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FISHES, FLOWERS, AND FIRE WORSHIP.




  Fishes, Flowers, & Fire
  AS ELEMENTS AND DEITIES IN THE
  Phallic Faiths & Worship
  OF THE ANCIENT RELIGIONS OF
  Greece, Babylon, Rome, India, &c.
  WITH ILLUSTRATIVE MYTHS AND LEGENDS.


  PRIVATELY PRINTED.

  A. READER, ORANGE STREET, RED LION SQUARE, LONDON.
  1890.




_PREFACE._


_The volume now in the reader's hands forms the fifth, and, for the
present, the concluding portion of the "Phallic Series" it was found
necessary to issue in further explication of certain matters set forth in
the first book on this peculiar subject._

_Having dealt with Sex Worship generally, Ophiolatræia, the Round Towers
and Holed Stones, Trees, Fishes, Flowers, and Fire, the ground has been
pretty well covered, and with the exception of an Appendix, which future
demands may possibly call forth, the subject is now complete. It is
confidently expected that the present volume will be found equally
interesting with those which have preceded it; it opens up entirely new
matter, and contains a number of curious traditions not before alluded
to._




CONTENTS.


                                                                     PAGE.

  CHAPTER I. (FISHES)                                                    1

  Frequent occurrence of the Fish Symbol--Fish Heraldry--Earliest
  devices--Fish devices on Churches and other public buildings--The
  Catacombs--Ichthus--Fish devices at Glastonbury Abbey, &c.--The
  Book-fish--Glasgow Fish-arms--The Fish and the Ring Story of
  Scotland--Solomon and the Fish and Ring--The Hermit's Fish Pond
  of St. Neot's--The Sacred Perch--The Dolphin--Neptune.

  CHAPTER II. (FISHES)                                                  10

  The Ancient Sacred Fish--Fish diet and its supposed effects--Fish
  and the Jews--The God Krodo--Oanes--Dagon--The Fish-god at
  Nimrod--Khorsabad--Fish Worship in Syria--Temple of Dagon at
  Azotus--The Dagon of the Bible--Adramelech--Abstinence from
  Fish-food--Ancient character of Fish Worship--"Paradise Lost"--
  The Irish demi-god Phin--The Fish as a Christian Symbol--Idea
  involved in Fish Worship--Holy Fish Ponds--Ancient Caledonian
  objections to Fish--Other anti-fish-eating nations--Ishtar.

  CHAPTER III. (FLOWERS)                                                25

  Universal Love of Flowers--Indifference to Flowers--Excessive
  Love of Flowers leading to adoration--Myths and Legends
  connected with Flowers--The Flos Adonis, Narcissus, Myrtle,
  Silene inflata, Clover--The Hundred-leaved Rose--Worship of
  Lily species--Signification of the Lotos--Hermaphroditic
  character of the Lotos--The Indian Mutiny of 1857, part played
  by the Lotus during its instigation.

  CHAPTER IV. (FLOWERS)                                                 33

  Importance of the Lotos--Varieties of Lotos--Statements by
  Herodotus, Homer, Theophrastus, Dioscorides, Pliny, Athenæus
  and others--The arborescent Lotos--The Sacred Lotos of the
  Nile--The Indian Lotos--Nepaulese adoration of the Lotos--
  Shing-moo, the Chinese Holy Mother--Lakshmi--The Queens of
  Beauty--The Loves of Krishna and Radha.

  CHAPTER V. (FIRE)                                                     43

  Story of the Fire-god and his Secret--Growth of Fire Worship--
  Fire an essential in Hindoo Worship--The Chaldeans--The
  Persians--The Hebrews--Fire in Hindu Ceremonies--Duties of
  Hindu Life--The Serpent and Fire--Phallo-Pythic Solar Shrines--
  Fire and Phallic Worship--Leaping through fire--Fire-treading
  in Scotland--Fire-leaping in Russia--The Medes as Fire
  Worshippers--The Sabines--Fire and the Ancient Christians--The
  Roman Church and Fire--The Jews--Temple of Vesta--Fire Worship
  in Ireland--Phallo-fire-worship of the Greeks and Romans.

  CHAPTER VI. (FIRE)                                                    60

  Fire Worship in the States of the Mediterranean--Special
  sacredness of the Public City-fire of Greece and Rome--The
  Sacred Fire of Tlachtga--Ceylon Fire Worship--The Parsees--
  Persian Monuments--Impiety of Cambyses--Cingalese Terms,
  Sanscrit, Welsh, &c.--The Yule Log--Fire Worship in England--
  Fire of Beltane--Druidical Fires--May-day Fires--November Fires
  in Ireland--Between two Fires--Scotland--The Summer Solstice-fire
  Ceremonies--Worship of Baal in Ireland--St. John's Day--
  Bonfires--Decree of Council of Constantinople.

  CHAPTER VII. (FIRE)                                                   75

  Paradise Lost and Moloch--The God of the Ammonites--The slaughter
  of Children by Fire, notices in the Scriptures--Fire Ceremonies
  and Moloch--Sacred Fire of the Phœnicians--The Carthaginians--
  Custom of Oziese--Sardinian Customs and Moloch--The Cuthites--
  Persian Fire Worship--House-fires of Greece and Rome--Sacred Books
  of the East--Laws of Manu--The Rig Veda and Hymns to Agni, the God
  of Fire--Vesta, Worship of--The Magi--Zoroaster.




FISHES, FLOWERS, AND FIRE.




CHAPTER I.

    _Frequent occurrence of the Fish Symbol--Fish Heraldry--Earliest
    Devices--Fish Devices in churches and other public buildings--The
    Catacombs--Ichthus--Fish Devices in Glastonbury Abbey, &c.--The Book
    Fish--Glasgow Fish Arms--The Fish and Ring Story of Scotland--Solomon
    and the Fish and Ring--The Hermit's Fish Pond of St. Neot's--The
    Sacred Perch--The Dolphin--Neptune._


Few, if any, symbols are of such frequent occurrence among the relics of
bygone ages as that of the fish. Whether we look upon the monuments of
Babylon and Nineveh, upon the walls of the Roman Catacombs where the early
Christians sought a refuge from the fury of their Pagan persecutors, or
amongst the heraldic devices adopted by our ancestors as coats of arms in
comparatively modern times, the fish is ever prominent. With regard to the
latter, it is certainly remarkable to what an extent it prevails, and
several writers on Heraldry (particularly Moule) have given us very full
accounts and graphic illustrations of its use. Nor is it one kind of fish
only we find thus employed, which might perhaps be associated with some
special myth or tradition--the dolphin, the herring, the salmon, the
trout, the pike, the barbel, the roach, the sole, the turbot, the
flounder, the haddock, the cod, the hake, the ling, the whiting, the
mullet, the grayling and others have all been pressed into the same
service, and even the different modes of taking fish by the spear, the
net, or the hook, are found in the armorial ensigns of the lords of manors
deriving revenue from the produce of the fishery. "The boats," says Moule,
"employed in the same service, which were at the command of the sovereign
in time of war, and formed the original navy of Britain, distinguish the
ensigns of the maritime lords, and the corporate bodies to whom the
jurisdiction of the ports was entrusted."

It is not unlikely that the vast numbers of fishes and their great variety
may have had much to do with their employment in this connection; some
years ago the British Museum contained fifteen hundred different species,
while the museum in Paris--one unusually rich in specimens of this part of
the animal kingdom--possessed as many as five thousand, a number which has
steadily gone on increasing. "As the symbol of a name, almost all fish
have been used in Heraldry; and in many instances fish have been assumed
in arms in reference to the produce of the estate, giving to the quaint
device a twofold interest. They are borne upright and extended, and when
feeding are termed devouring; Allumé, when their eyes are bright, and
Parné when their mouths are open."[1]

"The earliest known device of fish, the zodiacal sign, is emblematical of
the fishery of the Nile, commencing in the month of February, about the
time when the sun enters Pisces, which is the best season for fishing,
according to Pliny. Modern travellers relate that the walls of the temple
of Denderah are literally covered with magnificent sculpture and painting.
The figures representing the Zodiac are on the ceiling of the portico, and
are engraved in the great work on Egypt published by order of the French
Government. The signs of the Zodiac were frequently sculptured on the
exterior of ancient churches, presenting a sort of rural calendar for the
labours of the field each month in the year, which was of practical use.

  'When in the Zodiac the fish wheel round,
  They loose the floods and irrigate the ground.'

"In his directions to the husbandman for the month of February, old Tusser
says:

  'To the coast, man, ride, Lent stuff provide;'

with another couplet in encouragement of the fisherman,

  'The land doth will, the sea doth wish,
  Spare sometimes flesh, and feed off fish.'

"The Zodiacal signs also appear as an ornament on antique vases, coins,
pavements, &c., and are painted in bright colours on the inside of several
mummy cases now in the British Museum. A manuscript in the Cottonian
Library shows the sign Pisces having a connecting line from the tail of
each fish."[1]

On many churches and other buildings both in England and on the continent
the same device is found. The porch of the Virgin at Notre Dame at Paris
has a number of compartments representing the zodiacal signs and the
labours of the different months. The doorway of the church of St.
Margaret, York, is similarly adorned, as is one of the porches of Merton
College, Oxford. The western doorway of Iffley Church, said to be one of
the most beautiful specimens of Anglo-Norman architecture in England,
bears the sign of the fishes.

In Canterbury Cathedral also is a pavement of large stones, somewhat
rudely inlaid, bearing figures of the zodiacal signs in circular
compartments. The fishes are attached by a line passing from mouth to
mouth.

In the Roman Catacombs the fish is frequently found amongst the countless
inscriptions with which the walls are crowded. Maitland describes it as
there found as a symbol expressive of the name of Christ, and remarkable
as affording a combination of everything desirable in a tessera, or mystic
sign. The Greek for fish, ιχθυς, contains the initials of
Ιησους, Χριστος Θεος Υιος Σωτηρ: Jesus Christ, Son of God, the
Saviour; a sentence which had been adopted from the sibylline verses.
Moreover the phonetic sign of this word, the actual fish, was an emblem
whose meaning was entirely concealed from the uninitiated: an important
point with those who were surrounded by foes ready to ridicule and
blaspheme whatever of Christianity they could detect. Nor did the
appropriateness of the symbol stop here. "The fish," observed Tertullian,
"seems a fit emblem of Him whose spiritual children are, like the
offspring of fishes, born in the water of baptism."[2]

"On walls, as well as tombstones, we find the Fish, Phœnix, Anchor,
Ship, Olive and Palm, all of which are sacred to the God of Fertility or
the procreative energies. The fish, we are told, was adopted by those
Christians because of the alphabetical rebus--the Greek word I. K. Th. U.
S. containing the initial letters of the words forming this title in
Greek, 'Jesus Christ, Son of God, Saviour;' but Ikthus was a holy name in
Egypt and the East, long ere Greece had adopted her varied faiths, and
long before the good Nazarene had preached his holy gospel in the wilds
of Judea. The Hebrew for fish is Dg, Dag or De-ag, which some think may
have sprung from the Sanscrit De-Dev, and Ag or Ab, and be allied to the
solar Ak, and Aqua, water. Dagan was the fish-god (Alheim) of the
Philistines, and spelling Dag backwards as was so common and natural,
seeing some peoples read from right to left, and others from left to
right, we get Gad, the good one, that is God or Goddess of Day, as in Isa.
lxv. 11, where, in connection with Meni the moon, we read: 'Ye are they
that prepare a table for Gad, and that furnish the offering unto Meni;'
which Bagster's Comprehensive Bible admits to be stars or such objects.
Dag, says Calmet, signifies Preserver, and so Saviour, which has many
ancient connections with fish and water, as we see in the case of Dagon.
St. Augustine said of Christ: 'He is the great Fish that lives in the
midst of the waters;' so no wonder that Ichthus, a fish, should become a
holy term, and applied to Christ's representative, who in token wears a
Poitrine as his higher officers wear what is called a mitre or turban like
a fish's mouth. Christ, being a Hebrew, of course received the title
Ikthus from his Greek followers, just as he got I.H.S.--the monogram of
Bacchus--from those who forsook that god to follow Christianity. There is
nothing sacred about such matters. Ich or Ik, or Ak == Ab, at once Our
Father and water; and in India the fish is the god of the water, and so we
have _Dev-ab_, from which may come Deg-an or Dagon. The Greeks, of course,
used _Thus_ or theus, and so Ik-theus or God-Ik; at any rate Christians
have made Ik-thus a veritable God, and water its element a very holy
thing. The most ancient Keltic tongues seem to identify the two, for water
in Gaelic is _Uisge_, the water of life being Wisge (whiskey), and a fish
Iasg, or in old Irish, Iska or Ischa, which is an Eastern term for Jesus.
If V or F--the digamma is here admissible, then we arrive very near our
own word Fish. Perhaps Vishnoo, Viçnu or Fishnoo, is responsible here, for
he is the first who rises out of the water, and from a fish; and from his
first incarnation to his last, he is always connected with both."[3]

"Fish" says Moule, "have often been made the vehicle of religious
instruction, and for this purpose all the fine arts have been put in
requisition. Amongst many pictures by the first masters in which the finny
tribe are introduced, that of Saint Anthony, of Padua, preaching to the
fish, may be mentioned. This fine picture, by Salvator Rosa, is in the
collection at Althorp House, in Northamptonshire; the sermon itself is
given in Addison's Travels in Italy.

