciled; and the doubts concerning the wisdom
of its proceedings entirely dissolved. And as to the last of these, or
suicides, since the reason of their punishment, and why an action
of this kind is in general highly atrocious, is extremely mystical and
obscure, the following solution of this difficulty will, no doubt,
be gratefully received by the Platonic reader, as the whole of it is no where
else to be found but in manuscript. Olym- or possibly from iflD,
J)eier, an interpreter. See //. Corinthians, xii. 6-8.— A. W.
* PJuedo, The instruction in the doctrine given in the Mysteries,
that we human beings are in a kind of prison, and that we ought not to
free ourselves from it or seek to- escape, appears to me difficult to be
understood, and not easy to ap- prehend. The gods take care of us, and we
are theirs." Plotinus, it will be remembered, perceived by the
interior faculty that Porphyry contemplated suicide, and admonished
him accordingly. — A. W. Eleusinian and piodorus, then, a most
learned and excellent commentator on Plato, in his commentary on
that part of the PJuedo where Plato speaks of the prohibition of suicide
in the aporrhefa, observes as follows: "The argu- ment which
Plato employs in this place against suicide is derived fi^om the
Orphic mythology, in which foui" kingdoms are celebrated; the
first of Uranus [Ouranos] (Heaven), whom Ki'onos or Satm^n as-
saulted, cutting off the genitals of his father. But after Saturn, Zeus
or Jupiter succeeded to the government of the world, having hurled
his father into Tartarus. And after Jupiter, Dionysus or Bacchus rose
to light, who, according to report, was, through the insidious treachery
of Hera or Juno, torn in pieces by the Titans, by whom he was sur-
rounded, and who afterwards tasted his flesh : but Jupiter,enraged at the
deed, hurled his thunder at the guilty offenders and consumed them
to ashes. Hence a certain matter be- In the Hindu mythology, from which
this symbolism is evidently derived, a deity deprived thus of the lingam
or phallus, parted with his diviue authority. Bacchic
Mysteries. ing formed from the ashes or sooty vapor of the smoke
ascending from their burning bodies, out of this mankind were
produced. It is unlawful, therefore, to destroy ourselves, not as
the words of Plato seem to unport, because we are in the body, as in
prison, secured by a guard (for this is evident, and Plato would
not have called such an assertion arcane), but because our body is
Dionysiacal,* or of the nature of Bacchus : for we are a part of him,
since we are composed from the ashes, or sooty vapor of the Titans
who tasted his flesh. Socrates, therefore, as if fearful of
disclosing the arcane part of this narra- tion, relates nothing more of
the fable than that we are placed as in a prison secured by a guard
: but the interpreters re- late the fable openly." Koci z^zi zo
{j.'ji>c7,ov s-jrc/sijOT^pioL TGCOUtov. Ilapa tcp Oprpst
xsaaaps^ paaiXsiat 'juapa^c^ovxaL Ilptor^ [jisv, rj xo'j Oopctvoy,
Tjv 6 Kpovoc Sis^s^axo, sxtsij-cov xct atSota zoo 'irairpoc. Msxa qt^ tov
Kpovov, 6 * From Dionysus, the Greek name of Bacchus, and usually
so translated. 70 Elensinian and Ze'jc
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7rA£ov TupoaxiiJ-jxat xoo (o? £v xivi rppo'jpa
£a(JL£v. 'Oi 5£ £^YjYYjT;7.i xov jx'jO-ov xpoaxiO-£- 7a:v £|(oi)-£v.
After this he beautifully ob- serves, " That these four governments
signify the different gradations of virtues, accord- ing to which
oui^ soul contains the symbols of all the qualities, both contemplative
and purifying, social and ethical; for it either
Bacchic Mysteries. 71 operates acoording to the theoretic or
con- templative virtues, the model of which is the government of
Uranus or Heaven^ that we may begin from on high ; and on this ac-
count Uranus (Heaven) is so called irctpa TOO la avco 6pc/.v, from
beholding the things above : Or it lives purely, the exemplar of
which is the Kronian or Satiu^nian kingdom ; and on this account Kronos
is named as Koro-nous, one who perceives through him- self. Hence
he is said to devour his own offspring, signifying the conversion of
him- self into his own substance : or it operates according to the
social virtues, the sym- bol of which is the government of Jupiter.
Hence, Jupiter is styled the Demiurgus, as operating about secondary
things : — or it operates according to both the ethical and
physical virtues, the symbol of which is the kingdom of Bacchus ; and on
this account is fabled to be torn in pieces by the Titans, because
the virtues are not cut off by each other." Aiyozzoyzai (lege
aLVL-c- tovtat) 5s zo'jc, ocarpspofjc '^jrj.^\i.o'jc, x(ov aps-
xtov v.rj.d-' ac, -ri fj{X£xspa ^^yji ayjApoXa e'/oo:ja Bacchic
Mysteries. iraawv tcov apsKov, icov tis O-scopYj'iL'jctov,
otat yap ')C7.-a xa^ {^SfoprjitTca? svspyst cbv Tza^jo.-
^sr^xc/. Tj xo'j oopavotj pctaLAsta, lv7. avoiii-sv ap^a{j.£i)-a, 5io
y,at orjp7.voc sipr^'a: irapa xo'j T7. av(o opcjLV. 'H '/c^i^apTi^o)?
C'^j? '^jC 'irapa- Sstyjxa Y; Kpovsia jiaacXstc/., oio %at Kpovoc
st- p'Ajtai OLOv xopovofjc tic 03V 5ia zo s7.ytov 6pav. Aio y,7/w
xaxamveiv ta ocxsia ysw/)- {laxa Xsysta^ (o? a'jro^ 'jrpoc saozov
sTutatps- cpcov. 'H 7,7.1:7. X7.C TcoXtttxac tov arj{j.|3oAov, T)
XOU AlOZ ^7.aLX£t7., OLO %7.t $Tj{J.tGfJpYOC 6 ZstJt;, (0?
TuspL t;7 $£'jr£p7. svspYcov. 'H %at7 tac r^^'l- %aC %7C CpDa:7,7.?
7.p£'C7.C, tOV aUV^oXoV, Tj tou A'.ovfjaou paatXsca, 5co y-ai
a^apa-Tsrai, 5wti O'JT, aviate- AooO-o'jaiv aXXr^Xatc 7.t 7.p£X7.i.
And thus far Olympiodorus ; in which pas- sages it is necessary to
observe, that as the Titans are the artificers of things, and stand
next in order to their creations, men are said to be composed from their
fragments, because the human soul has a partial life capable of
proceeding to the most extreme division united with its proper natiu'e.
And while the soul is in a state of servitude to
Kleusinian Mysteries. Bacchic Mysteries. the body, she hves confined,
as it were, in bonds, througli the dominion of this Titan- ical
life. We may observe farther concerning these dramatic shows of the
Lesser Mys- teries, that as they were intended to rep- resent the
condition of the soul while subservient to the body, we shall find
that a liberation from this servitude, through the purifying
disciplines, potencies that separate from evil, was what the wisdom of
the an- cients intended to signify by the descent of Hercules,
Ulysses, etc., into Hades, and their speedy return from its dark abodes.
' ' Hence," says Proclus, " Hercules being purified by
sacred initiations^ obtained at length a per- fect estabhshment among the
gods:"* that is, well knowing the dreadful condition of his
soul while in captivity to a corporeal nature, and purifying himself by
practice of the cleansing virtues, of which certain puri- fications
in the mystic ceremonies were symbolical, he at length was freed from the
bondage of matter, and ascended beyond her Commentary on the
Statesman of Plato. Meusinian and reach. On this account, it is
said of him, that He dragg'd the three-mouth'd dog to upper day;
intimating that by temperance, continence, and the other virtues,
he drew upwards the intuitional, rational, and opinionative part of
the soul. And as to Theseus, who is repre- sented as . suffering eternal
punishment in Hades, we must consider him too as an allegorical
character, of which Proclus, in the above-cited admirable work, gives the
fol- lowing beautiful explanation : " Theseus and
Pirithous," says he, " are fabled to have ab- ducted Helen, and
descended to the infernal regions, i. e. they were lovers both of
mental and visible beauty. Afterward one of these (Theseus), on account
of his magnanimity, was Hberated by Hercules from Hades ; but the
other (Pirithous) remained there, be- cause he could not attain the
difficult height of divine contemplation." This account, in-
deed, of Theseus can by no means be recon- ciled with VIRGILIO’s: sedet,
seternumque sedebit, Infelix Theseus. There sits, and forever shall
sit, the unhappy Theseus. Bacchic Mysteries. Nor do I see how VIRGILIO can be
reconciled with himself, who, a httle before this, rep- resents him
as hberated from Hades. The conjecture, therefore, of Hyginus is
most probable, that VIRGILIO in this particular committed an oversight,
which, had he lived, he would doubtless have detected, and amended.
This is at least much more probable than the opinion of Dr. Warbm^ton,
that Theseus was a living character, who once entered into the
Eleusinian Mysteries by force, for which he was imprisoned upon earth,
and afterward punished in the infernal realms. For if this was the
case, why is not Hercules also represented as in punishment? and this
with much greater reason, since he actually dragged Cerberus from Hades ;
whereas the fabulous descent of Theseus was attended with no real,
but only intentional, mischief. Not to mention that Virgil appears to
be the only writer of antiquity who condemns this hero to an
eternity of pain. Nor is the secret meaning of the fables
concernmg the punishment of impure souls 78 Eleusinian
and less impressive and profound, as the follow- ing extract
fi'om the manuscript commentary of Olympiodorus on the GORGIA DI LEONZIO of
Plato will abundantly affirm: — "Ulysses," says he,
" descending into Hades, saw, among others, Sisyphus, and Tityus,
and Tantalus. Tityus he saw lying on the earth, and a vulture de-
vouring his liver; the liver signifying that he lived solely according to
the principle of cupidity in his natiu'e, and tln^ough this was
indeed internally prudent ; but the earth signifies that his disposition
was sordid. But Sisyphus, living under the dominion of ambi- tion
and anger, was employed in continually rolling a stone up an eminence,
because it perpetually descended again ; its descent im- plying the
vicious government of himself ; and his rolling the stone, the hard,
refractory, and, as it were, rebounding condition of his hf e. And,
lastly, he saw Tantalus extended by the side of a lake, and that there
was a tree before him, with abundance of fruit on its branches,
which he desired to gather, but it vanished from his view ; and this
indeed indicates, that he lived under the dominion Bacchic
Mysteries.of phantasy ; but his hanging over the lake, and in vain
attempting to drink, imphes the elusive, humid, and rapidly-ghding
condition of such a hfe." '0 O^uaasa? xaxsX^wv sec
cf'^o'j, oiQZ zoy Slgo^'ov, y.rji z^jV Tcc'jov, '/otc xov TavraXov.
Kc/.t tov {xsv TtTuov, st:'. xt^c yrj? £t§s %£L[X£Vov, vcat oxc xo
r^Trajj aoxoo r^aO-tsv Y'j'|. To {JL£V GOV T^Tuap GTjiJ-aLvst oxt ya-cct
xo STTtiJ'DJJL'/^XL/.OV fJ-SpOC sCTjaS, XOLl §17. XOfJXO £C3(0
cppovxiCs'co. 'H 5s Y'^j OYjiJiaLvst xo yO-ovtov a'jxoy
'-ppovrjiia. 5s -Itaocpoc, 7,axa xo cp^Xo- xqjLov, y.7.t O-ujJLOscSsi;
C'^aa? sy-uXis xov Xcr)-ov, %at TuaXtv %ax£cp£p£v, £7U£i5£ T:£pi afjxc/.
xaxap- p£C, 7,7.7,(0^ 'jroXtX£00{JL£VOC. AtO^OV 0£ £7,oXt£,
hirj, XO axXrjpov, %ac avxixuTcov xyjc auxoa C<'>''JC- Tov o£
T7.vx7.A0v £t.5£v £v Xt{JLV (lege Xqj.virj) %7.l OXt £V 5£v5pOtC
'^a7.V 07:(0p7.'., ■X,7.L T^{)'£X£ xpuyav, X7.t wj^rjyziQ ^^^v/o^zo
ai o^copat. TOUXO 5£ arj{X7.CV£t XTjV 7,7x7. (p7.VX7.ai7.V
Cto'^v. Aox'/j 5£ aTj[j,7.v£t xo oXiaO-'/jpov 7,7.t ^lopyov,
%7t i9'7.xxov7. 'jLO'!77.yo|jL£vov. So that accord- ing to the wisdom of
the ancients, and the most sublime philosophy, the misery which a
soul endures in the present life, when giv- ing itself up to the dominion
of the irrational 80 Elensinian and part, is
nothing more than the commence- ment, as it were, of that torment which
it win experience hereafter : a torment the same in kind though
different in degree, as it will be much more di'eadful, vehement,
and extended. And by the above specimen, the reader may perceive how
infinitely supe- rior the explanation which the Platonic philosophy
affords of these fables is to the frigid and trifling interpretations of
Bacon and other modern mythologists ; who are able mdeed to point
out their correspondence to something in the natui'al or moral world,
be- cause such is the wonderful connection of things, that all
things sympathize with all, but are at the same time ignorant that
these fables were composed by men divinely wise, who framed them
after the model of the highest originals, from the contemplation of
real and permanent heing, and not from regarding the delusive and fluctuating
objects of sense. This, indeed, mil be evident to every ingenuous
mind, from reflecting that these wise men universally considered
Hell or death as commencing in the present life Baccldc Mysteries.
81 (as we have already abundantly proved), and that,
consequently, sense is nothing more than the energy of the dormant soul,
and a perception, as it were, of the delusions of di'eams. In
consequence of tliis, it is ab- surd in the highest degree to imagine
that such men would compose fables from the contemplation of
shadows only, without re- garding the splendid originals from which
these dark phantoms were produced : — not to mention that their
harmonizing so much more perfectly with intellectual explications
is an indisputable proof that they were de- rived from an intellectual
[noetic] source. And thus much for the dramatic shows of the
Lesser Mysteries, or the first part of these sacred institutions, which
was properly denominated xsXst-r] [telete^ the closing up] and
[vrrpiz Muesis [the initiation], as con- taining certain perfective
rites, symbolical ex- hibitions and the imparting and reception of
sacred doctrines, previous to the beholding of the most splendid visions,
or ETuoTutsta \epop- teia, seership]. For thus the gradation of
Bacchic Mysteries. the Mysteries is disposed by Proclus in
Theology of Plato, book iv. " The perfective rite [rsXsrrj,
telete],^^ says he, " precedes in or- der the initiation [\xorpiQ,
muesis], and initia- tion, the final apocalypse, epopteiay
npoY^yst- STzoiizziaQ.* At the same time it is proper to
observe that the whole business of initiation was distributed into five
parts, as we are informed by Theon of Smyrna, in Matliema- tica,
who thus elegantly compares philosophy to these mystic rites : "
Again," says he, " philosophy may be called the initiation
into true sacred ceremonies, and the instruction in genuine
Mysteries ; for there are five parts of initiation : the first of which
is the previous purification ; for neither are the Mysteries
communicated to all who are wilhng to receive them ; but there are
cer- tain persons who are prevented by the voice of the crier
[%Tjpu^, herux^, such as those who possess impure hands and an
inartic- ulate voice ; since it is necessary that such as are not
expelled from the Mysteries * Theology of Plato. Bacchic Mysteries.
85 should first be refined by certain purifica- tions : but
after purification, the reception of the sacred rites succeeds. The third
part is denominated epopfeia, or reception.* And the fourth, which
is the end and design of the revelation, is [the investiture] the binding
of the head and fixing of the crowns. The ini- tiated person is, by
this means, authorized to communicate to others the sacred rites in
which he has been instructed ; whether after this he becomes a
torch-bearer, or an hierophant of the Mysteries, or sustains some
other part of the sacerdotal office. But the fifth, which is produced
from all these, is friendship and interior commtmion with God, and
the enjoyment of that felicity which arises from intimate converse
with divine beings. Similar to this is the com- munication of
political instruction ; for, in the first place, a certain purification
precedes, * Theon appears to regard the final apocalypse or
epopteia, like E. Poeocke to whose views allusion is made elsewhere.
This writer says : " The initiated were styled ebaptoi," and
adds in a foot-note — " Avaptoi, literaWj obtaining or
getting." According to this the epopteia would imply the final
reception of the interior doctrines. A. W. Eleusinian and or else
an exercise in proper matliematical discipline from early youth. For thus
Em- pedocles asserts, that it is necessary to be purified from
sordid concerns, by drawing from five fountains, with a vessel of
indis- soluble brass : but Plato, that purification is to be
derived fi'om the five mathematical disciplines, namely from arithmetic,
geome- try, stereometry, music, and astronomy ; but the
philosophical instruction in theorems, logical, pohtical, and physical,
is similar to initiation. But he (that is, Plato) denom- inates
zTzoizzzirj, [or the reveahng], a contem- plation of things which are
apprehended in- tuitively, absolute truths, and ideas. But he
considers the binding of the head, and corona- tion, as analogous to the
authority w^hich any one receives from his instructors, of leading
others to the same contemplation. And the fifth gradation is, the most
perfect fehcity arising from hence, and, according to Plato, an
assimilation to divinity^ as far as is pos- sible to mankind." But
though s'jroTrTS'.a, or the rendition of the arcane ideas, princi-
pally characterized the Greater Mysteries, yet Bacchic
Mysteries. 87 this was likewise accompanied with the [j.uyj-
GLc, or initiation, as will be evident in the conrse of this
inquuy. But let US now proceed to the doctrine of the Greater
Mysteries : and here I shall en- deavor to prove that as the dramatic
shows of the Lesser Mysteries occultly signified the miseries of
the soul while in subjection to body, so those of the Grreater obscurely
inti- mated, by mystic and splendid visions, the felicity of the
soul both here and hereafter, when purified from the defilements of
a material nature, and constantly elevated to the realities of
intellectual [spiritual] vision. Hence, as the ultimate design of the
Mys- teries, according to Plato, was to lead us back to the
principles from which we descended, that is, to a perfect enjoyment of intellectual
[spiritual] good, the imparting of these prin- ciples was doubtless one
part of the doctrine contained in the airoppTjia, aporrheta, or se-
cret discourses ; * and the different purifica- * The apostle Paul
apparently alludes to the disclosing of the Mystical doctrines to the
epopts or seers, in his Second Epistle to the Corinthians, xii. 3, 4:
"I knew a certain man, — whether in 88 Eleusinian
and tions exhibited in these rites, in conjunction with
initiation and the epopteia were symbols of the gradation of virtues
requisite to this reascent of the soul. And hence, too, if this be
the case, a representation of the descent of the soul [from its former
heavenly estate] must certainly form no inconsiderable part of
these mystic shows ; all which the f ollomng observations will, I do not
doubt, abundantly evince. In the first place, then, that the
shows of the Greater Mysteries occultly signified the felicity of
the soul both here and hereafter, when separated from the contact and
influ- ence of the body, is evident from what has been demonstrated
in the former part of this discourse : for if he who in the present life
is in subjection to Ms irrational part is truly in ITades, he who
is superior to its dominion is liheivise an inhahitayit of a place
totally different from Hades* If Hades therefore body or
outside of body, I know not: God knoweth, — who was rapt into paradise,
and heard appv]xr/. pYjfxata, tilings ineffable, which it is not lawful
for a man to repeat." *Paul, Epistle to the PhlUpjnans, iii,
20: "Our citizenship is in the heavens."
Bacchic Mysteries. 89 is the region or condition of
punishment and misery, the purified soul must reside in the regions
of bhss ; in a hf e and condition of purity and contemplation in the
present life, and entheastically,* animated by the divine *
Medical and Surgical Bejiorter, vol. xxxii. p. 195. "Those who have
professed to teach their fellow-mortals new truths eon- cerning
immortality, have based their authority on direct divine inspiration.
Numa, Zoroaster, Mohammed, Swedenborg, all claimed communication with
higher spirits ; they were what the Greeks called eniheast — 'immersed in
God' — a sti'iking word which Byron introduced into our tongue."
Carpenter describes the condition as an automatic action of the brain.
The inspired ideas arise in the mind suddenly, spontaneously, but very
vividly, at some time when tliinhing of some other topic. Francis
Galton defines genius as " the automatic activity of the mind, as
distin- guished from the effort of the will, — the ideas coming by
inspira- tion." This action, says the editor of the Reporter, is
largely favored by a condition approaching mental disorder — at least
by one remote from the ordinary working day habits of thought.
Fasting, prolonged intense mental action, gi-eat and unusual com- motion
of mind, will produce it ; and, indeed, these extraordinary displays seem
to have been so preceded. Jesus, Buddha, Moham- med, all began their
careers by fasting, and visions of devils fol- lowed by angels. The
candidates in the Eleusinian Mysteries also saw visions and apparitions,
while engaged in the mystic orgies. "We do not, however, accept the
materialistic view of this subject. The cases are enftieasHe ; and
although hysteria and other disorders of the sympathetic system sometimes
imitate the phenomena, we believe with Plato and Plotimis, that the
higher faculty, intellect or intuition as we prefer to call it, the
noetic part of our nature, is the faculty actually at work. "By
reflection, 90 Eleusinian and energy, in the
next. This being admitted, let us proceed to consider the
description which Virgil gives us of these fortunate abodes, and
the latent signification which it contains, ^neas and his guide, then,
hav- ing passed tlu^ough Hades, and seen at a dis- tance Tartarus,
or the utmost profundity of a material nature, they next advance to
the Elysian fields : Devenere locus Isetos, et amaena
vireta Fortunatoi'uin nemorum, sedesque beatas. Largiov Me
campos gether et lumine vestit Purpureo ; solemque suum, sua sidera
norunt. * Now the secret meaning of these
joyful places is thus beautifully unfolded by Olym- piodorus in his
manuscript Commentary on the Gorgias of Plato. "It is necessary
to know," says he, " that the fortunate islands are said
to be raised above the sea ; and self-knowledge, and intellectual
discipline, the soul can be raised to the vision of eternal truth,
goodness, and beauty — that is, to the vision of God." This is the
epopteia. A. W. They came to the
blissful regions, and delightful gi'eeu re- treats, and happy abodes in
the fortunate gi'oves. A freer and purer sky here clothes the fields with
a purjile light ; they recog- uize their own suu, their own stars."
Bacchic Mysteries. 91 hence a condition of being,
which transcends this corporeal hfe and generated existence, is
denominated the islands of the blessed ; but these are the same with the
Elysian fields. And on this account Hercules is said to have
accomphshed his last labor in the Hes- perian regions ; signifying
bythis, that having vanquished a dark and earthly life he after-
ward hved in day, that is, in truth and light." Asc 5s st^svai ozi
w. Yfpoi uTTspxu'jrxGoaiv zt^q i)-aXaaa'rj? avco-cspw otjoai. Tt;v oov
Tzokizsiay XTjV 67:£|v7,u^0Laav too fjioo if.rji z'qc, ysvY^ascoc,
{jLa7,7.p(ov VTjaouc '/.''jXo'JOI. TaoTC/v $£ saxi vcc/.t xo ^qkocjiw
TtS^iov. Airy, zoi zoozo xat 6 'Hpay,- Xtj^ zeXeozaioy alJ-Xov sv xo:;;
saTTspcocc {xspsatv s'jTorr^aaxo, 7.vxi xax'^jYcovcaato xov
axoxstvov jcai yO-oviov pwv, xai Xotirov sv '^^t^spcf., oaxiv sv
rjXrid-sio^ %rxi rp(oxi sC'^- So that he who in the present state
vanquishes as much as possible a corporeal life, through the
practice of the piu'ifying virtues, passes in reahty into the Fortunate
Islands of the soul, and lives surrounded with the bright splen-
dors of truth and wisdom proceeding from the sun of good.
92 Bacchic Mysteries. The poet, in describing the
employments of the blessed, says : Pars in gramineis
exereent membra paleestris : Coutendunt ludo, et f ulva luctantur arena
: Pars pedibus plaudunt choreas, et carmina dicunt. Nee non
Threicius longa cum veste saeerdos Obloquitur uumeris septem discrimina
vocum: lamque eadem digitis, jam pectiue pulsat eburno. Hie genus antiquum Teucri, puleherrima proles, Magnanimi heroes, nati
melioribus annis, Illusque, Assaracusque, et TroJEe Dardanus
auctor. Arma
procul, currusque virum miratur inanis. Stant terra defixse hastse,
passimque soluti Per campum pascuntur equi. Quae gratia curruum
Armorumque fuit vivis, quae cura nitentis Pascere equos, eadem sequitur
tellure repostos. Conspicit, ecee alios, dextra laevaque per herbam
Vescentis, Isetumque choro Pgeana eanentis. Inter odoratum lauri nemus :
unde superne Pliu'imus Eridaui per silvam volvitur amnis.* * "Some exercise their limbs upon the grassy field, contend
in play and wrestle on the yellow sand ; some dance on the ground
and utter songs. The priestly Thracian, likewise, in his long robe
[Orj^heus] responds in melodious numbers to the seven distinguished notes
; and now strikes them with his fingers, now with the ivory quill. Here
are also' the ancient race of Teucer, a most illustrious progeny, noble
heroes, born in happier j-ears, — II, Assarac, and Dardan, the founder of
Troy, ^neas looking from afar, admires the arms and empty war-cars of the
heroes. There stood spears fixed in the ground, and scattered over
the plain horses are feeding. The same taste which when alive
•'i%^!^mm^ Eleusiuiau Mj'steries.
Bacchic Mysteries. 95 This must not be understood as
if the soul in the regions of fehcity retained any affec- tion for
material concerns, or was engaged in the trifling pursuits of the
everyday cor- poreal life ; but that when separated from
generation, and the world's life, she is con- stantly engaged in
employments proper to the higher spiritual nature ; either in divine con-
tests of the most exalted wisdom ; in forming the responsive dance of
refined imagina- tions; in tuning the sacred lyi'e of mystic piety
to strains of divine fury and ineffable dehght ; in giving free scope to
the splendid and winged powers of the soul; or in nourishing the
higher intellect with the sub- stantial banquets of intelligible
[spiritual] food. Nor is it without reason that the river Eridanus
is represented as flowing through these delightful abodes; and is
at these men had for chariots and arms, the same passion for
rear- ing glossy steeds, follow them reposing beneath the earth.
Lo! also he views others, on the right and left, feasting on the
grass, and singing in chorus the joyful pteon, amid a fragrant grove
of laui'el; whence from above the greatest river Eridanus rolls
through the woods." A peeon was chanted to Apollo at Delphi every
seventh day. 96 Eleusinian and the same time
denominated plurimus (great- est), because a great part of it was
absorbed in the earth without emerging from thence : for a river is
the symbol of hfe, and conse- quently signifies in this place the
intellectual or spii'ituaJ life, j)roceeding from on liigh, that
is, from divinity itself, and gliding with pro- lific energy through the
hidden and profound recesses of the soul. In the following
lines he says : Nulli eerta domus. Lucis habitamus opacis,
Riparumque toros, et prata recentia rivis Incolimus.* By the
blessed not being confined to a par- ticular habitation, is implied that
they are perfectly free in all things ; being entirely free from
all material restraint, and purified from all inclination incident to the
dark and cold tenement of the body. The shady groves are symbols of
the retiring of the » li ' No one of us
has a fixed abode. We inhabit the dark groves, and occupy couches on the
river-banks, and meadows fresh with little rivulets."
Bacchic Mysteries. 97 soul to the depth of her essence, and
there, by energy solely divine, establishing herself in the
ineffable principle of things.* And the meadows are syin])ols of that prolific
power of the gods through which all the variety of reasons, animals, and
forms was produced, and which is here the refresh- ing pastui'e and
retreat of the hberated soul. But that the communication of
the knowl- edge of the principles from which the soul descended
formed a part of the sacred Mys- teries is evident from Yirgil ; and that
this was accompanied with a vision of these prin- ciples or gods,
is no less certain, from the testimony of Plato, Apuleius, and
Proclus. The first part of this assertion is evinced by the
following beautiful lines : * Plato: BepiihUc, vi. 5. "He who
possesses the love of true knowledge is naturally carried in his
aspirations to the real prin- ciple of being ; and his love knows no
repose till it shall have been united with the essence of each object
through that jiart of the soul, which is akin to the Permanent and
Essential ; and so, the divine conjunction having evolved interior
knowledge and truth, the knowledge of being is won."
98 EleiiHinian and Prineipio cfelum ac tei-ras, eamposque
liquentes Lucentemque globum luuas, Titauiaque astra
Spiritus intus alit, totumque infusa per artus Mens agitat
molem, et magno se corpore miscet. Inde hominum peeudiimque genus,
vitseque volantum, Et qu£e marmoreo fert monstra sub sequore
pontus. Igneus est oUis vigor, et cselestis origo
Seminibus, quantum non uoxia corpora tardant, Terrenique hebetant
artus, moribundaque membra. Hinc metiiunt cupiuntque : dolent,
gaudentque : neque auras Despieiunt clausa tenebris et carcere
csecc* For the sources of the soul's existence are also the
principles from which it fell; and these, as we may learn from the Thnams
of Plato, are the Demiurgus, the mundane soul, and the junior or
mundane gods.f Now, of * "First of all the interior spirit
sustains the heaven and earth and watery plains, the illuminated orb of
the moon, and the Titan- ian stars ; and the Mind, diffused through all
the members, gives energy to the whole frame, and mingles with the vast
body [of the universe]. Thence proceed the race of men and beasts, the
vital souls of birds and the brutes which the Ocean breeds beneath
its smooth surface. In them all is a potency like fire, and a celestial
origin as to the rudimentary principles, so far as they are not clogged
by noxious bodies. They are deadened by earthly forms and members subject
to death ; hence they fear and desire, grieve and rejoice ; nor do they,
thus enclosed in darkness and the gloomy prison, behold the heavenly
air." \ Timceus. xliv. "The Deity (Demiurgus) himself
formed the divine; and then delivered over to his celestial offspring
[the Bacchic Mysteries. 99 these, the mundane
intellect, which, accord- ing to the ancient theology, is
represented by Bacchus, is principally celebrated by the poet, and
this because the soul is particu- larly distributed into generation,
after the manner of Dionysus or Bacchus, as is evident from the
preceding extracts from Olympio- dorus : and is still more abundantly
confirmed by the following curious passage from the same author, in
his comment on the Plicedo of Plato. " The soul," says he,
" descends Cori- cally [or after the manner of Proserpine]
into generation,* but is distributed into gen- eration Dionysiacally,t
and she is bound in body PrometheiacallyJ and Titanically: she
fi'ees herself therefore from its bonds by ex- ercising the strength of
Hercules ; but she subordinate or generated gods], the task of
creating the mortal. These subordinate deities, copying the example of
their parent, and receiving from his hands the immortal principles of the
human soul, fashioned after this the mortal body, which they
consigned to the soul as a vehicle, and in which they placed also another
kind of a soul, which is mortal, and is the seat of violent and fatal
passions." * That is to say, as if dying. Kore was a name of
Proserpina. t /. e. as if divided into pieces. X I. e.
Chained fast. 100 We US in km and is collected
into one through the assistance of Apollo and the savior Minerva, by
phi- losophical discipline of mind and heart purify- ing the
nature." i)zi /.opr^toc {j.sv sic ysvE^tv 'jTzo zT^z
Ysvsascoc' npojXY^O-suo? "^s, v.rj.1 Tiza- AttoXXcovoc %ol^
rr^c acorrjpac A\)*T;va?, ':r7.{)-a(vT:L- '^(oc -(0 oyzi
r5'.Xoaorpo'ja7.. The poet, however, intimates the other causes of the
soul's exis- tence, when he says, Igneiis est ollis vigor, et
coelestis origo Semiuibus * which evidently alludes to the
sowing of souls into generation, t mentioned in the Timmus. And
fi'om hence the reader will * "There is then a certain fiery
potency, and a celestial oi'igiu as to the rudimentary principles."
/. e. Restored to wholeness and divine life. tl Corinthians,
xv. 42-44. "So also is the onafitaHis of the dead. It is sown in
corruption [the material body] ; it is raised in incorruption : it is
sown in dishonor ; it is raised in gloi-y : it is sown in weakness ; it
is raised in power : it is sown a psychical body ; it is raised a
spiritual body." Bacchic Mysteries. 101
easily perceive the extreme ridiculousness of Dr. Warburton's
system, that the grand secret of the Mysteries consisted in exposing
the errors of Polytheism, and in teaching the doctrine of the
unity, or the existence of one deity alone. For he might as well have
said, that the great secret consisted in teaching a man how, by
writing notes on the works of a poet, he might become a bishop ! But
it is by no means wonderful that men who have not the smallest
conception of the true nature of the gods ; who have persuaded
themselves that they were only dead men deified ; and who measure the
understand- ings of the ancients by their own, should be led to
fabricate a system so improbable and absurd. But that this
instruction was accompanied with a vision of the source from which
the soul proceeded, is evident from the express testimony, in the
first place, of Apuleius, who thus describes his initiation into
the Mysteries. " Accessi confinium mortis ; et calcato
Proserpinse limine, per omnia vectus elementa remeavi. Nocte media vidi solem. 102 Meusinicm and
candido coniscantem kimine, deos inferos, et deos superos. Access! coram, et adoravi de proximo." * That is, "I
approached the confines of death : and having trodden on the
threshold of Proserpina returned, having been carried through all the
elements. In the depths of midnight I saw the sun glitter- ing with
a splendid light, together with the infernal and supernal gods : and to
these divinities approaching near, I paid the tribute of devout
adoration." And this is no less evidently implied by Plato, who thus
de- scribes the fehcity of the holy soul prior to its descent, in a
beautiful allusion to the arcane visions of the Mysteries. Ka/.Ao?