"On the conventual seal of Glastonbury Abbey are represented the figures
of Saint Dunstan between Saint Patrick and Saint Benignus; each has his
emblem beneath his feet; the last has a party of fish: perhaps, adds the
historian of the abbey, he also preached to them, as Saint Anthony did.

"A fish furnishing the University of Cambridge with a religious feast was
the occasion of a tract, entitled 'Vox Piscis; or, the Book-fish;'
containing three treatises which were found inside a cod fish in Cambridge
market, on Midsummer Eve, 1676. This fish is said to have been taken in
Lynn deeps, and after finding a book within it, the fish was carried by
the bedel to the vice-chancellor; and coming as it did at the
commencement, the very time when good learning and good cheer were most
expected, it was quaintly remarked, that this sea guest had brought his
book and his carcass to furnish both.

"In the arms of the city of Glasgow, and in those of the ancient see, a
salmon with a ring in its mouth is said to record a miracle of St.
Kentigern, the founder of the see and the first bishop of Glasgow. On the
reverse of Bishop Wishart's seal in the reign of Edward II., this supposed
allusion to the legendary story of St. Kentigern appears for the first
time."

Some of the early bishops of Glasgow displayed the figure of a salmon,
either on the sides of or below the shield of arms on their seals, a
circumstance which may be accounted for, without reference to a miracle,
as depicting the produce of the Clyde. The revenue of the church of
Glasgow at the Reformation included one hundred and sixty-eight salmon
arising from the franchise or fishing in that river.

James Cameron, Lord Privy Seal to King James I. of Scotland and bishop of
Glasgow in 1462, bore on his episcopal seal the figure of St. Kentigern in
a tabernacle, below which are his paternal arms, three bars, having a
salmon with a ring in its mouth on either side of the shield, which is
surmounted by the mitre. The ring is, perhaps, a type of the annular
money, then current among the Britons.

"It is curious to note how the emblem of the same fish has continued to
enter into the composition of the Glasgow arms and those of the
ecclesiastical establishment.

"The diocese of Glasgow was erected into an archbishopric in 1491, with
Galloway, Argyll and the Isles as suffragans. James Beaton, archbishop of
Glasgow and abbot of Dumfermline, the uncle of Cardinal Beaton, died
primate of Scotland in 1539. Many munificent marks of his public spirit
and piety long resisted time, and remained after the cathedral ceremonies
had been deserted for the plain offices of the kirk of Scotland.

"On the walls of the Episcopal Palace or Castle of Glasgow were sculptured
the arms of Beaton--azure, a fess between three mascles, or, quartered
with Balfour, argent, on a chevron sable and otter's head erased of the
first, and below the shield, a salmon with a ring in its mouth, as
represented on the seals of his predecessors.

"Another Archbishop Beaton re-founded the Scotch College at Paris in 1603,
where, as a monument to his memory, are his arms, surmounted by the
episcopal hat, and beneath the shield the fish and ring, the emblem of the
see of Glasgow. In more recent times Archbishop Cairncross, in 1684, bore
the arms of the see impaled with his paternal coat.

"The arms of the city of Glasgow are those of the former see, argent, on a
mount a tree with a bird on a branch to the dexter, and a bell pendent on
the sinister side, the stem of a tree surmounted by a salmon in fess
having in its mouth a gold ring."[4]

Dr. Dibdin says, "The legend of the 'Fish and the King,' is extant in well
nigh every chap-book in Scotland; old Spotswood is among the earliest
historians who garnished up the dish from the Latin monastic legends, and
Messrs. Smith, McLellan and Cleland, have not failed to quote his words.
They report of St. Kentigern, that a lady of good place in the country
having lost her ring as she crossed the river Clyde, and her husband
waxing jealous, as if she had bestowed the same on one of her lovers, she
did mean herself unto Kentigern, entreating his help for the safety of her
honour; and that he, going to the river after he had used his devotion,
willed one who was making to fish, to bring the first that he caught,
which was done. In the mouth of this fish he found the ring, and sending
it to the lady, she was thereby freed of her husband's suspicion. The
credit of this I believe upon the reporters; but however it be, the see
and city of Glasgow do both of them bear in their arms a fish with a ring
in its mouth even to this day."[5]

Moule remarks that "the classical tale of Polycrates, related by Herodotus
a thousand years before the time of St. Kentigern, is perhaps the earliest
version of the fish and ring, which has often been repeated with
variations. The ring, Herodotus says, was an emerald set in gold and
beautifully engraved, the work of Theodorus the Samian; and this very
ring, Pliny relates, was preserved in the Temple of Concord at Rome, to
which it was given by the Emperor Augustus. The device of the fish is
engraved in M. Claude Paradin's "Hervical Devices" as an emblem of
uninterrupted prosperity."

"If we turn to chapter xxxviii. of Mahomet's Koran, we find the story of
the fish and the ring in another form. The note upon the words--'We placed
on his throne a counterfeit body,' says: 'The most received exposition of
this passage is taken from the following Talmudic fable: Solomon, having
taken Sidon, and slain the king of that city, brought away his daughter
Jerada, who became his favourite; and because she ceased not to lament her
father's loss, he ordered the devils to make an image of him for her
consolation: which being done, and placed in her chamber, she and her
maids worshipped it morning and evening, according to their custom. At
length Solomon being informed of this idolatry, which was practised under
his roof by his vizier, Asaf, he broke the image, and having chastised the
woman went out into the desert, where he wept and made supplications to
God; who did not think fit, however, to let his negligence pass without
some correction. It was Solomon's custom, while he washed himself, to
entrust his signet, on which his kingdom depended, with a concubine of his
named Amina: one day, therefore, when she had the ring in her custody, a
devil named Sakhar came to her in the shape of Solomon, and received the
ring from her; by virtue of which he became possessed of the kingdom, and
sat on the throne in the shape which he had borrowed, making what
alterations in the law he pleased. Solomon, in the mean time, being
changed in his outward appearance and known to none of his subjects, was
obliged to wander about and beg alms for his subsistence; till at length,
after the space of forty days, which was the time the image had been
worshipped in his house, the devil flew away and threw the signet into the
sea; the signet was immediately swallowed by a fish, which being taken and
given to Solomon, he found the ring in its belly, and having by this means
recovered the kingdom, took Sakhar, and, tying a great stone to his neck,
threw him into the lake of Tiberias."

One of the windows of St. Neot's Church, Cornwall, contains the history of
that saint known as the pious sacristan of Glastonbury Abbey, "perhaps,"
says Moule "the only instance of the legend of a local saint so
represented, and one of the most splendid specimens of stained glass in
the kingdom. The hermit's fish-pond, now remaining in the valley near his
cell, afforded materials for one of the legendary tales now represented in
the window. In this pool there were three fishes, of which Neot had divine
permission to take one every day, with an assurance that the supply should
never be diminished. Being afflicted with a severe indisposition, his
disciple Barius one day caught two fishes, and having boiled one and
broiled the other, placed them before him: 'What hast thou done?'
exclaimed Neot; 'lo, the favour of God deserts us: go instantly and
restore these fishes to the water.' While Barius was absent Neot
prostrated himself in earnest prayer, till he returned with the
intelligence that the fishes were disporting in the pool. Barius again
went and took only one fish, of which Neot had no sooner tasted than he
was restored to perfect health."[6]

A species of perch, common in the Mediterranean, is of a brilliant scarlet
colour, but with a very strong spinal fin, and, from the resemblance of
this spine to a razor, it is named _le barbier_. This fish is held sacred
among the divers for marine productions, and when caught by a hook, it is
instantly relieved by the rest of the shoal cutting the line of the angler
with their sharp spines.

"The dolphin, as a most peculiarly sacred fish, was called Philanthropist
by the ancients, and said to delight in music. It saved the great bard
Arion when he threw himself into the Mediterranean on his way to Corinth,
which event is said to have happened in the seventh century B.C., or about
the time the story of Jonah arose. The Greeks placed the dolphin in their
Zodiac. Burckhardt says in his travels in Nubia, that no one is permitted
to throw a lance at or injure a dolphin in the Red Sea; and the same rule
is enforced among most of the Greek islands.

"Neptune, the male sea-god of Rome, was identical with Poseidon of Greece,
and his temples and festivals were in the Campus Martius. Poseidon was a
brother of Jupiter and Pluto, and a mighty representative god-man of the
waters, and of what the sea symbolised; his was the teeming womb of
fertility, and therefore woman. His hosts are dolphins and innumerable
sea-nymphs and monsters. His chariots are yoked with horses, which he is
said to have created and taught men to manage. His symbol is the phallic
trident, or rather the Trisool, or 'giver of life' of Siva, which can
cleave rocks, produce water, and shake heaven and earth. The Nephthus of
Egypt was the goddess of the coasts of the Red Sea and the wife of the
wicked serpent deity Typhon. The Dolphin as a highly emblematic fish often
stands for Neptune himself, although it probably first rose in importance
from a mere punning on the words delphis a dolphin, and delphus the womb,
and occasionally the pudenda. Delphax was also a young pig which was
occasionally offered to Juno; Delphi was goddess Earth: symbolic chasm,
and Delphinius was her Apollo, and from dolphin springs the name Delphin
or Dauphin, the eldest son of the King of France."[7]




CHAPTER II.

    _The Ancient Sacred Fish--Fish Diet and its supposed Effects--Fish
    and the Jews--The god Krodo--Oanes--Dagon--The Fish-god at Nimroud--
    Khorsabad--Fish Worship in Syria--Temple of Dagon at Azotus--The
    Dagon of the Bible--Adramelech--Abstinence from Fish Food--Ancient
    Character of Fish Worship--Paradise Lost--The Irish demi-god Phin--The
    Fish as a Christian Symbol--Idea involved in Fish Worship--Holy Fish
    Ponds--Ancient Caledonian Objections to Fish--Other anti-fish-eating
    Nations--Ishtar._


Inman remarks that "the fish selected for honour amongst the ancients was
neither flat, globular, nor cylindrical; it was more or less oval, and
terminated in a forked tail. In shape it was like the almond, or the
'concha' with the 'nates.' Its open mouth resembles the 'os uteri,' still
called 'os tincæ,' or tench's mouth. Ancient priests are represented as
clothed with a fish, the head being the mitre. The fish's head as a mitre
still adorns the heads of Romish bishops. The fish was sacred to Venus,
and was a favourite esculent among the luxurious Romans. The fish was an
emblem of fecundity. The word _nun_, however, in the Hebrew, signifies to
_sprout_, _to put forth_, as well as _fish_; and thus the fish symbolises
the male principle in an active state. The creature had a very strong
symbolic connection with the worship of Aphrodite, and the Romanists still
eat it on that day of the week called Dies Veneris, Venus' Day."

"At the present time there are certain fish which are supposed to give
greatly increased virile power to those who eat them. I have (proceeds
Inman) indistinct recollection of a similar fact having been recorded in
Athenæus, who quotes Theophrastus as his authority. The passage is to the
effect, that a diet on a certain fish enabled an Indian prince to show one
hundred proofs of his manhood in a single day. The same writer mentions
goat's flesh as having something of the same effect. The Assyrian Oannes
was represented as a man-fish, and the Capricorn or goat with fish tail,
in the Zodiac, is said to have been an emblem of him.

"The fish was also associated with Isis, who, like Venus, represented the
female element in creation. It was likewise a sacred emblem amongst the
Buddhists.

"Since writing the above, I have ascertained that eating fish for supper,
on Friday night, is a Jewish custom or institution. As amongst that nation
fecundity is a blessing specially promised by the Omnipotent, so it is
thought proper to use human means for ensuring the blessing on the day set
apart by the Almighty. The Jewish Sabbath begins at sunset on Friday, and
three meals are to be taken during the day, which are supposed to have a
powerful aphrodisiac operation. The ingredients are meat and fish, garlic
and pepper; and the particular fish selected, so far as I can learn, is
the skate--that which in the Isle of Man is still supposed to be a
powerful satyrion. The meal is repeated twice on a Saturday. Mons. Lajard
bears testimony to the extent of this custom in the following passage,
though he does not directly associate it with the fish, except that the
latter are often seen on coins, with the other attributes of Venus. After
speaking of the probable origin of the cult, he says--'In our days,
indeed, the Druses of Lebanon, in their secret vespers, offer a true
worship to the sexual parts of the female, and pay their devotions every
Friday night--that is to say, the day which is consecrated to Venus; the
day in which, on his side, the Mussulman finds in the code of Mahomet, the
double obligation to go to the mosque and to perform the conjugal
duty.'"[8]

"In 1492, Bede mentions that 'a God Krodo is worshipped in the Hartz,
having his feet on a fish, a wheel in one hand and a pail of water in the
other--clearly a Vishnoo or Fishnoo solar deity carrying the solar or
lunar disk, and the ark or womb of fertility. These fish-gods, as Mr.
Baring Gould states in the case of the American Kox-Kox or Teokipaktli,
_i.e._, fish-god, much resemble the Old Testament Noah, for Kox,
encountered a flood and rescued himself in a cypress trunk (a true phallic
symbol), and peopled the world with wise and intelligent beings.' His full
title mixes him up with the 'flesh-god' idea of Hebrews and others. North
American Indians relate that they too followed a fish-man or demi-god
from Asia; he was only a man from the breasts upward, below he was a fish,
or, indeed, two fish, for each leg was a separate fish."[9]

"It is said Oanes was a man-headed fish, and the earliest Hermes or
Messenger of God to Kaldia. Berosus says he ate not, yet taught all the
arts of geometry, and the harvesting and storing of fruits and seeds.
Every night he retired to the sea (the Female and Holy Spirit), and after
him came Messiahs. Helladius called him Oes, but says he had the feet of a
man, and sprang from a mundane egg. He had a fish's skin, and Higgins says
he first taught astrology in Kaldia. The mother of Oanes was worshipped as
Venus Atergates, 'the good spirit,' and Oanes himself possibly signifies
the 'first-born of the Yoni,' the Protogonos of Sankuniathon. The Japanese
represent their Messiah emerging like Vishnoo from a fish, and as such
call him Kan-On or Can-on, and his temple, Onius, and make his spirit
repose on twelve cushions, just as they do in the case of Fo or Boodha,
showing clearly the solar significance of the whole. So we see a close
connection between the Kaldian O-AN or Oanes the Hebrew AON, which in
Koptic is the 'Enlightener,' and the Egyptian ON. In Armorik, Oan and
Oanic, and in Irish, UAN is a lamb, and in Hebrew Jonas signifies the
gentle one, a 'Revealer' or word from God, and a dove, so that the sum of
the whole points to the Sanscrit Yoni.

"Pan, Jove's senior brother, used to be called 'a whale-like fish,' and he
entangled Typhon in his nets and caught him, and yet who so unlike a fish
in character as the goat-footed god.

"So Boodha is called Day-Po or Fishpo; Vishnoo appears in the first Avatar
as a fish, for he is Viçoo, Fiçoo or Fish-oo, as Christ is _Ischa_ in
Ireland, which is the Welsh _Fischa_. In all lands, fish have proved the
saviours of many men, and among the fish, the dolphin, as the delphus or
womb. She who has dedicated her life to her God we call a nun, and this
with Hebrews is a fish, and the Yoni. Fish and birds were called in
Asyrian Nanu-Itsurn, yet a fish spoken of in opposition to a bird was
_Kha_ and a bird _Khu_. Isis was a brooding bird, yet is generally seen
with a fish on her head. The fish was the first to swallow up the
genitals of Osiris, when Typhon caused him to be cut up into pieces and
thrown away.

"Eating fish was considered to induce venery even more than beef or
garlic, and Shemitic races recommended or ordered such repasts on Frig's
Day, or night--their Sabbath or Sabbath Eve. Among the Druses of Syria,
Layard assures us such matters are still carefully attended to on Venus'
or Frig's Eve, adding that 'in secret vespers' these pious persons 'offer
a true worship to the sexual parts of the female.'"[10]

"Oannes and Dag-on (the fish On) are identical. According to an ancient
fable preserved by Berosus, a creature half man and half fish came out of
that part of the Erythræan Sea, which borders upon Babylonia, where he
taught men the arts of life, to construct cities, to found temples, to
compile laws, and, in short, instructed them in all things that tend to
soften manners and humanize their lives; and, he adds, that a
representative of this animal Oannes was preserved in his day. A figure of
him sporting in the waves, and apparently blessing a fleet of vessels, was
discovered in a marine piece of sculpture by M. Botta, in the excavations
of Khorsabad.

"At Nimroud, a gigantic image was found by Mr. Layard, representing him
with the fish's head as a cap and the body of the fish depending over his
shoulders, his legs those of a man, his left hand holding a richly
decorated bag, and his right hand upraised as if in the act of presenting
the mystic Assyrian fir-cone." (_Baring Gould's Myths of the Middle
Ages._)

Mr. Layard, in his interesting work "Nineveh and its Remains," thus
alludes to this--"I must not omit to allude to the tradition preserved by
Berosus, which appears to attribute to a foreign nation, arriving by sea,
the introduction at some remote period of civilization and certain arts
into Babylonia. According to the historian, there appeared out of the
Erythræan or Persian Gulf, an animal endowed with reason, called Oannes.
Its body was like that of a fish; but under the head of the fish was that
of a man, and added to its tail were women's feet. Its voice, too, was
human, and it spoke an articulate language. During the day it instructed
the Chaldæans in letters and in all arts and sciences, teaching them to
build temples; but at night it plunged again into the sea. Five such
monsters appeared at different epochs in Babylonia, and were called
'Annedoti' (coming out of, or proceeding from). The first was named the
Musarus Oannes, and the last Odacon. Their images, he adds, were preserved
in Chaldæa even to this day. (This fragment of Berosus is preserved by
Apollodorus. See Cory's Fragments.)

"In a bas-relief from Korsabad representing a naval engagement, or the
seige of a city on the sea coast, we have the god nearly as described by
Berosus. To the body of a man as far as the waist, is joined the tail of a
fish. The three-horned cap, surmounted by the flower in the form of a
fleur-de-lis, as worn by the winged figures of the bas-reliefs, marks the
sacred character. The right hand is raised as in the representations of
the winged deity in the circle. This figure is in the sea amongst fish and
marine animals. On Assyrian cylinders and germs the same symbolical figure
is very frequently found, even more closely resembling in its form the
description of Berosus, numerous instances of which are given in Lajard's
large work on the Worship of Venus.

"This Fish Worship extended to Syria, and appears to have been more
prevalent in that country than in Assyria. The Dagon of the Philistines of
Ashdad evidently resembled the figure on the Assyrian sculptures and
cylinders. When it fell before the ark, the head and both the palms of his
hands were cut off upon the threshold; only the fishy part of Dagon was
left to him. (I. Samuel, v. 4; see the marginal reading.) The same idol is
mentioned in Judges xvi. The meaning of the word in Hebrew is 'a fish.'
Although the image, like that of the Assyrians, appears to have been
originally male; at a later period, it became female in Syria, as we learn
from Lucian (de Deâ Syriâ), and Diodorus Siculus, who describes the idol
at Ascalon with the face of a woman and body of a fish. (Lib. ii.) An
icthyolatry, connected with Derceto or Atergates, was perhaps confounded
with the worship of Dagon."[11]

"In Azotus, or Asdotus, a renowned city of the Philistines, there was a
celebrated temple of Dagon in which the inhabitants kept the ark of the
covenant, in presence of the idols. And when they arose early in the
morning, behold Dagon was fallen upon his face to the ground before the
ark of the Lord, and the head of Dagon and both the palms of his hands
were cut off upon the threshold; and rah dagon nischar aghlaju, that is,
as R. D. Cimchi explains it, only the form of a fish was left to him. (I.
Samuel, v. 4.) For Dag and Dagah are words interpreted to mean fish,
whence he was called Dagon. The sacred scriptures, in Hebrews, bestow on
him the masculine gender, and so do the authors of the Greek version.
Philo Biblius says of Dagon, that he is a fruiterer and the son of
Cœlus, and thus thinks he should be called, because he first discovered
fruit. For Dagon in Hebrew is translated by the Greek word Siton, which
means fruit. He is also said to be the inventor of the plough, therefore
was named Zeus the plougher, as if he were Jupiter, the president of
agriculture.

"Ptolemus says that Ceres was called Sito among the Syracusans, from the
same Greek word Sito. But he is mistaken; for, while he derives it from
Dagon (which means fruit), he should have deduced it from Dag (which means
a fish). There is the most ancient testimony outside of the Bible in
regard to this god of Asia in what Berosus, Apollodorus, and Polyhistor
write concerning Oannes. For Oannes is mentioned as a two-headed animal;
that feet like those of human beings grew from his tail, and that the rest
of him is a fish. His voice was likewise human, and they say that,
emerging from the Red Sea, he came to Babylon, but that he returned to the
sea at sunset. He did this every day as if he were an amphibious animal.
From him men learned all the various arts, letters, agriculture, the
consecration of temples, architecture, political government, and whatever
could possibly pertain to civilised life, and the most wonderful history
of Belus and Omorea. His image was preserved down to the time of Berosus,
that is, to the beginning of the Grecian monarchy. This marine god can be
no other than Dagon, whose history is found in Samuel. He was worshipped
not only by the Philistines, but by the Babylonians also. Apollodorus,
from the same Berosus, narrates more extensively of four Oannes, called
Annedotos, who likewise in the lapse of ages appeared out of the Red Sea,
every one of whom was half man and half fish. But in the time of Ædoracus,
king of the Chaldeans, who preceded the deluge a few ages, another similar
figure appeared, who was called Odakon. Dagon is undoubtedly intended and
referred to in this fable of Odakon. Abydenos speaks of a second
Annedotos, and bestows on him the form of a semi-demon. Helladius
Besantinus speaks of a certain man of the name of Oleus arising out of the
Red Sea, whose head, hands and feet were human, but that the other members
of the body were those of a fish and that he taught letters, and the
science of astronomy. As all these references are so applicable to the
Oannes of Besorus, it is more than probable that the librarian made the
mistake in the name of abbreviation in the copy.

"What has been extracted from the Scriptures and what has been said from
the writings of the ancients will convince any one that the figure of
Dagon was a mixture of the human and marine form. His body was marine, and
his face, hands, and feet were human.

"The Scriptures say expressly that his hands and feet were cut off, or
broken, when he fell before the ark of the Testament. These ancients wrote
that his feet grew to his tail. The Scriptures make him a masculine god,
but what has been said elsewhere of the common sex of the gods should be
here considered, for this very Dagon was changed into the goddess
Adirdaga, that is, Atergatis, Adargatis, Derceto, and those other names
mispronounced by the Europeans. It is certain that the Phœnician and
Babylon goddess is the very same figure as Dagon, if you will change the
sex. Lucianus describes briefly the image of Derceto as seen by him in
Phœnicia, and it answers to that of Dagon. But also among other great
writers the goddess of Hierapolis is called Derceto, or Atergatis.