3s TOIS Y^V tOStV X7.[JLirpOV, OTS GOV £UOaL|J,OVt
)^op(p {j-ay,7.pcctv o^iv zz xac O-sav £:ro{jL£vot jjis'La [jLsv
Aio^ T;tJ-£tc, aXXot o£ \xez aXXoo ^scov, £l§ov t£ 7.71 BzzKO'jyzo
T£X£t(ov YjV 0-£|j.ic Xb^biv {i-7.%a- pKOXW.TYjV YjV 0pYl7.C0[J-£V
oXoX^Y^pOL {JL£V 7.010^ OVr£C, y,7.l 7.'Jr7.^£tC %7.'5t(OV 037. Y^|X7.C
£V 63r£p(p /p<5V(j) 67C£{X£V£V. '0X07cXy^P7. $£ 7,7.1 TLTiXa
%7.C aTp£(J.Y^ %7.t £u5aqJL0V7. rp7.a{J.7.-7. JJLyG'J{JL£VOt T£
7,71 £TC0TCT:£U0V'C£C £V auyTJ %7.9-7.pq: %7.l)-7.pOl * The Golden Ass.
xi. p. 239 (Bohn). Bacchic Mysteries. 103
TTSpLrpspovrs? ovofxaCopisv oarpsoa xpo':rov 5s d£3{jL£ujj-£V0L
That is, " But it was tlien law- ful to survey the most splendid
beauty, when we obtained, together with that blessed choir, this
happy vision and contemplation. And we indeed enjoyed this blessed spectacle
to- gether with Jupiter ; but others in conjunc- tion with some
other god ; at the same time being initiated in those Mysteries^ which
it is lawful to call the most blessed of all Mysteries. And these
divine Orgies* were celebrated by us, while we possessed the proper
integrity of our nature, we were freed from the molestations of evil
which otherwise await us in a future period of time. Likewise, in
consequence of this divine initiation, we became spectators of
entire, simple, immovable, and blessed visions, res- ident in a
pure hght ; and were ourselves pure and immaculate, being hberated
from this surrounding vestment, which we denom- inate body, and to
which we are now bound * The peculiar rites of the Mysteries were
indifferently termed Orgies or Labors, teletai or finishings, and
initiations. 10-i Bacchic Mysteries. like an
oyster to its shell."* Upon this beautiful passage Proclus observes,
"That the initiation and epopfeia [the vailing and the
reveahng] are symbols of ineffable silence, and of union with mystical
natures, through intelligible \dsions.t Kocl yap -q {xor^zic, v.ai
r^ * Phcedriis, 64. t Proclus : Theology of Plato, book
iv. The following reading is suggested : "The initiation and final
disclosing are a symbol of the Ineffable Silence, and of the enosis, or
being at one and en rapport with the mystical verities through
manifestations in- tuitively comprehended." The
ixv>'f\z<.z, muesis, or initiation is defined by E. Pocoeke as
relating to the "well-known Buddhist Moksha, final and eternal
happiness, the liberation of the soul from the body and its exemp- tion
from fvirther transmigration." For all mystcB therefore there was a
certain welcome to the abodes of the blessed. The term cTTOTrcjioi,
epopteia, applied to the last scene of initiation, he de- rives from the
Sanscrit, evaptoi, an obtaining; the epopt being regarded as having
secured for himself or herself divine bliss. It is more usual,
however, to treat these terms as pure Greek; and to render the mnesis as
initiation and to derive epopteia from STCOrtTopiat. According to this
etymology an epopt is a seer or clairvoyant, one who knows the interior
wisdom. The terms in- spector and superintendent do not, tome, at all
express the idea, and I am inclined, in fact, to suppose with Mr. Pocoeke,
that the Mysteries came from the East, and from that to deduce that
the technical words and expressions are other than Greek.
Plotinus, speaking of this enosis or oneness, lays down a spiritual
discipline analogous to that of the Mystic Orgies : " Purify your
soul from all undue hope and fear about earthly things ; mortify
tl'^ £leii8iiiiau Mysteries. Etruscan.
Bacchic Mysteries. 107 TYjC iTpoc xa {jLoatixa
"^ta t(ov vo'/^xcov cpaajjia- xtov svcoascoc;. Now, from all tliis,
it may be inferred, that the most sublime part of the zTzrj'Kisirx
\epoptei(i\ or final revealing, con- sisted in beholding the gods
themselves in- vested with a resplendent hght ; * and that this was
symbohcal of those transporting visions, which the virtuous soul will con-
stantly enjoy in a future state ; and of which it is able to gain some
ravishing glimpses, even while connected with the cumbrous vestment
of the body.f the body, deny self, — affections as well as
appetites, — and the inner eye will begin to exercise its clear and
solemn vision." " In the reduction of yonr soul to its simplest
principles, the divine germ, you attain this oneness. We stand then in
the immediate pres- ence of God, who shines out from the profound depths
of the soul."- A. W. * Apuleius: The Golden Ass. xi. The
candidate was instructed by the hierophant, and permitted to look within
the cistn or chest, which contained the mystic serpent, the phallus, egg,
and gi-ains sacred to Demeter. As the epopt was reverent, or otherwise,
he now "knew himself" by the sentiments aroused. Plato and
Al- cibiades gazed with emotions wide apart. — A. W. t Plotinus :
Letter to Flaccus. " It is only now and then that . we can enjoy the
elevation made possible for us, above the limits of the body and the
world. I myself have realized it but three times as yet, and Porphyry
hitherto not once." 108 Bacchic Mysteries.
But that this was actually the case, is evident fi'om the following
unequivocal tes- timony of Proclus : Ev airaac zaic, zsXszaic
TzpozEiyoo(ji [xoryfj.Q^ TToXXa $s G'/r^iiaza s^- aXazzoyzzc,
rpctcvovroir %ru zoze {j.£v azoizM- zov a'jrcov xpojBsjBXrjtac «:p(oc,
xors 5s sec c(v- {J-pcoTTStov {j-opY'/jv £a/'/j{j.axta[JL£vov, ':o':£ os
stc dXXotov trjTTov ';:po£XY|XfjG(o?. /. ^. " In all the
initiations and Mysteries, the gods ex- hibit many forms of themselves,
and appear in a variety of shapes : and sometimes, in- deed, a
formless light ^ of themselves is held forth to the view ; sometimes this
hght is according to a human form, and sometimes it proceeds into a
different shape." f This assertion of divine visions in the
Mysteries, Porpbyiy afterward declared that he witnessed
four times, when near him, the soul or " intellect " of
Plotiiius thns raised up to the First and Sovereign Good ; also that he
himself was only once so elevated to the enosis or union with God, so as
to have glimpses of the eternal world. This did not occur till he
was sixty-eight years of age. — A. W. * I. e. Si luminous
appearance without any defined form or shape of an object. \
Commentary upon the Republic of Plato, page 380. Cupids,
Satyr, aud statue of Priapua. Bacchic Mysteries. Ill is
clearly confirmed by Plotinus.* And, in short, that magical evocation
formed a part of the sacerdotal office in the Mysteries, and that
this was universally believed by all antiquity, long before the era of
the latter Platonists,t is plain from the testimony of Hippocrates,
or at least Democritus, in his Treatise de Morbo Sacro.X For speaking
of those who attempt to cure this disease by magic, he observes :
st yap csayjvtjv ts %aGac- Xaaaav arpovov 7.7.1 yqy, zat z'rjXka ta
zoiotjzo zpOTzrj, TTOLVca zizi^z/ovzrji sxiataaO-ai, slis 7cac STc
TEAET12N, scxs xoll Ss aXhric, zivoq yvtofj-Tj? {xsXsrr^^ cpaatv ocot xs
scvai 01 zrjjjza btzizt^^so- oyzec, ^uaspsstv sjj-oi ys 5oy.£oaaL y,. X.
/. e. " For if they profess themselves able to draw down the
moon, to obscure the sun, to pro- duce stormy and pleasant weather, as
like- wise showers of rain, and heats, and to render the sea and
earth barren, and to accomplish *Ennead, i. book 6; and ix. book
9. t Plotinus, Porphyry, lamblichus, Proclus, Longinus, and
their associates. X Epilepsy. 112 Eleusinian
and every thing else of this kind ; whether they derive this
knowledge from flie Mysteries^ or from some other mental effort or
meditation, they appear to me to be impious, from the study of such
concerns." From all which is easy to see, how egregiously Dr.
Warburton was mistaken, when, in page 231 of his Divine Legation^
he asserts, " that the light beheld in the Mysteries, was nothing
more than an illuminated image which the priests had thoroughly
purified." But he is likewise no less mistaken, in transferring
the injunction given in one of the Magic Oracles of Zoroaster, to the
busi- ness of the Eleusinian Mysteries, and in per- verting the
meaning of the Oracle's admoni- tion. For thus the Oracle speaks :
Myj 'puocojc y.akto'f\c, aoxonxoy a-^aKiw., That is, "
Invoke not the self -revealing image of Nature, for you must not behold
these things before your body has received the initiation."
Upon which he observes, " that Bacchic Mysteries.
113 the self-revealing image ivas only a diffusive shining
light, as the name partly declares^ * But this is a piece of gross
ignorance, from which he might have been freed by an atten- tive
perusal of Proehis on the Timceus of Plato : for in these truly divine
Commenta- ries we learn, " that the moonf is the cause of
nature to mortals, and the self -rev eating image of the fountain of
nature.^^ "^.zXriyq {isv acrca zoic, O-vyjzoi? zr^c, ^fO(jSo:)C, to
ayioTitCiV rj^^rjX\i.a. o'j37. xT^c 'izr^'^fr/.iac, 'f'jasco^. If the
reader is desirous of knowing what we are to under- stand by the
fountain of nature of which the moon is the image, let him attend to the
fol- lowing information, derived from a long and deep study of the
ancient theology : for from hence I have learned, that there are
many divine fountains contained in the essence of the demiurgus of
the world ; and that among these there are three of a very
distinguished rank, namely, the fountain of souls, or Juno, — the
fountain of virtues, or Minerva — and * Divine Legation, p.
231. t /. e. The Mother-Goddess, Isis or Demeter, symbolized
as Selene or the Moon, 114 Eleusinian and
the fountain of nature, or Diana. This last fountain too
immediately depends on the vilifying goddess Rhea; and was assumed
by the Demiurgus among the rest, as neces- sary to the prohfic
reproduction of liimself. And this information will enable us
besides to explain the meaning of the following i3as- sages in Apuleius,
which, from not being- understood, have induced the moderns to
believe that Apuleius acknowledged but one deity alone. The first of
these passages is in the beginning of the eleventh book of his
MetamorpJioses, in which the divinity of the moon is represented as
addressing him in this sublime manner : " En adsum tuis com-
mota, Luci, precibus, rerum Natura parens, elementorum omnium domina,
seculorum progenies initialis, summa numinum, regina Manium, prima
cai^litum, Deoruni Dearum- que facies uniformis : quae cseh
luminosa culmina, maris salubria flamina, inferorum de plorata
silentia nutibus meis dispenso : cu jus numen unicum, multiformi specie,
ritu vario, nomine multijugo totus veneratur orbis. Me primigenii
Phryges Pessinunticam nominant Bacchic Mysteries. 115
Deum matrem. Hiiic Autochthones Attici Cecropiam Minervam ; ilhiic
fluctuantes Cy- prii Paphiam Veiierem : Cretes sagittif eri
Dictjninam Dianam ; Sicuh trihngues Sty- giam Proserpinam ; Eleusinii
vetustam Deam Cererem : Junonem ahi, ahi Bellonam, alii Hecaten,
Rhamnusiam ahi. Et qui nascen- tis dei Sohs inchoantibus radiis
iUustrantur, ^thiopes, Ariique, priscaque doctrina pol- lentes
^gyptii cserimoniis me prorsus propriis percolentes appellant vero nomine
reginam Isidem." That is, " Behold, Lucius, moved with
thy supphcations, I am present ; I, who am Nature, the parent of things,
mis- tress of all the elements, initial progeny of the ages, the
highest of the divinities, queen of departed spirits, the first of the
celes- tials, of gods and goddesses the sole hkeness of all : who
rule by my nod the luminous heights of the heavens, the salubrious
breezes of the sea, and the woful silences of the in- fernal
regions, and whose divinity, in itself but one, is venerated by all the
earth, in many characters, various rites, and different
appellations. Hence the primitive Phry- 116 Bacchic
Mysteries. gians call me Pessinuntica, the motlier of the
gods ; the Attic Autochthons, Cecropian Muierva; the wave-siUTOunded
Cyprians, Paphian Venus ; the arrow-bearing Cretans, Dictynnian
Diana; the three-tongued Sicil- ians, Stygian Proserpina ; and the
inhabit- ants of Eleusis, the ancient goddess Ceres. Some, again,
have invoked me as Juno, others as Bellona, others as Hecate, and others
as Rhamnusia ; and those who are enlightened by the emerging rays
of the rising sun, the Ethiopians, and Aryans, and likewise the
Egyptians powerful in ancient learning, who reverence my divinity with
cerenioaies perfectly proper, call me by my true appellation Queen
Isis." And, again, in another place of the same book, he says of the
moon : " Te Superi colunt, observant Inferi : tu rotas orbem,
luminas Solem, regis mundum, calcas Tartarum. Tibi respondent sidera,
gaudent numina, redeunt tempora, serviunt elementa, etc." That
is, " The supernal gods reverence thee, and those in the realms
beneath at- tentively do homage to thy divinity. Thou dost make the
universe revolve, illuminate Bacchic Mysteries. 119
the sun, govern the world, and tread on Tar- tarns. The stars
answer thee, the gods re- joice, the houi's and seasons retui*n by
thy appointment, and the elements serve thee." For all tliis
easily follows, if we consider it as addressed to the fountain-deity of
nature, subsisting in the Demiurgus, and which is the exemplar of
that nature which flourishes in the lunar orb, and throughout the
mate- rial world, and from which the deity itself of the moon
originally proceeds. Hence, as this fountain innnediately depends on
the life-giving goddess Rhea, the reason is ob- vious, why it was
formerly worshiped as the mother of the gods : and as all the
mundane are contained in the super-mundane gods, the other
appellations are to be considered as names of the several mundane
divinities pro- duced by this fountain, and in whose essence they
are likewise contained. But to proceed with our inquiry, I
shall, in the next place, prove that the different purifications
exhibited in these rites, in con- junction with initiation and the
epopteia were symbols of the gradation of disciplines
120 Eleusinian and requisite to the reascent of the soul.*
And the fii'st part, indeed, of this proposition respecting the
purifications, immediately fol- lows from the testimony of Plato in the
pas- sage already adduced, in which he asserts that the ultimate
design of the Mysteries was to lead us back to the principles from which
we originally fell. For if the Mysteries were symbohcal, as is universally
acknowledged, this must likewise be true of the purifica- tions as
a part of the Mysteries ; and as in- ward puiity, of which the external
is sym- bolical, can only be obtained by the exercise of the
virtues, it evidently follows that the purifications were symbols of the
pimfying moral virtues. And the latter part of the proposition may
be easily inferred, from the passage ah'eady cited from the Phmdrus
of Plato, in which he compares initiation and the epopteia to the
blessed vision of the higher intelligible natures ; an employment
which can alone belong to the exercise of contemplation. But the whole of
this is rendered indisputable by the following re- */. e. to
its former divine condition. Bacchic Mysteries. 121 markable
testimony of Olympiodorus, in his excellent manuscript Commentary on
the PJuedo of Plato.* "In the sacred rites," says he,
"popular pui4fications are in the first place brought forth, and
after these such as are more arcane. But, in the third place,
collections of various things into one are re- ceived ; after which
follows inspection. The ethical and political virtues therefore are
analogous to the apparent purifications ; the cathartic virtues which
banish all external impressions, correspond to the more arcane
purifications. The theoretical energies about intelligibles, are
analogous to the collections ; and the contraction of these energies into
an * We have taken the liberty to present the following version
of this passage, as more correctly expressing the sense of the
orig- inal: "At the holy places are first the public purifications.
With these the more arcane exercises follow ; and after those the
obliga- tions [-jozzaizz'.z) are taken, and the initiations follow,
ending with the epopiic disclosures. So, as will be seen, the moral
and social (political) virtues are analogous to the public purifications
; the purifying virtues in their turn, which take the place of all
external matters, correspond to the moi'e arcane disciplines ; the
contemplative exei'cises concerning things to be known intui- tively to
the taking of the obligations ; the including of them as an undivided
whole, to the initiations ; and the simple ocular view of simple objects
to the epoptic revelations." 122 Eleusinian and
indivisible nature, corresponds to initiation. And the simple
self-inspection of simple forms, is analogous to epoptic vision."
'On QZIQ. Etra ZTZl ZnjJZrjXZ aTZOrjfjr^ZOZZrjrjr ^xszfj, 5s
za'jzac, QOGzaaeic, Tzarjzhr^x'^jrjyrjyzrj, y-ai siri zaozruQ
ixorpBiQ- £v TsXst 5s siroirrscc/i. xVvc/Ao- yooaL TGCV'JV ai [J-sv
TjO-^xat 7,7.^ 7:o/dziY.'y,i aps- xa^ XGtc s[xcpavsai y,7,i)'7.p{j-occ. Ai 5s
%7.i)"7pii- 7,7^ 0371 77C0a7.SU7.C0Vt7t TZaVZO. Zrj. kY.ZOC,
ZOIQ aTTopp'^ro-spoic. Ai 5s xspt ':7 voriza r^scopYpt- %7c
TS svspYSi7.i zai^ GOGzaoeaiy. Ac 5s to'jtojv G'jya.irjSJsiQ sec "co
ajispiarov X7cc \vyqGZGiy. Ai 5s CLTZkr/l
X(OV 7.7rAC0V SC5(0V 70X0'V.7C t71C s7U07ursc7t?. And here I can
not refrain from noticing, with indignation mingled with pity, the
ignorance and arrogance of modern crit- ics, who pretend that this
distribution of the virtues is entirely the invention of the latter
Platonists, and without any foundation in the writings of Plato.* And
among the sup- porters of such ignorance, I am sovry to find
* The writings of Augustin handed Neo-Platonism down to pos- terity
as the original and esoteric doctrine of the first followers of Plato. He
enumerates the causes which led, in his opinion, to the negative position
assumed by the Academics, and to the con- Bacchic Mysteries.
123 Fabricius, in his prolegomena to the hfe of Proclus. For
nothing can be more obvious to every reader of Plato than that in
his Laws he treats of the social and political virtues ; in his
Phcedo, and seventh book of the RepiibUc^ of the purifying; and in
his Thceafetus, of the contemplative and sub- limer virtues. This
observation is, indeed, so obvious, in the Phcedo, with respect to
the purifying virtues, that no one but a verbal critic could read
this dialogue and be insen- sible to its truth : for Socrates in the
very beginning expressly asserts that it is the business of
philosophers to study to die, and to be themselves dead,* and yet at the
same time reprobates suicide. What then can such eealment of
their real opinions. He describes Plotinus as a resuscitated Plato. Against the
Academics. Phcedo, 21. Kivoovjooos: y^P o'^o- TOY/_otvou-iv op&to?
«t:to|j.evo'. (pcXoaocp'.a? XsXfj^cVai la? aWooc^, bv. odgsv aXXo aoxo'.
ziz'.x-ffitiionz'y Y) aTCofl-VYjoxstv zt xa: TsS-vava:. /. e. For as many
as rightly apply themselves to philosophy seem to have left others
ignorant, that they themselves aim at nothing else than to die and to be
dead. Elsewhere (31) Socrates says : " While we live, we shall
ap- proach nearest to intuitive knowledge, if we hold no communion
with the body, except, what absolute necessity requires, nor suffer
ourselves to be pervaded by its nature, but purify ourselves from it
until God himself shall release us. Eleusinian and a death mean but
symbolical or philosophical death ? And what is this but the true
ex- ercise of the virtues which purify '? But these poor men read
only superficially, or for the sake of displaying some critical
acumen in verbal emendations ; and yet with such despicable preparations
for philosoph- ical discussion, they have the impudence to oppose
their puerile conceptions to the de- cisions of men of elevated genius
and pro- found investigation, who, happily freed from the danger
and drudgery of learning any foreign language,* directed all their
attention without restraint to the acquisition of the most exalted
truth. It only now remains that we prove, in the last place,
that a representation of the descent of the soul formed no inconsiderable
part of these mystic shows. This, indeed, is doubt- * It is
to be regretted, nevertheless, that our author had not risked the "
danger and drudgery " of learning Greek, so as to have rendered
fuller justice to his subject, and been of greater service to his
readers. We are conscious that those who are too learned in verbal
criticism are prone to overlook the real purport of the text.— A.
W. Bacchic Mysteries. 125 less occultly intimated
by Yirgil, when speak- ing of the souls of the blessed ui Elysium,
he adds, Has omnes, ubi mille rotam volvere per annos,
Lethaeum ad fluviiim deus evocat agmine magno : Scilicet immemores supera
ut convexa revisant, Eursus et incipiant iu eorpore velle reverti.*
But openly by Apuleius in the following prayer which Psyche
addresses to Ceres : Per ego te frugiferam tuam dextram istam
deprecor, per Isetificas messium cserimonias, per tacita sacra cistarum,
et per famulorum tuorum draconum pinnata cuiTicula, et glebae.
Siculae fulcamina, et currum rapacem, et ter- ram tenacem, et illuminarum
Proserpinse nuptiarum demeacula, et caetera quae silentio tegit
Eleusis, Atticae sacrarium ; miserandse Psyches animse, supplicis fuse,
subsiste.f That is, "I beseech thee, by thy fruit-bearing
right * " All these, after they have passed away a thousand
years, are summoned by the divine one in great array, to the Lethfean
river. In this way they become forgetful of their former earth-life,
and revisit the vatilted realms of the world, willing again to
return into bodies." t Apuleius : The Golden Ass. (Story
of Cupid and Psyche), book vi. Bacchic Mysteries. hand,
by the joyful ceremonies of harvest, by the occult sacred rites of thy
cistae,* and by the winged car of thy attending dragons, and the
furrows of the Sicilian soil, and the ra- pacious chariot (or car of the
ravisher), and the dark descending ceremonies attending the
marriage of Proserpina^ and the ascending rites which accompanied the
lighted return of thy daughter^ and l)ij other arcana which Eleusis
the Attic sanctuary conceals in profound silence^ reheve the sorrows
of thy wretched suppliant Psyche." For the abduction of
Proserpina signifies the descent of the soul, as is e^ddent from the
passage previously adduced from Olympiodorus, in which he says the
soul descends Corically ; f and this is confirmed by the authority of
the philosopher Sallust, who observes, " That the abduction of
Proserpina is fabled to have taken place about the opposite equinoctial
; and by this the descent of souls [into earth- * Chests or
baskets, made of osiers, in which were enclosed the mystical images and
utensils which the uninitiated were not per- mitted to behold.
t /• €. as to death ; analogously to the descent of Kore-Per-
sephone to the Underworld. Ceres lends lier ear to Triptolemus.
Proserpina and Pluto. Jupiter augry. Bacchic
Mysteries. 129 life] is implied." Tlepi ^(oov x'ajv svaviiav
lo^q- {)-ac, 6 5'^ /.^.O-oSoc soTt tcov '|y/cov.* And as the
abduction of Proserpina was exhibited in the dramatic representations of
the Myste- ries, as is clear from Apuleius, it indisputa- bly
follows, that this represented the descent of the soul, and its union with
the dark tene- ment of the body. Indeed, if the ascent and descent
of the soul, and its condition while connected with a material nature,
were rep- resented in the dramatic shows of the Mys- teries, it is
evident that this was implied by the rape of Proserpina. And the
former part of this assertion is manifest from Apu- leius, when
describing his initiation, he says, in the passage already adduced :
"I ap- proached the confines of death, and having trodden on
the threshold of Proserpina, / returned^ having been carried through
all the elements.^'' And as to the latter part, it has been amply
proved, fi'om the highest authority, in the first division of this
dis- course. * De Diis et Mundo, p. 251.
130 Meusinian and Nor must the reader be distiu^bed on find-
ing that, according to Porphyry, as cited by Eusebius,* the fable of
Proserpina alludes to seed placed in the ground ; for this is like-
wise true of the fable, considered according- to its material
explanation. But it will be proper on this occasion to rise a httle
higher, and consider the various species of fables, according to
their philosophical arrange- ment ; since by this means the present
sub- ject will receive an additional elucidation, and the wisdom of
the ancient authors of fables will be vindicated from the unjust
aspersions of ignorant declaimers. I shall present the reader, therefore,
with the fol- lowing interesting division of fables, fi'om the
elegant book of the Platonic philoso- pher Sallust, on the gods and the
universe. " Of fables," says he, " some are
theological, others physical, others animastic (or relating to
soul), others material, and lastly, others mixed from these. Fables are
theological which relate to nothing corporeal, but contem- plate
the very essences of the gods ; such as * Evang. Prcepui: book iii.
chap. 2. Bacchic Mysteries. 131 the fable which
asserts that Saturn devoured his children : for it insinuates nothing
more than the nature of an intellectual (or intu- itional) god ;
since every such intellect returns into itself. We regard fables
physically when we speak concerning the operations of the gods
about the world ; as when considering Saturn the same as Time, and calhng
the parts of time the children of the universe, we assert that the
children are devoiu'ed by their parent. But we utter fables in a
spiritual mode, when we contemplate the operations of the soul ;
because the intellections of our souls, though by a discursive energy
they go forth into other things, yet abide in their parents.
Lastly, fables are material, such as the Egyptians ignorantly employ,
consider- ing and calling corporeal natures divinities : such as
Isis, earth, Osiris, humidity, Typhon, heat • or, again, denominating
Saturn water, Adonis, fruits, and Bacchus, wine. And, in- deed, to
assert that these are dedicated to the gods, in the same manner as herbs,
stones, and animals, is the part of wise men ; but to call them
gods is alone the province of fools and 132 Eleusinian and
madmen ; unless we speak in the same man- ner as when, from estabhshed
custom, we call the orb of the sun and its rays the sun itself. But
we may perceive the mixed kind of fables, as well in many other
particulars, as when they relate that Discord, at a banquet of the
gods, tlu'ew a golden apple, and that a dispute about it arising among
the god- desses, they were sent by Jupiter to take the judgment of
Paris, who, charmed with the beauty of Venus, gave her the apple in
pref- erence to the rest. For in this fable the banquet denotes the
super-mundane powers of the gods ; and on this account they sub-
sist in conjunction with each other : but the golden apple denotes the
world, which, on account of its composition from contrary natures,
is not improperly said to be thrown by Discord, or strife. But again,
since dif- ferent gifts are imparted to the world by dif- ferent
gods, they appear to contest with each other for the apple. And a soul
living ac- cording to sense (for this is Paris), not per- ceiving
other powers in the universe, asserts that the apple is alone the beauty
of Venus. Bacchic Mysteries. 133 But of these
species of fables, such as are theological belong to philosophers ; the
phys- ical and spiritual to poets ; l)ut the mixed to the first of
the initiator i/ rites (ze'kszal(;) ; since the intention of all mystic
ceremonies is to conjoin us with the world and the gods.^''
Thus far the excellent Sallust : from whence it is evident, that
"the fable of Pro- serpina, as belonging to the Mysteries, is
properly of a mixed nature, or composed from all the four species of
fables, the theo- logical [spiritual or psychical], and material.
But in order to understand this divine fable, it is requisite to know,
that according to the arcana of the ancient theology, the Coric *
order (or the order belonging to Proserpina) is twofold, one part of
which is super-mundane, subsisting with Jupiter, or the Demiurgus,
and thus associated with him establishing one artificer of divisible
natures ; but the other is mundane, in which Proser- * Coric
from KopY], Kore, a name of Proserpina. The name is derived by E. Pococke
from the Sanscrit Goure. 134 EJeiisinian and
pina is said to be ravished by Pluto, and to animate the extremities
of the universe. *' Hence," says Prockis, "according to
the statement of theologists, who dehvered to us the most holy
Mysteries, she [Proserpina] abides on high in those dwellings of
her mother which she prepared for her in inac- cessible places,
exempt from the sensible world. But she likewise dwells beneath
with Pluto, administering terrestrial con- cerns, governing the recesses
of the earth, supplying life to the extremities of the uni- verse,
and imparting soul to beings which are rendered by her inanimate and
dead." Kai yap yj twv iJ-soXoytov "^'^{J-yj, xwv tac
aytco- xata? Y/^iiv £V EXsaacvt tsAs-ca? 7rry.pry.o£0(oy,G- xtov,
avco, ji£v OL'jr/jV sv xocc {X'ffrjOQ owoic JJLSV8CV cp'^acv, O'j^ Yj
(J-'^r/jp aur^ y-arsaxsuaCsv sv a[57'0L? £(;Y^pY;{ji£voac too tz^vzoq.
Katco §£ {i£'ca nXoD-covoc xcDV yO-ovuov eizapyeiy^ v.rj.i zooQ
ZTiQ YQC, \Loyofjc £':it'cpo7U£U£tv, vcat Cf«^Y^v £xop£Y£tv ZOIC
eyrj.zoic ^oo xavToc, %at ^^/''i^ {ji£ta5i5ovat rote Trap £rjjjzo)y
aj^oyoic, 7.ai V£- xpot?.* Hence we may easily perceive that
* Proclus: TJieology of Plato, p. 371. Bacchic
Mysteries. 135 this fable is of the mixed kind, one part of
which relates to the super-mundane estabhsh- ment of the secondarj^ cause
of life,* and the other to the procession or outgoing of life and
soul to the farthest extremity of things. Let us therefore more
attentively consider the fable, in that part of it which is sym-
bolical of the descent of souls ; in order to which, it will be requisite
to premise an abridgment of the arcane discourse, respecting the
wanderings of Ceres, as preserved by Minutius Felix. "
Proserpina," says he, " the daughter of Ceres by Jupiter, as
she was gathering tender flowers, in the new spring, was ravished
from her dehghtful abodes by Pluto ; and being carried from thence
through thick woods, and over a length of sea, was brought by Pluto into
a cavern, the residence of departed spirits, over whom she
afterward ruled with absolute sway. But * Plotiuus taught the
existence of three hypostases in the Divine Nature. There was the
Demiurge, the God of Creation and Providence ; the Second, the
Intelligible, self-contained and im- mutable Source of life ; and above
all, the One, who like the Zervane Akerene of the Persians, is above all
Being, a pure will, an Absolute Love — " Intellect." — A.
W. 136 Bacchic Mysteries. Ceres, upon
discovering the loss of her daugh- ter, with hghted torches, and begirt
with a serpent, wandered over the whole earth for the purpose of
finding her till she came to Eleusis ; there she found her daughter,
and also taught to the Eleusinians the cultivation of corn."
Now in this fable Ceres represents the evolution of that intuitional part
of our nature which we properly denominate intel- lect'^ (or the
unfolding of the intuitional faculty of the mind from its quiet and
col- lected condition in the world of thought) ; and Proserpina
that living, self -moving, and animating part which we call sonl. But
lest this comparing of unfolded intellect to Ceres should seem
ridiculous to the reader, unac- quainted with the Orphic theology, it is
neces- sary to inform him that this goddess, from her intimate
union with Rhea, in conjunc- tion with whom she produced Jupiter,
is * Also denominated by Kant, Pure reason, and by Prof,
Cocker, Intuitive reason. It was considered by Plato, as " not
amenable to the conditions of time and space, but in a particular sense,
as dwelling in eternity : and therefore capable of beholding
eternal realities, and coming into communion with absolute beauty,
and goodness, and truth — that is, with God, the Absolute
Being." Proserpina. Greek. Bacclius. India. Ceres.
Roman. Demeter.— Ktruscan. Bacchic
Mysteries. 139 evidently of a Saturnian and zoogonic, or in-
tellectual and vivific rank ; and hence, as we are informed by the
philosopher Sallust, among the mundane divinities she is the deity
of the planet Saturn.* So that in con- sequence of this, our intellect
(or intuitive faculty) in a descending state must aptly symbohze
with the divinity of Ceres. But Pluto signifies the whole of a
material natui'e ; since the empire of this god, accord- ing to
Pythagoras, commences downward from the Gralaxy or milky way. And
the cavern signifies the entrance, as it were, into the
profundities of such a nature, which is accomplished by the soul's union
with this terrestrial body. But in order to under- derstand
perfectly the secret meaning of the other parts of this fable, it will be
necessary to give a more exphcit detail of the particu- lars
attending the abduction, from the beau- tiful poem of Claudian on this
subject. From * Hence we may perceive the reason why Ceres as well
as Sat- urn was denominated a legislative deity; and why
illuminations were used in the celebration of the Saturnalia, as well as
in the Eleusinian Mysteries. 140 Bacchic
Mysteries. this elegant production we learn that Ceres, who
was a&aid lest some violence should be offered to Proserpina, on
account of her in- imitable beauty, conveyed her privately to
Sicily, and concealed her in a house built on purpose by the Cyclopes,
while she herself directs her course to the temple of Cybele, the
mother of the gods. Hej:'e, then, we see the first cause of the soul's
descent, namely, the abandoning of a life wholly according to the
higher intellect, which is occultly signi- fied by, the separation of
Proserpina fi*om Ceres. Afterward, we are told that Jupiter
instructs Venus to go to this abode, and be- tray Proserpina from her
retirement, that Pluto may be enabled to carry her away; and to
prevent any suspicion in the virgin's mind, he commands Diana and Pallas
to go in company. The three goddesses arriving, find Proserpina at
work on a scarf for her mother ; in which she had embroidered the
primitive chaos, and the formation of the world. Now by Venus in this
part of the narration we must understand desire^ which even in the
celestial regions (for such is the Venus, Diana, and Pallas
visit Proserpina* Bacchic Mysteries. 143
residence of Proserpina till slie is ravished by Pluto), begins
silently and stealthily to creep into the recesses of the soul. By
Minerva we must conceive the rational power of the soul, and by
Diana, nature^ or the merely natural and vegetable part of our
composi- tion ; both which are now ensnared through the allurements
of desire. And lastly, the web in which Proserpina had displayed
all the fair variety of the material world, beau- tifully
represents the commencement of the illusive operations through which the
soul becomes ensnared with the beauty of imagi- native forms. But
let us for a while attend to the poet's elegant description of her
em- ployment and abode : Devenere locum, Cereris quo tecta
nitebant Cyclopum firmata manu. Stant ardua f erro Msenia ; ferrati
postes : immensaqiie nectit Claustra elialybs. Nullum tanto sudore
Pyracmon, Nee Steropes, eonstruxit opus : nee talibus unquam
Spiravere uotis animge : nee flumine tanto Incoctum maduit lassa fornaee
metallum. Atria vestit ebur : trabibus solidatur aenis Culmen, et
in eelsas surgunt eleetra eolumnas. Ipsa domum tenero mulcens Proserpina
eantu Irrita texebat rediturje munera matri. Hie elementorum seriem
sedesque pateruas 144 Eleusinian and Insignibat
aeu : veterem qua lege tutmiltum Diserevit natiira parens, et semiua
jiistis Diseessere locis : quidquid leve fertiu" iu altum :
111 medium graviora caduut : incaiiduit tether : Egit flamma polum :
fluxit mare •. terra pependit Nee color uuus inest. Stellas accendit in
auro. Ostro fundit aquos, attollit litora gemmis, Filaque mentitos
jam jam cfelantia liuctus Arte tumeiit. Credas illidi cautibus
algam, Et raucum bibiilis inserpere murmur arenis. Addit quinqiie
plagas : mediam subtemine rubro Obsessam fervore notat : squalebat
adustus Limes, et assiduo sitiebant stamina sole. Vitales utrimque
duas ; quas mitis oberrat Temperies habitanda viris. Tum fine
supremo Torpentes traxit geminas, brumaque perenni Fgedat, et
a3terno coiitristat frigore telas. Nee non et patrui piugit sacraria
Ditis, Fatalesque sibi manes. Nee def nit omen. Prasscia nam
subitis maduerimt fletibus ora. After this, Proserpina,
forgetful of her par- ent's commands, is represented as venturing
from her retreat, through the treacherous persuasions of Venus :
Impulit Joiiios pra?misso lumine fluetus Nondum pura dies :
tremulis vibravit in iindis Ardor, et errantes ludunt per cferula
flammfe. Jamque audax animi, fidseque oblita parentis, Fraude
Dioiifea riguos Proserpina saltus (Sic Parcse voluere) petit.