"Macrobius contends that, with the figures of Atergatis, she is Astarte,
that very mother of gods, and he does not speak of her as any other than
that goddess of Hierapolis.

"Unless she had been half fish, she would by no means have been called
Derceto. But Atergatis, Adergatis, Atargata, Derceto, Derce, Adargidis,
Atargatis, all of which are names of this goddess, are corrupt words, and
from Adardaga, which in Hebrew means a magnificent or potent fish. This
name was surely most suitable for Oannes, who is said to have conferred so
many benefits on mankind.

"In the same way the Sepharvites called their god Adramelech, which means
a magnificent king. In the fables there is generally no other reason for
the figure than that because formerly Dirce, the daughter of Venus, having
fallen into the sea, was by fish preserved from all injuries of the
waters, or on account of the metamorphosis of Venus into a fish, when she
was running away terrified at the horrible advances of the monstre Typhon.

"Manilius, in his Astronomicon, book fourth, says:--

  'When Heaven grew weak and a successful fight,
  The giants raised and gods were saved by flight,
  From snaky Typhon's arms, a fish's shape
  Saved Venus and secured her from a rape.
  Euphrates hid her, and from thence his streams
  Owe all obedience to the fish's beams.'

"Or because a fish carried from the Euphrates an egg of wonderful size,
which a dove kept warm, and hatched the Syrian goddess; hence it was that
they abstained from the eating of fish. They feared that if they ate those
animals the vengeance of the goddess would be aroused: that the limbs of
their body would swell; that they would be covered by ulcers, and consumed
by wasting disease. Plutarch says of the Pythagoreans, that of sea
creatures they especially abstained from eating the fish called mullet and
urtic. They abstained from eating any kind of fish in order to instruct
men and accustom themselves to acts of justice, for they say that fish
neither do nor are capable of doing us harm. Others abstained from fish,
the same author says, because man arose from a liquid substance, and
therefore they worship fish as of the same production and breeding with
themselves.

"Anaximander says that men were first produced in fish, and when they were
grown up and able to help themselves were thrown out, and so lived upon
the land. So he contends that fishes were our common parents.

"Xenophon, in his Anabasis, speaking of the river Chalos, says it was
filled with large and gentle fish, which the Syrians worshipped as gods.
Neither would they permit them to be injured.

"These stories about fish are by no means the growth of the more ancient
ages, for about the time of the return of the Israelites from Egyptian
bondage, the Tyrians were in the habit of taking fish to Jerusalem for
sale. In Nehemiah xiii., v. 16 the words are as follows: 'There dwell men
of Tyre also therein, which brought fish, and all manner of ware and sold
on the sabbath, unto the children of Judah, and in Jerusalem.' At this
time the Jews were not free from the profane rites of their neighbours,
particularly such as had taken their wives from among the Philistines, who
especially worshipped Dagon. To eat fish or to sell them on the public
market-place was surely a great indignity to the god. There were certain
fish sacred among other nations, as Pompilius among the Grecians, Anguilla
among the Egyptians, and others among the Pythagoreans. In the same way as
fish, so were also doves held in great honour out of favour to this god.
It is, however, well known that doves were sacred to Venus, and she is
Derceto.

"The temple of Dagon is called Beth-Dagon, which is pure Hebrew. (See I.
Maccabeus x., 23.) 'The horsemen also being scattered in the field, fled
to Azotus and went into Beth-Dagon, their idol's temple, for safety.'
Venus of the Ascalonites--that is Derceto--has the very same name with
Herodotus, as Mylitta, Alitta, and the mother of the gods, and about the
temple of the goddess of Hierapolis fish and doves were received as
sacred, and in her honour, no less than where Derceto was worshipped.

"'Paradise Lost' has the following of this deity:--

                            'Next came one
  Who mourned in earnest, when the captive ark
  Maimed his brute image, heads and hands lopped off
  In his own temple on the grunsel edge,
  Where he fell flat, and shamed his worshippers;
  Dagon his name, sea-monster, upward man
  And downward fish: yet had his temple high
  Reared in Azotus, dreaded through the coast
  Of Palestine, in Gath and Ascalon,
  And Accaron and Gaza's frontier bounds.'[12]

"Phin.--The old Irish demi-god Pin or Fin seems to have been a form of
Pineus, and, like him, was a son of Hermes, sharing, with the Budh or
Da-Beoc, the exalted title of Bar-en-di, Son of the One God. It was Fin
who conquered the dragon or put down serpent worship and established all
the holy rites connected with Crones or Lingams, and, strangely enough,
Phins or Feni, as Dr. P. W. Joyce calls them, showed like Eastern
Boodhists, a great liking for both charms, which are but small phali,
suitable for carrying or wearing on the person. They are exactly like the
little Lingas worn on the arms, or secreted on the head or chest of Indian
Sivaites. Irish history relates that Christian Feni diligently searched
out and revered the teeth of St. Patrick.

"In the Brehon Laws of the Senchus Mor, the Feni or Fiannas, or champions,
are described as a real historical people and the lawgivers of Irene. What
Arthur and his knights were to Brythonick, British, or 'Little Briton'
Kelts, Fin and his Fenians were in the two Skotias or among the Skoti.

"Before the Pagan Phin was converted, he is described as presiding over
the Tara assembly 'as a Druid in strangely flowered garments' (note the
likeness to Indra and Herakles), and with a double-pointed head-dress, and
bearing in his hand a book, like Brahma, Matthew, Vishnoo, and the fishy
deities of Assyria, and of the Clonfest Cathedral, County Galway, pictures
of which are given by Keane.

"The two-headed mitre of fishy form, the upright rod, spotted or chequered
garment, and basket in hand, distinctly mark the Eastern idea of a great
Phalik chief, whilst in the mermaid with open book and jaunty arm akimbo,
who allows not even the waters to obscure her sexual capacities, we see
the Irish idea of Atargatis or Derketis, or 'Divine Ketis,' that form of
Venus which Juno assumed at Kupros, in the old Kelto-Pelasgian temple of
Kupreuses. There, says Bryant, she was worshipped by the _Pigalia_,
_Pialia_ or _Pials_, that is, the worshippers of the Oracle or Pi, who may
be called the Pi-i, Phin-i, Pi-ni or Pini, a word which is possibly the
base of the Latin and French terms for the Phallus, and which is otherwise
of unknown but significant derivation. Macrobius calls _Der-Ketis_ 'the
mother of the gods,' and Syrians, 'the receptacle of the gods,' that is,
an _Erk_ or Ark, which the fish represented. If we were fully cognisant of
the origin of _Der-Ketis_, it might turn out to be, like the Indian names,
a dual or Linga-in Yoni. Thus Brahma, sitting on the lotus, is called
_Brahma-Yoni_, and if _Der_ be the Jovine tree or Oak, Der-Ketis would be
simply the bi-sexual name of a supreme god. The mythical Semiramis was a
daughter of _Der-ketis_, who was changed into a dove, and her mother into
a fish, showing the close intertwining of all these figures by
phallists."[13]

"Christians were very partial to the fish, but indeed, may be said to have
carried on freely all the ancient ideas, as which faith has not after its
first attempt at purification? On Christian tombs especially do fish
abound, commonly crossed, which reminds us that crossed serpents denote
their act of intercourse, and in this symbolism the fish would be very
natural and usual, because denoting new life in death. Derceto, the
half-fish and half-woman of the temple of the Dea Syria at Hira, was, says
Lucian, the perfection of woman; she was the mystic Oanes, Athor, and
Venus, whom Egyptians have handed down to us embalmed.

"So the Fathers of the Church have called their flocks Pisciculi, and
their high-priest a fisherman; and have given to all cardinals and bishops
the fish-head of Dagon.

"The fish is universally worshipped in all lands as the most fecundative
of all creatures; and where most valued, the superstitious have offered it
in sacrifice to their gods refusing to eat it. Many a time have I
travelled through a poor and barren country where it was all mankind could
do to live, and seen rivers and lakes teeming with fine fish which I dared
not touch, or only so by stealth as night came on, much to the annoyance
of my followers and myself, and the detriment of the people.

"We find Phœnicians, Kelts and Syrians specially mentioned as holding
the fish in the greatest reverence, and at different periods of their
history not eating it. The hill-tribes towards the sources of the Indus
have the same ideas. The Phœnicians picture Dagon and Dorketa the gods
of _Gaza_ and _As-Kal-on_, as Fish Gods, or perhaps we should say a fish
god and goddess, for we know they were also Astartian Deities. _Kuthera_
and _Kupros_ (Cypress) as shrines of Aphrodite, vied in the worship of
this fruitful Kubele, and Syria held the great northern shrine of
Hieropolis most holy to Venus as the _Fish Goddess_. _Cadiz_, Kodes, or
_Gadir-Gades_, had Herkales on one side of her coins, and a fish or
Lunette on the other; whilst Syracuse, or rather Soora-Koos, and Soosa
alike held their finny multitudes sacred to Fertility. In these days we
can imagine what a curse these faiths here were to the poor, and, indeed,
to humanity."[14]

"The high round hill of Tabor, known to Christians as the 'Mount of
Transfiguration,' is called by the Fălâhin the _umbilicus_ of their
great earth mother Terra--that womb of nature in which we are
transfigured. To her also they had sacred temples at Askalon and Akcho
with suitable holy waters; and still at Tripolis, her very ancient city,
do we find her pond of holy fish, which are said to 'fight against
infidels,' and to which multitudes still make long pilgrimages, and
worship with offerings and sacrifices. We have often come across similar
holy ponds and lakes in India, and been warned off with our unholy rod and
line. The Venus of Tripolis was Kadishah or Atergatis; indeed the city is
called Kadishah, a name expressive of coarse phallic vices."[14]

"Dion Cassius says the Caledonians never taste fish, although their lakes
and rivers furnish an inexhaustible supply. Two 'holie fishes' in the
seventeenth century occupied a well near the church of Kilmore in
Argyleshire. They were black--never changed colour--neither increased in
number nor in size in the memory of the most aged. The people believed
that no others existed anywhere. Mr. Martin, in his 'Western Isles,'
describes the ceremonies practised by invalids who came to be cured by the
waters of a well at Loch Saint, in the Isle of Skye. They drank the water
and then moved round the well deasil (sunwise), and before departing left
an offering on the stone. Martin adds that no one would venture to kill
any of the fish in Loch Saint, or to cut as much as a twig from an
adjacent copse. These customs practised in the end of the seventeenth
century, have apparently reference to the worship of the sun, the
fountain, the fish, and the oak.

"The absence of any allusion to the art of catching fish has been used as
an argument in support of the authenticity of the poem of Ossian, as well
as being corroborative of the statement of Dion Cassius. Fish-eaters was
one of the contemptuous epithets which the Scottish Celt applied to the
Saxon and other races that settled in the Lowlands of Scotland, and the
remains of the superstitious veneration of fish, or rather abstaining from
fish as an article of food, is registered by the author of 'Caledonia' as
influencing the more purely Celtic portions of the British population in
the early part of the present century.

"Ancient nations that did not eat but worshipped the fish were the
Syrians, Phœnicians, and Celts. But in Caufiristaun, in the remote
parts of the Hindu-Cosh, the Caufirs will not eat fish, although it is not
said that they worship it. They believe in one great god, but have
numerous idols that represent those who were once men and women. A plain
stone, about four feet high, represents God, whose shape they say they do
not know. One of their tribes call God Dagon. The fish-god and goddess of
the Phœnicians were called Dago and Derceto; the worship of Dagon being
more particularly celebrated at Gaza and Ashdod; that of Derceto at
Ascalon."[15]

"The old sculptures and gems of Babylon and Assyria furnish sufficient
proof of the worship of Fertility, but writers and readers have alike lost
the key, or purposely skipped the subject, and this we have a prominent
example of in the case of the beautiful Assyrian cylinder, exhibiting the
worship of the Fish God, which Mr. Rawlinson gives us without a comment.
There we see the mitred man-god with rod and basket adoring the solar
Fructifier, hovering over the fruitful tree from which spring thirteen
full buds, whilst behind him stands another adoring winged deity backed by
a star, a dove, and a yoni. On the opposite side of the Tree of Life is
fire, and another man in the act of adoration, probably the Priest of God,
pleading with both hands open, that the requests of the other two figures
may be granted."[16]

"I may state that all that the author of Anc. Mons. writes in regard to
these old faiths thoroughly supports what I urge, though he is far from
looking at their features as I do, for he clearly knows very little of
Eastern Phallic faiths and their interpretation. Ashtoreth is Ishtar or
woman, the Star in more senses than one; the Phœnicians call her
Astarte, but the 'present Mendean form is Ashtar,' and the plural
Ashtaroth. Bunsen derives this representative name from the very coarse,
but I fear perfectly correct source, '_the seat of the cow_--_Has_ and
_toreth_;' for this is true to the idea of all Hindoos, and shows us that
the terms 'male' and 'female' originally meant the _organs pur et simple_,
which indeed the writer of Gen. i. 27 expresses in the words _Zakar_ and
_Nekabah_. In all African and Arabian dialects, _Nana_ and not Ishtar is
the commonest term for Mother, the usual initial being Ma, Ya, Ye, Ni, and
rarely Om and On; see the long list of over one hundred names given by Sir
John Lubbock as those of the 'non-Aryan nations of Europe and Asia' and of
'East Africa.' There we see Ma and even _Ama_ occasionally used for
Father, perhaps because among some tribes the strange custom existed of
his going to bed to protect and warm the infant as soon as born. The
almost universal initial sounds for the male ancestor are Pa, Fa, Ba, and
in a few instances Da and Ad, and once Od and Ta. In Asia Baba, Aba, Apa,
and sometimes Ama occur; now what we want to know is the origin of these
sounds, but here philology is silent with seemingly no power to advance.
This is not the case, however, in regard to the objective roots of
religion; here we work with reasoning creatures, and can see that the
child continues, and that all mankind have ever continued to mate, whether
in their own kind, or in their gods, the same A's, P's, F's, D's, to
males, and M's, N's, Om's, Y's to females, and we therefore conclude that
those were man's earliest symbols and names for the organs of sex, the
Omphe or Mamma of the mother, which man had first cognisance of, and the
A, Ab or Pa which he noticed as the characteristic of the opposite sex.
The Assyrian often represented Ishtar as the upright fish, probably
because of the fecundative powers of the fish, and as the creature _par
excellence_ of water. The great mythic queen Semiramis, wife of Ninus, the
founder of Nineveh or Ninus, was said to have sprung from a fish some
twenty-three centuries B.C., and to be representative woman, Eva or Mary.

"The mythic genealogy of Semiramis begins with a fish and ends with
Ninyas. Her mother was Dorketo the Fish Goddess of Askalon, in Syria,
where she was worshipped as Astarte or Aphrodite. She was famed down to
the days of Augustus for her beauty, voluptuousness, virtues and vices.
There seems no doubt but that there was some ruler called Semiramis, who
conquered most of Western Asia, Egypt and part of Ethiopia, and who
attempted India. Her fish origin is simply due to her being a woman and to
her marrying _On_ or _Ones_, or probably _Oanes_ or _Ho-Anes_, the Serpent
Fish, or recognised God of Passion, both on the lower Euphrates and the
lower Nile. Her conquests may merely signify that the race who had faith
in her conquered, or that certain conquerors embraced the worship of the
Sun Goddess. When Kaldia fell to Assyria, she was very naturally made to
marry Ninus, or the strong Bull-Uan which this name signifies; she was
preserved by doves, for these birds were sacred to Aphrodite. Mr.
Rawlinson believes that the origin of the myth lies in Ivaloosh's Queen of
the eighth century B.C., who was possibly a Babylonian, and shared in the
Government with her Lord, but there is little doubt that there was such a
queen or goddess. Her name, if embracing Sun and fertilizing energies,
would naturally be Sivāmy or Sami (God), Rames, Rami, or Ramesi--the
Goddess of the Sun, in fact Ishtar, which Wilford calls her, saying these
names mean Isis. The Assyrian story is, that she sprang from a dove or
Yoni, which Capotesi would signify, and this is the Indian
manifestation."[17]




CHAPTER III.

    _Universal Love of Flowers--Indifference to Flowers--Excessive Love
    of Flowers leading to Adoration--Myths and Legends connected with
    Flowers, the Flos Adonis, Narcissus, Myrtle, Silene inflata,
    Clover--The Hundred-leaved Rose--The Worship of the Lily Species--
    Signification of the Lotos--Hermaphroditic Character of the Lotos--
    The Indian Mutiny of 1857, part played by the Lotos during its
    Instigation._


"Why?" asked a writer some years ago, "why is it that every eye kindles
with delight at the sight of beautiful flowers? that in all lands, and
amidst all nations, the love of flowers appears to prevail to so great an
extent, that no home is considered complete without them--no festival duly
honoured unless they decorate the place where it is observed? They are
strewn in the path of the bride; they are laid on the bier of the dead;
the merry-maker selects from the floral tribes the emblem of his joy; and
the mourner the insignia of his grief. Everywhere and under all
circumstances, flowers are eagerly sought after and affectionately
cherished; and when the living and growing are not to be obtained, then is
their place filled by some substitute or other, according to the
circumstances or taste of the wearer; but whether that substitute be a
wreath of gorgeous gems for the brow of royalty, or a bunch of coloured
cambric for the adornment of a servant girl, it is usually wrought into
the form of flowers.

"This taste depends not on wealth or on education, but is given, if not to
all individuals, yet to some of every class. From the infant's first gleam
of intelligence, a flower will suffice to still its cries; and even in old
age the mind which has not been perverted from its natural instincts, can
find a calm and soothing pleasure in the contemplation of these gems of
creation."

A man, reputed wise, was once asked in a garden: "do you like flowers?"
"No," said he; "I seldom find time to descend to the little things." "This
man," said an American writer, "betrayed a descent, in his speech, to the
pithole of ignorance. Flowers, sweet flowers! he that loves them not
should be classed with the man that hath not music in his soul, as a
dangerous member of the community."

Instead of _not liking_ or _not caring_, leaving out, _not loving_
flowers, the general tendency with humanity has been to run to an opposite
extreme and render them not merely estimation, care or love, but
veneration and worship.

The adoration of flowers is one of the most ancient systems of worship
with which we are acquainted. It can be traced back for ages amongst the
Hindus, who believing that the human soul is a spark or emanation from the
Great Supreme, held that this essence can only be renovated in man by a
communion with his works; it is found amongst the Chinese, it occupied a
most important position in the mysteries of Egyptian idolatry, it figures
prominently on the past and present monuments of Mexico, and to some
extent prevailed in Europe. Naturally enough, it arose in the warmer
regions of the earth, where the vegetable productions of the tropics are
so much more gorgeous in their colouring and noble in their growth, and in
those regions it still lingers, after having been swept away in other
lands before the advance of education and a more intellectual religion.

It would be interesting did space allow to enumerate some of the myths and
legends connected with flowers, but as we have another object in view
these must be allowed to pass with a mere cursory allusion. There is the
Flos Adonis which perpetuates the memory of Venus's favourite, Adonis, the
son of Myrrha, who was herself said to be turned into a tree called myrrh.
Adonis had often been warned by Venus not to hunt wild beasts; but
disregarding her advice, he was at last killed by a wild boar and was then
changed by his mistress into this flower. There was Narcissus, too,
destroying himself in trying to grasp his form when reflected in the water
by whose margin he was reclining. Then we have Myrtillus and the Myrtle.
The father of Hippodamia declared that no one should marry his daughter
who could not conquer him in a chariot race; and one of the lovers of the
young lady bribed Myrtillus, who was an attendant of Œnomaüs, to take
out the linchpin from his master's chariot, by which means the master was
killed; and Myrtillus, repenting when he saw him dead, cast himself into
the sea, and was afterwards changed by Mercury into the myrtle.

A bladder campion (Silene inflata) is another curiosity. Ancient writers
say that it was formerly a youth named Campion, whom Minerva employed to
catch flies for her owls to eat during the day, when their eyes did not
serve them to catch food for themselves; but Campion indulging himself
with a nap when he ought to have been busy at his task, the angry goddess
changed him into this flower, which still retains in its form the bladders
in which Campion kept his flies, and droops its head at night when owls
fly abroad and have their eyes about them.

The common clover which was much used in ancient Greek festivals, was
regarded by the Germans as sacred, chiefly in its four leaved variety.
There is indeed, in the vicinity of Altenburg, a superstition that if a
farmer takes home with him a handful of clover taken from each of the four
corners of his neighbour's field it will go well with his cattle during
the whole year; but the normal belief is that the four-leaved clover, on
account of its cross form, is endowed with magical virtues. The general
form of the superstition is that one who carries it about with him will be
successful at play, and will be able to detect the proximity of evil
spirits. In Bohemia it is said that if the maiden manages to put it into
the shoe of her lover without knowledge when he is going on any journey,
he will be sure to return to her faithfully and safely. In the Tyrol the
lover puts it under the pillow to dream of the beloved. On Christmas Eve,
especially, one who has it may see witches. Plucked with a gloved hand and
taken into the house of a lunatic without anyone else perceiving it, it is
said to cure madness. In Ireland also it is deemed sacred and has been
immortalized in Lover's beautiful song as a safeguard against every
imaginable kind of sorrow and misfortune.

It was a belief among the Jews, according to Zoroaster says Howitt, that
every flower is appropriated to a particular angel, and that the
hundred-leaved rose is consecrated to an archangel of the highest order.
The same author relates that the Persian fire-worshippers believe that
Abraham was thrown into a furnace by Nimrod, and the flames forthwith
turned into a bed of roses.

In contradistinction to this in sentiment is the belief of the Turk, who
holds that this lovely flower springs from the perspiration of Mohammed,
and, in accordance with this creed, they never tread upon it or suffer one
to lie upon the ground.

"Of shrub or flower worship, the most important in the east and south has
been that of the lily species. The lily of October--the saffron--was very
sacred to the Karnean, or horned Apollo--that is, the sun--for horns
usually stand for rays of glory, as in the case of the horned Moses of our
poets, artists and ecclesiastics, who make him like an Apis of Egypt,
because of the text which says, 'his face shone' when he came down from
the mountain. All lilies have more or less to do with the female or
fecundating energies, and so even in Europe we have many stories of the
crocus species, because it is said 'of their irradiating light, having
peculiar looking bells, three-headed and crested capillaments, three
cells, and reddish seeds,' &c.

"The Lotus is the seat of most deities, but notably so of the creator
Brahma, who, thus enthroned, is called the _Kamāl-a-yoni_, or the great
androgynous god. The lotus is the womb of all creation. It is said to
originate from the great fertiliser, water, alone; and dropping its great
leaves on this fertiliser as on a bed, it springs upwards with a slender,
elegant stalk, and spreads forth in a lovely flower. Even the grave and
mighty Vishnoo delights in the lotus, which is one of the four emblems he
holds in his fourfold arms. It is Venus' sacred flower.

"The flower is shaped like a boat, is a representation of divinity, and is
shown as springing from the navel of the great god resting on his milky
sea. It always signifies fecundation. Inman, under the head Nabhi, navel,
says--'The germ is "Meroo" (the highest pinnacle of the earth), the petals
and filaments are the mountains which encircle Meroo, a type of the Yoni,'
and Sanscrit for _mons veneris_. Amongst fourteen kinds of fruit and
flowers which must be presented to 'Ananta' (Sanskrit, eternity), the
lotus is the only indispensable one, as he (Ananta) is then worshipped in
the form of a mighty serpent with seven heads.

"Hindoo and other writers often tell us that the lotus originated the idea
of the triangle, which is 'the first of perfect figures, for two lines are
an imperfection,' and the lotus also gives us a circle on a triangle which
is full of cells and seed, and so is more perfect still. Siva is, as
Orientals know, '_the god of the triangle_,' and hence, in his palace in
_Kailasa_ we are told the most precious object 'on his table of nine
precious stones is the padma (lotus), carrying in its bosom the triangle,
as origin and source of all things;' and that from 'this triangle issues
the Lingam, the eternal god who makes in it his eternal dwelling;' which,
however, is not quite correct on the part of M. Guigniant, whom Mr. Barlow
quotes. The lotus is an inverted triangle, and is therefore the female
sign; the pyramid or triangle on base is Siva, or the _Ray of Light_, the
sun-god.