Bacchic Mysteries. 145 And this with the greatest
propriety: for obhvion necessarily follows a remission of
intellectnal action, and is as necessarily at- tended with the
allurements of desire.* Nor is her dress less symbolical of the acting
of * When the person turns the back upon his higher faculties,
and disregards the communications which he receives through them
from the world of unseen realities, an oblivion ensues of their
existence, and the person is next brought within the province and
operation of lower and worldly ambitions, such as a love of power,
passion for riches, sensual pleasure, etc. This is a descent, fall, or
apostasy of the soul, — a separation from the sources of divine life and
ravishment into the region of moral death. In the Pluedras, in the
allegory of the Chariot and Winged Steeds, Plato represents the lower or
inferior part of man's nature as dragging the soul down to the earth, and
subjecting it to the slavery of corporeal conditions. Out of these
conditions there arise numerous evils, that disorder the mind and becloud
the rea- son, for evil is inherent to the condition of finite and
multiform being into which we have "fallen by our own fault."
The pres- ent earthly life is a fall and a punishment. The soul is
now dwelling in ''the gi-ave which we call the body." In its
incorpo- rate state, and previous to the discipline of education, the
rational- element is " asleep." " Life is more of a dream
than a reality." Men are utterly the slaves of sense, the sport of
phantoms and illusions. We now resemble those " captives chained in
a subter- raneous cave," so poetically described in the seventh book
of The Republic ; their backs are turned to the light, and
consequently they see but the shadows of the objects which pass behind
them, and " they attribute to these shadows a perfect reality."
Their sojourn upon earth is thus a dark imprisonment in the body, a
dreamy exile from their proper home." — CucJcer's Greek Philosophy, Eleiisinian
and the soul in such a state, principally according to the
energies and promptings of imagina- tion and nature. For thus her
garments are beautifully described by the poet : Qiias
inter Cereris proles, nunc gloria luatris, Mox dolor, sequali tendit per
gratnina passu, Nee membris nee honore minor ; potuitque Pallas, si
clipeum, si ferret spieula, Phoebe. CoUeetsB tereti nodantur jaspide
vestes. Peetinis ingenio nunquam felicior arti Coutigit eventus.
Nullse sic consona telae Fila, nee in tantum veri duxere figuram.
Hie Hyperionis Solem de semine nasei Fecerat, et pariter, sed forma
dispare lunam, Aurora} noetisque duces. Cunabula Tethys Praebet, et
infantes gremio solatur anhelos, Cseruleusque sinus roseis radiatur
alumnis. Invalidum dextro portat Titana laeerto Nondum luce gravem,
nee pubescentibus alte Cristatum radiis : prime clementior sevo
Fiugitur, et tenerum vagitu despiiit ignem. Lseva parte soror
vitrei libaraina potat Uberis, et parvo signatur tempora cornu.
In which description the sun represents the
phantasy, and the moon, nature, as is well known to every tyro in the
Platonic philos- ophy. They are likewise, with great pro- priety,
described in their infantine state : for Bacchic Mysteries.
147 these energies do not arrive to perfection previous to
the sinking of the soul into the dark receptacle of matter. After this we
be- hold her issuing on the plain with Minerva and Diana, and
attended by a beauteous train of nymphs, who are evident symbols of
world of generation,* and are, therefore, the proper companions of the
soul about to fall into its fluctuating realms. But the
design of Proserpina, in venturing from her retreat, is beautifully
significant of her approaching descent: for she rambles from home
for the purpose of gathering flowers ; and this in a lawn replete with
the most enchanting variety, and exhahng the most dehcious odors.
This is a manifest image of the soul operatmg principally ac-
cording to the natural and external life, and so becoming effeminated and
ensnared through the delusive attractions of sensible form. Minerva
(the rational faculty in this case), likewise gives herself wholly to
the * Porphyry : Cave of the Nymphs. lu the later Greek, v'j|i.'f
rj sigaified a bride. 148 EJeusinian and
dangerous employment, and abandons the proper characteristics of
her nature for the destructive revels of desire. All which is
thus described with the ut- most elegance by the poet : Forma
loci siiperat flores : eurvata tumore Pai'vo planities, et moUibus edita
clivis Creverat in eoUem. Vivo de pumice fontes Roscida mobilibus
lambebant gramina rivis. Silvaque torrentes ramonim fi"igore
soles Temperat, et medio brumam sibi viudicat sestu. Apta fretis abies, bellis aecomoda eomus, Quercus arnica Jovi,
tumulos tectura cupressus, Hex plena favis, venturi pra?seia
lanrus. Fluctuat hie denso crispata cacumine buxus, Hie ederae
serpunt, hie pampinus indnit ulmos. Hand proeul inde laciis (Pergum
dixere Sioani) Panditur, et nemorum frondoso margine cinetus
Vicinis pallescit aquis : admittit in altum Cernentes oculos, et late
perviiis humor Ducit inoflfensus liquido sub gurgite visus, Imaque
perspicui prodit secreta profundi. Hue elapsa
eohors gaudent per florea rura Hortarur Cytherea, legant. Nunc ite,
sorores, Dum matutinis prsesudat solibus aer : Dum meus humectat
flaventes Lucifer agros, Rotanti praevectus equo. Sic fata, doloris
Carpit signa sui. Varios turn cjetera saltus Invasere eohors. Credas
examina fundi Hyblagum raptura thymum, cum cerea reges
Baccliic Mysteries. 149 Castra movent, fagique cava demissus
ab alvo Mellifer electis exereitus obstrepit lierbis. Pratorum
spoliatur honos. Hac lilia fuseis Iiitexit violis : banc mollis amaraeus
ornat : Heec graditur stellata rosis ; haec alba ligiistris. Te
quoqiie flebilibus mserens, Hyacintbe, figuris, Narcissumque metunt, nunc
inclita germina veris, Proestantes dim pueros. Tu natus Amyclis :
Hunc Helicon genuit. Te disci perculit error : Hune fontis decepit amor.
Te fronte retusa Deluis, hiinc fracta Cephissus arundiue luget.
j3^]staat ante alias avido fervore legeudi Frugiferte spes una Dese. Nunc
vimine texto Eidentes ealatbos spoliis agrestibus implet : Nunc
sociat flores, seseque ignara corouat. Augurium fatale tori. Quin ipsa
tubarum Armorumque potens, dextram qua fortia turbat Agmina ; qua
stabiles portas et msenia vellit, Jam levibus laxat studiis, hastamque reponit,
Insolitisque docet galeam mitescere sertis. Ferratus lascivit apex, horrorque recessit Martins, et cristse pacato
fulgure vernant. Nee quae Parthenium canibus scrutatur odorem,
Aspernata clioros, libertatemque comarum Injecta tantum voluit freuare
corona. But there is a circumstance relative to the
narcissus which must not be passed over in silence : I mean its being,
according to Ovid, the metamorphosis of a youth who fell a victim
to the love of his own corporeal form ; the secret meaning of which
most 150 Bacchic Mysteries. admirably accords
with the rape of Proser- pina, which, according to Homer, was the
immediate consequence of gathering this wonderful flower.* For by Narcissus
falling in love with his shadow in the limpid stream we may behold
an exquisitely apt represen- tation of a soul vehemently gazing on
the flowing condition of a material body, and in consequence of
this, becoming enamored with a corporeal life, which is nothing
more than the delusive image of the true man, or the rational and
immortal soul. Hence, by an immoderate attachment to this
unsubstau- tial mockery and gliding semblance of the real soul,
such an one becomes, at length, wholly changed, as far as is possible to
his nature, into a vegetive condition of being, into a beautiful
but transient flower, that is, into a corporeal life, or a life totally
consist- * Homer: Rymn to Ceres. "We were plucking the
pleasant flowers, the beauteous crocus, and the Iris, and hyacinth, and
the narcissus, which, like the crocus, the wide earth produced. I
was plucking them with joy, when the earth yawned beneath, and out
leaped the Strong King, the Many-Receiver, and went bearing me, grieving
much, beneath the earth in his golden chariot, and I cried aloud. Pioseipiua
gathering Flowers. Pluto carrj'iiig off Pioserplna.
Bacchic Mysteries, 153 ing in the mere operations of
nature. Pro- serpina, therefore, or the soul, at the very instant
of her descent into matter, is, with the utmost propriety, represented as
eagerly engaged in pkicking this fatal flower ; for her faculties
at this period are entirely oc- cupied with a hf e divided about the
fluctuat- ing condition of body. After this, Pluto, forcing
his passage through the earth, seizes on Proserpina, and carries
her away with him, notwith- standing the resistance of Minerva and
Diana. They, indeed, are forbid by Jupiter, who in this place signifies
Fate, to attempt her deUverance. By this resistance of Mi- nerva
and Diana no more is signified than that the lapse of the soul into a
material nature is contrary to the genuine wish and proper
condition, as well of the corporeal hfe depending on her essence, as of
her true and rational nature. Well, therefore, may the soul, in
such a situation, pathetically exclaim with Proserpina :
154 Bacchic Mysteries. O male dileeti flores, despeetaque
matris Consilia : O Veneris deprensse serius artes ! * But,
according to Minutius Felix, Proserpina was carried by Pluto tlu-ough
thick woods, and over a length of sea, and brought into a cavern,
the residence of the dead : where by 'woods a material nature is plainly
implied, as we have already observed in the first part of this
discourse ; and where the reader may likewise observe the agreement of
the de- scription in this particular with that of Yvn- gil in the
descent of his hero : Tenent media omnia silvce Coeytusque
sinuque labens, cireumvenit atro.t In these words the woods are
expressly mentioned; and the ocean has an evident agreement with
Cocytus, signifying the out- flowing condition of a material nature,
and the sorrows and sufferings attending its con- nection with the
soul. * Oh flowers fatally dear, and the mother's cautions despised
: Oh cruel arts of cunning Venus ! t " Woods cover all
the middle space and Cocytus gliding on, surrounds it with his dusky
bosom." Bacchic Mysteries. 157 Pluto
hurries Proserpina into the infernal regions : in other words, the soul
is sunk into the profound depth and darkness of a material nature.
A description of her mar- riage next succeeds, her union with the
dark tenement of the body : Jam siius iuferno processerat
Hesperus orbi Ducitur in thalamum virgo. Stat pronuba
juxta Stellautes Nox pieta sinus, tangensque cubile Omina perpetuo
genitalia federe sancit. Night is with
great beauty and propriety in- troduced as standing by the nuptial
couch, and confirming the oblivious league. For the soul through
her union with a material body becomes an inhabitant of darkness,
and subject to the empire of night ; in conse- quence of which she
dwells wholly with de- lusive phantoms, and till she breaks her
fetters is deprived of the intuitive percep- tion of that which is real
and true. In the next place, we are presented with the
following beautiful and pathetic descrip- tion of Proserpina appearing in
a dream to 158 Eleusinian and Ceres, and
bewailing her captive and miser- able condition : Sed tunc
ipsa, sui jam non ambagibus ullis Nuutia, materna faeies ingesta
sopori. Namque videbatur tenebroso obtecta reeessu Carceris, et
ssevis Proserpina vineta catenis, Non qualem roseis nuper convallibus
^tnae Suspexere Dete. Squalebat pulchrior auro Csesaries, et nox
oculorum infeeerat ignes. Exhaustusque gelu pallet rubor. Die
superbi Flamineus oris honos, et non cessura pruinis Membra
eolorantur pieei caligine regni. Ergo hanc ut dubio vix tandem agnoseere
visu Evaluit : cujus tot p«n£e criminis ? inquit. Unde hsec infoi'mis macies ? Cui tanta f acultas In me ssevitisB est?
Eigidi
cur vincula ferri Vix aptanda f eris molles meruere lacerti ? Tu,
mea tu proles I An vana fallimur umbra ? Such, indeed, is the wretched situation of the soul when
profoundly merged in a cor- poreal nature. She not only becomes
captive and fettered, but loses all her original splen- dor ; she
is defiled with the impurity of mat- ter ; and the sharpness of her
rational sight is blunted and dunmed through the thick darkness of
a material night. The reader may observe how Proserpina, being
repre- sented as confined in the dark recess of a Bacchic
Mysteries. 159 prison, and bound with fetters, confirms the
explanation of the fable here given as sym- bolical of the descent of the
soul ; for such, as we have ah*eady largely proved, is the
condition of the soul from its union with the body, according to the
uniform testimony of the most ancient philosophers and priests.*
After this, the wanderings of Ceres for the discovery of Proserpina
commence. She is described, by Minutius Fehx, as begirt ^dth a
serpent, and bearing two hghted torches in her hands ; but by Claudian,
instead of being gu^t with a serpent, she commences her search by
night in a car drawn by dragons. But the meaning of the allegory is the
same in each ; for both a serpent and a di'agon are emblems of a
divisible hfe subject to transi- tions and changes, with which, in this
case, our intellectual (and diviner) part becomes connected : since
as these animals put off their skins, and become young again, so
* Manteis, /jLavisic, not bpE'.;;. The term is more commonly trans-
lated prophets, and actually signifies persons gifted with divine
insight, through being in an entheastic condition, called also mania or
divine fury. Bacchic Mysteries. tlie divisible life of the
soul, falling into generation, is rejuvenized in its subsequent
career. But what emblem can more beau- tifully represent the evolutions
and out- goings of an intellectual nature into the regions of sense
than the wanderings of Ceres by the hght of torches through the
darkness of night, and continuing the pursuit until she proceeds into the
depths of Hades itself ? For the intellectual part of the soul,*
when it verges towards body, enkindles, in- deed, a light in its dark
receptacle, but be- comes itself situated in obscurity : and, as
Proclus somewhere divinely observes, the mortal nature by this means
participates of the divme intellect, but the intellectual part is drawn
down to death. The tears and lam- entations too, of Ceres, in her
coiu'se, are sym- bolical both of the providential operations of
* " The soul is a composite nature, is on one side linked to
the eternal world, its essence being generated of that ineffable
ele- ment which constitutes the real, the immutable, and the perma-
nent. It is a beam of the eternal Sun, a spark of the Divinity, an
emanation from God. On the other hand, it is linked to the phe- nomenal
or sensible world, its emotive part being formed of that which is
relative and phenomenal." — Cocker. Bacchic Mysteries. intellect
about a mortal nature, and the mis- eries with which such operations are
(with respect to imperfect souls like oui's) attended. Nor is it
without reason that lacchus, or Bacchus, is celebrated by Orpheus as
the companion of her search : for Bacchus is the evident symbol of
the imperfect energies of intellect, and its scattering into the
obscure and lamentable dominions of sense. But our
explanation will receive additional strength from considering that these
sacred rites occupied the space of nine days in their celebration;
and this, doubtless, because, according to Homer,* this goddess did
not discover the residence of her daughter till the expu-ation of
that period. For the soul, in falling from her original and divine
abode in the heavens, passed through eight spheres, * Hymn to
Ceres. "For nine days did holy Demeter perambulate the earth . . and
when the ninth shining morn had come, Hecate met her, bringing news."
Apuleius also explains that at the initiation into the Mysteries of
Isis the candidate was enjoined to abstain from luxurious food for ten
days, from the flesh of animals, and from wine. — Golden Ass, book xi. p.
239 (BoJin). 164 Eleusinian and namely, the
fixed or inerratic sphere, and the seven planets, assuming a different
body, and employing different faculties in each; and becomes
connected with the sublunary world and a terrene body, as the ninth,
and most abject gradation of her descent. Hence the first day of
initiation into these mystic rites was called agurmos^ L e. according
to Hesychius, eM'Jesia et '^rav to ayscpoiJ-svov, an assembly^ and
all collecting fogefher : and this with the greatest propriety;
for, according to Pythagoras, "the people of dreams are souls
collected together in the Gralaxy.* Atj[jlo^ 5s ovstpcov 7.a.za
noO-ayopav Jcav.f And from this part of the heavens souls
first begin to descend. After this, the soul falls from the tropic of
Cancer into the planet Satm'n; and to this the second day of
initiation was consecrated, which they called AXol5s (j-uarai, [" to
the sea, ye initi- ated ones ! "] because, says Meui'sius, on
that * Only persons taking a view solely external will suppose
the galaxy to be literally the milky belt of stars in the sky. t
Cave of the Xymphs. Bacchic Mysteries. 165 day
the crier was accustomed to admonisli the mystte to betake themselves to
the sea. Now the meaning of this will be easily understood, by
considering that, according to the arcana of the ancient theology, as may
be learned from Proclus, * the whole planetary system is under the
dominion of Neptune; and this too is confirmed by Martianus
Capella, who describes the several planets as so many streams. Hence when
the soul falls into the planet Saturn, which Capella compares to a
river voluminous, sluggish, and cold, she then first merges herself
into fluctuating matter, though purer than that of a sublunary
natiu'e, and of which water is an ancient and significant symbol.
Besides, the sea is an emblem of purity, as is evident from the
Orphic hymn to Ocean, in which that deity is called {^swv ayvtajxa
{xsy^^'^^v, tlieon agnisma megiston^ i. e. the greatest purifier of
the gods : and Saturn, as we have already observed, is pure [intuitive]
intellect. And what still more confirms this observation is, that
Pythagoras, as we are informed by Por- * Theology of Plato, book
vi. 166 Bacchic Mysteries. pliyry, in his life
of that philosopher, symbol- ically called the sea a tear of Saturn. But
the eighth day of initiation, which is symbohcal of the falhng of
the soul into the lunar orb,* was celebrated by the candidates by a
repeated initiation and second sacred rites ; because the soul in this
situation is about to bid adieu to every thing of a celestial natui'e
; to sink into a perfect obhvion of her divine origin and pristine
felicity ; and to rush pro- foundly into the region of
dissimilitude,! ignorance, and error. And lastly, on the ninth day,
when the soul falls into the sub- lunary world and becomes united with a
ter- restrial body, a hbation was performed, such as is usual in
sacred rites. Here the initiates, filling two earthen vessels of broad
and spa- cious bottoms, which were called irX'^fj-o/oat,
plemokhoai^ and y-G-cuXoaTcoL, JcotuIusJioi, the former of these words
denoting vessels of a conical shape, and the latter small bowls or
* The Moon typified the mother of gods and men. The soul descending
into the lunar orb thus came near the scenes of earthly existence, where
the life which is transmitted by generation has opportunity to involve it
about. t The condition most unlike the former divine estate. Goddess
Night. Three Graces. Bacchic Mysteries.
169 cups sacred to Bacchus, they placed one towards the east,
and the other towards the west. And the first of these was
doubtless, according to the interpretation of Proclus, sacred to
the earth, and symbolical of the soul proceeding from an orbicular
figure, or divine form, into a conical defluxion and ter- rene
situation : * but the other was sacred to the soul, and symbolical of its
celestial origin ; since our intellect is the legitimate progeny of
Bacchus. And this too was occultly sig- nified by the position of the
earthen ves- sels ; for, according to a mundane distribu- tion of
the divinities, the eastern center of the universe, which is analogous to
fire, belongs to Jupiter, who likewise governs the fixed and
inerratic sphere ; and the western to Pluto, who governs the earth,
because the west is allied to earth on account of its dark
and nocturnal nature. f Again, according to Clemens
Alexandri- nus, the following confession was made by * An
orbicular figure symbolized the maternal, and a cone the masculine divine
Energy. t Proclus: Theology of Plato, book vi. c. 10.
170 Eleusinian and tlie new initiate in these sacred rites,
in an- swer to the interrogations of the Hierophant : "I have
fasted; I have drank the Cyceon;* I have taken out of the Cista, and
placed what I have taken ont into the Calathns; and alternately I
have taken out of the Ca- lathus and put into the Cista." Kcj^a-cc
xo a'jv^r^{xa EXsoaivLcov {xoax-r^puov. EvYja-cwaa* xtatY^v.
But as this pertains to a circum- stance attending the wanderings of
Ceres, which formed the most mystic and emblem- atical part of the
ceremonies, it is necessary to adduce the following arcane
narration, summarily collected from the writings of Arnobius :
" The goddess Ceres, when search- ing through the earth for her
daughter, in the course of her wanderings arrived at the boundaries
of Eleusis, in the Attic region, a place which was then inhabited by a
people called Autochthones, or descended fi'om the * Homer:
Hymn to Ceres. "To her Metaneira gave a cup of sweet wine, but slie
refused it ; but bade her to mix wheat and water with pounded pennyroyal.
Having made the mixture, she gave it to the goddess."
Bacchic Mysteries. 171 earth, whose names were as follows :
Baubo and Triptolemus ; Dysaules, a goatherd ; Eu- bulus, a keeper
of swme ; and Eumolpus, a shepherd, from whom the race of the
Eumol- pidse descended, and the illustrious name of Cecropidse was
derived ; and who afterward flourished as bearers of the caduceus,
hiero- phants, and criers belonging to the sacred rites. Baubo,
therefore, who was of the female sex, received Ceres, wearied with
complicated evils, as her guest, and endea- vored to soothe her sorrows
by obsequious and flattering attendance. For this purpose she
entreated her to pay attention to the re- freshment of her body, and
placed before her a mixed potion to assuage the vehemence of her
thirst. But the sorrowful goddess was averse from her solicitations, and
rejected the friendly officiousness of the hospitable dame. The
matron, however, who was not easily re- pulsed, still continued her
entreaties, which were as obstinately resisted by Ceres, who
persevered in her refusal with unshaken per- sistency and invincible
firmness. But when Baubo had thus often exerted her endeavors
Bacchic Mysteries. to appease the sorrows of Ceres, but without
any effect, she, at length, changed her arts, and determined to try if
she could not exhil- arate, by prodigies (or out-of-the-way expe-
dients), a mind which she was not able to allure by earnest endeavors.
For this pur- pose she uncovered that part of her body by which the
female sex produces children and derives the appellation of woman.* This
she caused to assume a purer appearance, and a smoothness such as
is found in the private parts of a stripling child. She then
returns to the afflicted goddess, and, in the midst of those
attempts which are usually employed to alleviate distress, she uncovers
herself, and exhibits her secret parts ; upon which the goddess
fixed her eyes, and was diverted with the novel method of mitigating the
an- guish of soiTow; and afterward, becoming more cheerful through
laughter, she assuages her thirst with the mingled potion which she
had before despised." Thus far Arnobius ; and the same narration is
epitomized by Clemens Alexandrinus, who is very indignant *
FuvT), (June, woman, from y^juvo;, gounos, Latin ciodiks. Cupifl auil Veuus.
Satyr and Goat. Baubo, Ceres, and Nymphs. Bacchic Mysteries.
175 at the indecency as he conceives, in the stoiy, and
because it composed the arcana of the Eleusinian rites. Indeed as the
simple father, with the usual ignorance * of a Christian priest,
considered the fable literally, and as designed to promote indecency and
lust, we can not wonder at his ill-timed abuse. But the fact is,
this narration belonged to the aiuoppYjxa, aporrheta^ or arcane
discourses, on account of its mystical meaning, and to pre- vent it
from becoming the object of ignorant declamation, licentious perversion,
and im- pious contempt. For the purity and excel- lence of these
institutions is perpetually acknowledged even by Dr. Warburton him-
seK, who, in this instance, has dispersed, for a moment, the mists of
delusion and intolerant zeaLf Besides, as lamblichus beautifully
ob- serves, t "exhibitions of this kind in the Mysteries were
designed to free us from hcen- * Uneandidness was more probably the
fault of which Clement was guilty. t Divine Legation of
Moses, book ii. I "The wisest and best men in the Pagan world
are unanimous in this, that the Mysteries were instituted pure, and
proposed the noblest ends by the worthiest means. Bacchic
Mysteries. tioiis passions, by gratifying the sight, and at
the same time vanquisliing desire, through the awful sanctity with which
these rites were accompanied : for," says he, " the
proper way of freeing ourselves from the passions is, first, to
indulge them mth moderation, by which means they become satisfied ;
hsten, as it were, to persuasion, and may thus be en- tirely
removed."* This doctrine is indeed so rational, that it can never be
objected to by any but quacks in philosophy and rehgion. For as he
is nothing more than a quack in medicine who endeavors to remove a
latent bodily disease before he has called it forth externally, and
by this means diminished its fuiy ; so he is nothing more than a
pretender in philosophy who attempts to remove the passions by
violent repression, instead of moderate comphance and gentle
persuasion. But to return from this disgression, the fol-
lowing appears to be the secret meaning of this mystic discourse : The
matron Baubo may be considered as a symbol of that pas- *
Mysteries of the Egyptians, Chaldeans, and Assyrians. Bacchic Mysteries.
177 sive, womanish, and corporeal life tlirongh whicli the
soul becomes united with this earthly body, and through which, being
at first ensnared, it descended, and, as it were, was born into the
world of generation, pass- ing, by this means, from mature
perfection, splendor and reality, into infancy, darkness, and
error. Ceres, therefore, or the intel- lectual soul, in the course of her
wanderings, that is, of her evolutions and goings-f orth into
matter, is at length captivated with the arts of Baubo, or a corporeal hf
e, and forgets her sorrows, that is, imbibes oblivion of her
wretched state in the mingled potion which she prepares : the mingled
hquor being an obvious symbol of such a life, mixed and im- pure,
and, on this account, liable to cor- ruption and death ; since every
thing pure and unmixed is incorruptible and divine. And here it is
necessary to caution the reader from imagining, that because, accord-
ing to the fable, the wanderings of Ceres commence after the rape of
Proserpina, hence the intuitive intellect descends sub- sequently
to the soul, and separate from it. Eleusinimi and Notliing
more is meant by this circumstance than that the diviner intellect, from
the su- perior excellence of its nature, has in cause, though not
in time, a priority to soul, and that on this account a defection and
revolt (and descent earthward from the heavenly condition)
commences, from the soul, and afterward takes place in the intellect,
yet so that the former descends with the latter in inseparable
attendance. From this explanation, then, of the fable, we may
easily perceive the meaning of the mystic confession, / have fasted; I
have drank a mingled potion, etc.; for by the former part of the
assertion, no more is meant than that the higher intellect,
previous to imbibing of oblivion through the decep- tive arts of a
corporeal life, abstains from all material concerns, and does not mingle
itself (as far as its nature is capable of such abasement) with even the
necessary delights of the body. And as to the latter part, it
doubtless alludes to the descent of Proser- pina to Hades, and her
re-ascent to the Bacchic Mysteries. 179 abodes
of her mother Ceres : that is, to the outgoing and return of the soul,
alternately falhng into generation, and ascending thence into the
intelhgible world, and becoming per- fectly restored to her divine and
intellec- tual nature. For the Cista contained the most arcane
symbols of the Mysteries, into which it was unlawful for the profane
to look : and whatever were its contents,* we learn from the hymn
of Callimachus to Ceres, that they were formed from gold, which,
from its incorruptibihty, is an evi- dent symbol of an immaterial nature.
And as to the Calathus, or basket, this, as we are told by
Claudian, was filled with spoliis agres- tibus^ the spoils or fruits of
the field, which are manifest symbols of a life corporeal and
earthly. So that the candidate, by confess- ing that he had taken from
the Cista, and placed what he had taken into the Calathus, *A
golden serpent, an egg, and the phallus. The epopt look- ing upon these,
was rapt with awe as contemplating in the»sym- bols the deeper mysteries
of all life, or being of a grosser temper, took a lascivious impression.
Thus as a seer, he beheld with the eyes of sense or sentiment ; and the
real apocalypse was therefore that made to himself of his own moral life
and character. — A. W. 180 Eleusinian and and
tlie contrary, occultly acknowledged the descent of his soul from a
condition of being super-material and immortal, into one mate- rial
and mortal ; and that, on the contrary, by hving according to the purity
which the Mysteries inculcated, he should re-ascend to that
perfection of his nature, from which he had unhappily fallen.*
* "Exiled from the true home of the spirit, imprisoned in the
body, disordered by passion, and becloixded by sense, the soul has yet
longings after that state of perfect knowledge, and purity, and bliss, in
which it was first created. Its affinities are still on high. It yearns
for a higher and nobler form of life. It essays to rise, but its eye is
darkened by sense, its wings are besmeared by pas- sion and lust ; it is
' borne downward until it falls upon and attaches itself to that which is
material and sensual,' and it floun- ders and grovels still amid the
objects of sense. And now, Plato asks: How may the soul be delivered from
the illusions of sense, the distempering influence of the body, and the
disturbances of passion, which becloud its vision of the real, the good,
and the true?" " Plato believed and hoped that this
could be accomplished by philosophy. This he regarded as a grand intellectual
discipline for the purification of the soul. By this it was to be
disenthralled from the bondage of sense, and raised into the empyrean of
pure thought, 'where truth and reality shine forth.' All souls have
the faculty of knowing, but it is only by reflection and
self-knowledge, and intellectual discipline, that the soul can be raised
to the vision of eternal truth, goodness, and beauty — that is, to
the vision of God." — Cocker: Christianity and Greek Philosophy,
x. pp. 351-2. Bacchic Mysteries. 181 It
only now remains that we consider the last part of this fabulous
narration, or arcane discourse. It is said, that after the goddess
Ceres, on arriving at Eleusis, had discovered her daughter, she instructed
the Eleusinians in the planting of corn : or, according to Claudian,
the search of Ceres for her daugh- ter, through the goddess, instructing
in the art of tillage as she went, proved the occasion of a
universal benefit to mankind. Now the secret meaning of this will be
obvious, by considering that the descent of the superior intellect
into the realms of generated exis- tence becomes, indeed, the greatest
benefit and ornament which a material nature is capable of
receiving : for without this parti- cipation of intellect in the lowest
department of corporeal life, nothing but the irrational soul* and
a brutal life would subsist in its dark and fluctuating abode, the body.
As the art of tillage, therefore, and particularly the growing of
corn, becomes the greatest possi- * " It is linked to the
phenomenal or sensible world, its emotive part (sTitf)ujj.Y)Tixov) being
formed of what is relative and phe- nomenal." 182
Elensinian and ble benefit to our sensible life, no symbol
can more aptly represent the unparalleled ad- vantages arising from
the evolution and pro- cession of intellect with its divine natui^e
into a corporeal life, than the good resulting from agriculture and
corn : for whatever of horrid and dismal can be conceived in night,
sup- posing it to be perpetually destitute of the friendly
illuminations of the moon and stars, such, and infinitely more dreadful,
would be the condition of an earthly nature, if de- prived of the
beneficent irradiations [irfio- o5o J and supervening benefits of the
diviner hfe. And this much for an explanation of the
Eleusinian Mysteries, or the history of Ceres and Proserpina ; in which
it must be remem- bered that as this fable, according to the
excellent observation of Sallust already ad- duced, is of the mixed kind,
though the descent of the soul was doubtless principally alluded to
by these sacred rites, yet they hkewise occultly signified, agreeable to
the nature of the fable, the descending of divinity
Bacchic Mysteries. 183 into the sublunary world. But when
we view the fable in this part of its meaning, we must 'be careful
not to confound the nature of a partial inteUect like ours with the one
uni- versal and divine. As everything subsisting about the gods is
divine, therefore intellect in the highest degree, and next to this
soul, and hence wanderings and abductions, lam- entations and
tears, can here only signify the participations and providential
opera- tions of these in inferior natures ; and this in such a manner
as not to derogate from the dignity, or impair the perfection, of
the divine principle thus imparted. I only add, that the preceding
exposition will enable us to perceive the meaning and beauty of the
following representation of the rape of Proserpina, from the Heliacan tables
of Hi- eronymus Aleander.* Here, first of all, we behold Ceres in a
car drawn by two drag- ons, and afterwards, Diana and Minerva, with
an inverted calathus at their feet, and pointing out to Ceres her
daughter Proser- pina, who is hurried away by Pluto in his *
KiRCHEB : Obeliscus Famjyhilius, page 227. 184 Meusinian
and car, and is in the attitude of one struggling to be free.
Hercules is likewise represented with his club, in the attitude of
opposing the violence of Pluto : and last of all, Jupiter is
represented extending his hand, as if wilhng to assist Proserpina in
escaping from the embraces of Pluto. I shall therefore con- clude
this section with the following remark- able passage from Plutarch, which
will not only confirm, but be itself corroborated by the preceding
exposition. 'Ozi [xey o'jv y^ Tza- Xata ^uaio/voyca, xai Trap EWrpi xai
Bappa- Tcporpoc, %r/x ix'jaz'qpiMOfic, GooXoyca. Ta ts Xrj-
Xo'j[j,£V7. Tcov arj'cojxsvcov Gr//fe::ze[jrj. zoic, izoX- Xoic syovza.
Kat zr/. arj'cojisva tcov AaXoy|jLSV(ov UTTOTrrorspct. AyjXov sart,
pergit, £v tolc Opcpt- Y.01Q s-i^sac, y,ac tote Ar^'oirrtaxoic %ai
(j^prrfirjiQ XojoiQ. MaXcara 5s of 'Jispt try.c xsXszac opyt-
aa{j,oc, y,7.c 1:7. $po){X£V7 a'j|x[BoXi%(oc sv zaiQ cspoapycaie, xyjv
tcov TzrjXrjKov sjxrpacvat $ia- voirjy.^ i. e. " The ancient
physiology,! both * Plutarch : Euseh. i I. e.
Exposition of the laws and oi^erations of Nature. Bacchic
Mysteries. 185 of the Greeks and the Barbarians^ was noth-
ing else than a discoiu'se on natiu^al subjects, involved or veiled in
fables, conceahng many things through enigmas and under -meanings,
and also a theology taught, in which, after the manner of the Mysteries,*
the things spoken were clearer to the multitude than those dehvered
in silence, and the things delivered in silence were more subject
to investigation than what was spoken. This is manifest from the
Orphic verses^ and the Egyptian and Phrygian discourses. But the
orgies of initiations^ and the sumbolical cere- monies of sacred rites
especiallij, exhibit the understanding had of them by the
ancients,'''' * MuaxYjp:tuoTj?, mystery-like.
A.IB^ Psyche Asleep in Hades. River Gortrtesses.
SECTION 11. 4:::? THE Dionysiacal sacred rites instituted by
Orpheus,* depended on the follow- ing arcane narration, part of which has
been already related in the preceding section, and the rest may be
found in a variety of authors. "Dionysus, or Bacchus
[Zagreus], while he was yet a boy, w^s engaged by the Titans,
through the stratagems of Juno, in a variety of sports, with which that
period of * Whethei' Orpheus was an actual living person has been
ques- tioned by Aristotle ; but Herodotus, Pindar, and other
writers, mention him. Although the Orphic system is asserted to
have come from Egypt, the internal evidence favors the opinion that
it was derived from India, and that its basis is the Buddhistic
phi- losophy. The Orphic associations of Greece were ascetic, con-
trasting markedly with the frenzies, enthusiasm, and license of the
popular rites. The Thracians had numerous Hindu customs. The name Kox-e
is Sanscrit; and Zeus may be the Dyaus of Hindu story. His visit to the
chamber of Kore-Persephoneia (Parasu-pani) in the form of a dragon or
na(ja, and the horns or crescent on the head of the child, are Tartar or
Buddhistic. The Eleusinian and life is so vehemently allured ;
and among the rest, he was particularly captivated with beholding
his image in a mirror ; during his admiration of which, he was miserably
torn in pieces by the Titans; who, not content with this cruelty,
first boiled his members in water, and afterwards roasted them by
the fire. But while they were tasting his flesh thus dressed,
Jupiter, roused by the odor, and perceiving the cruelty of the
deed, hurled his thunder at the Titans ; but com- mitted the
members of Bacchus to Apollo, his brother, that they might be properly
in- terred. And this being performed, Diony- sus (whose heart
during his laceration was snatched away by Pallas and preserved),
by a new regeneration again emerged, and being restored to his
pristine life and integ- name Zagreus is evidently Chahra, or ruler
of the earth. The Hera who compassed his death is Aira, the wife of
Buddha ; and the Titans are the Daityas, or apostate tribes of India. The
doc- trine of metempsychosis is expressed by the swallowing of the
heart of the murdered child, so as to reabsorb his soul, and bring
him anew into existence as the son of Semele. Indeed, all the
stories of Bacchus liave Hindu characteristics ; and his cultus is a
part of the serpent worship of the ancients. The evidence appears
to us unequivocal. A. W. Bacchic Mysteries. 189
rity, he afterwards filled up the number of the gods. But m the
mean time, from the exhalations arising from the ashes of the
burning bodies of the Titans, mankind were produced." Now, in order
to understand properly the secret of this naiTation, it is
necessary to repeat the observation already made in the preceding
chapter, "that all fables belonging to mystic ceremonies are
of the mixed kind " : and consequently the present fable, as well as
that of Proserpina, must in one part have reference to the gods,
and in the other to the human soul, as the following exposition will
abundantly evince : In the first place, then, by Dionysus, or
Bacchus, according to the highest concep- tion of this deity, we
understand the spiritual part of the mundane soul ; for there are
Various processions or avatars of this god, or Bacchuses, derived from
his essence. But by the Titans we must understand the mun- dane
gods, of whom Bacchus is the highest ; by Jupiter, the Demiurgus,* or
artificer of * Plotiuus regarded the Demiurgus, or creator, as the
god of providence, thought, essence, and power. Above him was the
190 Eleusinian and the universe ; by Apollo, the deity
of the Sun, who has both a mundane and super- mundane
establishment, and by whom the universe is bound in symmetry and
consent, through splendid reasons and harmonizing power ; and,
lastly, by Minerva we must un- derstand that original, intellectual,
ruhng, and providential deity, who guards and pre- serves all
middle lives* in an immutable condition, through intelhgence and a
self- supporting life, and by this means sustains them from the
depredations and inroads of matter. Again, by the infancy of Bac-
chus at the period of his laceration, the condition of the intellectual
natui^e is im- phed; since, according to the Orphic theol- ogy,
souls, under the government of Saturn, or Kronos, who is pure intellect
or spiritual- ity, instead of proceeding, as now, from youth to
age, advance in a retrograde progression from age to youth.t The arts
employed by deity of " pure intellect," aud still higher
The One. These three were the hypostases. * Lives which are
not conjoined with material bodies, nor yet elevated to the lofty state
which is the true divine condition. t Emanuel Swedenborg says:
"They who are in heaven are Bacchic Mysteries.
191 the Titans, in order to ensnare Dionysus, are symbolical
of those apparent and divisible operations of the mundane gods,
through which the participated intellect of Bacchus becomes, as it
were, torn in pieces ; and by the mirror we must understand, in the
lan- guage of Proclus, the inaptitude of the uni- verse to receive
the plenitude of intellectual or spiritual perfection ; but the
symbolical meaning of his laceration, through the strat- agems of
Juno, and the consequent punish- ment of the Titans, is thus
beautifully unfolded by Olympiodorus, in his manuscript Commentary
on the PJi(edo of Plato : " The form," says he, " of that
which is universal is plucked off, torn in pieces, and scattered
into generation ; and Dionysus is the monad of the Titans. But his
laceration is said to take place through the stratagems of Juno,
continually advancing to the spring of life, and the more thou-
sands of years they live, so much the more delightful and happy is the
spring to which they attain, and this to eternity with increments
according to the progresses and degrees of love, of charity, and of
faith. Women who have died old and worn out with age, yet have lived in
faith on the Lord, in charity toward their neighbor, and in happy
conjugal love with a husband, after a succession of years, come more and
more into the flower of youth and adolescence." 192
Eleusinian and because this goddess is the supervising
guardian of motion and progression ; * and on this account, in the Iliad,
she perpetually rouses and excites Jupiter to providential action
about secondary concerns ; and, in another respect, Dionysus is the
epJiof^us or supervising guardian of generation, because he
presides over life and death ; for he is the guardian or epliorus of life
because of genera- tion, and also of death because wine produces an
enthusiastic condition. We become more enthusiastic at the period of
dying, as Proc- lus indicates in the example of Homer who became
prophetic [[xavxcxoc] at the time of his death.f They likewise assert,
that tragedy and comedy are assigned to Dionysus : com- edy being
the play or ludicrous representation of life ; and tragedy having
relation to the 'By progression [7rpoo5oc] is here signified the
raying-out, or issuing forth of the soul ; having left the divine or pre
-existent life, and come forth toward the human. t See also
Plato : Phcedrus, 43. " When I was about to cross the river, the
divine and wonted signal was given me — it always deters me from what I
am about to do — and I seemed to hear a voice from this very spot, which
would not suffer me to depart before I had purified myself, as if I had
committed some Bacchic Mysteries. 193 passions
and death. The comic writers, therefore, do not rightly call in question
the tragedians as not rightly representing Bac- chus, saying that
such things did not happen to Bacchus. But Jupiter is said to have
hurled his thunder at the Titans ; the thun- der signifying a conversion
or changing : for fire naturally ascends ; and hence Jupiter, by
this means, converts the Titans to his own essence." ^TzapazzEzai §£
to xa^oXoo si^oQ £v zTj ysvsasi, [xovctc 5s Ttxavcov 6 Aiovo-
aoc. Kctr ZTzi^oohqy ^s zriQ 'Hpac ^lozi -/.i- vrpetoc,
et^opoc, y; ^-boq %at 'Epoo'^o'j. Aio v.ru aov£'/(o^ £v TTj Wirj.Gi
si^avcaTTjatv aozrj, %ai OlE^fOpSl TOV 5t7. eiQ TZrjCiyrjirjy XCOV
SsOXSpCOV. Kat ysvsascoc aXX(o? srpopoc sartv 6 AcovDao?,
5wrt %ai Cw^js ^^-t tsXsfjTYjC. Zcc/j? |j-sv yap srpopG?, STTsid'^ .7,at
z^qz ysvsaswc, xsXsutTjC 5s 5^0X1 svO-ouacav 6 otvoc ttocsl Kat ';r£pt
xyjv TsXsuTTjV 5s svO-Guatcta'ccxcotspc/t YtvoiJLSxJ'a, coi;
offense against the Deity. Now I am a prophet, though not a very
good one : for the soul is in some measure prophetic." See also
Shakspere : Henry IV. part 1. " Oh I could prophesy, But
that the earthy and cold hand of death Lies on my tongue."
194 Eleiisinian and StjXol 6 Trap 'OiJi'/jpco
UpOTcXoc, (JLavTC%oc ys- T'/jv {i£v 7,(o[JL(o5tav Tuaiyvcov o'jaav
to'j [3tov TYjv dc Tpayco^^av 5ca xa 7ta{)-rj, %7.t xr^v xsXs'j-
I'^v. O'jy, apct %aX(oc of y,co{it7,o^ xoi? xpayLy-oi? syxaXoaacv, (o:;
\rq AtovoataTcoic oyar.^, Asyov Tsc otc oD^sv zwjzrj, xpo? TGV AiovDaov.
Kspau- VOt §£ TO'JtOl? 6 ZSD^, TOO %£paOV0'J $TjXoaVZ05
X'^v STiiatpo'fSV xupyap stcl xa oivco zivo'J[X£Vol' S'lriatpsrpsL
O'jv aoroa^ zpoc saoTOv. But by the members of Dionysus being first
boiled in water by the Titans, and afterward roasted by the fire,
the outgoing or distribution of intellect into matter, and its subsequent
re- turning from thence, is evidently implied: for water was
considered by the Egyptians, as we have ah*eady observed, as the
symbol of matter ; and fire is the natural symbol of ascending. The
heart of Dionysus too, is, with the greatest propriety, said to be
pre- served by Minerva ; for this goddess is the guardian of hfe,
of which the heart is a sym- bol. So that this part of the fable
plainly signifies, that while intellectual or spiritual
Bacchic Mysteries. 195 life is distributed into the universe,
its prin- ciple is preserved entire by the guardian power and
providence of the Divine intel- ligence. And as Apollo is the source of
all union and harmony, and as he is called by Proclus, " the
key-keeper of the fountain of life," * the reason is obvious why the
mem- bers of Dionysus, which were buried by this deity, again
emerged by a new generation, and were restored to their pristine
integrity and life. But let it here be carefidly ob- served, that
renovation, when apphed to the gods, is to be considered as secretly
implying the rising of their proper hght, and its con- sequent
appearance to subordinate natures. And that punishment, when considered
as taking place about beings of a nature superior to mankind,
signifies nothing more than a secondary providence over such beings
which is of a punishing character, and which sub- sists about souls
that deteriorate. Hence, then, from what has been said, we may
easily collect the ultimate design of the first part of this mystic fable
; for it appears to be * Hymn to the Sun. 196
Bacchic Mysteries. no other than to represent the manner in
which the form of the mundane intellect is divided through the universe ;
— that such an intellect (and every one which is total) re- mains
entire during its division into parts, and that the divided parts
themselves are continually turned again to their source, with which
they become finally united. So that illumination from the liigher
reason, while it proceeds into the dark and rebound- ing receptacle
of matter, and invests its ob- scurity with the supervening ornaments
of divine light, returns at the same time with- out interruption to
the source or principle of its descent. Let us now consider
the latter part of the fable, in which it is said that our souls
were formed from the vapors emanating from the ashes of the burning
bodies of the Titans; at the same time connecting it with the
former part of the fable, which is also appli- cable in a certain degree
to the condition of a partial intellect * hke ours. In the first
* Partial, as being parted from the Supreme Mind.
Etruscan Kleusiuiaus. Bacchic Mysteries. 199
place, then, we are made up from frag- ments (says Olympiodorus),
because, through faUing into generation, our hf e has proceeded
into the most distant and extreme division ; and from Titanic fragments^
because the Titans are the ultimate artificers of things,* and
stand immediately next to whatever is constituted from them. But further,
our irrational life is Titanic, by which the rational and higher
life is torn in pieces. Hence, when we disperse the Dionysus, or
intuitive intellect contained in the secret recesses of our nature,
breaking in pieces the kindred and divine form of our essence, and
which communicates, as it were, both with things subordinate and
supreme, then we become Titans (or apostates) ; but when we
establish ourselves in union with this Dionysiacal or kindred form,
then we become Bacchuses, or perfect guardians and keepers of our
irra- tional life : for Dionysus, whom in this re- spect we
resemble, is himself an epJiorus or * The Demiurge or Creator being
superior to matter in which is concupiscence and all evil, the Titans who
are not thus superior are made the actual artificers. Meusinian
and guardian deity, dissolving at his pleasure the bonds by
which the soul is united to the body, since he is the cause of a parted
hfe. But it is necessary that the passive or femi- nine nature of
our UTational part, through which we are bound in body, and which
is nothing more than the resounding echo, as it were, of soul,
should suffer the punishment incurred by descent ; for when the soul
casts aside the [divine] peculiarity of her nature, she requires
her own, but at the same time a multiform body, that she may again
become in need of a common form, which she has lost through Titanic
dispersion into matter. But in order to see the perfect
resem- blance between the manner in which our souls descend and the
dividing of the intui- tive intellect by mundane natures, let the
reader attend to the following admirable citation from the manuscript
Commentary of Olympiodorus on the Phcedo of Plato : "It is
necessary, first of all, for the soul to place a hkeness of herself in
the body. This is to ensoul the body. Secondly, it is necessary for her
to sympathize with the image, as being of hke idea. For every external
form or substance is wrought into an identity with its interior
substance, through an ingenerated tendency thereto. In the third place,
being situated in a divided nature, it is necessary that she should
be torn in pieces, and fall into a last separation, till, through the
action of a life of puiification, she shall raise herself from the
dispersion, loose the bond of sym- pathy, and act as of herself without
the external image, having become established according to the
first-created life. The like things are fabled in the example. For
Dio- nysus or Bacchus because his image was formed in a mirror,
pursued it, and thus became distributed into everything. But Apollo
collected him and brought him up ; being a deity of puiification, and the
true savior of Dionysus ; and on this account he is styled in the
sacred hymns, Dionusites." sauto'j £v TO) a(ojiatc. Tooxo yap
sait f^yyco- oai TO awjjict. Asorspov 5s afjjJLiraO-stv x(p £l5(o-
Xcj), xctxa z^(]v ojiosL^stav. Ilav yap stSoc sTust- 202
Eleusinian and xcti £Lc Tov ZT/az^jy ST.'JTsastv {j.£{jLa[xov.
'Eco? av oat TT^i; 7,a{>a[>xiT^%'r]v; C^otj? aavaystpat {xsv
eaoTTjv aiTo xou avcop:rta[xo'j, Xoa'/^ gs tov Ssa- jj-ov XYji;
a^j{iYj7:7.i8'£iac, xpopaXXsiai §£ xvjv avso xou £co(oAou, xctx)-'
Erjjjzr^y iaxtoaav iipcoTO'jpYOV C(OYjV. 'Oxi ta 6{JL0ta [xuO-sosxai,
'>c7.i sv xcp Tzarjaciei'^ixrj.zi. '0 yap Aiovaaoc, on zo scoco-
Xov svsO-'^xs T(o saoTuTTpto XGU-cp scpsairsto. Kac ouxd)? eiQ zo Tifjy
sjispiaiJ-Yj. ""0 5s AttoXXwv aov- aystpst t£ aozoy 7,ac
avaysi, xavJ-apiwoc (ov ^£oc, 'x.ai xo'j AcGvoaoD aojxY^p (oc
aXcoO-m?. Kat 5l7. xodto AcovoaoxY^? av'j(j.£tx7.L Hence, as the
same author beautifully observes, the soul revolves according to a mystic
and mundane revolution : for flying from an in- divisible and
Dionysiacal hfe, and operating according to a Titanic and revolting
energy, she becomes bound in the body as in a prison. Hence, too,
she abides in punishment and takes care of her partial and
secondary concerns; and being purified from Titanic defilements,
and collected into one, she be- Bacchic Mysteries. 203
comes a Bacchus ; that is, she passes into the proper integrity of
her nature according to the divine principle ruhng on high. From
all which it evidently fohows, that he who hves Dionysiacally rests
from labors and is freed from his bonds ; * that he leaves his
prison, or rather his apostatizing life ; and that he who does this
is a philosopher purifying him- seK from the contaminations of his
earthly life. But farther fi'om this account of Dio- nysus, we may
perceive the truth of Plato's observation, " that the design of the
Myste- ries is to lead us back to the perfection from which, as our
beginning, we first made our de- scent." For in this perfection
Dionysus him- self subsists, establishing perfect souls in the
throne of his father ; that is, in the in- tegrity of a life according to
Jupiter. So that he who is perfect necessarily resides with the
gods, according to the design of those deities, who are the sources of
con- summate perfection to the soul. And lastly, *"We
strive toward virtue by a strenuous use of the gifts which God
communicates ; but when God communicates himself, then we can be only
passive — we repose, we enjoy, but all opera- tion ceases."
204 Bacchic Mysteries. the Thyrsus itself, which was
used in the Bacchic procession, as it was a reed full of knots, is
an apt symbol of the diffusion of the higher nature into the sensible
world. And agreeable to this, Olympiodorus on the Pluedo observes,
" that the Thyrsus * is a symbol of a forming anew of the material
and parted substance from its scattered condition ; and that on
this account it is a Titanic plant. This it was customary to extend
before Bac- chus instead of his paternal scepter; and through this
they called him down into our partial nature. Indeed, the Titans are
Thyr- sus-bearers ; and Prometheus concealed fire in a Thyi'sus or
reed ; after which he is con- sidered as bringing celestial light into
genera- tion, or leading the soul into the body, or calling forth
the divine illumination, the whole being ungenerated, into generated
ex- istence. Hence Socrates calls the multitude Thyrsus-bearers
Orphically, as hving accord- ing to a Titanic life." 'On 6 vapO-rj^
aa[x[5oXov ZQZi zriz svaXo'j $7j{xtC(0pYtac, %ai {xsptatYjc, 5ta
* The word thyrsus, it will be seen, is here translated from
vapd'Yj^, a rod or ferula. Bacchic Mysteries. 207
TY]v [laXtaxa StsaTCapiJ-svYjv aovs/scav, o^sv %at Tixavtxov xo
cprjxov. Kat yap t(p Aiovoacp Tupoxscvooatv aoto), avcc too 'irarpty.oo
axY^irxpofj. Kai xauTTj irpoxaXoovxai a'jxov zic, xov {xspcxov. Kat
{isvcoi, 'jcc/.i vapi^TjTcocpopooacv oc Tixavs?, %at g
ITpGIJLTjiJ'SaC, £V VapO-YjT.l' 'AkZlZZl TO 'EUp, SLTS XO
oupaviov cp(oc see x'A^v ysvsatv xaxaaTucov, stxs xr;v 4^yX'/jV £1?
xo a(0[jLa xpoaycov, stxs xtjv o^scav £XXa{i-'];tv oXt^v aysvvTjXOv ouaav,
see xtjv ysvs- atv TTpoxaXouiisvGC. Ata 5s xorjxo, %at 6 -co-
y-pax'^C xorj:; ttoXXo'jc "JcolXsl vapi)"f]%ocpopoy? Op-
cpt7,(oc, co^ C^'^vxac Ttxry.vcy.(oc. And thus much for the secret
meaning of the fable, which formed a principal part of these mystic
rites. Let us now proceed to consider the signification of the
symbols, which, according to Clemens Alexandrinus, belonged to the
Bacchic ceremonies ; and which are comprehended in the following-
Orphic verses : M7]Xa to )(po-ca y,aXv. trap egtcj^wiuv
Xi-p^oivcov. That is, A wheel, a pine-nut, and the
wanton plays, Which move and bend the limbs in various ways :
208 Eleusinian and With these th' Hesperian
golden-fruit combine, Which beauteous nymphs defend of voice
divine. To all which Clemens adds saoTU'pov, esop- troii, a
mirror, i:oy.oCj polios, a fleece of wool, and aa-payaXoc, asfragaios,
the anMe-bone. In the first place, then, wdth respect to the wheel,
since Dionysus, as we have already explained, is the mimdane intellect,
and in- tellect is of an elevating and convertive na- ture, nothing
can be a more apt symbol of intellectual action than a w^heel or sphere
: besides, as the laceration and dismemberment of Dionysus
signifies the going-forth of in- tellectual illumination into matter, and
its returning at the same time to its source, this too will be
aptly symbolized by a wheel. In the second place, a pine-nut, from its
conical shape, is a perspicuous symbol of the manner in which
intellectual or spiritual illmnination proceeds from its source and
beginning into a material nature. " For the soul," says
Ma- crobius,* "proceeding from a round figure, which is the
only divine form, is extended into the form of a cone in going
forth." * In Somnid Scijnonis, xii. Bacchic
Mysteries. 209 And the same is true sjrmbolically of the
higher intellect. And as to the wanton sports which bend the limbs, this
evidently alludes to the Titanic arts, by which Dionysus was
allured, and occultly signifies the facul- ties of the mundane intellect,
considered as subsisting according to an apparent and divisible
condition. But the Hesperian golden-apples signify the pure and
incorrupt- ible nature of that intellect or Dionysus, which is
possessed by the world ; for a golden-apple, according to Sallust, is a
symbol of the world ; and this doubtless, both on account of its
ex- ternal figui'e, and the incorruptible intellect which it
contains, and with the illuminations of which it is externally adorned ;
since gold, on account of never being subject to rust, aptly
denotes an incorruptible and immaterial na- ture. The mirror, which is
the next symbol, we have already explained. And as to the fleece of
wool, this is a symbol of laceration, or distri])ution of intellect, or
Dionysus, into matter; for the verb o'jrapattco, sparaffOy diJanio,
which is used in the relation of the Bacchic discerption, signifies to
tear in pieces 210 Bacchic Mysteries. like wool
: and hence Isidoinis derives the Latin word laua, wool, from Janiando,
as velliis from vellendo. Nor must it pass un- observed, that
Xq^jz^ in Greek, signifies wool, and Xtjvo;, a wine-press.* And, indeed,
the pressing of grapes is as evident a symbol of dispersion as the
tearing of wool; and this circumstance was doubtless one principal
reason why grapes were consecrated to Bac- chus : for a grape, previous
to its pressure, aptly represents that which is collected into one
; and when it is pressed into juice, it no less aptly represents the
diffusion of that which was before collected and entu'e. And
lastly, the aarpotyaXoc, astragalos, or anJiJe- hone, as it is
principally subser\dent to the progressive motion of animals, so it
belongs, with great propriety, to the mystic symbols of Bacchus;
since it doubtless signifies the going forth of that deity into the
department of physical existence : for nature, or that divisible
life which subsists about the body, * The practice of punning, so
common in all the old rites, is here forcibly exhibited. It aided to
conceal the symbolism and mislead uninitiated persons who might seek to
ascertain the genuine meaning. i\v>'-
.../Mm Hercules Reclining. Bacchic
Mysteries. 213 and whicli is productive of seeds, imme-
diately depends on Bacchus. And hence we are informed by Proclus, that
the sexual parts of this god are denominated by theologists, Diana,
who, says he, presides over the whole of the generation into natural
existence, leads forth into light all natural reasons, and extends
a prolific power from on high even to the subterranean reahns.* And hence
we may perceive the reason why, in the Orphic Hjjmn to Nature, that
goddess is described as " turning round silent traces with the
ankle- bones of her feet. ^^ And it is highly worthy our
observation that in this verse of the hymn Nature is cele- brated
as Fortune, according to that descrip- tion of the goddess in which she
is repre- sented as standing with her feet on a wheel which she
continually turns round ; as the following verse from the same hymn
abun- dantly confirms : Asvao) axpo'-paXiYY- S'oov po/xa
o'.vsooooa.. * Commentary upon the Timceus. 214
Meusinian and The sense of which is, "moving with rapid
motion on an eternal wheel." Nor ought it to seem wonderful that
Nature should he celebrated as Fortune; for Fortune in the Orphic
h}Tnn to that deity is invoked as Diana : and the moon, as we have
observed in the preceding section, is the aoro'iriov ayaXjia
rpyasto?, fJie self-revealing emblem of Nature ; and indeed the apparent
incon- stancy of Fortune has an evident agreement with the
fluctuating condition in which the dominions of nature are perpetually
involved. It only now remains that we explain the secret meaning of
the sacred dress with which the initiated in the Dionysiacal Myste-
ries were invested, in order to the GpovLajxo^ (fhromsmoSy enthroning)
taking place ; or sitting in a solemn manner on a throne, about
which it was customary for the other initiates to dance. But the
particulars of this habit are thus described in the Orphic verses
preserved by Macrobius : * Scojxa ti-£00 ji"/,aTT£'.v
s^'.a'j-fooq r^zX'.o'.Q. * Satunialia, i. 18. Bacchic Mysteries.
215 flpwxct ;j.Ev ap-p'f :«:? evaXcYxcov «xTtvsaa:v
IIsttUv cpo'.vtxjpov (lege -^otvtxjov) -pottxjXov a^cp-paAEO^oc-.
ii'Jxocp 67ispa-j vsi^poio TiavatoXoo sJpu xa*«-|a'. ^^plxrx
Kfjhjzxi-Azrrj ^vjpoc xaxa Sa^tov Jjjulojv, Aatpoiv o«-5aXftov
;j.i|uh;jl' bpoo xz nolo'.o. Eka r 6;.jp,<).s vs^pY)?
xpt>asov UoxY^pa pocXeaS-at n«;A'favoaiVTa irsp-^ oxspvuiv
cpopjj-v fxsya arj|jia Eo9-u5 ox' EX Ttspaxwv Tac-r]? (paja-wv
avopouaiov Xpoasiai? axxcat ,3(x>.-/j poov Oxsavow,
Auyv] o' atjjTjxo? -f], ava S' Spoaoj a;jLcpt;xtYE:aa
Mapixrxirj-fj o'y-rpvj A:zar>iitY(] maxfj. xoxXov,
Ilpoci&s ^£00. Z(ovf] o' ap OTTO axjpvuiv a/ji£xp7]xu>v
<I>aovjx' ap' ily.zrj.wo Kov.Uq, iityx Oau^' ecowsa^ac.
That is, He who desires in pomp of sacred dress
The sun's resplendent body to express, Should first a vail
assume of purple bright, Like fair white beams combin'd with fiery
light : On his right shoulder, next, a mule's broad hide
Widely diversified with spotted pride Should hang, an image
of the pole divine, And dfBdal stars, whose orbs eternal
shine. A golden splendid zone, then, o'er the vest He
next should throw, and bind it round his breast; In mighty token,
how with golden light. The rising sun, from earth's last bounds and
night Sudden emerges, and, with matchless force, Darts
through old Ocean's billows in his course. A boundless splendor
hence, enshrin'd in dew, Plays on his whirlpools, glorious to the
view ; While his circumfluent waters spread abroad,
Full in the presence of the radiant god : Eleusinian and
But Ocean's circle, like a zone of light, The sun's wide
bosom girds, and charms the wond'ring sight. lu the first place,
then, let us consider why this mystic dress belonging to Bacchus is
to represent the sun. Now the reason of this will be evident from the
following ob- servations : according to the Orphic theol- ogy, the
divine intellect of every planet is denominated a Bacchus, who is
characterized in each by a different appellation; so that the
intellect of the solar deity is called Trie- tericus Bacchus. And in the
second place, since the divinity of the sun, according to the
arcana of the ancient theology, has a super-mundane as well as mundane
establish- ment, and is wholly of an exalting or intel- lectual
nature ; hence considered as super- mundane he must both produce and
contain the mundane intellect, or Dionysus, in his essence ; for
all the mimdane are contained in the super-mundane deities, by whom also
they are produced. Hence Proclus, in his elegant Hijmn to the Sun, says
: Bacchic Mysteries. 217 That is, " they
celebrate thee in hymns as the illustrious parent of Dionysus." And
thirdly, it is through the subsistence of Dionysus in the sun that
that luminary derives its circular motion, as is evident from the
following Or- phic verse, in which, speaking of the sun, it is said
of him, that " He is called Dionysus, because he is
carried with a circular motion through the immense- ly-extended
heavens." And this with the greatest propriety, since intellect, as
we have already observed, is entirely of a transforming and
elevating nature : so that from all this, it is sufficiently evident why
the dress of Diony- sus is represented as belonging to the sun. In
the second place, the vail, resembling a mixture of fiery light, is an
obvious image of the solar fire. And as to the spotted mule- skin,*
which is to represent the starry heav- ens, this is nothing more than an
image of * Nehris is also a fawn-skin. The Jewish high-priest wore one
at the great festivals. It is rendered *• badger's skin " in the
Bible. In India the robe of Indra is spotted. 218
Bacchic Mysteries. tlie moon ; tMs luminary, according to
Proc- lus on Hesiod, resembling the mixed nature of a mule ; "
becoming dark through her par- ticipation of earth, and deriving her
proper light from the sun." T-qz [isy s/ooaa xo a%o- So
that the spotted hide signifies the moon attended with a multitude of
stars : and hence, in the Oi'phic Hymn to the Moon, that deity is
celebrated "as shining surrounded with beautiful stars " :
v.rjXoic, aaz^jOiGi ppy- ooarj., and is likewise called aaxpap/Tj,
as- trarche, or " queen of the starsy In the next place,
the golden zone is the circle of the Ocean, as the last verses
plainly evince. But, you will ask, what has the rising of the sun
through the ocean, from the boundaries of earth and night, to do with
the adventures of Bacchus ? I answer, that it is inpossible to
devise a symbol more beauti- fully accommodated to the purpose : for,
in the first place, is not the ocean a proper emblem of an earthly
nature, whirling and Bacchic Mysteries. 221
stormy, and perpetually rolling without ad- mitting any periods of
repose ? And is not the sun emerging from its boisterous deeps a
perspicuous symbol of the higher spiritual nature, apparently rising from
the dark and fluctuating material receptacle, and confer- ring form
and beauty on the sensible uni- verse through its light ? I say
apparently rising, for though the spiritual nature always diffuses
its splendor with invariable energy, yet it is not always perceived by
the subjects of its illuminations : besides, as psychical na- tures
can only receive partially and at inter- vals the benefits of the divine
irradiation ; hence fables regarding this temporal partici- pation
transfer, for the purpose of conceal- ment and in conformity to the
phenomena, the imperfection of subordinate natures to such as are
supreme. This description, there- fore, of the rising sun, is a most
beautiful symbol of the new birth of Bacchus, which, as we have
already observed, implies nothing more than the rising of intellectual
light, and its consequent manifestation to subordinate orders of existence.
222 Eleusinian and And thus much for the mysteries of
Bac- chus, which, as well as those of Ceres, relate in one part to
the descent of a partial in- tellect into matter, and its condition while
united with the dark tenement of the body : but there appears to be this
difference be- tween the two, that in the fable of Ceres and
Proserpine the descent of the whole rational soul is considered ; and in
that of Bacchus the scattering and going forth of tliat su- preme
part alone of our nature which we properly characterize hy the
appellation of. intellect* In the composition of each we may
discern the same traces of exalted wis- dom and recondite theology; of a
theology the most venerable for its antiquity, and the most
admirable for its excellence and reahtyo I shall conclude this
treatise by presenting the reader with a valuable and most elegant
hymn of Proclusf to Minerva, which I have * Greek, wn;;, nous, the
Intuitive Eeasoii, that faculty of the mind that apprehends the Ineffable
Truth. t That the following hymn was composed by Proclus, can
not be doubted by any one who is conversant with those already ex-
tant of this incomparable man, since the spirit and manner in both is
perfectly the same. Bacchic Mysteries. 223
discovered in the British Museum ; and the existence of which
appears to have been hitherto utterly unknown. This hymn is to be
found among the Harleian Manuscripts, in a volume containing several of
the OrpJiic liymns^ with which, through the ignorance of
transcriber, it is indiscriminately ranked, as well as the other four
hymns of Proclus, already printed in the Bihliotlieca Grmca of
Fabricius. Unfortunately too, it is tran- scribed in a character so
obscure, and with such great inaccuracy, that, notwithstanding the
pains I have taken to restore the text to its original purity, I have
been obUged to omit two hues, and part of a third, as beyond my
abilities to read or amend ; however, the greatest, and doubtless the
most important part, is fortunately intelhgible, which I now
present to the reader's inspection, accompa- nied with some corrections,
and an Enghsh paraphrased translation. The original is highly
elegant and pious, and contains one mythological particular, which is no
where else to be found. It has likewise an evident connection with
the preceding fable of Bac- 224 EJeusinian and
chus, as will be obvious from the perusal; and on tins account
principally it was in- serted in the present discoui'se. Ek
aohnan. KATOI fJLcU a'.'(lO/0{.0 OiO? TJXO?' Tj Y£VETY]pO(;
IlTjYf]? oY.Tzpo9-opoooa, v.a'. wxpoxaxY,? ano asipa?
Apo£vod'0|j.3- cpspa^iLf jj.cY«-3'2V;5* o,3p:|i,07tarrjp,* KiV.Xo&r
ov/yozo 3' u;xvov £0'f pov: Tioxvia i)'U^uj 'H aO'^'.Tj?
ViZXrj.Zrj.ir/. ^iZOZv/^trxC,] TTuXjUlVa;;. Ka: "/^O-ovuuv
orj.^r/.zrj.zrx Oj(ojxaya (p'j)>a •j-'-Y* '11 %pa3'.r|V saawaai;
ajj-UGXiXsutov J rjyrj.v.xo^ Ai&jpo? sv YU«Xc'-a'. p-ipiCo/J-svoo
TcatJ Bav-^ou l\xav(uv oTzo X.'p"-, TiopcC oj 2 Tiaxpt
'|)4po'Joa Ocppa VEOi; ^ouX'rjatv wtt' appYjxo:at xov.yjo?, Ev.
ScJuisXt]? TCcpt xoa^aov avY]^f]av] Alovuooo?. 'Hi; ttsXsx'.? § 6-rjpiu)V
xafjivcuv TCpo^£Xu|Jt.va %apv]va Ilavojpy.ou? sy.oir^; ir«t)£u>v
T|VUOj 'iz'^tifK-qv 'H v.paxQC 'Hpar Oc|xvov eY'P"^- ppcixoiv
apjxa'iov H jjioxov v.QajJLTjaoti; oXov uo/.ojiSi';: zz/yrj.'.c,
Azix:oof'^:xry ojprjv || '{^'j'/at-t ^aXXouaa* 'II Krj./ZQ
rxv.pOTZo\'.r/. So|JLpoXov axpoxarq? ixs'(rj.\-r^q azo ixoxvia
0£tpf]?' * Lege oPptjULOTraxpT), t Lege f)joaj,3Eia?. t
Lege a|j.oax'. Xuxoo. § Lege tceXexu?. II Lege Op;jL-r]v.
BaccJiic Mysteries. 225 'H x8-ova ,3coT:ccvE.pa
tpt^aa? fxvjtjpa? p-^Xoiv. K/.oa-: ixEU Y| <pao? ay^ov
aiiaoTpaTrxooaa Trpoatouou- Ao? OS ;i.oi oXptov op;j.ov aXiuo/xsva rspo
yacav. Ao? -]/ox-/y Y^-oc, GtYvov air' eo^pjiuv oso |jio{).uiv Ka:
ao-^iY]v -/.at jpcoxoc- ,j.svoc S's/J-Tivsoaov jpwTi, Toaaattov, xac
towv, oaov /&ov:ojv ajio xoXttojv A'^spv-r] ,rpoc OXd|xkov s? Yjf^sa
Traxpo^ £o:o, Ei5j Ttc «/j.T:Xax:-r];x£* xocx-r] f.tototo
Sa/uiaCs;. IXa9.- /x£:X:xo,3ooXj- aao/i,3potj- /Ji7]5s/JL£aoY)?
f Trcjoavat? TOivatacv eXtup xot: xop/xa Ysvsaaot,
KstfAsvov Ev 8aTT:s5otatv, 61: TcO? so/o/jiac swxr KsxXofl-:
xjxXoO-- xa: ;xol iitCu^yiv 00a? 6tox£C. TO MINEEVA.