"Another reason why the lotus is in all lands so sacred is its androgynous
or hermaphrodite character, a feature imperative in the case of all the
great gods of man, though this is not very clear if we dive deeply below
the surface, either in the case of the Jewish Elohim or the lotus. Brahma,
the creator, whilst sitting on the lotus, as all great gods do, desired,
says the 'Hindoo Inspired Word,' to create the universe, and for this
purpose, became androgynous, or a breathing-spirit (Ruach?)--prakriti or
nature; when creation at once commenced and progressed, much as we have it
in the genesis of most faiths. The details of this mystic plant have much
exercised all Asiatic and Egyptian minds. In its circular stamina it shows
two equilateral triangles placed across each other, which Sanskritists
call the _shristi-chakra_, also sixteen petals called the _shoodasa_; and
this, it is held, is a revelation from the deity as to the proper age for
the representative woman or prakriti, in the Sakti ceremonies. These
triangles, with apex upwards and downwards, are _the chapel_ or magic
diagram which the pious are told to ponder over, for it has many
significations and possesses numerous spells; and hence we see it
venerated in all early ages, and still an important article of
Freemasonry. The spells go by the name of the _devi-chakrams_, or godesses
of circles, no doubt having a solar signification.

"The _Padma_ and _Kamalata_ or _Granter-of-Desires_, or
'Consummator-of-our-Wishes,' are all terms applied to the lotus. It is the
symbol of Venus or Lakshmi, or of her incarnation--Krishna's wife, Padha,
who is commonly a nude Venus or Sakti. It is also called '_love's
creeper_,' the throne and ark of the gods, and the water-born one. One
author writes, that from far Thibet to Ceylon, and over every eastern
land and islet, the holy Padma is only a little less sacred than the Queen
of Heaven--Juno (I Oni) herself. It is as mysterious as the Yoni--is, like
it, the flower of concealment, of night and of silence, and that
mysteriousness of generation and reproduction; it is described as a sort
of incomprehensible dualism which veils the Almighty One and his mysteries
from our minds. Linnæus tells us it is the _Nelumbo_, but R. Payne Knight
is clearer when he writes to this effect. The flowers of the lotus contain
a seed vessel shaped like an inverted _cone or bell_, which are very holy
symbols with all peoples, and representative male and female. This
inverted bell is punctuated on the top with little cavities or cells in
which the seeds grow as in a matrix fed by the parent plant till they
arrive at such a size as to break open 'the ark boat of life.' They then
emerge and float away, taking root wherever they find ground, and throwing
down long tentacles or tendrills in quest of it. The idea is expressed by
Brahma in his address to the angels, as given in the _Linga-Pooran_,
beginning: 'When I sprang into existence, I beheld the mighty Narāyana
reposing on the abyss of waters;' which reminds us of the Jewish
Elohim-god who it is said generated all things 'by brooding o'er the
deep.'"[18]

Those who remember the Indian mutiny of the year 1867 and the long tale of
horrors which overwhelmed the British dominions with grief, dismay and
indignation, will be interested by the information that the conspiracy was
first manifested by the circulation of symbols in the forms of cakes and
lotus flowers. Commenting upon this, a writer in "Household Words," of
September, 1857, said, after he had given a description and historical
account of the flower: I fear I may have indulged in too long an excursion
into the realms of botany to suit the reader, who merely wishes to know
why the Indian rebels choose lotus flowers as symbols of cospiracy. I am
sure I am as innocent of the knowledge as of the rebellion, but I will try
to help my readers to a guess. Four-fifths of the human species worship a
God-woman; and the vestiges of this worship are found in the most ancient
monuments, documents and traditions, stretching backwards into the past
eternity from millenium to millenium, towards an epoch beyond the records
of the Deluge, and almost coeval with the loss of Eden. The Tentyrian
planisphere of the ancient Egyptians represents the virgin and child
rising out of a lotus flower. The Egyptian hieroglyphics depict the
goddess Asteria, or Justice, issuing out of a lotus, and seating herself
upon the centre of the beam of Libra, or the Scales. Pictorial
delineations of the judgment of the dead, represent Osiris as Ameuti,
swathed in the white garments of the grave, girt with a red girdle, and
seated upon a chequered throne of white and black spots, or good and evil.
Before him are the vase of nectar, the table of ambrosia, the great
serpent, and the lotus of knowledge--the emblems of Paradise. There are
Egyptian altar-pieces upon which the lotus figures as the tree of life.
The Hindu priests say that the lotus rising out of the lakes is the type
of the world issuing out of the ocean of time.

Travellers who have observed the worship of the Hindus and Parsees, tell
us that they give religious honours to the lotus. The Budhist priests
cultivate it in precious vases, and place it in their temples. The Chinese
poets celebrate the sacred bean of India, out of which their god Amida and
her child arose, in the middle of a lake. We can be at no loss to imagine
the appearance of the Budhist pagodas, for our Gothic cathedrals are just
those pagodas imitated in stone. Their pillars copy the trunks of the
palm-trees and the effects of the creeping plants of the pagodas; their
heaven piercing spires are the golden spathes of palm flowers, and the
stained glass reproduces, feebly, the many brilliances of the tropical
skies. Every pious Buddist, giving himself up to devout meditations,
repeats as often as he can, the words "On ma ni bat mo Klom." When many
worshippers are kneeling and repeating the sound, the effect is like
counter-bass or the humming of bees; and profound sighs mingle with the
repetitions. The Mongolian priests say these words are endowed with
mysterious and supernatural powers; they increase the virtues of the
faithful; they bring them nearer to divine protection, and they exempt
them from the pains of the future life. When the priests are asked to
explain the words, they say volumes would be required to tell all their
meanings. Klaproth, however, says that the formula is nothing but a
corruption of four Hindu words, "Om man'i padma houm," signifying "Oh!
precious lotus!" Without pretending that the volume of the Hindu fakirs on
the signification of the lotus, might not throw more light upon the use of
it as a symbol of conspiracy, there are hints enough in the facts I have
stated to warrant the conclusion that it serves as a sign of a great and
general rising on behalf of Budhism. The flower was circulated to rally
the votaries of the goddess of the lotus.




CHAPTER IV.

    _Importance of the Lotos--Varieties of Lotos--Statements by Herodotus,
    Homer, Theophrastus, Dioscorides, Pliny, Athenæus and others--The
    Arborescent Lotos--The Sacred Lotos of the Nile--The Indian Lotos--
    Nepaulese Adoration of the Lotos--Shing-moo, the Chinese Holy Mother--
    Lakshmi--The Queens of Beauty--The Loves of Krishna and Radha._


The Lotos is a flower of such importance and prominence in the subject
before us, and especially in connection with the ancient worship of the
East--notably of that of a _phallic_ character, that we naturally look
carefully about us for the best descriptive information we can find
respecting it. A writer (M. C. Cooke, M.A.) in the "Popular Science
Review" for July, 1871, says:--"The history of sacred plants is always an
interesting and instructive study; more so when it extends into a remote
antiquity, and is associated with such great and advanced nations as those
of Egypt and India. Much has been written and speculated concerning the
Lotos of old authors; and great confusion has existed in many minds on
account of the desire to make all allusions and descriptions to harmonise
with one ideal plant--the classic Lotos. We must clearly intimate that it
is impossible to combine all the fragments of history and description
applied to some plant or plants, known by the name of Lotos--and met with
in the pages of Herodotus, Homer, Theophrastus, and others--into one
harmonising whole, and apply them to a single mythical plant. It is
manifest, from the authors themselves, that more than one Lotos is spoken
of, and it was never intended to convey the notion that, like immortal
Jove, the Lotos was one and indivisible. Starting, then, with the
conviction that the one name has been applied to more than one or two very
distinct and different plants, we shall have less difficulty than were we
to attempt the futile task of reconciling all remarks about the Lotos to a
single plant."

"In the first instance, it is perfectly clear that the Lotos of Homer,
which Ulysses discovered, and which is alluded to in the ninth book of the
'Odyssey,' is quite distinct from any of the rest. It is the fruit of
this tree to which interest attaches, and not to the flower as in some
others--this is the arborescent Lotos.

"The second Lotos may be designated as the Sacred Lotos, or Lotos of the
Nile. It is the one which figures so conspicuously on the monuments,
enters so largely into the decoration, and seems to have been interwoven
with the religious faith of the Ancient Egyptians. This Lotos is mentioned
by Herodotus, Theophrastus, Dioscorides, Pliny, and Athenæus as an
herbaceous plant of aquatic habits, and from their combined description,
it seems evident that some kind of water-lily is intended. Herodotus
says:--'When the river is full, and the plains are inundated, there grow
in the water numbers of lilies which the Egyptians call Lotos.'
Theophrastus says:--'The Lotos, so called, grows chiefly in the plains
when the country is inundated. The flower is white, the petals are narrow,
as those of the lily, and numerous, as of a very double flower. When the
sun sets they cover the seed-vessel, and as soon as the sun rises the
flowers open, and appear above the water; and this is repeated until the
seed-vessel is ripe and the petals fall off. It is said that in the
Euphrates both the seed-vessel and the petals sink down into the water
from the evening until midnight to a great depth, so that the hand cannot
reach them; at daybreak they emerge, and as day comes on they rise above
the water; at sunrise the flowers open, and when fully expanded they rise
up still higher, and present the appearance of a very double flower.'
Dioscorides says:--'The Lotos which grows in Egypt, in the water of the
inundated plains, has a stem like that of the Egyptian bean. The flower is
small and white like the lily, which is said to expand at sunrise, and to
close at sunset. It is also said that the seed-vessel is then entirely hid
in the water, and that at sunrise it emerges again.' Athenæus states that
they grow in the lakes in the neighbourhood of Alexandria, and blossom in
the heat of summer. He also mentions a rose-coloured and a blue variety.
'I know that in that fine city they have a crown called Antinœan, made
of the plant which is there named Lotos, which plant grows in the lakes in
the heat of summer, and there are two colours of it; one of them is the
colour of a rose, of which the Antinœan crown is made; the other is
called Lotinos, and has a blue flower.'"

After quoting a number of other descriptions from these authors, the
writer proceeds:--"From these descriptions it is evident that the Sacred
Lotos of the Nile, the Egyptian Lotos of the ancients, was a species of
Nymphœa, common in the waters of that river. Plants, and animals also,
submit so much to external circumstances, that the lapse of centuries may
eradicate them from spots on which they were at one time common. It by no
means follows that the same plants will be found flourishing in the Nile
now, that were common under the Pharaohs; but, when the French invaded
Egypt in 1798, Savigny brought home from the Delta a blue Nymphœa,
which was figured in the 'Annales du Museum,' corresponding very closely
in habit to the conventional Lotos so common on the Egyptian monuments.

"It seems to be very probable that the Lotos-flower in the hands of the
guests at Egyptian banquets, and those presented as offerings to the
deities, were fragrant. The manner in which they are held strengthens this
probability, as there is no other reason why they should be brought into
such close proximity with the nose.

"There is still a third Lotos mentioned by Dioscorides, Theocritus, and
Homer, which may be some species of Medicago or of the modern genus Lotos.
It is herbaceous, sometimes wild, and sometimes cultivated; but always
written about as though constituting herbage, and is on one occasion cropt
by the horses of Achilles. We shall not pause to identify this plant, but
proceed at once to the last plant it is our design to deal with.

"The Kyamos, or Indian Lotos. This can scarcely claim to be one of the
kinds of Lotos mentioned by the ancients, since it is distinctly alluded
to by them as the Egyptian bean, or Kyamos. This plant among the Hindus
has a sacred character, equal to that of the Lotus among the Egyptians. It
was doubtless Asiatic in its origin, but at one time was plentiful in
Egypt, whence it has now totally vanished. It is represented on the
Egyptian monuments, but far less common than the Sacred Lotos. Some
authors declare this to be the veritable 'Sacred Lotos of Egypt,' a title
to which it has no claim. Herodotus, after describing the Lotos,
adds--'There are likewise other lilies, like roses (and these, too, grew
in the Nile) whose fructification is produced in a separate seed-vessel,
springing like a sucker from the root, in appearance exactly resembling a
wasp's nest and containing a number of esculent seeds, about the size of
olive-berries. These are also eaten when tender and dry.