Daughter of aegis-bearing Jove, divine, Propitious to thy
votaries' prayer incline ; From thy great father's fount supremely
bright, Like fire resounding, leaping into light.
Shield-bearing goddess, hear, to whom belong A manly mind,
and power to tame the strong! Oh, sprung from matchless might, with
joyful mind Accept this hymn ; benevolent and kind !
The holy gates of wisdom, by thy hand Are wide unfolded ; and
the daring band Of earth-born giants, that in impious fight
Strove with thy fire, were vanquished by thy might. Once by
thy care, as sacred poets sing. The heart of Bacchus, swiftly-slaughtered
king, * Lege a|xirXaxY]|ULa. t Lege iKiy: t^C tr^zr^^^.
Eleusinian and Was sav'd in ^ther, when, with fnry
fired, Tlie Titans fell against his life conspired ;
And with relentless rage and thirst for gore, Their hands his
members into fragments tore : But ever watchful of thy father's
will, Thy power preserv'd him from succeeding ill. Till
from the secret counsels of his fire, And born from Semele through
heavenly sire, Great Dionysus to the world at length
Again appeared with renovated strength. Once, too, thy
warlike ax, with matchless sway, Lopped from their savage necks the
heads away Of furious beasts, and thus the pests destroyed
Which long all-seeing Hecate annoyed. By thee benevolent
great Juno's might Was roused, to furnish mortals with
delight. And thro' life's wide and various range, 't is thine
Each part to beautify with art divine : Invigorated hence by
thee, we find A demiurgic impulse in the mind. Towers proudly
raised, and for protection strong. To thee, dread guardian deity,
belong. As proper symbols of th' exalted height Thy
series claims amidst the courts of light. Lands are beloved by
thee, to learning prone. And Athens, Oh Athena, is thy own !
Great goddess, hear! and on my dark'ned mind Pour thy pure
light in measure unconfined ; — That sacred light, Oh
all-protecting queen. Which beams eternal from thy face
serene. My soul, while wand'ring on the earth, inspire
With thy own blessed and impulsive fire : And from thy
fables, mystic and divine. Give all her powers with holy light to
shine. Bacchic Mysteries. 227 Give love, give
wisdom, and a power to love, Incessant tending to the realms above
; Such as unconscious of base earth's control Gently attracts the
vice-subduing soul : From night's dark region aids her to retire,
And once moi'e gain the palace of her sire. O all-propitious to my prayer
incline ! Nor let those horrid punishments be mine Which guilty
souls in Tartarus confine, With fetters fast'ned to its brazen
floors. And lock'd by hell's tremendous iron doors. Hear me, and
save (for power is all thine own) A soul desirous to be thine
alone.* It is very remarkable in this hymn, that the exploits
of Minerva relative to cutting off the heads of wild beasts with an ax,
etc., is mentioned by no writer whatever; nor can I find the least
trace of a circumstance either in the history of Minerva or Hecate
to which it alludes.f And from hence, I * If I should ever be able
to publish a second edition of my translation of the hymns of Orpheus, I
shall add to it a translation of all those hymns of Proclus, which are
fortunately extant ; but which are nothing more than the wreck of a great
multitude which he composed. t If Mr. Taylor had been
conversant with Hindu literature, he would have perceived that these
exploits of Minerva-Athene were taken from the buffalo-sacrifice of Durga
or Bhavani. The whole Dionysiac legend is but a rendering of the Sivaic
and Buddhistic legends into a Grecian dress. A. W. Bacchic
Mysteries. think, we may reasonably conclude that it
belonged to the arcane Orphic narrations concerning these goddesses,
which were con- sequently but rarely mentioned, and this but by a
few, whose works, which might afford us some clearer information, are
unfortu- nately lost. Musical Couference.
Venus Kisiiig troni the Sea. Since writing the above Dissertation,
I have met with a curious Greek manu- script entitled: "Of
Psellus, Concerning DcBmons^* according to the opinion of the
GreeJiS " : zoo WeWoo xivct Tuspt ^aqiovcov So^aCooacv 'EXXtjvs? :
In the course of which he describes the machinery of the Eleusinian
Mysteries as follows : — 'A oe ys [lo^jzr^iAa xoo- T(ov, oiov aaxi^a ta
EXsuatvia, xov [xod-i^ov OTUOTcpivsrac 3ia {i^iyvo^ASVov xifj Stjgi, t]
"cyj Atjix'/j- x£pL, xctt XT] OoYatspsL Tc/.ux'A]? Ospas^axxTj
xt] xctt Kop'^. Etcsiotj 5s sjjisXXov %7.t acppoStaiot sict XT]
{JiaYjGst ytvsa^at aujJi'jrXoxac, avaSostat iro)? Y] ArppoScx'rj airo
xtvcov 'jrsTuXaajj.svwv (JL'rjSs- * Daemons, divinities, spirits ;
a term formerly applied to all rational beings, good or bad, other than
mortals. 229 230 Appendix, (ov
TusAayw^. Etta 5s yafJiYjXioc S'Jrt 'Ctj Kopifj 6[JL£vaio?. Kat
s'^a^ouatv of t£Xou{i.£VOC, sx to[jl- Tuavou scpayov £% %o{Ji[57.X(ov
sttiov, sxtpvo'fo- p'^aa (lege s^spvocpopr^cc/.) utto tov xoLarov
siasouv. TTroT-pcvstaL $£.%at ta^ Stjooc (o^iva?. Ttat xapocaXytaL
Erp' otc ^oii tpaYoa^sXsc {Jtt- {x-^{ia TTOLO-atvojxsvov xspi roi?
^l^'jjxo^c' otc xsp TSpayou (lege Tpayou) opyscc aTrorsjKov,
to) x-oXiro) xauxT^c xaxsO-e'co, (oairsp 5yj y,7.c saotou. Etc^
xaatv c/i xoy AtovoaoD xqiat, y,at yj xrjauc, y,ai T7. iroXyoix'-paXa
TuoTrava, ^ai of x(o }:^apa- CtCO XSXO'JJXSVOC, %X'^50V£C '^2 ^^-^
{XC{J-aA(OV£C, %at zic, rf/iny XsfJr^Q O£a'jrp(ox£toc y-^M
A(o5(ovctcov yaXv.ziov, -/.rji KopyjBctc aXXo? xai 7,0'jp'rj^ £X£-
poc, 5at{JL0V(ov {xc{JLYj|jL7.xa. Ecp' ot? Yj Bapfoxooc (lege Y^ Baupfo
xo^c) {J-'^pooc avaaopojj.£V7j, xat 6 yovaixo? %x£ic> oozio yap
ovo{xaCoDaL xy^v ai5(o aia/ovo[JL£VOL Kai ouxco? £v ata/pco xy^v
x£X£X7]v %7.xa)jjo'jacv. /. e. " The Mysteries of these demons, such
as the Eleusinia, con- sisted in representing the mythical narra-
tion of Jupiter mingling mth Ceres and her daughter Proserpina
(Phersephatte). But as Appendix. 231 venereal
connections are in the initiation,* a Venus is represented rising from
the sea, from certain moving sexual parts : afterwards the
celebrated marriage of Proserpina (with Pluto) takes place ; and those
who are initiated sing : " 'Out of the drum I have
eaten, Out of the cymbal I have drank, The mystic vase I have
sustained, The bed I have entered.' The pregnant throes
likewise of Ceres [Deo] are represented : hence the supphcations of
Deo are exhibited; the drinking of bile, and the heart-aches. After this,
an effigy with the thighs of a goat makes its appear- ance, which
is represented as suffering vehe- mently about the testicles : because
Jupiter, as if to expiate the violence which he had offered to
Ceres, is represented as cutting off the testicles of a goat, and placing
them on her bosom, as if they were his own. But after all this, the
rites of Bacchus suc- ceed; the Cista, and the cakes with many
bosses, Uke those of a shield. Likewise the * /. e. a
representation of them. 232 Appendix. mysteries
of Sabazius, divinations, and the mimalons or Bacchants ; a certain sound
of the Thesprotian bason ; the Dodonsean brass ; another Corybas,
and another Proserpina, — representations of Demons. After these
suc- ceed the uncovering of the thighs of Baubo, and a woman's comb
(lie is), for thus, through a sense of shame, they denominate the
sexual parts of a woman. And thus, with scanda- lous exhibitions,
they finish the initiation." From this curious passage, it
appears that the Eleusinian Mysteries comprehended those of almost
all the gods ; and this account will not only throw hght on the relation
of the Mysteries given by Clemens Alexandidnus, but likewise be
elucidated by it in several particulars. I would willingly unfold to
the reader the mystic meaning of the whole of this machinery, but
this can not be accom- phshed by any one, without at least the pos-
session of all the Platonic manuscripts which are extant. This
acquisition, which I would infinitely prize above the wealth of the
In- dies, will, I hope, speedily and fortunately Jupiter disguised
as Diana, and Calisto. Hercules, Deianeira and Nessus.
Appendix. 235 be mine, and then I shall be no less
anxious to communicate this arcane infoiTQation, than the liberal
reader will be to receive it. I shall only therefore observe, that the
mu- tual communication of energies among the gods was called by
ancient theologists c'spo^ yafiGc, hieros gcimos, a sacred marriage
; concerning which Proclus, in the second book of his manuscript
Commentary on the Parmenides, admirably remarks as follows:
TaUTTTJV $£ tTjV 7.0tV(l>VtaV, TTOrS {1£V £V ZOIQ GO-
Gzor^oic, 6p(oac d-zoic, (oi {^ooXoyot) %at vcaXooat Ya{j.ov 'Hpoic
y-^J-i Aloc, Ojpavoo %ac TqQ, Kpo- voo v.0.1 Tsac* '7L0ZS §£ ttov
T-ara^ssarspcov TzpOQ xa xpsLtto), %ai v^aXooGi ya^ioy Aco? y-ac
Atjjxtj- Tpac* irors 5s xai £{jL'3r7.Xtv xcov xpsiTiKovcov xpo? xa
6rp£t[j,£V7., %7.i Xsyouat Atoc %ct: KopTj? Ya{xov. Etcsl^'A] tcov 0£(ov
aXXat jj-sv staiv af irpoc X7. GDGZoiya 7,oiva)vi7,c, 7.XX7.1 5s at
'jrpoi; xa xpo 7.'jx(ov' aXXat 5s 7.c xpo? xa |X£X7. xa^)xa. Kai
dsL XYjV £%7.axTj? i5lgxyjx7. /,7.xavo£iv y,7C {j.£- XaY£tV 7.7r0
X(OV 0£(OV £Xt X7. £C57J X'^V XCiC7.0X7]V dta'jiXoxYjV. /. ^.
" Theologists at one time considered this communion of the gods
in divinities co-ordinate with each other ; and 236
Appendix. then tliey called it the mamage of Jupiter and
Jiino, of Heaven and Earth [Uranos and Gre], of Saturn and Rhea : but at
another time, they considered it as svibsisting be- tween
subordinate and superior divinities; and then they called it the marriage
of Jupi- ter and Ceres ; but at another time, on the contrary, they
beheld it as subsisting be- tween superior and subordinate
divinities; and then they called it the marriage of Jupi- ter and
Kore. For in the gods there is one kind of communion between such as are
of a co-ordinate nature ; another between the subordinate and
supreme ; and another again between the supreme and subordinate.
And it is necessary to understand the peculiarity of each, and to
transfer a conjunction of this kind froin the gods to the communion
of ideas with each other." And in Tim (mis ^ book i., he
observes : y.rj.i zo rrjv wjzr^v (supple /. e. '' And that the same
goddess is conjoined with other gods, or the same god with many
goddesses, may be collected fi'om the mystic discourses, and those
marriages which are called in the Mysteries Sacred Marriages.''^
Thus far the divine Proclus ; from the first of which passages the reader
may perceive how adultery and rapes, as represented in the machinery
of the Mysteries, are to be under- stood when apphed to the gods; and
that they mean nothing more than a communica- tion of divine
energies, either between a su- perior and subordinate, or subordinate
and superior, divinity. I only add that the ap- parent indecency of
these exhibitions was, as I have already observed, exclusive of its
mystic meaning, designed as a remedy for the passions of the soul :
and hence mystic ceremonies were very properly called a%£7., akea,
medicines, by the obscure and noble Heracleitus.'^ *
Iamblichus : De Mijsteriis. Saciifice of a Pig.
Hercules Drunk. ORPHIC HYMNS.
I shall utter to whom it is lawful ; but let the doors be closed,
Nevertheless, against all the profane. But do thou hear, Oh Musseus, for
I will declare what is true. . . . He is the One, self -proceeding
; and from him all things proceed, And in them he himself exerts his
activity ; no mortal Beholds Him, but he beholds all. There
is one royal body in which all things are enwombed, Fire and Water,
Earth, ^ther, Night and Day, And Counsel [Metis'], the first producer,
and delightful Love, — For all these are contained in the great body of
Zeus. Zeus, the mighty thunderer, is first ; Zeus is last
; Zeus is the head, Zeus the middle of all things ; From Zeus were
all things produced. He is male, he is female ; Zeus is the depth of the
earth, the height of the starry heavens ; 238
Appendix. 239 He is the breath of all things, the force of untamed
fire ; The bottom of the sea ; Sun, Moon, and Stars ; Origin of all
; King of all ; One Power, one God, one Great Ruler. HYMN OF
CLEANTHES. Greatest of the gods, God with many names,
God ever-ruling, and ruling all things ! Zeus, origin of Nature,
governing the universe by law, All hail ! For it is right for mortals to
address thee ; For we are thy offspring, and we alone of all <
That live and creep on earth have the power of imitative speech.
Therefore will I praise thee, and hymn forever thy power. Thee the wide
heaven, which surrounds the earth, obeys : Following where thou wilt,
willingly obeying thy law. Thou boldest at thy sei'vice, in thy mighty
hands, The two-edged, flaming, immortal thunderbolt. Before whose
flash all nature trembles. Thou rulest in the common reason, which goes
through all. And appears mingled in all things, great or small,
Which filling all nature, is king of all existences. Nor without thee. Oh
Deity,* does anything happen in the world. From the divine ethereal pole
to the great ocean, Except only the evil preferred by the senseless
wicked. But thou also art able to bring to order that which is
chaotic. Giving form to what is formless, and making the discordant
friendly ; So reducing all variety to imity, and even making good
out of evil. Thus throughout nature is one great law Which only the
wicked seek to disobey. Poor fools ! who long for happiness. But
will not see nor hear the divine commands. Greek, Aaifxov, Demon. [In
frenzy blind they stray a\v;iy from good, By thii'st of glory
tempted, or sordid avarice, Or pleasures sensual and joys that
fall.] But do thou, Oh Zeus, all-bestower, cloud-compeller!
Ruler of thunder ! guard men from sad error. Father ! dispel
the clouds of the soul, and let us follow The laws of thy great and
just reign ! That we may be honored, let us honor thee again,
Chanting thy great deeds, as is proper for mortals, For
nothing can be better for gods or men Than to adore with hymns the
Universal King.* * Rev. J. Freeman Clarke, whose version is here
copied, renders this phrase "the law common to all." The Greek
text reads: " 7] xoivov a;c vojAciv £v v.-A-Q u/ivstv," — the
term vojj.oc:, nomos, or Law, being used for King, as Love is for God. —
A. W. Proserpina Enthroned in Hades. Nymphs and
Centaurs. AporrJieta, Greek aiioppTjTa — The instructions given by
the hierophant or interpreter in the Eleusinian Mysteries, not to
be disclosed on pain of death. There was said to be a syn- opsis of them
in the i^etroma or two stone tablets, which, it is said, were bound
together in the form of a book. Apostatise — To fall or descend, as
the spiritual part of the soul is said to descend from its divine home to
the world of nature. Cathartic — Purifying. The term was used by
the Platonists and others in connection with the ceremonies of
purification be- fore initiation, also to the corresponding performance
of rites and duties which renewed the moral life. The cathartic
virtues were the duties and mode of living, which conduced to that end.
The phrase is used but once or twice in this edition. Cause —
The agent by which things are generated or produced. Circulation —
The peculiar spiral motion or progress by which the spiritual nature or
"intellect" descended from the divine region of the universe
into the world of sense. Cogitative — Relating to the
understanding: dianoetic. Conjecture, or Opinion — A mental
conception that can be changed by argument. Core — A name of
Ceres or Demeter, applied by the Orphic and later writers to her daughter
Persephone or Proserpina. She was supposed to typify the spiritual nature
which was abducted by Hades or Pluto into the Underworld, the figure
signifying the apostasy or descent of the soul from the higher life to
the material body. CoricaUy — After the manner of Proserpina, i.
e., as if descending into death from the supernal world.
D(emoii — A designation of a certain class of divinities. Different
authors employ the term differently. Hesiod regards them as the souls of
the men who lived in the Golden Age, now act- ing as guardian or tutelary
spirits. Socrates, in the CratyJus, says " that daemon is a term
denoting wisdom, and that every good man is dsemonian, both while living
and when dead, and is rightly called a daemon." His own attendant
spirit that checked him whenever he endeavored to do what he might
not, was styled his Daemon. lamblichus places Daemons in the second order
of spiritual existence. — Cleanthes, in his celebrated Hymn, styles Zeus
oatfiov (daimon). Demiurgiis — The creator. It was the title of
the; chief-magistrate in several Grecian States, and in this work is
applied to Zeus or Jupiter, or the Euler of the Universe. The latter
Pla- tdnists, and more especially the Gnostics, who regarded matter
as constituting or containing the principle of Evil, sometimes applied
this term to the Evil Potency, who, some of them affirmed, was the Hebrew
God. Distrihuted — 'SiQ(hxc&^ from a whole to parts and
scattered. The spiritual nature or intellect in its higher estate was
regarded as a whole, but in descending to worldly conditions became
divided into parts or perhaps characteristics. Divisible — Made
into parts or attributes, as the mind, intellect, or spiritual, first a
whole, became thus distinguished in its de- scent. This division was
regarded as a fall into a lower plane of life. Energise,
Greek z^z^^-^zw — Ho operate or work, especially to undergo discipline of
the heart and character. Glossary. 243 Energy —
Operation, activity. Eternal — Existing through all past time, and
still continuing. Faith — The correct conception of a thing as it
seems, — fidelity. Freedom — The ruling power of one's life ; a
power over what per- tains to one's self in life. Friendship
— Union of sentiment; a communion in doing well. Fury — The
peculiar mania, ardor, or enthusiasm which inspired and actuated
prophets, poets, intei'preters of oracles, and others ; also a title of
the goddesses Demeter and Persephone as the chastisers of the wicked, —
also of the Eumenides. Generation, Greek Y^^'^t? — Generated
existence, the mode of life peculiar to this world, but which is
equivalent to death, so far as the pure intellect or spiritual nature is
concerned ; the process by which the soul is separated from the
higher form of existence, and brought into the conditions of life
upon the earth. It was regarded as a punishment, and ac- cording to Mr.
Taylor, was prefigured by the abduction of Proserpina. The soul is
supposed to have pre-existed with God as a pure intellect like him, but
not actually identical — at one but not absolutely the same.
Good — That which is desired on its own account. Hades — A
name of Pluto; the Underworld, the state or region of departed souls, as
understood by classic writers ; the physical nature, the corporeal
existence, the condition of the soul while in the bodily life.
Herald, Greek y.7]po4 — The crier at the Mysteries.
Hierophant — The interpreter who explained the purport of the
mystic doctrines and dramas to the candidates. Holiness, Greek
ooioty]? — Attention to the honor due to God. Idea — A principle in
all minds underlying our cognitions of the sensible world.
Imprudent — Without foresight ; deprived of sagacity.
Infernal regions — Hades, the Underworld. Instruction — A
power to cure the soul. 244 Glossary. Intellect,
Greek voo? — Also rendered j)?^re reason, and by Professor Cocker,
intuitive reason, and the rational soul; the spiritual nature. " The
organ of self-evident, necessary, and universal truth. In an immediate,
direct, and intuitive manner, it takes hold on truth with absolute
certainty. The reason, through the medium of ideas, holds communion with
the world of real Being. These ideas are the light y^\\\(^\i reveals the
world of unseen realities, as the sun reveals the world of sensible
forms. ' The Idea of the good is the Sun of the Intelligible World
; it sheds on objects the light of truth, and gives to the soul
that knows the power of knowing.' Under this light the eye of reason
apprehends the eternal world of being as truly, yet more truly, than the
eye of sense appi'ehends the world of phenomena. This power the rational
soul possesses by virtue of its having a nature kindred, or even
homogeneous with the Divinity. It was ' generated by the Divine Father,'
and like him, it is in a certain sense ' eternal.' Not that we are
to understand Plato as teaching that the rational soul had an independent
and underived existence ; it was created or 'generated' in eternity, and
even now, in its incorporate state, is not amenable to the condition of
time and space, but, in a peculiar sense, dwells in eternity : and
therefore is capable of beholding eternal realities, and coming into
communion with absolute beauty, and goodness, and truth — that is, with
God, the Absolute Being." — Christianity and Greek Philosophy, Intellective
— Intuitive ; perceivable by spiritual insight. Ititelligihle —
Eelating to the higher reason. Interpreter — The hierophant or
sacerdotal teacher who, on the last day of the Eleusinia, explained the
petroma or stone book to the candidates, and unfolded the final meaning
of the repre- sentations and symbols. In the Phoenician language he
was called ins, peter. Hence the petroma, consisting of two tablets
of stone, was a pun on the designation, to imply the
Glossary. 245 Interpreter — continued. wisdom to
be uiit'olcled. It has been suggested by the Rev, Mr. Hyslop, that the
Pope derived his claim, as the successor of Peter, from his succession to
the rank and function of the Hierophant of the Mysteries, and not from
the celebrated Apostle, who probably was never in Rome. Just
— Productive of Justice. Justice — The harmony or perfect
proportional action of all the powers of the soul, and comprising equity,
veracity, fidelity, usefulness, benevolence, and purity of mind, or
holiness. Judgment — A. peremptory decision covering a disputed
matter; also o'.avoLa, dianoia, or understanding. Knowledge —
A comprehension by the mind of fact not to be over- thrown or modified by
argument. o Legislative — Regulating. Lesser Mysteries
— The TsXeia:, teletai, or ceremonies of purifica- tion, which were
celebrated at Agrae, prior to full initiation at Eleusis. Those initiated
on this occasion were styled fJLuaxai, mystcB, from (xoto, muo, to vail ;
and their initiation was called (jiuYjat?, muesis, or vailing, as
expressive of being vailed from the former life. Magic —
Persian mag, Sanscrit maha, great. Relating to the order of the Magi of
Persia and Assyria. Material do'mons — Spirits of a nature so gross
as to be able to assume visible bodies like individuals still living on
the Earth. Matter — The elements of the world, and especially of
the human body, in which the idea of evil is contained and the soul
incarcerated. Greek oXt], Hule or Hyle. Muesis, Greek iinrioiq,
from ixotn, to vail — The last act in the Lesser Mysteries, or rsXtza:,
teletai, denoting the separating of the initiate from the former exotic
life. Mysteries — Sacred dramas performed at stated periods.
The most celebrated were those of Isis, Sabazius, Cybelfe, and
Eleusis. Mystic — Relating to the Mysteries: a person initiated in
the Lesser Mysteries — Greek jj.u3Totu Occult — Arcane;
hidden; pertaining to the mystical sense. Orgies, Greek opY-'^' —
The peculiar rites of the Bacchic Mysteries. Opinion — A hypothesis
or conjecture. Partial — Divided, in parts, and not a whole.
Philologist — One pursuing literature. Philosopher — One
skilled in philosophy; one disciplined in a right life.
Philosophise — To investigate final causes; to undergo discipline
of the life. Philosophy — The aspiration of the soul after wisdom
and truth, " Plato asserted philosophy to be the science of
unconditioned being, and asserted that this was known to the soul by
its intuitive reason (intellect or spiritual instinct) which is the
organ of all philosophic insight. The reason perceives sub- stance ; the
understanding, only phenomena. Being (xo ov), which is the reality in all
actuality, is in the ideas or thoughts of God; and nothing exists (or
appears outwardly), except by the force of this indwelling idea. The word
is the true expression of the nature of every object : for each has its
divine and natural name, besides its accidental human appellation.
Philosophy is the recollection of what the soul has seen of things and
their names." (J. Freeman Clarke.) Plotinus — A philosopher
who lived in the Third Century, and re- vived the doctrines of
Plato. Prudent — Having foresight. Purgation,
purification — The introduction into the Teletce or Lesser Mysteries ; a
separation of the external principles from the soul. Punishment —
The curing of the soul of its errors. Prophet, Greek \i.rj.^x'.c, —
One possessing the prophetic mania, or inspiration. Priest —
Greek \xrjyz'.c, — A prophet or inspired person, ispjuc — a sacerdotal
person. Revolt — A rolling away, the career of the soul in its descent
from the pristine divine condition. Science — The knowledge
of universal, necessary, unchangeable, and eternal ideas.
Shows — The peculiar dramatic representations of the Mysteries.
Telete, Greek tjXext] — The finishing or consummation ; the Lesser
Mysteries. Theologist — A teacher of the literatiu-e relating to
the gods. Theoretical — Perceptive. Torch bearer — A
priest who bore a torch at the Mysteries. Titans — The beings who
made war against Kronos or Saturn. E. Poeoeke identifies them with the
Daittjas of India, who resisted the Brahmans. In the Orphic legend, they
are described as slaying the child Bacchus-Zagreus. Titanic —
Eelating to the nature of Titans. Transmigration — The passage of
the soul from one condition of being to another. This has not any
necessary reference to any rehabilitation in a corporeal nature, or body
of flesh and blood. See I Corinthians, XV. Virtue — A good
mental condition; a stable disposition. Virtues — Agencies, rites,
inflluences. Cathartic Virtues — Purify- ing rites or influences.
Wisdom — The knowledge of things as they exist ; " the
approach to God as the substance of goodness in truth."
World — The cosmos, the universe, as distinguished from the earth
and human existence upon it. ('§ Eleusinian Priest and
Assistants. Fortune and the Three Fates.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. Drawm from the antique. A. L.
RAWSON. A DESCRIPTION of tlie illustrations to this volume
properly includes the two or three theories of human life held by
the ancient Greeks, and the beautiful myth of Demeter and Pro-
serpina, the most charming of all mythological fancies, and the Orgies of
Bacchus, which together supplied the motives to the artists of the
originals from which these drawings were made. From them* we
learn that it was believed»that the soul is a part of, or a spark from,
the Great Soul of the Kosmos, the Cen- tral Sun of the intellectual
universe, and therefore immortal ; has lived before, and will continue to
hve after this '' body prison " is dissolved ; that the river Styx
is between us and the unseen world, and hence we have no recollection of
any former state of existence ; and that the body is Hades, in
which the soul is made to suffer for past misdeeds done in the unseen
world. Poets and philosophers, tragedians and comedians,
embel- lished the myth with a thousand fine fancies which were
248 List of Illustrations. 249 woven into
the ritual of Eleusis, or were presented in the theaters during the
Bacchic festivals. The pictures include, beside the costumes of
priests, jiriest- esses, and their attendants, and of the fauns and
satjrrs, many of the sacred vessels and implements used in celebrating
the Mysteries, in the orgies, and in the theaters, all of which
were drawn by the ancient artists from the objects represented, and
their work has been carefully followed here. Page. 1.
Frontispiece. Sacrifice to Ceres. — Denhndler, sculptur. The
goddess stands near a serpent-guarded altar, on which a sheaf of grain is
aflame. Worshipers attend, and Jupiter approves. (See page 17.)
2. Decoratinq a Statue of Bacchus 4 — Bom. Campana. The
priest wears a lamb-skin skirt, the thyrsus is a natural vine with grape
clusters, and there are fruit and wine bearers. 3. Bacchantes with
Thyrsus and Flute 4 Two fragments. —Bom. Camp. 4.
Symbolical Ceremony.Bom. Camp 4 Torch and thyrsus bearers and faun.
See cut No. 40, and page 208 for reference to pine nut. 5.
Bacchus and Nymphs 5 6. Pluto, Proserpina, and Furies 5
— Galerie des Peintres. The Furies were said to be children of
Pluto and Proserpina ; other accounts say of Nox and Acheron, and Acheron
was a son of Ceres Avithout a father. Priestess with Amphora and Sacred
Cake 6 8. Priestess with Musical Instruments 6 9. Faun
Kissing Bacchante. — Bourbon Mus 6 10. Faun and Bacchus. — Bourbon
Mus 6 250 List of Ilhistrations. Page.
11. Etruscan Y A^Y^.—MilUngen 7 See drawings on page
lOG. Mercury Presenting a Soul to Pluto Pict. Ant. Sep. Nasonion, pi. I,
8. 13. Mystic Rites. Arhniranda, tav. 17 8 14.
Eleusinian Ceremony. — Oes^. Benk. Alt. Kimst, II., 8 8 15. Bacchic
Festival.— JSarto?*, Admiranda, 43 9 Probably a stage scene. The
cliaracters are the king, who was an archon of Athens; a thyrsns bearer,
musician, wine and fruit bearers, dancers, and Pluto and Proserpina. A
boy re- moves the king's sandal. (See page 35.) 16. Apollo
and the Muses. — Florentine Museum 10 The muses were the daughters
of Jupiter and Mnemosyne ; that is, of the god of the present instant,
and of memory. Their office was, in part, to give information to any
inquiring soul, and to preside over the various arts and sciences.
They were called by various names derived from the places where
they were worshiped : Aganippides, Aonides, Castalides, HeUconiades,
Lebetheides, Pierides, and others. Apollo was called Musagetes, as their
leader and conductor. The palm tree, laurel, fountains on Helicon,
Parnassus, Pindus, and other sacred mountains, were sacred to the
muses. 17. Prometheus Forms a Woman 11 — Visconti, Mus.
Fio. Clem., IV., 34. Mercury, the messenger of the gods, brings a soul
from Jupiter for the body made by Prometheus, and the three Fates
attend. The Athenians built an altar for the worship of Pro- metheus in
the grove of the Academy. 18. Procession of Iacchus and Phallus
16 Montfaucon. From Athens to Eleusis, on the sixth day of
the Eleusinia. The statue is made to play its part in a mystic ceremony,
typi- fying the union of the sexes in generation. Attendant priest-
esses bear a basket of dried flgs and a phallus, baskets of fruit, vases
of wine, with clematis, and musical and sacrificial instni- ments. None
but women and children were permitted to take part in this ceremony. The
wooden emblem of fecundity was an object of supreme veneration, and the
ceremony of placing and hooding it. was assigned to the most highly
respected woman in Athens, as a mark of honor. Lucian and Plutarch Illustrations. say the phallus bearers at Rome
carried images (phalloi) at the top of long poles, and their bodies were
stained with wine lees, and partly covered with a lamb-skin, their heads
crowned with a wreath of ivy. (See page 14.) 19, 20, 21. From
Etruscan Vases Florentine Museum.
22 Human sacrifice may be indicated in the lower group. Venus
and Proserpina in Hades 28 — Galerie des Peintres. The myth
relates that Venus gave Proserpina a pomegranate to eat in Hades, and so
made her subject to the law which re- quired her to remain four months of
each year with Pluto in the Underworld, for Venus is the goddess who
presides over birth and growth in all cases. Cerberus (see page 65)
keeps guard, and one of the heads holds her garment, signifying
that his master is entitled to one-third of her time. 23.
Rape of Proserpina. Carried Down to Hades (Invisibility) — Flor.
Mus, Pallas, Venus, and Diana Consulting 30 — Gal. des Peint.
Jupiter ordered these divinities to excite desire in the heart of
Proserpina as a means of leading her into the power of the richest of all
monarchs, the one who most abounds in treasures. (See page 140.)
25. Dionysus as God op the Sun 31 — Pit. Ant. Ercolmio.
Dionysus — Bacchus — symbolizes the sun as god of the sea- sons ; rides
on a panther, pours wine into a drinking-horn held by a satyr, who also
carries a wine skin bottle. The winged genii of the seasons attend.
Winter carries two geese and a cornu- copia ; Spring holds in one hand
the mystical cist, and in the other the mystic zone ; Summer bears a
sickle and a sheaf of grain ; and Autumn has a hare and a horn-of-plenty
full of fruits. Fauns, satyrs, boy-fauns, the usual attendants of
Bacchus, play with goats and panthers between the legs of the larger
figures. 26. Herse and Mercury 42 — Pit. Ant.
Ercolano. A fabled love match between the god and a daughter of
Cecrops, the Egyptian who founded Athens, supplied the ritual for
the festivals Hersephoria, in which young girls of seven to eleven years,
from the most noted families, dressed in List of Illustrations.
Page. white, carried the sacred vessels and implements used
in the Mysteries in procession. Cakes of a peculiar form were made
for the occasion. 27. Narcissus Sees His Image in Water 42
P. Ovid. Naso. The son of Cephissus and Liriope, an Oceanid, was
said to be very beautiful. He sought to win the favor of the nymph
of the fountain where he saw his face reflected, and failing, he
drowned himself in chagrin. The gods, unwilling to lose so much beauty,
changed him into the flower now known by his name. (See page 150.)
28. Jupiter as Diana, and Calisto. — P. Ovid. Naso The supreme deity of
the ancients, beside numerous marriages, was credited with many amours
with both divinities and mor- tals. In some of those adventures he
succeeded by using a disguise, as here in the form of the Queen of the
Starry Heavens, when he surprised Calisto (Helice), a daughter of
Lycaon, king of Arcadia, an attendant on Diana. The com- panions of that
goddess were pledged to celibacy. Jupiter, in the form of a swan,
surprised Leda, who became mother of the Dioscuri (twins).
29. Diana and Calisto. — Ovid. Naso, Neder 62 The fable says
that when Diana and her nymphs were bathing the swelling form of
Calisto attracted attention. It was re- ported to the goddess, when she
punished the maid by chang- ing her into the form of a bear. She would
have been torn in pieces by the hunter's dogs, biit Jupiter interposed
and trans- lated her to the heavens, where she forms the
constellation The Great Bear. Juno was jealous of Jupiter, and requested
Thetis to refuse the Great Bear permission to descend at night beneath
the waves of ocean, and she, being also jealous of Poseidon, complied,
and therefore the dipper does not dip, but revolves close around the pole
star. Bacchantes and Fauns Dancing 74 A stage ballet. — Bom.
Campana, 37. 31. Hercules, Bull, and Priestess. Bom. Camp 74 Bacchic orgies.
32. Fruit and Thyrsus Bearers. Boiir. Mm 84 33. Torch-Bearer as
Apollo. Bourbon Mits 84 34.
Eleusinian Mysteries. — Florence 3Ius 94 List of
Illustrations. 253 r>- T-, Page, 60. Etruscan
Mystic Ceremony.— i?oH«. Camp 94 36. Etruscan Altar Group.— JPtor.
Mus 106 The mystic cist with serpent coiled around, the sacred
oaks, baskets, drinking-horns, zones, f estoou of branches and
flowers, make very pretty and impressive accessories to two
handsome priestesses. 37. Etruscan Bacchantes.— JfiZZm^en
106 These two groups were drawn from a vase (page 7) which is
a very fine work of art. The drapery, .decoration, symbols, accessories,
and all the details of implements used in the cele- bration of the
Mysteries are very carefully drawn on the vase, which is well preserved.
This vase is a strong proof of the antiquity of the orgies, for the
Etruscans, Tyrrheni, and Tusci were ancient before the Romans began to
build on the Tiber. 38. Etruscan Ceremony.- m7fo><r/m
106 39. Satyr, Cupid and Venus.— ilfo>i?/a«cow; SculpUre .
110 Some Roman writers affirmed that the Satyr was a real
animal, but science has dissipated that belief, and the monster has
been classed among the artificial attractions of the theater where it
belongs, and where it did a large share of duty in the Mysteries. They
were invented by the poets as an impersona- tion of the life that
animates the branches of trees when the wind sweeps through them,
meaning, whistling, or shrieking in the gale. They were said to be the
chief attendants on Bacchus, and to delight in revel and wine.
40. Cupids, Satyr, and Statue of ^niwvs^.—Montfaucon The many suggestive
emblems in this picture form an instruc- tive group, symbolic of Nature's
life-renewing power. The ancients adored this power under the emblems of
the organs of generation. Many passages in the Bible denounce that wor-
ship, which is called " the grove," and usually was an iipright
stone, or wooden pillar, plain or ornamented, as in Rome, where it became
a statue to the waist, as seen in the engrav- ing. The Palladium at
Athens was a Greek form. The Druzes of Mount Lebanon in Syria now
dispense with em- blems of wood and stone, and use the natural objects in
their mystic rites and ceremonies. 41. Apollo and Daphne,—
Galerie des Peint 118 The rising sun shines on the dew-drops, and
warming them as they hang on the leaves of the laurel tree, they
disappear, 254 List of lUiisfrations.
Page. leaving the tree ; and it is said by the poet that
Apollo loves and seeks Daphne, striving to embrace her, when she flies
and is transformed into a laurel tree at the instant she is embraced
by the sun-god. 42. Diana and Endymion. — Bourbon 3Ius
118 Diana as the queen of the night loves Endymion, the
setting sun. The lovers ever strive to meet, but inexorable fate as
ever prevents them from enjoying each other's society. The fair
huntress sometimes is permitted, as when she is the new moon, or in the
first quarter, to approach near the place where her beloved one lingers
near the Hesperian gardens, and to follow him even to the Pillars of
Hercules, but never to embrace him. The new moon, as soon as visible,
sets near but not with the sun. Endymion reluctantly sinks behind the
western horizon, and would linger until the loved one can be folded in
his arms, but his duty calls and he must turn his steps toward the
Elysian Fields to cheer the noble and good souls who await his presence,
ever cheerful and benign. Diana follows closely after and is welcomed by
the brave and beautiful inhabitants of the Peaceful Islands, but while
receiving their homage her lover hastens on toward the eastern gates,
where the golden fleece makes the morning sky resplendent.
43. Ceres and the Car op Treptolemus 127 P. Ovid. Naso,
Neder. Triptolemus (the word means three plowings) was the founder
of the Eleusinian Mysteries, and was presented by Ceres with her car
drawn by winged dragons, in which he distributed seed grain all over the
world. 44. Pluto Marries Proserpina 127 P. Ovid. Naso,
Neder. Jupiter is said to have consented to request of Pluto that
Proser- pina might revisit her mother's dwelling, and the picture
repre- sents him as very earnest in his appeal to his brother.
Since then the seed of grain has remained in the ground no longer
than four months ; the other eight it is above, in the regions of light.
In the engraving a curtain is held up by bronze figures. This seems
conclusive that it was a representation of a dra- matic scene. (See pp.
159, 186.) 45. Proserpina, according to the Greeks. Heck... 138 46. Bacchus after the
Visit to India. — Heck 138 A Roman Figure of Geres.— Heck 138
Demeter, from Etruscan Vase.— IfecZ; 138 49. Venus,
Pallas, and Dlana Inspecting the Needlework of Proserpina.— Galerie
des Peini . 142 50. Proserpina Exposed to Pluto 152
Ovid. Naso, Neder. There may have been a mild sarcasm in this artist's
mind when he drew the maid as dallying with Cupid, and the richest
mon- arch in all the earth in the distance, hastening toward her.
He succeeded, as is shown in the next engraving. 51. Pluto
Carrying Off Proserpina 152 — P. Ovid. Naso, Neder. Eternal
change is the universal law. Proserpina must go down into the Underworld
that she may rise again into light and life. The seed must be planted
under or into the soil that it may have a new birth and growth.
52. Proserpina in Pluto's Court. — Montfaucon 156 As a
personation she was the "Apparent Brilliance" of all fruits and
flowers. 53. Ceres in Hades. — Montfaucon 162 54.
Bacchus, Fauns, and Wine Jars. — Montfaucon .... 168 55. Tragic
KQTOn.^Bourhon Museum 168 56. A Group of Deities. Heck 168 Pan and Dionysus, Hygeia,
Hermes, Dionysus and Faunus, and Silenus. 57. Night with Her
Starry Canopy. — Heck 168 58. The Three Graces. Heck 168 59. Cupid Asleep in the
Arms of Venus 174 Galerie des Peint. 60. Prize Dance
between a Satyr and a Goat 174 Anticld. 61. Baubo and Ceres at
Eleusis. Galerie des Peint. 174
See page 232. 256 List of Illustrations.
Page. 62. Psyche Asleep in Hades 186 — From the
ruins of the Bath of Titus, Rome. See page 45. 63. Nymphs of
the Four Rivers in Hades 187 Tomb of the Nasons. "It
was easy for poets and mythographers, when they had once started the idea
of a gloomy land watered with the rivers of woe, to place Styx, the
stream which mates men shudder, as the boundary which separates it from
the world of Uving men, and to lead through it the channels of Lethe, in
which all things are forgotten, of Kokytos, which echoes only with
shrieks of pain, and of Pyiyphlegethon, with its waves of fire."
Acheron, in the early myths, was the only river of Hades. 64.
Etruscan Vase Group. MilUngen Dancers,
ETRUscANS.~i¥i//M?, 1 pJ. 27 198 66. Greek Convivial Scene. —
Millin, 1 ^9^ 38 198 67. Faun and Bacchante. — Bour. Mus 206
68. Thyrsus-Bearer. — Bourbon Museum 206 69. Bacchante and
Faun.— 5o«r. Mus 206 These three verj' graceful pictures were drawn
from paintings on walls in Herculaneum. KiN<T, Torch, Fruit, and
Thyrsus Bearer 212 71. Hercules RECLiNiNG.^.^oe5f«, Bassirilievi,
70 212 Here is an actual ceremony in which many actors took parts
; with an altar, flames, a torch, tripod, the kerux (crier), bac-
chantes, fauns, and other attendants on the celebration of the
Mystei'ies, including tlie role of an angel with wings. Marriage (or
Adultery) or Mars and Venus 220 — Montfaucon. See pages
231-2.37. If this is from a scene as played at the Bacchic theaters,
those dramas must have been very popular, and justly so. To those
theaters, which were supported by the government in Athens and in many
other cities througliout Greece, we owe the immortal works of ^schylus
and Soph- ocles. Page. 73, Musical Conference
(Epithalamium) 228 S. Bartoli, Admiranda, pi. 62, Written
music was evidently used, for one of the company is writing as if
correcting the score, and writing with the left hand. Venus Rising
from the QEA.—Ovid. Naso, Verburg.This goddess was called Venus Anadyomene, for
the poets said she rose from the sea — the morning sunlight on the foam
of the sea on the shore of the island Cythera, or Cyprus, or
wherever the poet may choose as the favored place for the manifestation
of the generative power of nature, and wherever flowers show her
footprints. The loves bear aloft her magic girdle, which Juno borrowed as
a means of winning back Jupiter's affection. The rose and the myrtle were
sacred to her. Her worship was the motive for building temples in
Cy- thera and in Cyprus at Amathus, Idalium. Golgoi, and in many
other places. (See engravings, Jupiter Disguised as Diana, and Calisto Ovid.
Naso, Neder. The gods were said to have the power, and to practice
as- suming the form of any other of their train, or of any animal.
In these disguises they are supposed to play tricks on each other as
here. Diana is the queen of the night sky, Calisto is one of her
attendants, and many white clouds float over the blue ether (Jupiter),
and are chased by the winds (as dogs). 76. Hercules, Deianeira, and
Nessus 234 — Ovid. Naso, Neder. The sun nears the end of the
day's journey; he is aged and weary ; dark clouds obscure his face and
obstruct his way, but stUl Hercules loves beautiful things, and
Deianeira, the fair daughter of the king of ^tolia, retires with him into
exile. At a ford the hero entrusts his bride to Nessiis the Centaur,
to carry across the river. The ferryman made love to the lady, and
Hercules resented the indiscretion, and wounded him by an arrow. Dying
Nessus tells Deianeira to keep his blood as a love charm in case her husband
should love another woman. Hercules did love another, named lole, and
Deianeira dipped his shirt in the blood of Nessus — the crimson' and
scarlet clouds of a splendid sunset are made glorious by the blood
of Nessus, and Hercules is burnt on the funeral pyre of scarlet and
crimson sunset clouds. Illustrations. The Sacrifice. — Herculaneum, Hercules
Drunk. Zoegciy BassirilievU tav. Proserpina Enthroned in Hades- — Archdol.
Zeit. 240 The principle of growth rules the Underworld.
80. Bacchante and Centaur. — Bourbon Mus .Bacchante and Cbntauress.
Bourbon Mus Eleusinian Priest and Assistants 247 83. The Fates. —
Zoeya, Bassirilievi, tav. 46 248 84. Supper Scene 258
85. Bacchic Bull. — Antichi Ou cover. Suppei- Scene. The
Eleusinian and Bacchic mysteries. Princeton Theological
Semmary-Speer Library PHALLIC WORSHIP: A DESCRIPTION OF THE
MYSTERIES OF THE SEX WORSHIP OF THE ANCIENTS
WITH THE HISTORY OF THE MASCULINE CROSS AN ACCOUNT
OF PRIMITIVE SYMBOLISM, HEBREW PHALLICISM, BACCHIC FESTIVALS,
SEXUAL RITES, AND THE MYSTERIES OF THE ANCIENT FAITHS, LONDON. The
present somewhat slight sketch of a most interesting subject, whilst not
claiming entire originality, yet embraces the cream, so to speak, of
various learned works of great cost, some of which being issued for private
circulation only, are almost unobtainable. During the past few
years several philophical have been
written upon ancient Roman Phallicism in conjunction with other kindred
matters f but not devoting themselves entirely to one ancient mystery
y the writers have only partially ventilated the subject. The
present work seeks to obviate this failing by confining its attention
entirely to the Sex Worship or Phallicism of the ancient world. Many of
the topics have received only slight treatmenty being little more than
indicated ; but the work will enable the reader to understand and possess
the truth concerning the Phallic Worship of the Ancients .
Those who desire to know more, or to authenticate the statements
and facts given in this book , should consult the large and important
works of Payne Knight , Higgins , Dulaure, Rolky Inman , and other
writers . It was intended to give with this volume a list of
works and miscellaneous pieces written on the subject , but the
length of the list prevented its being added. Sex Worship has prevailed
among all peoples of ancient times, sometimes contemporaneous and often
mixed with Star, Serpent, and Tree Worship. The powers of nature
were sexualised and endowed with the same feelings, passions, and performing
the same functions as human beings. Among the ancients, whether the
Sun, the Serpent, or the Phallic Emblem was worshipped, the idea was
the same — the veneration of the generative principle. Thus we find
a close relationship between the various mythologies of the ancient
nations, and by a comparison of the creeds, ideas, and symbols, can see
that they spring from the same source, namely, the worship of the forces
and operations of nature, the original of which was doubt- less Sun
worship. It is not necessary to prove that in primitive times the Sun
must have been worshipped under various names, and venerated as the
Creator, Light, Source of Life, and the Giver of Food. In the
earliest times the worship of the generative power was of the most simple
and pure character, rude in manner, primitive in form, pure in idea, the
homage of man to the supreme power, the Author of life.
Afterwards the worship became more depraved, a religion of feeling,
sensuous bliss, corrupted by a priesthood who were not slow to take advantage
of this state of affairs, and inculcated with it profligate and
mysterious ceremonies, union of gods with women, religious prosti-
tution and other degrading rites. Thus it was not long before the emblems
lost their pure and simple meaning and became licentious statues and
debased objects. Hence we have in Rome the depraved ceremonies at the
worship of BACCO, who became, not only the representative of the
creative power, but the god of pleasure and licentiousness. The
corrupted religion always found eager votaries, willing to be captives to a
pleasant bondage by the impulse of physical bliss, as was the case in
among the Romans. Sex worship personifies became the supreme and
governing deity, enthroned as the ruling God over all ; dissent therefrom
was impious and punished. The priests of the worship compelled obedience.
Monarchs complied to the prevailing faith and became willing devotees to
the shrines of VENERE on the one hand, and of BACCO and PRIAPO on
the other, by appealing to the most animating passion of
nature. This is the worship of the reproductive powers, the sexual
appointments revered as the emblems of the divine creator. The one male,
the active creative power ; the other the female or passive power ; ideas
which were represented by various emblems in different countries.These
emblems were of a pure and sacred character, and used at a time when the
prophets and priests spoke plain speech, understood by a rude and
primitive people ; although doubtless by the common people the
emblems were worshipped themselves, even as at the present day in
Roman Catholic countries the more ignorant, in many cases, actually
worship the images and pictures themselves, while to the higher and more
intelligent minds they are only symbols of a hidden object of worship. In
the same manner, the concealed meaning or hidden truth was to the
ignorant and rude people of early times entirely unknown, while the
priests and the more learned kept studiously concealed the meaning of the
ceremonies and symbols. Thus, the primitive idea became mixed with
profligate, debased ceremonies, and lascivious rites, which in time
caused the more pure part of the worship to be forgotten. But Phallicism
is not to be judged from these sacred orgies, any more than
Christianity from the religious excitement and wild excesses of a
few Christian sects during the Middle Ages. In a work on the
“ Worship of the Generative Powers during the Middle Ages,” the writer
traces the superstition westward, and gives an account of its prevalence
through- out Southern and Western Europe during that period.
The worship was very prevalent in Italy, and was invariably carried
by the Romans into the countries they conquered, where they introduced
their own institutions and forms of worship. Accordingly, in Britain
have been found numerous relics and remains ; and many of our
ancient customs are traced to a Phallic origin. “ When we cross over to
Britain,” says the writer, “ we find this worship established no less
firmly and extensively in that island; statuettes of Priapus, Phallic
bronzes. io Phallic Worship pottery covered with
obscene pictures, are found wherever there are any extensive remains of
Roman occupation, as our antiquaries know well. The numerous
Phallic figures in bronze found in England are perfectly identical
in character with those that occur in France and Italy.” All
antiquaries of any experience know the great number of obscene subjects
which are met with among the fine red pottery which is termed Samian
ware, found so abundantly in all Roman sites in our island. “ They
represent erotic scenes, in every sense of the word, with figures of
Priapus and Phallic emblems. The Phallus, or Lingam, which stood for the
image of the male organ, or emblem of creation, has been worshipped
from time immemorial. Payne Knight describes it as of the greatest
antiquity, and as having prevailed in Egypt and all over Asia.
The women of the former country carried in their re- ligious
processions, a movable Phallus of disproportionate magnitude, which
Deodorus Siculus informs us signified the generative attribute. It has
also been observed among the idols of the native Americans and
ancient Scandinavians, while the Greeks represented the Phallus
alone, and changed the personified attribute into a distinct deity,
called Priapus. Phallus, or privy member ( membrum virile ),
signifies, “ he breaks through, or passes into.” This word survives
in German pfabl, and pole in English. Phallus is supposed
Phallic Worship ii to be of Phoenician origin,
the Greek word pallo> or phallo , “ to brandish preparatory to
throwing a missile,” is so near in assonance and meaning to Phallus, that
one is quite likely to be parent of the other. In Sanskrit it can
be traced to phal> “ to burst,” “ to produce,” “ to be fruitful ” ;
then, again, phal is “ a ploughshare,” and is also the name of Siva and
Mahadeva, who are Hindu deities. Phallus, then, was the ancient emblem
of creation : a divinity who was companion to Bacchus. The
Indian designation of this idol was Lingam, and those who dedicated
themselves to its service were to observe inviolable chastity. “ If it
were discovered,” says Crawford, “ that they had in any way departed
from them, the punishment is death. They go naked, and being
considered as sanctified persons, the women approach without scruple, nor
is it thought that their modesty should be offended by it.” SYMBOLS
OR EMBLEMS The Phallus and its emblems were representative of
the gods Bacchus, Priapus, Hercules, Siva, Osiris, Baal, and Asher,
who were all Phallic deities. The symbols were used as signs of the great
creative energy or operating power of God from no sense of mere animal
appetite, but in the highest reverence. Payne Knight, describing
the emblems, says : — “ Forms and ceremonials of a religion are not
always to be understood in their direct and obvious sense, but are
to be considered as symbolical representations of some hidden meaning
extremely wise and just, though the symbols themselves, to those who know
not their true signification, may appear in the highest degree
absurd and extravagant. It has often happened that avarice and
superstition have continued these symbolical repre- sentations for ages
after their original meaning has been lost and forgotten; they must, of
course, appear nonsensical and ridiculous, if not impious and extravagant.
Such is the case with the rite now under consideration, than which
nothing can be more monstrous and indecent, if considered in its plain
and obvious meaning, or as part of the Christian worship ; but which will
be found to be a very natural symbol of a very natural and
philosophical system of religion, if considered according to its
original use and intention.” The natural emblems were those
which from their character were most suitable representatives ; such
as poles, pillars, stones, which were sacred to Hindu, Egyptian,
and Jewish divinities. Blavalsky gives an account of the Bimlang
Stone, to be found at Narmada and other places, which is sacred to
the Hindu deity Siva ; these emblem stones were anointed, like the stone
consecrated by the Patriarch Jacob. Blavalsky further says
that these stones are “ identical in shape, meaning, and purpose with the
‘ pillars ’ set up by the several patriarchs to mark their adoration of
the Lord God. In fact, one of these patriarchal lithoi might even
now be carried in the Sivaitic processions of Calcutta without its Hebrew
derivation being suspected.” Phallic Worship
*5 THE POLE The Pole was an emblem of the Phallus, and
with the serpent upon it, was a representative of its divine wisdom
and symbol of life. The serpent upon the tree is the same in character,
both are representative of the tree of life. The story of Moses will well
illustrate this, when he erected in the wilderness this effigy, which
stood as a sign of hope and life, as the cross is used by the Catholics
of the present day ; the cross then, as now, being simply an emblem of
the Creator, used as a token of resurrection or regeneration.
iEsculapius, as the restorer of health, has a rod or Phallus with a
serpent entwined. The Rev. M. Morris has shown that the raising of
the May-pole is of Phallic origin, the remains of a custom of India
or Egypt, and is typical of the fructifying powers of spring. The
May festival was carried on with great licentious- ness by the Romans,
and was celebrated by nearly all peoples as the month consecrated to
Love. The May-day in England was the scene of riotous enjoyment,
very nearly approaching to the Roman Floralia. No wonder the
Puritans looked upon the May-pole as a relic of Paganism, and in their
writings may be gleaned much of the licentious character of the
festival. Philip Stubbes, a Puritan writer in the reign of
Elizabeth, thus describes a May-day in England : “ Every parishe,
towne, and village assemble themselves together, bothe men, women, and
children, olde and younge even indiffer- ently ; and either goyng all
together, or devidyng themselves into companies, they go some to the
woods and groves, some to one place, some to another, where thei
spend all the night in pleasant pastymes ; and in the 14
Phallic Worship mornyng they returne, bryngyng with them birch
bowes and branches of trees, to deck their assemblies withall. . .
. But their cheerest jewell thei bryng from thence is their Maie pole,
whiche thei bryng home with great veneration, as thus : thei have twentie
or fortie yoke of oxen, every oxe havyng a sweet nosegaie of
flowers placed on the tippe of his homes, and these oxen drawe home
this Maie pole (this stinckyng idoll rather), which is covered all over
with flowers and hearbes, bound rounde aboute with strynges from the top
to the bottome, and sometyme painted with variable colours, with
two or three hundred men, women, and children, folio wyng it with
great devotion. And thus beyng reared up, with handekerchiefes and
flagges streamyng on the top, thei strawe the grounde aboute, binde
greene boughes aboute it, sett up sommer haules, bowers, and arbours hard
by it. And then fall thei to banquet and feast, to leape and daunce
aboute it, as the heathen people did at the dedication of their idols,
whereof this is a perfect patterne, or rather the thyng itself.” The
ceremony was almost identical with the Roman festival, where the Phallus
was introduced with garlands. Both were attended with the same
licentiousness, for Stubbes gives a further account of the depravity
attending the festivities. PILLARS Another type of
emblem was the stone pillar, remains of which still exist in the British
Isles. These pillars or so called crosses generally consist of a shaft of
granite with a carved head. In the West of England crosses are very
common, standing in the market and receiving the name of “ The
Cross.” These stone pillars were first erected in honour of
the Phallic deity, and on the introduction of Christianity were not
destroyed, but consecrated to the new faith, doubtless to honour the
prejudices of the people. These monolisks abound in the Highlands, they
are stones set up on end, some twenty-four or thirty feet high, others
higher or lower and this sometimes where no such stones are to be
quarried. We learn that the Bacchus of the Thebans was a
pillar. The Assyrian Nebo was represented by a plain pillar,
consecrated by anointing with oil. Arnobius gives an account of this
practice, as also does Theophrastus, who speaks of it as a custom for a
superstitious man, when he passed by these anointed stones in the streets
to take out a phial of oil and pour it upon them and having fallen
on his knees to make his adorations, and so depart. In various
parts of the Bible the Pillar is referred to as of a sacred character, as
in Isaiah, “ In that day shall there be an altar to Jehovah in the midst
oi the land of Egypt, and a pillar at the border thereof to
Jehovah, and it should be for a sign and a witness to the Lord.”
The Orphic Temples were doubtless emblems of the same principle of
the mystic faiths of the ancients, the same as the Round Towers of
Ireland, a history of which was collected by O’Brien, who describes the
Towers as “ Temples constructed by the early Indian colonists of
the country in honour of the Fructifying principle of nature, emanating
as was supposed from the Sun, or the deity of desire instrumental in that
principle of universal generativeness diffused throughout all
nature.” 16 Phallic Worship According to the
same author these towers were very ancient, and of Phoenician origin, as
similar towers have been found in Phoenicia. “ The Irish themselves,”
says O’Brien, “ designated them ‘ Bail-toir,’ that is the tower of
Baal. Baal was the name of the Phallic deity, and the priest who attended
them ‘ Aoi Bail-toir ’ or superin- tendent of Baal tower.” This Baal was
worshipped wherever the Phoenicians went, and was represented by a
pillar or stone or similar objects. The stone that Jacob set up, and
anointed as a rallying place for worship, became afterwards an object of
worship to the Phoenicians. The earliest navigators of the world
were the Phoenicians, they founded colonies and extended their
commerce first to the isles of the Mediterranean, from thence to
Spain, and then to the British Isles. Historians have accorded to them
the settlements of the most remote localities. They formed settlements in
Cyprus, and Atticum, according to Josephus, was the principal
settle- ment of the Tyrians upon this island. Strabo’s testimony
is, that the Phoenicians, even before Homer, had possessed themselves of
the best part of Spain. Where the Phoenicians settled, there they
introduced their religion, and it is in these countries we find the
remains of ancient stone and pillar worship. LOGGIN STONES, ETC.
Loggin stones are by Payne Knight considered as Phallic emblems. “
Their remains,” he says, “ are still extant, and appear to have been
composed of a crone set into the ground, and another placed upon the
point of it and so nicely balanced that the wind could move it,
though so ponderous that no human force, unaided by machinery, can
displace it; whence they are called * logging rocks * and * pendre
stones/ as they were anciently * living stones * and 4 stones of God/
titles which differ very little in meaning from that on the Tyrian
coins. Damascius saw several of them in the neighbourhood of Heliopolis
or Baalbeck, in Syria, particularly one which was then moved by the wind
; and they are equally found in the Western extremities of Europe
and the Eastern extremities of Asia, in Britain, and in China.”
Bryant mentions it as very usual among the Egyptians to place with
much labour one vast stone upon another for a religious memorial.
Such immense masses, being moved by causes seeming so inadequate,
must naturally have conveyed the idea of spontaneous motion to ignorant
observers, and persuaded them that they were animated by an emanation of
the vital spirit, whence they were consulted as oracles, the
responses of which could always be easily obtained by interpreting the
different oscillatory movements into nods of approbation or
dissent. Phallic emblems abounded at Heliopolis in Syria, and
many other places, even in modern times. A physician, writing to Dr. Inman,
says : “ I was in Egypt last winter (1865-66), and there certainly are
numerous figures of gods and kings, on the walls of the temple at
Thebes, depicted with the male genital erect. The great temple at
Karnak is, in particular, full of such figures, and the temple of
Danclesa likewise, though that is of much later date, and built merely in
imitation of old Egyptian art. The same inspiring bas-reliefs arc pointed
out by Ezek. I remember one scene of a king (Rameses II) returning
in triumph with captives, many of whom were undergoing the process of
castration.” Obelisks were also representative of the same
emblem. Payne Knight mentions several terminating in a cross, which
had exactly the appearance of one of those crosses erected in churchyards
and at cross roads for the adoration of devout persons, when devotions
were more prevalent than at present. Stones, pillars, obelisks, stumps
of trees, upright stones have all the same signification, and are
means by which the male element was symbolised. TRIADS The
Triune idea is to be found in the system of almost every nation. All have
their Trinity in Unity, three in one, which can be distinctly recognised
in the cross. The Triad is the male or triple, the constitution of
the three persons of most sacred Trinity forming the Triune system.
In the analysis of the subject by Rawlinson, we find the Trinity
consisted of Asshur or Asher, associated with Anu and Hea or Hoa. Asshur,
the supreme god of the Assyrians, represents the Phallus or central organ
or the Linga, the membrum virile . The cognomen Anu was given to the
right testis, while that of Hea designated the left. It was
only natural that Asshur being deified, his appendages should be deified
also. “ Beltus,” says Inman, “ was the goddess associated with them, the
four together made up Arba or Arba-il, the four great gods,” the
Trinity in Unity. The idea thus broached receives great confirmation when
we examine the particular stress laid in ancient times respecting the
right and left side of the body in connection with the Triad names given
to offspring mentioned in the scriptures with the titles given to
Anu and Hea. The male or active principle was typified by the idea of
“solidity ” and “ firmness,” and the females or passive by the principles
of “ water,” “ soft- ness,” and other feminine principles. Thus the
goddess Hea was associated with water, and according to Forlong,
the Serpent, the ruler ot the Abyss, was sometimes repre- sented to be
the great Hea, without whom there was no creation or life, and whose
godhead embraced also the female element water. Rawlinson
also gives a similar conclusion, and states as far as he could determine
the third divinity or left side was named Hea, and he considered this
deity to correspond to Neptune. Neptune was the presiding deity of the
deep, ruler of the abyss, and king of the rivers. As Darwin and his
coadjutors teach, mankind, in common with all animal life, originally
sprung from the sea ; so physiology teaches that each individual had
origin in a pond of water. The fruit of man is both solid and fluid. It
was natural to imagine that the two male appendages had a distinct
duty, that one formed the infant, the other water in which it lived, that
one generated the male, the other the female offspring ; and the
inference was then drawn that water must be feminine, the emblem of all
possible powers of creation. It will be seen that the names
and signification of the gods and their attributes had no ideal meaning.
Thus in Genesis xxx. 13, we find Asher given as a personality,
which signifies “ to be straight,” “ upright,” “ fortunate,” “
happy.” Asher was the supreme god of the Assyrians, 20
Phallic Worship the Vedic Mahadeva, the emblem of the human
male structure and creative energy. The same idea of the creator is
still to be seen in India, Egypt, Phoenicia, the Mediterranean, Europe,
and Denmark, depicted on stone relics. To a rude and ignorant
people, enslaved with such a religion, it was an easy step from the crude
to the more refined sign, from the offensive to a more pictured and
less obnoxious symbol, from the plain and self-evident to the mixed,
disguised, and mystified, from the unclothed privy member to the
cross. THE CROSS The Triad, or Trinity, has been
traced to Phoenicia, Egypt, Japan, and India ; the triple deities Asshur,
Anu, and Hea forming the “ tau.” This mark of the Christians,
Greeks, and Hebrews became the sign or type of the deities representing
the Phallic trinity, and in time became the figure of the cross. It is
remarked by Payne Knight that “ The male organs of generation are sometimes
found represented by signs of the same sort, which properly should
be called the symbol of symbols. One of the most remarkable of these is a
cross, in the form of the letter (T), which thus served as the emblem of
creation and generation before the Church adopted it as a sign of
salvation.” Another writer says, “ Reverse the position of
the triple deities Asshur, Anu, Hea, and we have the figure of the
ancient ‘ tau * of the Christians, Greeks, and ancient Hebrews. It is one
of the oldest conventional forms of the cross. It is also met with in
Gallic, Oscan, Arcadian, Etruscan, original Egyptian, Phoenician,
Ethiopic, and Pelasgian forms. The Ethiopic form of the * tau ’ is
the exact prototype and image of the cross, or rather, to state the
fact in order of merit and time, the cross is made in the exact image of
the Ethiopic * tau.’ The fig-leaf, having three lobes to it, became a
symbol of the triad. As the male genital organs were held in early
times to exemplify the actual male creative power, various natural
objects were seized upon to express the theistic idea, and at the same
time point to those parts of the human form. Hence, a similitude was
recognised in a pillar, a heap of stones, a tree between two rocks, a
club between two pine cones, a trident, a thyrsus tied round with
two ribbons with the two ends pendant, a thumb and two fingers, the
caduceus. Again, the conspicuous part of the sacred triad Asshur is
symbolised by a single stone placed upright — the stump of a tree, a
block, a tower, spire, minaret, pole, pine, poplar, or palm tree,
while eggs, apples, or citrons, plums, grapes, and the like
represented the remaining two portions, altogether called Phallic
emblems. Baal-Shalisha is a name which seems designed to perpetuate the
triad, since it signifies c my Lord the Trinity,’ or ‘ my God is three.’
” We must not omit to mention other Phallic emblems, such as
the bull, the ram, the goat, the serpent, the torch, fire, a knobbed
stick, the crozier ; and still further per- sonified, as Bacchus,
Priapus, Dionysius, Hercules, Hermes, Mahadeva, Siva, Osiris, Jupiter,
Moloch, Baal, Asher, and others. If Ezekiel is to be
credited, the triad, T, as Asshur, Anu, and Hea, was made of gold and
silver, and was in his day not symbolically used, but actually
employed; for he bluntly says “ whoredom was committed with the
images of men/’ or, as the marginal note has it, images of “ a male ”
(Ezek. xvi. 17). It was with this god-mark — a cross in the form of the
letter T — that Ezekiel was directed to stamp the foreheads of the men of
Judaea who feared the Lord (Ezek. ix. 4). That the cross, or
crucifix, has a sexual origin we determine by a similar rule of research
to that by which comparative anatomists determine the place and habits
of an animal by a single tooth. The cross is a metaphoric tooth
which belongs to an antique religious body physical, and that essentially
human. A study of some of the earliest forms of faith will lift the veil
and explain the mystery. India, China, and Egypt have
furnished the world with a genus of religion. Time and culture have
divided and modified it into many species and countless varieties.
However much the imagination was allowed to play upon it, the animus of
that religion was sexuality — worship of the generative principle of man
and nature, male and female. The cross became the emblem of the
male feature, under the term of the triad — three in one. The
female was the unit ; and, joined to the male triad, con- stituted a
sacred four. Rites and adoration were sometimes paid to the male,
sometimes to the female, or to the two in one. So great was
the veneration of the cross among the ancients that it was carried as a
Phallic symbol in the religious processions of the Egyptians and
Persians. Higgins also describes the cross as used from the
earliest times of Paganism by the Egyptians as a banner, above
which was carried the device of the Egyptian cities. The cross was
also used by the ancient Druids, who held it as a sacred emblem. In Egypt
it stood for the significa- tion of eternal life. Schedeus describes it
as customary for the Druids “ to seek studiously for an oak tree,
large and handsome, growing up with two principal arms in the form
of a cross , besides the main stem upright. If the two horizontal arms
are not sufficiently adapted to the figure, they fasten a cross-beam to
it. This tree they consecrate in this manner : Upon the right branch
they cut in the bark, in fair characters, the word ‘ Hesus ’ ; upon
the middle, or upright stem, the word ‘ Taranius 9 ; upon the left branch
* Belenus * ; over this, above the going off of the arms, they cut the
name of the god Thau ; under all, the same repeated, Thau ”
YONI There is in Hindostan an emblem of great sanctity, which
is known as the “ Linga-Yoni.” It consists of a simple pillar in the
centre of a figure resembling the outline of a conical ear-ring. It is
expressive of the female genital organ both in shape and idea. The Greek
letter “ Delta ” is also expressive of it, signifying the door of a
house. Yoni is of Sanskrit origin. Yanna, or Yoni, means the
vulva, the womb, the place of birth, origin, water, a mine, a hole, or pit. As
Asshur and Jupiter were the representatives of the male potency, so
Juno and Venus were representatives of the female attribute. Moore, in
his “ Oriental Fragments,” says : “ Oriental writers have generally
spelled the word, * Yoni/ which I prefer to write ‘ IOni/ As Lingam
24 Phallic Worship was the vocalised cognomen of the
male organ, or deity, so IOni was that of hers.” Says R. P. Knight : “
The female organs of generation were revered as symbols of the
generative powers of nature or of matter, as those of the male were of
the generative powers of God. They are usually represented emblematically
by the shell Concha Veneris , which was therefore worn by devout
persons of antiquity, as it still continues to be by the pilgrims of many
of the common people of Italy ” (“ On the worship of Priapus,” p.