"Theophrastus describing this plant, says:--'It is produced in marshes and
in stagnant waters; the length of the stem, at the longest, four cubits,
and the thickness of a finger, like the smooth jointless reed. The inner
texture of the stem is perforated throughout like a honey-comb, and upon
the top of it is a poppy-like seed-vessel, in circumference and appearance
like a wasp's nest. In each of the cells there is a bean projecting a
little above the surface of the seed-vessel, which usually contains about
thirty of these beans or seeds. The flower is twice the size of a poppy,
of the colour of a full-blown rose, and elevated above the water; about
each flower are produced large leaves of the size of a Thessalian hat,
having the same kind of stem as the flower-stem. In each bean when broken
may be seen the embryo plant, out of which the leaf grows. So much for the
fruit. The root is thicker than the thickest reed, and cellular like the
stem; and those who live about the marshes eat it as food, either raw, or
boiled, or roasted. These plants are produced spontaneously, but they are
cultivated in beds. To make these bean-beds, the beans are sown in the
mud, being previously mixed up carefully with chaff, so that they may
remain without injury till they take root, after which the plant is safe.
The root is strong, and not unlike that of the reed; the stem is also
similar, except that it is full of prickles, and therefore the crocodiles,
which do not see very well, avoid the plant, for fear of running the
prickles into their eyes."

Major Drury observes that the mode of sowing the seeds, is by first
enclosing them in balls of clay, and then throwing them into the water.
Sir James Smith says that in process of time the receptacle separates from
the stalk, and, laden with ripe oval nuts, floats down the water. The nuts
vegetating, it becomes a cornucopœia of young sprouting plants, which
at length break loose from their confinement, and take root in the mud.

After comparing these and other accounts, the author of the paper urges
that there is no room for doubt that this is the plant which was known to
the ancients as the Kyamos or Egyptian bean, the Tamara of modern India.

"The beans and flower stalks of this plant abound in spiral tubes, which
are extracted with great care by gently breaking the stems and drawing
apart the ends; with these filaments are prepared those wicks which are
burnt by the Hindoos in the lamps placed before the shrines of their gods.
In India, as well as in China and Ceylon, the flowers are held to be
specially sacred."

Sir William Jones says:--"The Thibetans embellish their temples and altars
with it, and a native of Nepaul made prostration before it on entering my
study, where the fine plant and beautiful flowers lay for examination."

"Thunberg affirms that the Japanese regard the plant as pleasing to the
gods, the images of their idols being often represented sitting on its
large leaves. In China, the Shing-moo or Holy Mother is generally
represented with a flower of it in her hand, and few temples are without
some representation of the plant.

"According to Chinese mythology, Shing-moo bore a son, while she was a
virgin, by eating the seeds of this plant, which lay upon her clothes on
the bank of a river where she was bathing. In the course of time she
returned to the same place, and was there delivered of a boy. The infant
was afterwards found and educated by a poor fisherman, and in process of
time became a great man and performed miracles. When Shing-moo is
represented standing, she generally holds a flower in her hand; when she
is sitting, she is usually placed upon one of its leaves."[19]

The Lotos (Lotus) is held in the highest veneration in India, inclusive of
Thibet and Nepaul. Amongst the Brahmans and enthusiastic Hindoos, no
object in nature is looked on with more superstition; and their books
abound in mystical allusions to this lovely aquatic. Being esteemed the
most beautiful of vegetables, it not unappropriately furnishes a name for
the Hindoo queen of beauty, and Kamal or Kamala is a name of Lakshmi: as
is Padma or Pedma, another Sanscrit appellation for both. Under the form
of Kamala, Lakshmi is usually represented with a Lotos in her hand, and in
most pictures and statues of her consort Vishnu, he is furnished with the
Pedma, or Lotus bud, in one of his four hands, as a distinguishing
attribute. Accordingly, as it is represented in different stages of
efflorescence, it varies, in the eyes of mystics, its emblematical
allusions. As an aquatic, the Lotos is a symbol also of Vishnu, he being a
personification of water or humidity, and he is often represented seated
on it. Brahma the creative power, is also sometimes seated on the Lotos,
and is borne on its calyx in the whimsical representation of the
renovation of the world, when this mystical plant issued out of the navel
of Vishnu from the bottom of the sea where he was reposing on the serpent
Lesha.

Lakshmi, as we have just noticed, is the sakti or consort of Vishnu, the
preservative power of the deity. The extensive sect of Vaishnava, or
worshippers of Vishnu, esteem Lakshmi as mother of the world, and then
call her Ada Maya; and such Vaishnavas as are saktas, that is, adorers of
the supremacy of the female energy, worship her extensively as the type of
the Eternal Being, and endow her with suitable attributes. She is
represented by the poets and painters as of perfect beauty. Hindoo females
are commonly named after her: and there are few in the long catalogue of
their deities whose various names and functions are so frequently alluded
to in conversation and writing, either on theogony, mythology, poetry or
philosophy. Her terrestrial manifestations have been frequent, and her
origin various. As Rhemba, the sea born goddess, she arose out of the
fourteen gems from the ocean when churned by the good and evil beings for
the amrita or beverage of immortality. She then assumes the character of
Venus Marina, or Aphrodites of the Greeks, who, as Hesiod and Homer sing,
arose from the sea, ascended to Olympus, and captivated all the gods. The
production of Rhemba, Sri, or Lakshmi is thus described in the
thirty-sixth section of the first book of Ramayana. "The gods, the asuras
and the gandharvas, again agitating the sea, after a long time appeared
the great goddess, inhabiting the lotus; clothed with superlative beauty,
in the first bloom of youth, covered with ornaments, and bearing every
auspicious sign; adorned with a crown, with bracelets on her arms, her
jetty locks flowing in ringlets, and her body--which resembled burnished
gold--adorned with ornaments of pearl. Thus was produced the goddess Padma
or Sri, adored by the whole universe, Padma by name. She took up her
abode in the bosom of Padma-nabha, even of Heri," that is, of Vishnu, of
whom these are names. Sri, as this deity is often called, distinguished
her more particularly as the goddess of fortune, the word meaning
_prosperity_; but it is not given exclusively to Lakshmi. Other of her
names are derived from the lotus, which is the emblem of female beauty,
and especially applicable to this goddess. In images and pictures of her,
which are very common in India, Lakshmi is generally represented as a mere
woman; sometimes, however, four-armed; often holding a kamal or lotus, in
an easy and elegant attitude, and always very handsome. With her lord,
Vishnu, she is frequently seen on the serpent Sesha; he reposing, she in
respectful attendance, while a lotus springing from Vishnu's navel to the
surface of the sea (for this scene is subaqueous) bears in its expanded
calyx, Brahma, the creator of the world, about to perform the work of
renovation. Sometimes she is seated with her lord on Garuda, or Superva,
clearing the air, of which Vishnu is a personification. In Vishnu's most
splendid avatara, or incarnation of Krishna, she became manifested as
Rukmein, or Radha, the most adored of the amorous deities, and mother of
the god of love; here again corresponding with our popular Venus, the
mother of Cupid. In the avatara of Rama, Lakshmi was his faithful spouse,
in the form of Sita; in that of Narsingha she was Narsinhi, or Nrisinhi;
when Varaha, Varahi; and as the Sakti of Narayana she is by her own
sectaries called Narayni; and in most of the many incarnations of Vishnu
she appears to have descended with him, frequently under his own celestial
name: as his consort generally she is called Vaishnavi.

Lakshmi and Bhavani are both considered queens of beauty, and their
characters are said to "melt into each other." Lakshmi being commonly seen
with a Kamal or Lotos, the emblem of female beauty, in her hand, she is
called Kamala: the word is by some--by Sir W. Jones, indeed, in his
earlier lucubrations on Hindu mythology, spelled Kemel. In his profound
and spirited hymn to Narayana, which every inquirer into its subject would
do well to consult with attention, that deity, a personification of the
Spirit of Brahme, as "he heavenly pensive on the Lotus lay," said to
Brahma, "Go; bid all the worlds exist!" and the Lotus is thus
apostrophised:--

  "Hail, primal blossom! hail, empyreal gem!
  Kemel, or Pedma, or whate'er high name
  Delight thee; say, what four-formed Godhead came,
  With graceful stole, and bearing diadem,
  Forth from thy verdant stem?--
  Full-gifted Brahma."[20]

The following extract from the "Loves of Krishna and Radha" shews the deep
poetic sentiment associated with flowers, and especially with the Lotos.
Krishna, afflicted by the jealous anger of Radha, exclaims--

"Grant me but a sight of thee, O lovely Radhica! for my passion torments
me. I am not the terrible Mahesa: a garland of water-lilies, with subtile
threads, decks my shoulders--not serpents with twisted folds: the blue
petals of the Lotos glitter on my neck--not the azure gleam of poison:
powdered sandal wood is sprinkled on my limbs--not pale ashes. O god of
love! mistake me not for Mahadeva; wound me not again; approach me not in
anger; hold not in thy hand the shaft barbed with an amra flower. My heart
is already pierced by arrows from Radha's eyes, black and keen as those of
an antelope; yet mine eyes are not gratified by her presence. Her's are
full of shafts; her eyebrows are bows, and the tips of her ears are silken
strings: thus armed by Ananga, the god of desire, she marches, herself a
goddess, to ensure his triumph over the vanquished remorse. I meditate on
her delightful embrace: on the vanishing glances darted from the fragrant
Lotos of her mouth: on her nectar-dropping speech; on her lips, ruddy as
the berries of the Bimba."

Radha, half pacified, thus tenderly reproaches him--

"Alas! alas! Go, Madhava--depart, Kesavi; speak not the language of guile:
follow her, O Lotus-eyed god--follow her, who dispels thy care. Look at
his eyes, half-opened, red with waking through the pleasurable night--yet
smiling still with affection for my rival. Thy teeth, O cerulean youth!
are as azure as thy complexion, from the kisses which thou hast imprinted
on the beautiful eyes of thy darling, graced with dark blue powder; and
thy limbs, marked with punctures in love's warfare, exhibit a letter of
conquest, written in polished sapphire with liquid gold. That broad
bosom, stained by the bright Lotos of her foot, displays a vesture of
ruddy leaves over the tree of thy heart, which trembles within it. The
pressure of her lips on thine wound me to the soul. Ah! how canst thou
assert that we are one, since our sensations differ thus widely?--Thy
soul, O dark-limbed god! shows its blackness externally; even thy childish
heart was malignant, and thou gavest death to the nurse who would have
given thee milk."

Krishna is thus farther described in the same poem--

"His azure breast glittered with pearls of unblemished lustre, like the
full bed of the cerulean Yamuna, interspersed with curls of white foam.
From his graceful waist flowed a pale yellow robe, which resembled the
golden dust of the water-lily scattered over its blue petals. His passion
was inflamed by the glances of her eyes, which played like a pair of water
birds with azure plumage, that sport near a full-blown Lotos on a pool, in
a season of dew. Bright earrings, like two suns, displayed, in full
expansion, the flowers of his cheeks and lips, which glistened with the
liquid radiance of smiles. His locks, interwoven with blossoms, were like
a cloud variegated with moonbeams, and on his forehead shone a circle of
odorous oils, extracted from the sandal of Malaya--like the moon just
appearing on the dusky horizon, while his whole body seemed in a flame
from the blaze of unnumbered gems."

With respect to the mention above of the _blue_ Lotos, Moor
notes:--"Written in the north of India; the Lotos in the southern parts,
Bengal and the Dekhan, having only white and red flowers. Hence the Hindu
poets feign that the Lotus was dyed red by the blood of Siva, that flowed
from the wound made by the arrow of Kama."

And with respect to the expression, "the bright Lotos of her foot," he
says:--"Hindustani women dye the soles of their feet, and nails, of a
bright red. Redha, in her frenzied jealousy, fancies she sees a print of
her rival's foot on Krishna's breast; observing, perhaps, the indelible
impression of the foot of Brighu, received on his breast by Vishnu."