28). If Asshur, the conspicuous feature of the male Creator,
is supplied with types and representative figures of himself, so the
female feature is furnished with substitutes and typical imagery of
herself. One of these is technically known as the sistrum of
Isis. It is the virgin’s symbol. The bars across the fenestrum> or
opening, are bent so that they cannot be taken out, and indicate that the
door is closed. It signifies that the mother is still virgo intacta — a
truly immaculate female — if the truth can be strained to so
denominate a mother . The pure virginity of the Celestial Mother
was a tenet of faith for 2,000 years before the accepted Virgin Mary now
adored was born. We might infer that Solomon was acquainted with the
figure of the sistrum , when he said, “ A garden enclosed is my
spouse, a spring shut up, a fountain sealed ” (Song of Sol. iv.
12). The sistrum , we are told, was only used in the worship of
Isis, to drive away Typhon (evil). The Argha is a contrite form, or
boat-shaped dish or plate used as a sacrificial cup in the worship of
Astarte, Isis, and Venus. Its shape portrays its own significance.
The Argha and crux ansata were often seen on Egyptian monuments, and yet
more frequently on bas-reliefs. Phallic Worship
*3 Equivalent to Iao, or the Lingam, we find Ab, the Father,
the Trinity ; Asshur, Anu, Hea, Abraham, Adam, Esau, Edom, Ach, Sol,
Helios (Greek for Sun), Dionysius, Bacchus, Apollo, Hercules, Brahma,
Vishnu, Siva, Jupiter, Zeus, Aides, Adonis, Baal, Osiris, Thor, Oden ;
the cross, tower, spire, pillar, minaret, tolmen, and a host of others
; while the Yoni was represented by IO, Isis, Astarte, Juno, Venus,
Diana, Artemis, Aphrodite, Hera, Rhea, Cybele, Ceres, Eve, Frea, Frigga ;
the queen of Heaven, the oval, the trough, the delta, the door, the ark,
the ship, the chasm, a ring, a lozenge, cave, hole, pit. Celestial Virgin,
and a number of other names. Lucian, who was an Assyrian, and visited the
temple of Dea Syria, near the Euphrates, says there are two Phalli
standing in the porch with this inscription on them, “ These Phalli I,
Bacchus, dedicate to my step-mother Juno.” The Papal religion
is essentially the feminine, and built on the ancient Chaldean basis. It
clings to the female element in the person of the Virgin Mary.
Naphtali (Gen. xxx. 8) was a descendant of such worshippers, if
there be any meaning in a concrete name. Bear in mind, names and pictures
perpetuate the faith of many peoples. Neptoah is Hebrew for “ the vulva,”
and, A1 or El being God, one of the unavoidable renderings of Naphtali
is “the Yoni is my God,” or “I worship the Celestial Virgin.” The
Philistine towns generally had names strongly connected with sexual
ideas. Ashdod, aisb or esby means “ fire, heat,” and dod means “ love, to
love,” “ boiled up,” “ be agitated,” the whole signifying “ the
heat of love,” or “ the fire which impels to union.” Could not those
people exclaim, Our " God is love ” ? (i John iv. 8).
The amatory drift of Solomon’s song is undisguised. 26
Phallic Worship though the language is dressed in the habiliments
of seem- ing decency. The burden of thought of most of it bears
direct reference to the Linga-Yoni. He makes a woman say, “ He shall lie
all night betwixt my breasts ” (S. of S. i. 1 3). Again, of the Phallus,
or Linga, she says, “ I will go up the palm-tree, I will take hold of the
boughs thereof ” (vii. 8). Palm-tree and boughs are euphemisms of
the male genitals. The nations surrounding the Jews practising the
Phallic rites and worshipping the Phallic deities, it is not to be
supposed that the Jews escaped their influence. It is indeed certain that
the worship of the Phallics was a great and important part of the Hebrew
worship. This will be the more plainly seen when we bear in
mind the importance given to circumcision as a covenant between God and
man. Another equally suggestive custom among the Patriarchs was the act
of taking the oath, or making a sacred promise, which is commented
upon by Dr. Ginsingburg in Kitto’s Cyclopadia. He says : “ Another
primitive custom which obtained in the patriarchal age was, that the one
who took the oath put his hand under the thigh of the adjurer (Gen. xxiv.
2, and xlvii. 29). This practice evidendy arose from the fact that
the genital member, which is meant by the euphe- mistic expression thigh
, was regarded as the most sacred part of the body, being the symbol of
union in the tenderest relation of matrimonial life, and the seat whence
all issue proceeds and the perpetuity so much coveted by the
ancients. Compare Gen. xlvi. 26 ; Exod. i. 5 ; Judges vii. 30. Hence the
creative organ became the symbol of the Creator , and the object of
worship among all nations of antiquity. It is for this reason that
God claimed it as a sign of the covenant between himself and his
chosen people in the rite of circumcision. Nothing therefore could render
the oath more solemn in those days than touching the symbol of creation,
the sign of the covenant, and the source of that issue who may at
any future period avenge the breaking a compact made with their
progenitor.” From this we learn that Abraham, himself a Chaldee, had
reverence for the Phallus as an emblem of the Creator. We also learn that
the rite of circumcision touches Phallic or Lingasic worship. From
Herodotus we are informed that the Syrians learned circumcision from the
Egyptians, as did the Hebrews. Says Dr. Inman : “I do not know anything
which illustrates the difference between ancient and modern times
more than the frequency with which circumcision is spoken of in the
sacred books, and the carefulness with which the subject is avoided now.”
The mutilation of male captives, as practised by Saul and David,
was another custom among the worshippers of Baal, Asshur, and other
Phallic deities. The practice was to debase the victims and render them
unfit to take part in the worship ?nd mysteries. * Some idea can be
formed of the esteem in which people in former times cherished the male
or Phallic emblems of creative power when we note the sway that power
exercised over them. If these organs were lost or disabled, the
unfortunate one was unfitted to meet in the congregation of the
Lord, and disqualified to minister in the holy temples. Excessive
28 Phallic Worship punishment was
inflicted upon the person who had the temerity to injure the sacred
structure. If a woman were guilty of inflicting injury, her hand was cut
off without pity (Deut.). The great object of veneration in the Ark
of the Covenant was doubtless a Phallic emblem, a symbol of the
preservation of the germ of life. In the historical and
prophetic books of the Old Testament we have repeated evidence that the
Hebrew worship was a mixture of Paganism and Judaism, and that
Jehovah was worshipped in connection with other deities. Hezekiah is
recorded in 2 Kings xviii. 3, to have “ removed the high places, and
broken the images, and cut down the groves (Ashera), and broken in
pieces the brazen serpent that Moses had made, for unto those days
the children of Israel did burn incense to it.” The Ashera, or sacred
groves here alluded to are named from the goddess Ashtaroth, which Dr.
Smith describes as the proper name of the goddess ; while Ashera is
the name of the image of the goddess. Rawlinson, in his Five Great
Monarchies of the Ancient World, describes Ashera to imply something that
stood straight up, and probably its essential element was the stem of a
tree, an analogy suggestive of the Assyrian emblem of the Tree of
Life of the Scriptures. This stem, which stood for the emblem of life,
was probably a pillar, or Phallus, like the Lingi of the Hindus,
sometimes erected in a grove or sacred hollow, signifying the Yoni and
Lingi. We read in 2 Kings xxi. 7, that Manasseh “ set up a graven
image in the grove,” and, according to Dr. Oort, the older reading is in
2 Chron. xxxiii. 7, 15, where it is an image or pillar. During the reigns
of the Jewish kings, the worship of Baal, the Priapus of the Romans,
was extensively practised by the Jews. Pillars and groves were reared in
his name. In front of the Temple of Baal, in Samaria, was
erected an Ashera (i Kings xvi. 31, 32) which e ven survived
the temple itself, for although Jehu destroyed the Temple of Baal, he
allowed the Ashera to remain (2 Kings x. 18, 19; xiii. 6). Bernstein, in
an important work on the origin of the legends of Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob, undoubtedly proves that during the monarchial period of
Israel, the sanguinary wars and violent conflicts between the two
kingdoms of Judah and Israel were between the Elohistic and Jehovahic
faiths, kept alive by the priesthood at the chief places of worship,
concerning the true patriarch, and each party manufacturing and
inserting legends to give a more ancient and important part to its
own faith. It is not at all improbable that the conflict was
between the two portions of the Phallic faith, the Lingam and Yoni
parties. The cause of this conflict was the erection of the consecrated
stones or pillars which were put up by the Hebrews as objects of Divine
worship. The altar erected by Jacob at Bethel was a pillar, for
according to Bernstein the word altar can only be used for the
erection of a pillar. Jacob likewise set up a Matzebah, or pillar
of stone, in Gilead, and finally he set one up upon the tomb of
Rachel. A great portion of the facts have been suppressed by
the translators, who have given to the world histories which have glossed
over the ancient rites and practices of the Jews. An instance
is given by Forlong on the important word “ Rock or Stone,” a Phallic
emblem to which the Jews addressed their devotions. He says, “It
should not be, but I fear it is, necessary to explain to mere
English readers of the Old Testament that the Stone or Rock Tsur
was the real old god of all Arabs , Jews, and Phoenicians, that this
would be clear to Christians were the Jewish writings translated
according to the first ideas of the people and Rock used as it ought to
be, instead of ‘ God/ * Theos/ ‘ Lord,’ etc., being written where Tsur
occurs . Numerous instances of this are given in Dr. Ort’s worship
of Baal in Israel, where praises, addresses, and adorations are addressed
to the Rock , instance, Deut. xxxii. 4, 18. Stone pillars were also used
by the Hebrews as a memorial of a sacred covenant, for we find Jacob
setting up a pillar as a witness, that he would not pass over it.
Connected with this pillar worship is the ceremony of anointing by
pouring oil upon the pillar, as practised by Jacob at Bethel. According
to Sir W. Forbes, in his Oriental Memoirs, the “ pouring of oil upon a
stone is practised at this day upon many a shapeless stone
throughout Hindostan.” Toland gives a similar account of the
Druids as practising the same rite, and describes many of the stones
found in England as having a cavity at the top made to receive the
offering. The worship of Baal like the worship of Priapus was attended
with prostitution, and we find the Jews having a similar custom to the
Babylonians. Payne Knight gives the following account of it in
his work : “ The women of every rank and condition held it to be an
indispensable duty of religion to prostitute themselves once in their
lives in her temple to any stranger who came and offered money, which,
whether little or much, was accepted, and applied to a sacred
purpose. Women sat in the temple of Venus awaiting the selection of
the stranger, who had the liberty of choosing whom Phallic
Worship 51 he liked. A woman once seated must remain until
she has been selected by a piece of silver being cast into her lap,
and the rite performed outside the temple.” Similar customs existed
in Armenia, Phrygia, and even in Palestine, and were a feature of the
worship of Baal Peor. The Hebrew prophets described and denounced
these excesses which had the same characteristics as the rites of the
Babylonian priesthood. The identical custom is referred to in 1 Sam. ii.
22, where “ the sons of Eli lay with the women that assembled at the door
of the tabernacle of the congregation.” Words and history
corroborate each other, or are apt to do so if contemporaneous. Thus
kadesh , or kaesb , designate in Hebrew “ a consecrated one,” and
history tells the unworthy tale in descriptive plainness, as will
be shown in the sequel. That the religion was dominating and
imperative is determined by Deut. xvii. 12, where presumptuous
refusal to listen to the priest was death to the offender. To us it is
inconceivable that the indulgence of passion could be associated with
religion, but so it was. Much as it is covered over by altered words and
substituted expressions in the Bible — an example of which see men
for male organ, Ezek. xvi. 17 — it yet stands out offensively bold. The
words expressive of “ sanctuary,” “ conse- crated,” and “ Sodomite,” are
in the Hebrew essentially the same. They indicate the passion of amatory
devotion. It is among the Hindus of to-day as it was in Greece and
Italy of classic times ; and we find that “ holy women ” is a title given
to those who devote their bodies to be used for hire, the price of which
hire goes to the service of the temple. As a general rule, we
may assume that priests who make or expound the laws, which they declare
to be from God, are men, and, consequently, through all time, have
thought, and do think, of the gratification of the masculine half of
humanity. The ancient and modern Orientals are not exceptions. They lay
it down as a momentous fact that virginity is the most precious of all
the possessions of a woman, and, being so, it ought, in some way or
other, to be devoted to God. Throughout India, and also through the
densely inhabited parts of Asia, and modern Turkey there is a class
of females who dedicate themselves to the service of the deity whom they
adore ; and the rewards accruing from their prostitution are devoted to
the service of the temple and the priests officiating therein.
The temples of the Hindus in the Dekkan possessed their
establishments. They had bands of consecrated dancing-girls called the
Women of the Ido/, selected in their infancy by the priests for the
beauty of their persons, and trained up with every elegant accomplishment
that could render them attractive. We also find David and the
daughters of Shiloh per- forming a wild and enticing dance ; likewise we
have the leaping of the prophets of Baal. It is again
significant that a great proportion of Bible names relate to “ divine,”
sexual, generative, or creative power ; such as Alah, “ the strong one ”
; Ariel, “ the strong Jas is El”; Amasai, “Jah is firm”; Asher,
<c the male ” or “ the upright organ ” ; Elijah, “ El is Jah ” ;
Eliab, “ the strong father ” ; Elisha, iC El is upright ” ; Ara, “ the
strong one,” “ the hero ” ; Aram, " high,” or, “ to be uncovered ” ;
Baal Shalisha, “ my Lord the trinity,” or “ my God is three ” ;
Ben-zohett, M son of firmness ” ; Camon, “ the erect One ” ; Cainan,
Phallic Worship 33 “ he stands upright ”
; these are only a few of the many names of a similar
signification. It will be seen, from what has been given, that the
Jews, like the Phoenicians (if they were not the same), had the
same ceremonies, rites, and gods as the surrounding nations, but enough
has been said to show that Phallic worship was much practised by the
Jews. It was very doubtful whether the Jehovah-worship was not of a
monotheistic character, but those who desire to have a further insight
into the mysteries of the wars between the tribes should consult
Bernstein’s valuable work. EARTH MOTHER The following
interesting chapter is taken from a valuable book issued a few years ago
anonymously : “ Mother Earth ” is a legitimate expression, only
of the most general type. Religious genius gave the female quality
to the earth with a special meaning. When once the idea obtained that our
world was feminine , it was easy to induce the faithful to believe that
natural chasms were typical of that part which characterises woman.
As at birth the new being emerges from the mother, so it was supposed
that emergence from a terrestrial cleft was equivalent to a new birth. In
direct proportion to the resemblance between the sign and the thing
signified was the sacredness of the chink, and the amount of virtue
which was imparted by passing through it. From natural caverns being
considered holy, the veneration for apertures in stones, as being equally
symbolical, was a natural transition. Holes, such as we refer to, are
still to be seen in those structures which are called Druidical, both
in the British Isles and in India. It is impossible to say when
these first arose ; it is certain that they survive in India to this day.
We recognise the existence of the emblem among the Jews in Isaiah li. i,
in the charge to look “ to the hole of the pit whence ye are digged.”
We have also an indication that chasms were symbolical among the
same people in Isaiah lvii. 5 , where the wicked among the Jews were
described as “ inflaming themselves with idols under every green tree,
and slaying the children in the valleys under the clefts of the rocks.”
It is possible that the “ hole in the wall ” (Ezek. viii. 7) had a
similar signification. In modern Rome, in the vestibule of the
church close to the Temple of Vesta, I have seen a large perforated stone
, in the hole of which the ancient Romans are said to have placed their
hands when they swore a solemn oath, in imitation, or, rather, a
counterpart, of Abraham swearing his servant upon his thigh — that
is the male organ. Higgins dwells upon these holes, and says : “
These stones are so placed as to have a hole under them, through which
devotees passed for religious purposes. There is one of the same kind in
Ireland, called St. Declau’s stone. In the mass of rocks at Bramham
Crags there is a place made for the devotees to pass through. We read in
the accounts of Hindostan that there is a very celebrated place in Upper
India, to which immense numbers of pilgrims go, to pass through a
place in the mountains called “ The Cow’s Belly.” In the Island of
Bombay, at Malabar Hill, there is a rock upon the surface of which there
is a natural crevice, which communicates with a cavity opening below.
This place is used by the Gentoos as a purification of their sins.
Phallic Worship 35 which they say is effected by their
going in at the opening below, and emerging at the cavity above — “ born
again.” The ceremony is in such high repute in the neighbouring
countries that the famous Conajee Angria ventured by stealth, one night,
upon the Island, on purpose to perform the ceremony, and got off
undiscovered. The early Christians gave them a bad name, as if from envy
; they called these holes “ Cunni Diaboli ” (. Atiacalypsis)
BACCHANALIA AND LIBERALIA FESTIVALS The Romans called the feasts of
Bacchus, Bacchanalia and Liberalia, because Bacchus and Liber were the
names for the same god, although the festivals were celebrated at
different times and in a somewhat different manner. The latter, according
to Payne Knight, was celebrated on the 17th of March, with the most
licentious gaiety, when an image of the Phallus was carried openly
in triumph. These festivities were more particularly cele- brated
among the rural or agricultural population, who, when the preparatory
labour of the agriculturist was over, celebrated with joyful activity
Nature’s reproductive powers, which in due time was to bring forth the
fruits. During the festival a car containing a huge Phallus was
drawn along accompanied by its worshippers, who in- dulged in obscene
songs and dances of wild and extrava- gant character. The gravest and
proudest matrons suddenly laid aside their decency and ran screaming
among the woods and hills half-naked, with dishevelled hair, interwoven
with which were pieces of ivy or vine. }6
Phallic Worship The Bacchanalian feasts were celebrated in the
latter part of October when the harvest was completed. Wine and
figs were carried in the procession of the Bacchants, and lastly came the
Phalli, followed by honourable virgins, called canephora , who carried
baskets of fruit. These were followed by a company of men who carried
poles, at the end of which were figures representing the organ of
generation. The men sung the Phallica and were crowned with violets and
ivy, and had their faces covered with other kinds of herbs. These were
followed by some dressed in women’s apparel, striped with white,
reaching to their ancles, with garlands on their heads, and wreaths
of flowers in their hands, imitating by their gestures the state of
inebriety. The priestesses ran in every direction shouting and screaming,
each with a thyrsus in their hands. Men and women all intermingled,
dancing and frolicking with suggestive gesticulations. Deodorus
says the festivals were carried into the night, and it was then
frenzy reached its height. He says, “ In performing the solemnity virgins
carry the thyrsus, and run about frantic, halloing ‘ Evoe ’ in honour of
the god ; then the women in a body offer the sacrifices, and roar out
the praises of Bacchus in song as if he were present, in imitation
of the ancient Maenades, who accompanied him.” These festivities were carried
into the night, and as the celebrators became heated with wine, they
degenerated into extreme licentiousness. Similar enthusiastic
frenzy was exhibited at the Luper- calian Feasts instituted in honour of
the god Pan (under the shape of a Goat) whose priests, according to Owen
in his Worship of Serpents , on the morning of the Feast ran naked
through the streets, striking the married women they met on the hands and
belly, which was held as an omen promising fruitfulness. The nymphs
performing the same ostentatious display as the Bacchants at the
festival of Bacchanalia. The festival of Venus was celebrated
towards the begin- ning of April, and the Phallus was again drawn in a
car, followed by a procession of Roman women to the temple of
Venus. Says a writer, “ The loose women of the town and its
neighbourhood, called together by the sounding of horns, mixed with the
multitude in perfect nakedness, and excited their passions with obscene
motions and language until the festival ended in a scene of mad
revelry, in which all restraint was laid aside.” It is said
that these festivals took their rise from Egypt, from whence they were
brought into Greece by Metampus, where the triumph of Osiris was
celebrated with secret rites, and from thence the Bacchanals drew their
original ; and from the feasts instituted by Isis came the orgies
of Bacchus. DRUID AND HEBREW FAITHS It seems not at all
improbable that the deities wor- shipped by the ancient Britons and the
Irish, were no other then the Phallic deities of the ancient Syrians
and Greeks, and also the Baal of the Hebrews. Dionysius Periegites,
who lived in the time of Augustus Csesar, states that the rites of
Bacchus were celebrated in the British Isles ; while Strabo, who lived in
the time of Augustus and Tiberius, asserts that a much earlier
writer described the worship of the Cabiri to have come
originally from Phoenicia. Higgins, in his History of the Druids,
says, the supreme god above the rest was called Seodhoc and Baal. The
name of Baal is found both in Wales, Gaul, and Germany, and is the same
as the Hebrew Baal. The same god, according to O’Brien, was the
chief deity of the Irish, in whose honour the round towers were
erected, which structures the ancient Irish themselves designated
Bail-toir, or the towers of Baal. In Numbers, xxii, will be found a
mention of a similar pillar consecrated to Baal. Many of the same customs
and superstitions that existed among the Druids and ancient Irish,
will likewise be found among the Israelites. On the first day of
May, the Irish made great fires in honour of Baal, likewise offering him
sacrifices. A similar account is given of a custom of the Druids by
Toland, in an account of the festival of the fires ; he says : — “ on
May-day eve the Druids made prodigious fires on these earns, which
being everyone in sight of some other, could not but afford a glorious
show over a whole nation.” These fires are said to be lit even to the
present day by the Aboriginal Irish, on the first of May, called by
them Bealtine, or the day of Belan’s fire, the same name as given
them in the Highlands of Scotland. A similar practice to this will
be noticed as mentioned in the II Book of Kings, where the Canaanites in
their worship of Baal, are said to have passed their children through the
fire of Baal, which seems to have been a common practice, as Ahaz, King
of Israel, is blamed for having done the same thing. Higgins in his
Anacalypsis y says this super- stitious custom still continues, and that
on “ particular days great fires are lighted, and the fathers taking the
children in their arms, jump or run through them, and thus pass their
children through them ; they also light two fires at a little distance
from each other, and drive their cattle between them.” It will be found
on reference to Deuteronomy, that this very practice is specially
for- bidden. In the rites of Numa, we have also the sacred fire of
the Irish ; of St. Bridget, of Moses, of Mithra, and of India,
accompanied with an establishment of nuns or vestal virgins. A sacred
fire is said to have been kept burning by the nuns of Kildare, which was
established by St. Bridget. This fire was never blown with the
mouth, that it might not be polluted, but only with bellows ; this fire
was similar to that of the Jews, kept burning only with peeled wood, and
never blown with the mouth. Hyde describes a similar fire which was
kept burning in the same way by the ancient Persians, who kept
their sacred fire fed with a certain tree called Hawm Mogorum ; and
Colonel Vallancey says the sacred fire of the Irish was fed with the wood
of the tree called Hawm. Ware, the Romish priest, relates that at
Kildare, the glorious Bridget was rendered illustrious by many
miracles, amongst which was the sacred fire, which had been kept burning
by nuns ever since the time of the Virgin. The earliest
sacred places of the Jews were evidently sacred stones, or stone circles,
succeeded in time by temples. These early rude stones, emblems of
the Creator, were erected by the Israelites, which in no way differed
from the erections of the Gentiles. It will be found that the Jews to
commemorate a great victory, or to bear witness of the Lord, were all
signified by stones : thus, Joshua erected a stone to bear witness ;
Jacob put up a stone to make a place sacred ; Abel set up the same
for a place of worship ; Samuel erected a stone as a boundary, which was
to be the token of an agreement made in the name of God. Even Maundrel in
his travels names several that he saw in Palestine. It is curious
that where a pillar was erected there, sometime after, a temple was
put up in the same manner that the Round Towers of Ireland were, — always
near a church, but never formed part of it. We find many instances in the
Scriptures of the erection of a number of stones among the early
Israelites, which would lead us to conclude that it was not at all
unlikely that the early places of worship among them, were similar to the
temples found in various parts of Great Britain and Ireland. It is
written in Exodus xxiv. 4, that Moses rose up early in the morning, and
builded an altar under the hill, and twelve pillars, according to
the twelve tribes of Israel, were erected. It is also given out that when
the children of Israel should pass over the Jordan, unto the land which
the Lord giveth them, they should set up great stones, and plaster
them with plaster, and also the words of the law were to be written
thereon. In many other places stones were ordered to be set up in the
name of the Lord, and repeated instances are given that the stones should
be twelve in number and unhewn. Stone temples seem to have
been erected in all countries of the world, and even in America, where,
among the early American races are to be found customs, superstitions,
and religious objects of veneration, similar to the Phoenicians. An
American writer says : — “ There is sufficient evidence that the
religious customs of the Mexicans, Peruvians and other American races,
are nearly identical with those of the ancient Phoenicians. . . .
We moreover discover that many of their religious terms have,
etymologically, the same origin.” Payne Knight, in his Worship of
Priapus, devotes much of his work to show that the temples erected at
Stonehenge and other places, were of a Phoenician origin, which was
simply a temple of the god Bacchus. STONEHENGE A TEMPLE OF
BACCHUS Of all the nations of antiquity the Persians were the
most simple and direct in the worship of the Creator. They were the
puritans of the heathen world, and not only rejected all images of God and
his agents, but also temples and altars, according to Herodotus,
whose authority we prefer to any other, because he had an
opportunity of conversing with them before they had adopted any foreign
superstitions. As they worshipped the ethereal fire without any medium of
personification or allegory, they thought it unworthy of the dignity
of the god to be represented by any definite form, or cir-
cumscribed to any particular place. The universe was his temple, and the
all-pervading element of fire his only symbol. The Greeks appear
originally to have held similar opinions, for they were long without
statues and Pausanias speaks of a temple at Siciyon, built by
Adrastus — who lived in an age before the Trojan war — which consisted of
columns only, without wall or roof, like the Celtic temples of our
northern ancestors, or the Phyrcetheia of the Persians, which were
circles of stones in the centre of which was kindled the sacred fire,
the symbol of the god. Homer frequently speaks of places of worship
consisting of an area and altar only, which were probably enclosures like
those of the Persians, with an altar in the centre. The temples dedicated
to the creator Bacchus, which the Greek architects called hypathral
, seem to have been anciently of this kind, whence probably came
the title (“ surround with columns ”) attributed to that god in the
Orphic litanies. The remains of one of these are still extant at
Puzznoli, near Naples, which the inhabitants call the temple of Serapis ;
but the ornaments of grapes, vases, etc., found among the ruins, prove
it to have been of Bacchus. Serapis was indeed the same deity
worshipped under another form, being usually a personification of the
sun. The architecture is of the Roman times ; but the ground plan is
probably that of a very ancient one, which this was made to replace —
for it exactly resembles that of a Celtic temple in Zeeland,
published in Stukeley’s Itinerary. The ranges of square buildings which
enclose it are not properly parts of the temple, but apartments of the
priests, places for victims and sacred utensils, and chapels dedicated to
the sub- ordinate deities, introduced by a more complicated and
corrupt worship and probably unknown to the founder of the original
edifice. The portico, which runs parallel with these buildings, encloses
the temenss , or area of sacred ground, which in the pyratheia of the
Persians was circular, but is here quadrangular, as in the Celtic
temple in Zeeland, and the Indian pagoda before described. In the
centre was the holy of holies, the seat of the god, consisting of a
circle of columns raised upon a basement, without roof or walls, in the
middle of which was probably the sacred fire or some other symbol of the
deity. The square area in which it stood was sunk below the natural
level of the ground, and, like that of the Indian pagoda, appears to have
been occasionally floated with water; the drains and conduits being still
to be seen, as also several fragments of sculpture representing waves,
serpents, and various aquatic animals, which once adorned the
basement. The Bacchus here worshipped, was, as we learn from the
Orphic hymn above cited, the sun in his character of extinguisher of the
fires which once pervaded the earth. He is supposed to have done this by
exhaling the waters of the ocean and scattering them over the land, which
was thus supposed to have acquired its proper temperature and
fertility. For this reason the sacred fire, the essential image of the
god, was surrounded by the element which was principally employed in
giving effect to the beneficial exertion* of the great attribute.
From a passage of Hecatasus, preserved by Diodorus Siculus, it
seems evident that Stonehenge and all the monu- ments of the same kind
found in the north, belong to the same religion which appears at some
remote period to have prevailed over the whole northern hemisphere.
According to that ancient historian, the Hyperboreans inhabited an island
beyond Gaul , as large as Sicily , in which Apollo was worshipped in a
circular temple considerable for its si^e and riches. Apollo, we know, in
the language of the Greeks of that age, can mean no other than the
sun, which according to Caesar was worshipped by the Germans, when
they knew of no other deities except fire and the moon. The island can
evidently be no other than Britain, which at that time was only known to
the Greeks by the vague reports of the Phoenician mariners ; and so
uncertain and obscure that Herodotus, the most inquisitive and
credulous of historians, doubts of its existence. The circular temple of
the sun being noticed in such slight and imperfect accounts, proves that
it must have been some- thing singular and important ; for if it had been
an inconsiderable structure, it would not have been mentioned
44 Phallic Worship at all ; and if there
had been many such in the country, the historian would not have employed
the singular number. Stonehenge has certainly been a circular
temple, nearly the same as that already described of the Bacchus at
Puzznoli, except that in the latter the nice execution and beautiful
symmetry of the parts are in every respect the reverse of the rude but
majestic simplicity of the former. In the original design they differ but
in the form of the area. It may therefore be reasonably supposed that
we have still the ruins of the identical temple described by
Hecataeus, who, being an Asiatic Greek, might have received his
information from Phoenician merchants, who had visited the interior parts
of Britain when trading there for tin. Anacrobius mentions a temple of
the same kind and form, upon Mount Zilmissus, in Thrace, dedicated
to the sun under the title of Bacchus Sebrazius. The large obelisks of
stone found in many parts of the north, such as those at Rudstone, and
near Boroughbridge, in Yorkshire, belong to the same religion ; obelisks
being, as Pliny observes, sacred to the sun, whose rays they
represented both by their form and name . — Payne Knight* s Worship of
Priapus. BUNS AND RELIGIOUS CAKES Says Hyslop : — “
The hot cross-buns of Good Friday, and the dyed eggs of Pasch or Easter
Sunday, figured in the Chaldean rites just as they do now. The buns
known, too, by that identical name, were used in the worship of the Queen
of Heaven, the goddess Easter (Ishtar or Astarte), as early as the days
of Cecrops, the founder of Athens, 1,500 years before the Christian era.”
“ One species of bread,” says Bryant, “ ‘ which used to be offered to
the gods, was of great antiquity, and called Bonn. 9 Diogenes
mentioned * they were made of flour and honey.’ ” It appears that
Jeremiah the Prophet was familiar with this lecherous worship. He says :
— “ The children gather wood, the fathers kindle the fire, and the women
knead the dough to make cakes to the Queen of Heaven (Jer. vii.,
18). Hyslop does not add that the “ buns ” offered to the Queen of
Heaven, and in sacrifices to other deities, were framed in the shape of
the sexual organs, but that they were so in ancient times we have
abundance of evidence. Martial distinctly speaks of such
things in two epigrams, first, wherein the male organ is spoken of,
second, wherein the female part is commemorated ; the cakes being made
of the finest flour, and kept especially for the palate of the fair
one. Wilford (Asiatic Researches) says : — “ When the people of
Syracuse were sacrificing to goddesses, they offered cakes called mullot
, shaped like the female organ, and in some temples where the
priestesses were probably ventriloquists, they so far imposed on
the credulous multitude who came to adore the Vulva as to make them
believe that it spoke and gave oracles.” We can understand how such
things were allowed in licentious Rome, but we can scarcely comprehend
how they were tolerated in Christian Europe, as, to all innocent
surprise we find they were, from the second part of the “ Remains of the
Worship of Priapus ” : that in Saintonge, in the neighbourhood of La
Rochelle, small cakes baked in 46 Phallic
Worship the form of the Phallus are made as offerings at
Easter, carried and presented from house to house. Dulare states
that in his time the festival of Palm Sunday, in the town of Saintes, was
called le fete des pinnes — feast of the privy members — and that during
its continuance the women and children carried in the procession a
Phallus made of bread, which they called a pinne, at the end of
their palm branches ; these pinnes were subsequently blessed by
priests, and carefully preserved by the women during the year. Palm
Sunday 1 Palm, it is to be remembered, is a euphemism of the male organ,
and it is curious to see it united with the Phallus in Christendom.
Dulare also says that, in some of the earlier inedited French books
on cookery, receipts are given for making cakes of the salacious
form in question, which are broadly named. He further tells us those
cakes symbolized the male, in Lower Limousin, and especially at B rives ;
while the female emblem was adopted at Clermont, in Auvergne, and
other places. THE ARK AND GOOD FRIDAY The ark of
the covenant was a most sacred symbol in the worship of the Jews, and
like the sacred boat, or ark of Osiris, contained the symbol of the
principle of life, or creative power. The symbol was preserved with
great veneration in a miniature tabernacle, which was considered the
special and sanctified abode of the god. In size and manner of
construction the ark of the Jews and the sacred chest of Osiris of the
Egyptians were Phallic Worship 47 exactly
alike, and were carried in processions in a similar manner
The ark or chest of Osiris was attended by the priests, and was
borne on the shoulders of men by means of staves. The ark when taken from
the temple was placed upon a table, or stand, made expressly for the
purpose, and was attended by a procession similar to that which
followed the Jewish ark. According to Faber, the ark was a symbol of the
earth or female principle, containing the germ of all animated nature,
and regarded as the great mother whence all things sprung. Thus the
ark, earth, and goddess, were represented by common symbols, and
spoken of in the old Testament as the “ ashera.” The sacred emblems
carried in the ark of the Egyptians were the Phallus, the Egg, and the
Serpent ; the first representing the sun, fire, and male or generative
principle — the Creator ; the second, the passive or female, the
germ of all animated things — the Preserver ; and the last the Destroyer
: the Three of the sacred Trinity. The Hindu women, according to Payne
Knight, still carry the lingam, or consecrated symbol of the
generative attribute of the deity, in solemn procession between two
serpents ; and in a sacred casket, which held the Egg and the Phallus in
the mystic processions of the Greeks, was also a Serpent. “
The ark,” says Faber, “ was reverenced in all the ancient religions.” It
was often represented in the form of a boat, or ship, as well as an
oblong chest. The rites of the Druids, with those of Phoenicia and
Hindostan, show that an ark, chest, cell, boat, or cavern, held an
important place in their mysteries. In the story of Osiris, like
that of the Siva, will be found the reason for the emblem being
carried in the sacred chest, and the explanation of one of the mysteries
of the Egyptian priests. It is said that Osiris was tom to pieces by the
wicked Typhon, who after cutting up the body, distributed the parts over
the earth. Isis recovered the scattered limbs, and brought them
back to Egypt ; but, being unable to find the part which distinguished
his sex, she had an image made of wood, which was enshrined in an ark,
and ordered to be solemnly carried about in the festivals she had
instituted in his honour, and celebrated with certain secret rites.
The Egg, which accompanied the Phallus in the ark was a very common
symbol of the ancient faiths, which was considered as containing the
generation of life. The image of that which generated all things in
itself. Jacob Bryant says : — “ The Egg, as it contained the
principles of life was thought no improper emblem of the ark, in
which were preserved the future world. Hence in the Dionysian and in
other mysteries, one part of the nocturnal ceremony consisted in the
consecration of an egg.” This egg was called the Mundane Egg.
The ark was likewise the symbol of salvation, the place of safety,
the secret receptacle of the divine wisdom. Hence we find the ark of the
Jews containing the tables of the law ; we find too that the Jews were
ordered to place in the ark Aaron’s rod, which budded, conveying
the idea of symbolised fertility : showing that the ark was considered as
the receptacle of the life principle — as an emblem of the Creator.
With the Egyptians Osiris was supposed to be buried in the ark,
which represented the disappearance of the deity. His loss, or death,
constituted the first part of the mysteries, which consisted of
lamentations for his decease. After the third day from his death, a
procession went down to the seaside in the night, carrying the ark with
them. During Phallic Worship 49
the passage they poured drink offerings from the river, and when the
ceremony had been duly performed, they raised a shout that Osiris had
again risen — that the dead had been restored to life. After this
followed the second or joyful part of the mysteries. The similarity of
this custom with the Good Friday celebrations of the death of Jesus, and
the rejoicings on account of his resurrection on Easter Sunday,
will be at once observed. It is further said that the missing part of
Osiris was eaten by a fish, which made the fish a sacred symbol. Thus we
have the Ark, Fish, and Good Friday brought together, also the Egg, for
the origin of the Easter eggs is very ancient. A bull is represented
as breaking an egg with his horn, which signified the liberating of
imprisoned life at the opening or spring of the year, 'which had been
destroyed by Typhon. The opening of the year at that time commenced in
the spring, pot according to our present reckoning ; thus, the Egg
was a symbol of the resurrection of life at the spring, or our Easter
time. The author of the “ Worship of the Generative Powers,” describes
the origin of the hot cross- bun at Easter, which is a further
parallelism of the Christian and Pagan festivals. The author also draws a
further conclusion — that the cakes or buns have in reality a
Phallic origin, for in France and other parts, the Easter cakes were
called after the membrun virile. The writer says : — “ In the primitive
Teutonic mythology, there was a female deity named in old German, Ostara,
and in Anglo-Saxon, Eastre or Eostre ; but all we know of her is
the simple statement of our father of history, Bede, that her festival
was celebrated by the ancient Saxons in the month of April, from which
circumstance that month was named by the Anglo-Saxons, Easter-mona or
Eoster- mona, and that the name of the goddess had been frequently
50 Phallic Worship given to the Paschal
time, with which it was identical. The name of this goddess was given to
the same month by the old Germans and by the Franks, so that she must
have been one of the most highly honoured of the Teutonic deities,
and her festival must have been a very important one and deeply implanted
in the popular feelings, or the Church would not have sought to identify
it with one of the greatest Christian festivals of the year. It is
under- stood that the Romans considered this month as dedicated to
Venus, no doubt because it was that in which the productive powers of
nature began to be visibly developed. When the Pagan festival was adopted
by the Church, it became a moveable feast, instead of being fixed to
the month of April. Among other objects offered to the goddess at
this time were cakes, made no doubt of fine flour, but of their form we
are ignorant. The Christians when they seized upon the Easter festival,
gave them the form of a bun, which indeed was at that time the
ordinary form of bread ; and to protect themselves and those who
ate them from any enchantment — or other evil influences which might
arise from their former heathen character — they marked them with the
Christian symbol — the cross. Hence we derived the cakes we still eat at
Easter under the name of hot cross-buns, and the superstitious
feelings attached to them ; for multitudes of people still believe
that if they failed to eat a hot cross-bun on Good Friday, they would be
unlucky all the rest of the year.” ARCHITECTURAL PILLARS DEVISED FROM
THE LOTUS The earliest capital seems to have been the bell
or seed vessel, simply copied without alteration, except a little
expansion at the bottom to give it stability. The leaves of some other
plant were then added to it, and varied in different capitals according
to the different meanings intended to be signified by the accessory
symbols. The Greeks decorated it in the same manner, with the
foliage of various plants, sometimes of the acanthus and sometimes of the
aquatic kind, which are, however, generally so transformed by excessive
attention to elegance, that it is difficult to distinguish them. The most
usual seems to be the Egyptian acacia, which was probably adopted
as a mystic symbol for the same reasons as the olive, it being equally
remarkable for its powers of reproduction. Theophrastus mentions a large
wood of it in the “ Thebaid,” where the olive will not grow, so
that we reasonably suppose it to have been employed by the Egyptians in
the same symbolical sense. From them the Greeks seem to have borrowed it
about the time of the Macedonian conquest, it not occurring in any
of their buildings of a much earlier date ; and as for the story of the
Corinthian architect, who is said to have invented this kind of capital
from observing a thorn growing round a basket, it deserved no credit,
being fully contradicted by the buildings still remaining in Upper
Egypt. The Doric column, which appears to have been the only
one known to the very ancient Greeks, was equally derived from the
Nelumbo ; its capital being the same •eed-vessel pressed flat, as it
appears when withered and Phallic Worship 5
Z dry — the only state probably in which it had been seen in
Europe. The flutes in the shaft were made to hold spears and staves,
whence a spear-holder is spoken of in the “ Odyssey ” as part of a
column. The triglyphs and blocks of the cornice were also derived from
utility, they having been intended to represent the projecting ends
of the beams and rafters which formed the roof. The Ionic capital
has no bell, but volutes formed in imitation of sea-shells, which have
the same symbolical meaning. To them is frequently added the ornament
which architects call a honeysuckle, but which seems to be meant
for the young petals of the same flower viewed horizontally, before they
are opened or expanded. Another ornament is also introduced in this
capital, which they call eggs and anchors, but which is, in fact,
composed of eggs and spear-heads, the symbols of female generation
and male destructive power, or in the language of mythology, of Venus and
Mars. Payne Knight . BELLS IN RELIGIOUS WORSHIP Stripped,
however, of all this splendour and magnifi- cence it was probably nothing
more than a symbolical instrument, signifying originally the motion of
the elements, like the sistrum of Isis, the cymbals of Cybele, the
bells of Bacchus, etc., whence Jupiter is said to have overcome the
Titans with his aegis, as Isis drove away Typhon with her sistrum, and
the ringing of the bells and clatter of metals were almost universally
employed as a means of consecration, and a charm against the destroying
and inert powers. Even the Jews welcomed the new moon with such noises,
which the simplicity of the early ages employed almost everywhere to
relieve her during eclipses, supposed then to be morbid affections
brought on by the influence of an adverse power. The title Priapus y by
which the generative attribute is dis- tinguished, seems to be merely a
corruption of Briapuos (clamorous) ; the beta and pi being commutable
letters, and epithets of similar meaning, being continually applied
both to Jupiter and Bacchus by the poets. Many Priapic figures, too,
still extant, have bells attached to them, as the symbolical statues and
temples of the Hindus are ; and to wear them was a part of the worship
of Bacchus among the Greeks : whence we sometimes find them of
extremely small size, evidently meant to be worn as amulets with the
phalli, lunulas, etc. The chief priests of the Egyptians and also the
high priests of the Jews, hung them as sacred emblems to their sacerdotal
garments ; and the Brahmins still continue to ring a small bell at
the interval of their prayers, ablutions, and other acts of
devotion ; which custom is still preserved in the Roman Catholic Church
at the elevation of the host. The Lacedaemonians beat upon a brass vessel
or pan, on the death of their kings, and we still retain the custom
of tolling a bell on such occasions, though the reason of it is not
generally known, any more than that of other remnants of ancient ceremonies
still existing . 1 It will be observed that the bells used by the
Christians very probably came direct from the Buddhists. And from
the same source are derived the beads and rosaries of the Roman
Catholics, which have been used by the Buddhist 1 The above description
is from Payne Knight's "Symbolical Language of ancient Art and
Mythology." monks for over 2,000 years. Tinkling bells were
suspended before the shrine of Jupiter Ammon, and during the service the
gods were invited to descend upon the altars by the ringing of bells ;
they were likewise sacred to Siva. Bells were used at the worship of
Bacchus, and were worn on the garments of the Bacchantes, much in
the same manner as they are used at our carnivals and masquerades.
HINDU PHALLICISM The following curious fable is given by Sir
William Jones, as one of the stories of the Hindus for the origin
of Phallic devotion : — “ Certain devotees in a remote time had
acquired great renown and respect, but the purity of the art was wanting,
nor did their motives and secret thoughts correspond with their professions
and exterior conduct. They affected poverty, but were attached to the
things of this world, and the princes and nobles were constantly
sending their offerings. They seemed to sequester them- selves from this
world ; they lived retired from the towns ; but their dwellings were
commodious, and their women numerous and handsome. But nothing can be hid
from their gods, and Sheevah resolved to put them to shame. He
desired Prakeety (nature) to accompany him ; and assumed the appearance
of a Pandaram of a graceful form. Prakeety was herself a damsel of
matchless worth. She went before the devotees who were assembled
with their disciples, awaiting the rising of the sun, to perform
their ablutions and religious ceremonies. As she advanced
Phallic Worship 55 the refreshing breeze moved
her flowing robe, showed the exquisite shape which it seemed intended to
conceal. With eyes cast down, though sometimes opening with a timid
but tender look, she approached them, and with a low enchanting voice
desired to be admitted to the sacrifice. The devotees gazed on her with
astonishment. The sun appeared, but the purifications were forgotten
; the things of the Poo j ah (worship) lay neglected ; nor was any
worship thought of but that of her. Quitting the gravity of their
manners, they gathered round her as flies round the lamp at night —
attracted by its splendour, but consumed by its flame. They asked from
whence she came ; whither she was going. ‘ Be not offended with us
for approaching thee, forgive us our importunities. But thou art
incapable of anger, thou who art made to convey bliss ; to thee, who
mayest kill by indifference, indignation and resentment are unknown. But
whoever thou mayest be, whatever motive or accident might have
brought thee amongst us, admit us into the number of thy slaves ; let us
at least have the comfort to behold thee.’ Here the words faltered on the
lip, and the soul seemed ready to take its flight ; the vow was
forgotten, and the policy of years destroyed. Whilst the devotees
were lost in their passions, and absent from their homes, Sheevah entered
their village with a musical instrument in his hand, playing and
singing like some of those who solicit charity. At the sound of his
voice, the women immediately quitted their occupation ; they ran to see
from whom it came. He was as beautiful as Krishen on the plains of Matra.
Some dropped their jewels without turning to look for them ; others
let fall their garments without perceiving that they discovered
those abodes of pleasure which jealousy as well as decency had ordered to
be concealed. All pressed forward with their offerings, all wished to
speak, all wished to be taken notice of, and bringing flowers and
scattering them before him, said — ‘ Askest thou alms ! thou who are made
to govern hearts. Thou whose countenance is as fresh as the
morning, whose voice is the voice of pleasure, and they breath like that
of Vassant (Spring) in the opening of the rose I Stay with us and we will
serve thee ; nor will we trouble thy repose, but only be zealous how
to please thee/ The Pandaram continued to play, and sung the loves
of Kama (God of Love), of Krishen and the Gopia, and smiling the gentle
smiles of fond desire. But the desire of repose succeeds the waste of
pleasure. Sleep closed the eyes and lulled the senses. In the
morning the Pandaram was gone. When they awoke they looked round with
astonishment, and again cast their eyes on the ground. Some directed to
those who had formerly been remarked for their scrupulous manners,
but their faces were covered with their veils. After sitting awhile in
silence they arose and went back to their houses, with slow and troubled
steps. The devotees returned about the same time from their wanderings
after Prakeety. The days that followed were days of embarrass- ment
and shame. If the women had failed in their modesty, the devotees had
broken their vows. They were vexed at their weakness, they were sorry for
what they had done ; yet the tender sigh sometimes broke forth, and
the eyes often turned to where the men first saw the maid — the women,
the Pandaram. “But the women began to perceive that what the
devotees foretold came not to pass. Their disciples, in consequence,
neglected to attend them, and the offerings from the princes and nobles
became less frequent than Phallic Worship
57 before. They then performed various penances ; they
sought for secret places among the woods unfrequented by man ; and having
at last shut their eyes from the things of this world, retired within
themselves in deep meditation, that Sheevah was the author of their
misfortunes. Their understanding being imperfect, instead of bowing the
head with humility, they were inflamed with anger ; instead of contrition
for their hypocrisy, they sought for vengeance. They performed new
sacrifices and incantations, which were only allowed to have effect in
the end, to show the extreme folly of man in not submitting to the will
of heaven. “ Their incantations produced a tiger, whose mouth
was like a cavern and his voice like thunder among the mountains. They
sent him against Sheevah, who with Prakeety was amusing himself in the
vale. He smiled at their weakness, and killing the tiger at one blow
with his club, he covered himself with his skin. Seeing them-
selves frustrated in this attempt, the devotees had recourse to another,
and sent serpents against him of the most deadly kind ; but on approaching
him they became harmless, and he twisted them round his neck. They
then sent their curses and imprecations against him, but they all
recoiled upon themselves. Not yet disheartened by all these
disappointments, they collected all their prayers, their penances, their
charities, and other good works, the most acceptable sacrifices ; and
demanding in return only vengeance against Sheevah, they sent a
fire to destroy his genital parts. Sheevah, incensed at this attempt,
turned the fire with indignation against the human race ; and mankind
would soon have been destroyed, had not Vishnu, alarmed at the
danger, implored him to suspend his wrath. At his entreaties
JS Phallic Worship Sheevah relented ; but it
was ordained that in his temples those parts should be worshipped \ which
the false doctrines had impiously attempted to destroy.” THE
CROSS AND ROSARY The key which is still worn with the Priapic hand,
as an amulet, by the women of Italy appears to have been an emblem
of the equivocal use of the name, as the language of that country
implies. Of the same kind, too, appears to have been the cross in the
form of the letter tau> attached to a circle, which many of the
figures of Egyptian deities, both male and female, carry in their left
hand ; and by the Syrians, Phoenicians and other inhabitants of
Asia, representing the planet Venus, worshipped by them as the
emblem or image of that goddess. The cross in this form is sometimes
observable on coins, and several of them were found in a temple of
Serapis, demolished at the general destruction of those edifices by the
Emperor Theodosius, and were said by the Christian antiquaries of
that time to signify the future life. In solemn sacrifices, all the
Lapland idols were marked with it from the blood of the victims ; and it
occurs on many Runic ornaments found in Sweden and Denmark, which are of
an age long anterior to the approach of Christianity to those
countries, and probably to its appearance in the world. On some of the
early coins of the Phoenicians, we find it attached to a chaplet of beads
placed in a circle, so as to form a complete rosary, such as the Lamas of
Thibet and China, the Hindus, and the Roman Catholics now tell over
while they pray. Beads were anciently used to reckon time, and a
circle, being a line without termination, was the natural emblem of
its perpetual continuity ; whence we often find circles of beads upon the
heads of deities, and enclosing the sacred symbols upon coins and other
monuments. Perforated beads are also frequently found in tombs,
both in the northern and southern parts of Europe and Asia, whence
are fragments of the chaplets of consecration buried with the deceased.
The simple diadem, or fillet, worn round the head as a mark of
sovereignty, had a similar meaning, and was originally confined to the
statues of deities and deified personages, as we find it upon the
most ancient coins. Chryses, the priest of Apollo, in the “ Iliad,” brings
the diadem, or sacred fillet, of the god upon his sceptre, as the most
imposing and invocable emblem of sanctity ; but no mention is made of its
being worn by kings in either of the Homeric poems, nor of any
other ensign of temporal power and command, except the royal staff or
sceptre. THE LOTUS The double sex typified by the
Argha and its contents is by the Hindus represented by the “ Mymphcea ”
or Lotus, floating like a boat on the boundless ocean, where the
whole plant signifies both the earth and the two principles of its
fecundation. The germ is both Meru and the Linga ; the petals and
filaments are the mountains which encircle Meru, and are also a type of
the Yoni; the leaves of the calyx are the four vast regions to the
cardinal points of Meru ; and the leaves of the plant are the Dwipas or
isles round the land of Jambu. As this plant or lily was probably the
most celebrated of all the vegetable creation among the mystics of the
ancient world, and is to be found in thousands of the most beautiful
and sacred paintings of the Christians of this day — I detain my reader
with a few observations respecting it. This is the more necessary as it
appears that the priests have now lost the meaning of it ; at least this
is the case with everyone of whom I have made enquiry ; but it is like
many other very odd things, probably understood in the Vatican, or
the crypt of St. Peter’s. Maurice says that among the different plants
which ornament our globe, there is not one which has received so much
honour from man as the Lotus or Lily, in whose consecrated bosom Brahma
was born, and Osiris delighted to float. This is the sublime, the
hallowed symbol that eternally occurs in oriental mythology, and in truth
not without reason, for it is itself a lovely prodigy. Throughout all the
northern hemispheres it was everywhere held in profound veneration,
and from Savary we learn that the veneration is yet continued among the
modern Egyptians. And we find that it still continues to receive the
respect if not the adoration of a great part of the Christian
world, unconscious, perhaps, of the original reason of this conduct.
Higgins’s Anacalypsis. The following is an account given of it by
Payne Knight, in his curious dissertation on Phallic Worship : The Lotus
is the Nelumbo of Linnaeus. This plant grows in the water, among its
broad leaves puts forth a flower, in the centre of which is formed the
seed vessel. shaped like a bell or inverted cone, and perforated on
the top with little cavities or cells, in which the seeds grow. The
orifices of these cells being too small to let the seeds drop out when
ripe, they shoot forth into new plants in the places where they are
formed : the bulb of the vessel serving as a matrix to nourish them,
until they acquire such a degree of magnitude as to burst it open and
release themselves, after which, like other aquatic weeds, they
take root wherever the current deposits them. This plant, therefore,
being thus productive of itself, and vegetating from its own matrix,
without being fostered in the earth, was naturally adopted as the symbol
of the productive power of the waters, upon which the active spirit
of the Creator operated in giving life and vegetation, to matter. We
accordingly find it employed in every part of the northern hemisphere,
where the symbolical religion, improperly called idolatry , does or ever
did prevail. The sacred images of ihe Tartars, Japanese, and
Indians are almost placed upon it, of which numerous instances
occur in the publications of Kcempfer, Sonnerat, etc. The Brahma of India
is represented as sitting upon his Lotus throne, and the figure upon the
Isaaic table holds the stem of this plant surmounted by the seed vessel
in one hand, and the Cross representing the male organs of
generation in the other ; thus signifying the universal power, both
active and passive, attributed to that goddess.” Nimrod says : — “
The Lotus is a well-known allegory, of which the expansive calyx
represents the ship of the gods floating on the surface of the water ;
and the erect flower arising out of it, the mast thereof. The one
was the galley or cockboat, and the other the mast of cockayne ;
but as the ship was Isis or Magna Mater, the female principle, and the
mast in it the male deity, these parts of 62
Phallic Worship the flower came to have certain other significations,
which seem to have been as well known at Samosata as at Benares.
This plant was also used in the sacred offices of the Jewish religion. In
the ornaments of the temple of Solomon, the Lotus or lily is often
seen.” The figure of Isis is frequently represented holding
the stem of the plant in one hand, and the cross and circle in the
other. Columns and capitals resembling the plant are still existing among
the ruins of Thebes, in Egypt, and the island of Philce. The Chinese
goddess, Pussa, is represented sitting upon the Lotus, called in
that country Lin, with many arms, having symbols signifying the various
operations of nature, while similar attributes are expressed in the
Scandinavian goddess Isa or Disa. The Lotus is also a
prominent symbol in Hindu and Egyptian cosmogony. This plant appears to
have the same tendency with the Sphinx, of marking the connection
between that which produces and that which is produced. The Egyptian
Ceres (Virgo) bears in her hand the blue Lotus, which plant is acknowledged
to be the emblem of celestial love so frequently seen mounted on the back
of Leo in the ancient remains. The following is a translation of
the Purana relating to the cosmogony of the Hindus, and will be found
interesting as showing the importance attached to the Lotus in the
worship of the ancients : — “ We find Brahma emerging from the Lotus. The
whole universe was dark and covered with water. On this primeval
water did Bhagavat (God), in a masculine form, repose for the space of
one Calpho (a thousand years) ; after which period the intention of
creating other beings for his own wise purposes became pre-
dominant in the mind of the Great Creator . In the first
Phallic Worship 65 place, by his sovereign will
was produced the flower of the Lotus, afterwards, by the same will, was
brought to light the form of Brahma from the said flower ; Brahma,
emerging from the cup of the Lotus, looked round on all the four sides,
and beheld from the eyes of his four heads an immeasurable expanse of
water. Observing the whole world thus involved in darkness and submerged
in water, he was stricken with prodigious amazement, and began to
consider with himself, ‘ Who is it that produced me ? * * whence came I ?
9 ' and where ami? Brahma, thus kept two hundred years in contem-
plation, prayers, and devotions, and having pondered in his mind that
without connection of male and female an abundant generation could not be
effected — again entered into profound meditation on the power of the
Supreme, when, on a sudden by the omnipotence of God, was produced
from his right side Swayambhuvah Menu , a man of perfect beauty ; and
from the Brahma’s left side a woman named Satarupa. The prayer of Brahma
runs thus : O Bhagavat 1 since thou broughtest me from nonentity
into existence for a particular purpose, accomplish by thy benevolence
that purpose.’ In a short time a small white boar appeared, which
soon grew to the size of an elephant. He now felt God in all, and
that all is from Him, and all in Him. At length the power of the
Omnipotent had assumed the body of Vara. He began to use the instinct of
that animal. Having divided the water, he saw the earth a mighty barren
stratum. He then took up the mighty ponderous globe (freed from the
water) and spread the earth like a carpet on the face of the water ;
Brahma, contemplating the whole earth, performed due reverence, and
rejoicing exceedingly, began to consider the means of peopling
6 4 Phallic Worship the renovated
world.” Pyag, now Allahabad, was the first land said to have appeared,
but with the Brahmins it is a disputed point, for many affirm that Cast
or Benares was the sacred ground. MERU The
learned Higgins, an English judge, who for some years spent ten hours a
day in antiquarian studies, says that Moriah, of Isaiah and Abraham, is
the Meru of the Hindus, and the Olympus of the Greeks. Solomon
built high places for Ashtoreth, Astarte, or Venus, which because mounts
of Venus, mons veneris — Meru and Mount Calvary — each a slightly
skull-shaped mount, that might be represented by a bare head. The Bible
translators perpetuate the same idea in the word “ calvaria.” Prof.
Stanley denies that “ Mount Calvary ” took its name from its being the
place of the crucifixion of Jesus. Looking elsewhere and in earlier times
for the bare calvaria, we find among Oriental women, the Mount of
Venus, mons veneris > through motives of neatness or religious
sentiment, deprived of all hirsute appendage. We see Mount Calvary
imitated in the shaved poll of the head of a priest. The priests of
China, says Mr. J. M. Peebles, continue to shave the head. To make a
place holy, among the Hindus, Tartars, and people of Thibet, it was
necessary to have a mount Meru, also a Linga-Yoni, or Arba.
Phallic Worship 65 LINGAM IN THE TEMPLE OF ELORA
This marvellous work of excavation by the slow process of the
chisel, was visited by Capt. Seeley, who afterwards published a volume
describing the temple and its vast statues. The beauty of its
architectural ornaments, the innumerable statues or emblems, all hewn out
of solid rock, dispute with the Pyramids for the first place among
the works undertaken to display power and embody feeling. The stupendous
temple is detached from the neighbouring mountain by a spacious area all
round, and is nearly 250 feet deep and 150 feet broad, reaching to
the height of 100 feet and in length about 145 feet. It has
well-formed doorways, windows, staircases, upper floors, containing fine
large rooms of a smooth and polished surface, regularly divided by rows
of pillars ; the whole bulk of this immense block of isolated excavation
being upwards of 500 feet in circumference, and having beyond its
areas three handsome figure galleries or verandas supported by regular
pillars. Outside the temple are two large obelisks or phalli standing, “
of quadrangular form, eleven feet square, prettily and variously carved,
and are estimated at forty-one feet high ; the shaft above the
pedestal is seven feet two inches, being larger at the base than
Cleopatra’s Needle.” In one of the smaller temples was an image of
Lingam, “ covered with oil and red ochre, and flowers were daily
strewed on its circular top. This Lingam is larger than usual, occupying
with the altar, a great part of the room. In most Ling rooms a sufficient
space is left for the votaries to walk round whilst making the usual
invocations to the deity (Maha Deo). This deity is much frequented
by female votaries, who take especial care to keep it clean
E 66 Phallic Worship washed,
and often perfume it with oderiferous oils and flowers, whilst the
attendant Brahmins sweep the apartment and attend the five oil lights and
bell ringing.” This oil vessel resembled the Yoni (circular frame), into
which the light itself was placed. No symbol was more venerated or
more frequently met with than the altar and Ling, Siva, or Maha Deo. “
Barren women constantly resort to it to supplicate for children,” says
Seeley. The mysteries attended upon them is not described, but doubtless
they were of a very similar character to those described by the
author of the “ Worship of the Generative Powers of the Western Nations,”
showing again the similarity of the custom with those practised by the
Catholics in France. The writer says : — “ Women sought a remedy for
barren- ness by kissing the end of the Phallus ; sometimes they
appear to have placed a part of their body, naked, against the image of
the saint, or to have sat upon it. This latter trait was perhaps too bold
an adoption of the indecencies of Pagan worship to last long, or to be
practised openly ; but it appears to have been innocently represented
by lying upon the body of the saint, or sitting upon a stone,
understood to represent him without the presence of the energetic member.
In a corner in the church of the village of St. Fiacre, near Monceaux, in
France, there is a stone called the chair of St. Fiacre, which confers
fecundity upon women who sit upon it ; but it is necessary nothing
should intervene between their bare skin and the stone. In the church of
Orcival in Auvergne, there was a pillar which barren women kissed for the
same purpose and which had perhaps replaced some less equivocal
object.” The principal object of worship at Elora is the stone,
so frequently spoken of ; “ the Lingam,” says Seeley, and he
apologises for using the word so often, but asks to be excused, “ is an
emblem not generally known, but as frequently met with as the Cross in
Catholic worship.” It is the god Siva, a symbol of his generative
character, the base of which is usually inserted in the Yoni. The
stone is of a conical shape, often black stone, covered with flowers (the
Bella and Asuca shrubs). The flowers hang pendant from the crown of the
Ling stone to the spout of the Argha or Yoni (mystical matrix) ; the
same as the Phallus of the Greeks. Five lamps are commonly used in
the worship at the symbol, or one lamp with five wicks. The Lotus is
often seen on the top of the Ling. VENUS-URANIA. — THE MOTHER
GODDESS The characteristic attribute of the passive generative
power was expressed in symbolical writing, by different enigmatical
representations of the most distinguished characteristic of the female
sex : such as the shell or Concha Veneris , the fig-leaf, barley corn,
and the letter Delta, all of which occur very frequently upon coins
and other ancient monuments in this sense. The same attribute
personified as the goddess of Love, or desire, is usually represented
under the voluptuous form of a beautiful woman, frequently distinguished
by one of these symbols, and called Venus, Kypris, or Aphrodite,
names of rather uncertain mythology. She is said to be the daughter
of Jupiter and Dione, that is of the male and female personifications of
the all-pervading Spirit of the Universe ; Dione being the female Dis or
Zeus, and there- fore associated with him in the most ancient
oracular 68 Phallic Worship temple
of Greece at Dodona. No other genealogy appears to have been known in the
Homeric times ; though a different one is employed to account for the
name of Aphrodite in the “ Theogony ” attributed to Hesiod.
The Genelullides or Genoidai were the original and appropriate
ministers or companions of Venus, who was however, afterwards attended by
the Graces, the proper and original attendants of Juno ; but as both
these goddesses were occasionally united and represented in one
image, the personifications of their respective sub- ordinate attributes
were on other occasions added : whence the symbolical statue of Venus at
Paphos had a beard, and other appearances of virility, which seems
to have been the most ancient mode of representing the celestial as
distinguished from the popular goddess of that name — the one being a
personification of a general procreative power, and the other only of
animal desire or concupiscence. The refinement of Grecian art,
however, when advanced to maturity, contrived more elegant modes of
distinguishing them ; and, in a celebrated work of Phidias, we find the
former represented with her foot upon a tortoise ; and in a no less
celebrated one of Scopas, the latter sitting upon a goat. The tortoise,
being an androgynous animal, was aptly chosen as a symbol of the
double power ; and the goat was equally appropriate to what was meant to
be expressed in the other. The same attribute was on other
occasions signified by a dove or pigeon, by the sparrow, and perhaps by
the polypus, which often appears upon coins with the head of the
goddess, and which was accounted an aphrodisiac, though it is likewise of
the androgynous class. The fig was a still more common symbol, the statue
of Priapus being made of the tree, and the fruit being carried with the Phallus
in the ancient processions in honour of Bacchus, and still continuing
among the common people of Italy to be an emblem of what it anciently
meant : whence we often see portraits of persons of that country
painted with it in one hand, to signify their orthodox elevation to
the fair sex. Hence, also arose the Italian expression far la fica ,
which was done by putting the thumb between the middle and fore-fingers,
as it appears in many Priapic orna- ments extant ; or by putting the
finger or thumb into the corner of the mouth and drawing it down, of
which there is a representation in a small Priapic figure of
exquisite sculpture, engraved among the Antiquities of Herculaneum. LIBERALITY
AND SAMENESS OF THE WORLD-RELIGIONS The same liberal and
humane spirit still prevails among those nations whose religion is
founded on the same principles. “ The Siamese,” says a traveller of
the seventeenth century, “ shun disputes and believe that almost
all religions are good ” (“ Journal du Voyage de Siam ”). When the
ambassador of Louis XIV asked their king, in his master’s name, to
embrace Christianity, he replied, “ that it was strange that the king of
France should interest himself so much in an affair which concerns
only God, whilst He, whom it did concern, seemed to leave it wholly to
our discretion. Had it been agreeable to the Creator that all nations
should have had the same form of worship, would it not have been as easy
to His omnipotence to have created all men with the same send- merits
and dispositions, and to have inspired them with the same notions of the
True Religion, as to endow them with such different tempers and
inclinations ? Ought they not rather to believe that the true God has as
much pleasure in being honoured by a variety of forms and
ceremonies, as in being praised and glorified by a number of
different creatures ? Or why should that beauty and variety, so
admirable in the natural order of things, be less admirable or less
worthy of the wisdom of God in the supernatural ? ” The
Hindus profess exactly the same opinion. “ They would readily admit the
truth of the Gospel,” says a very learned writer long resident among
them, “ but they contend that it is perfectly consistent with their
Shastras. The Deity, they say, has appeared innumerable times in
many parts of this world and in all worlds, for the salvation of his
creatures ; and we adore, they say, the same God, to whom our several
worships, though different in form, are equally acceptable if they be
sincere in substance.” The Chinese sacrifice to the spirits of the
air the mountains and the rivers ; while the Emperor himself
sacrifices to the sovereign Lord of Heaven, to whom all these spirits are
subordinate, and from whom they are derived. The sectaries of Fohi have,
indeed, surcharged this primitive elementary worship with some of
the allegorical fables of their neighbours ; but still as their
creed — like that of the Greeks and Romans — remains undefined, it admits
of no dogmatical theology, and of course no persecution for opinion.
Obscure and sanguinary rites have, indeed, been wisely prescribed
on many occasions ; but still as actions and not as opinions.
Atheism is said to have been punished with death at Athens ; but
nevertheless it may be reasonably doubted Phallic Worship whether
the atheism, against which the citizens of that republic expressed such
fury, consisted in a denial of the existence of the gods ; for Diagoras,
who was obliged to fly for this crime, was accused of revealing and
calum- niating the doctrines taught in the Mysteries ; and from the
opinions ascribed to Socrates, there is reason to believe that his
offence was of the same kind, though he had not been initiated.
These were the only two martyrs to religion among the ancient
Greeks, such as were punished for actively violating or insulting the
Mysteries, the only part of their worship which seems to have possessed
any vitality ; for as to the popular deities, they were publicly
ridiculed and censured with impunity by those who dared not utter a
word against the populace that worshipped them ; and as to the forms and
ceremonies of devotion, they were held to be no otherwise important, then
as they were constituted a part of civil government of the state ;
the Phythian priestess having pronounced from the tripod, that
whoever performed the rites of his religion according to the laws of his
country , performed them in a manner pleasing to the Deity . Hence THE
ROMANS made no alterations in the religious institutions of any of the
conquered countries ; but allowed the inhabitants to be as absurd and
extravagant as they pleased, and to enforce their absurdities and
extravagances wherever they had any pre-existing laws in their favour. An
Egyptian magistrate would put one of his fellow-subjects to death for
killing a cat ora monkey ; and though the religious fanaticism of
the Jews was too sanguinary and too violent to be left entirely
free from restraint, a chief of the synagogue could order anyone of his
congregation to be whipped for neglecting or violating any part of the
Mosaic Ritual. The principle underlying the system of emanations
was, that all things were of one substance, from which they were
fashioned and into which they were again dissolved, by the operation of
one plastic spirit universally diffused and expanded. The polytheist ot
ancient Greece and Rome candidly thought, like the modern Hindu, that
all rites of worship and forms of devotion were directed to the
same end, though in different modes and through different channels. <c
Even they who worship other gods , says Krishna, the incarnate Deity, in
an ancient Indian poem ( 'Bhagavat-Gita ), c< worship me although they
know it not. Knight. Giorgio Colli. Colli. Keywords:
espressione, L’Apollo romano, L’appollo
d’etruria, La mesura d’Apollo, la dismisura di Bacco; l’enigma filosofico, Bacco,
Nietzsche, Girgentu, Velia, Crotone, Gorgia, Zenone di Velia, l’implicatura di
Prosimno, l’implicatura di Bacco e Prosimno. Refs.: Luigi
Speranza, “Grice e Colli: l’implicatura di Bacco e Prosimno”, misterio
bacchico, bacchic mystery, the fig tree branch, phallus, self-sacrifice,
self-sodomisation, not without pain, even with pleasure – Higinus., symbolism,
the old shepherd erastes eromenos, Bacchus eromenon , the symbolism of the
promise, to rescue her mother from hell the role of the widow, female widow,
Bacco’s duty to keep his promise. The echo of the sentence, ‘you probably
passed it’ – ‘the lake’ the grave. Colli.
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