"The Indians commonly represent the mystery of their physiological
religion by the emblem of a _Nymphœa_, or _Lotos_, 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 _Méru_ and the
_Linga_; the _petals_ and _filaments_ are the mountains which encircle
Méru, and are also a type of the Yoni; the leaves of the calyx are the
four vast regions to the cardinal points of Méru, and the leaves of the
plant are the _dwipas_ or isles round the land of _Jambu_. Another of
their emblems is called _Argha_, which means a _cup_ or _dish_, or any
other vessel, in which _fruit_ and _flowers_ are offered to the deities,
and which _ought_ always to be _shaped like a boat_, though we now see
arghas of many different forms, oval, circular or square; and hence it is
that Iswara has the title of _Arghanatha_, or the lord of the boat-shaped
vessel: a rim round the _argha_ represents the mysterious Yoni, and the
navel of Vishnu is commonly denoted by a convexity in the centre, while
the contents of the vessel are symbols of the _linga_. This _argha_, as a
type of the _adhara-sacti_, or _power of conception_, excited and vivified
by the _linga_, or _Phallus_, we cannot but suppose to be one and the same
with the ship Argo, which was built, according to Orpheus, by Juno and
Pallas, and according to Appolonius, by Pallas and Argus at the instance
of Juno: the Yoni, as it is usually pronounced, nearly resembles the name
of the principal Hetruscan goddess, and the Sanscrit phrase _Arghanatha_
Iswara seems accurately rendered by Plutarch, when he asserts Osiris was
commander of the Argo. We cannot yet affirm that the words phala, or
fruit, and phulla, or a flower, have ever the sense of Phallus; but fruit
and flowers are the chief oblations in the _argha_, and triphala is a name
sometimes given, especially in the West of India, to the trifula, or
trident of Mahadeva. It can be shown that the Jupiter Triphylius of the
Pauchœan Islands was no other than Siva holding a triphala, who is
represented also with three eyes to denote a triple energy, as Vishnu and
Prithivi are severally typified by an equilateral triangle, (which
likewise gives an idea of capacity) and conjointly, when their powers are
supposed to be combined, by two such equal triangles intersecting each
other."[21]




CHAPTER V.

    _Story of the Fire-God and his secret--Growth of Fire-Worship--Fire an
    essential in Hindu Worship--The Chaldeans--The Persians--The Hebrews--
    Fire in Hindu Ceremonies--Duties of Hindu Life--The Serpent and Fire--
    Phallo-Pythic Solar Shrines--Fire and Phallic Worship--Leaping through
    Fire--Fire-treading in Scotland--Fire-leaping in Russia--The Medes as
    Fire Worshippers--The Sabines--Fire and the Ancient Christians--The
    Roman Church and Fire--The Jews--Temple of Vesta--Fire Worship in
    Ireland--Phallo-Fire Worship of Greeks and Romans._


The Rev. W. Gill in his "Myths and Songs from the South Pacific" supplies
us with a story particularly suitable for notice here, called the "Fire
God's Secret." The story tells us that originally fire was unknown to the
inhabitants of the world, who of necessity ate raw food. That in the
nether-world (Avaiki) lived four mighty ones: Manike, god of fire; the
Sun-god Rā; Ru, supporter of the heavens; and lastly, his wife
Buataranga, guardian of the road to the invisible world. To Ru Buataranga
was born a famous son Māni. At an early age Māni was appointed one
of the guardians of this upper world where mortals live. Like the rest of
the inhabitants of the world, he subsisted on uncooked food. The mother
Buataranga, occasionally visited her son; but always ate her food apart,
out of a basket brought with her from nether-land. One day, when she was
asleep, Māni peeped into her basket and discovered cooked food. Upon
tasting it he was decidedly of opinion that it was a great improvement
upon the raw diet to which he was accustomed. This food came from
nether-world; it was evident that the secret of fire was there. To
nether-world, the home of his parents he would descend to gain this
knowledge, so that ever after he might enjoy the luxury of cooked food.

The story goes on to say that when Buataranga set out, next day, on her
journey to nether-world, Māni followed her, unbeknown to her. He then
saw his mother standing opposite a black rock which she addressed in
these words: "Buataranga, descend thou bodily through this chasm. The
rainbow-like must be obeyed. As two dark clouds parting at dawn, Open,
open up my road to nether-world, ye fierce ones!"

At these words the rock divided, and Buataranga descended. Māni
carefully treasured up these words; and started off to see the god Tane,
the owner of some wonderful pigeons. He begged Tane to lend him one, but
as the one Tane lent him did not please him, he returned it, as he did
also another and a better one. The only bird that would content him was a
certain red pigeon, which was specially prized by its owner and was made a
great pet of. Tane at first objected to part with the bird and only did so
upon Māni's faithfully promising to restore it uninjured. Off went
Māni with the bird to the place where his mother had descended.
Pronouncing the magic words, the rock opened, and Māni descended. The
guardian demons of the chasm, enraged at finding themselves imposed upon
by a stranger, tried to seize the pigeon, intending to devour it. They
only succeeded in getting possession of the tail, which the pigeon went on
without. (They say that Māni had transformed himself into a small
dragon-fly and was perched upon the pigeon's back.)

Arrived at nether-land, Māni sought for the home of his mother, which
was the first house he saw. The pigeon alighted on an oven-house opposite
to an open shed where Buataranga was beating out cloth. She stopped her
work to gaze at the bird, which she guessed to be a visitor from the upper
world as none of the pigeons in the shades were red. She said to the
bird:--"Are you not come from daylight?" The pigeon nodded assent; "Are
you not my son Māni?" Again the pigeon nodded. At this Buataranga
entered her dwelling and the bird flew to a bread-fruit tree. Māni
resumed his proper form, and went to embrace his mother, who inquired how
he had descended to nether-world and the object of his visit. Māni
answered that he had come to learn the secret of fire. Buataranga said,
"This secret rests with the fire-god Manike. When I wish to cook I ask
your father Ru to beg a lighted stick from Manike." Māni inquired where
the fire-god lived. His mother pointed out the direction, and said it was
called Are-ava, _house-of-banyan-sticks_. She warned her son to be
careful, "for," she said, "the fire is a terrible fellow, and of a very
irritable temper."

Māni walked up boldly towards the house of the fire-god. Manike, who
happened to be busy cooking an oven of food, stopped at his work and
demanded what the stranger wanted. Māni replied, "A fire brand." The
fire brand was given. Māni carried it to a stream running past the
bread fruit tree and there extinguished it. He now returned to Manike and
obtained a second fire brand, which he also extinguished in the stream.
The third time a lighted stick was demanded of the fire-god he was beside
himself with rage. Raking the ashes of the oven, he gave the daring
Māni some of them on a piece of dry wood. These live coals were thrown
into the stream as the former lighted sticks had been.

Māni correctly thought that a fire brand would be of little use unless
he could obtain the secret of fire. The brand would eventually go out;
_but how to reproduce the fire?_ His object therefore was to pick a
quarrel with the fire-god, and compel him by sheer violence to yield up
the invaluable secret, as yet known to none but himself. On the other
hand, the fire-god, confident in his own prodigious strength, resolved to
destroy this insolent intruder into his secret. Māni for the fourth
time demanded fire of the enraged god. Manike ordered him away, under pain
of being tossed into the air; for Māni was small of stature. But the
visitor said he should enjoy nothing better than a trial of strength with
the fire-god. Manike entered his dwelling to put on his war-girdle; but on
returning found that Māni had swelled himself to an enormous size.
Nothing daunted at this, Manike boldly seized him with both hands and
hurled him to the height of a cocoa-nut tree. Māni contrived in falling
to make himself so light that he was in no degree hurt by his adventure.
Manike, maddened that his adversary should yet breathe, excited his full
strength, and next time hurled him far higher than the highest cocoa-nut
tree that ever grew. Yet Māni was uninjured by his fall, whilst the
fire-god lay panting for breath.

It was now Māni's turn. Seizing the fire-god he threw him up to a dizzy
height and caught him again like a ball with his hands. Without allowing
Manike to touch the ground, he threw him a second time into the air, and
caught him in his hands. Assured that this was but a preparation for a
final toss which would seal his fate, the panting and thoroughly exhausted
Manike entreated Māni to stop and to spare his life. Whatever he
desired should be his.

The fire-god, now in miserable plight, was allowed to breathe awhile.
Māni said, "Only on one condition will I spare you--_tell me the secret
of fire_. _Where is it hidden? How is it produced?_ Manike gladly promised
to tell him all he knew, and led him inside his wonderful dwelling. In one
corner there was a quantity of fine cocoa-nut fibre; in another, bundles
of fire-yielding sticks--the _au_, the oronga, the tauinu, and
particularly the aoa or banyan tree. These sticks were all dry and ready
for use. In the middle of the room were two smaller sticks by themselves.
One of these the fire-god gave to Māni, desiring him to hold it firmly,
while he himself plied the other most vigorously. And thus runs the
Fire-god's Song:--

  "Grant, oh grant me thy hidden fire,
        Thou banyan tree!
  Perform an incantation;
  Utter a prayer to (the spirit of)
        The banyan tree!
  Kindle a fire for Manike
  Of the dust of the banyan tree."

By the time the song was completed, Māni, to his great joy, perceived a
faint smoke arising out of the fine dust produced by the friction of one
stick upon another. As they persevered in their work the smoke increased;
and, favoured with the fire-god's breath, a slight flame arose, when the
fine cocoa-nut fibre was called into requisition to catch and increase the
flame. Manike now called to his aid the different bundles of sticks and
speedily got up a blazing fire, to the astonishment of Māni.

The grand secret of fire was secured. The story tells us that the victor
then in order to be revenged for his trouble and his tossing into the air,
set fire to his adversary's abode, that in a short time all the
nether-world was in flames, which consumed the fire-god and all he
possessed.

Māni then picked up the two fire-sticks and hastened to the bread-fruit
tree, where the red pigeon awaited his return. His first care was to
restore the tail of the bird so as to avoid the anger of Tane. There was
no time to be lost, for the flames were rapidly spreading. "He re-entered
the pigeon, which carried his fire-stalks one in each claw, and flew to
the lower entrance of the chasm. Once more pronouncing the words he learnt
from Buataranga, the rocks parted, and he safely got back to this upper
world. Māni now resumed his original human form, and hastened to carry
back the pet bird of Tane. Passing through the main valley of Keia, he
found that the flames had preceded him, and had found an aperture at
Teava, since closed up. The king's Rangi and Mokoiro trembled for their
land; for it seemed as if everything would be destroyed by the devouring
flames. To save Mangaia from utter destruction, they excited themselves to
the utmost, and finally succeeded in putting out the fire. Rangi
thenceforth adopted the new name of Matamea, or Watery-eyes, to
commemorate his sufferings; and Mokoiro was ever after called Anai, or
Smoke."

"The inhabitants of Mangaia availed themselves of the conflagration to get
fire and to cook food. But after a time the fire went out, and as they
were not in possession of the secret, they could not get new fire.

"But Māni was never without fire in his dwelling; a circumstance that
excited the surprise of all. Many were the inquiries as to the cause. At
length he took compassion on the inhabitants of the world, and told them
the wonderful secret--that fire lies hidden in the hibiscus, the urtica
argenta, the 'tauinu' and the banyan. This hidden fire might be elicited
by the use of fire sticks which he produced. Finally, he desired them to
chant the fire-god's song, to give efficacy to the use of the
fire-sticks."

"From that memorable day all the dwellers in this upper world used
fire-sticks with success, and enjoyed the luxuries of light and cooked
food.

"To the present time this primitive method of obtaining fire is still in
vogue; cotton, however, being substituted for fine cocoa-nut fibre as
tinder. It was formerly supposed that only the four kinds of wood found in
the fire-god's dwelling would yield fire.

"'Aoa' means banyan-tree; for intensity and rhythm the word is lengthed
into 'aoaoaoa.' The banyan was sacred to the fire-god.

"The spot where the flames are said to have burst through, named Te-oao
or _the banyan-tree_, was sacred till Christianity induced the owner to
convert the waste land into a couple of taro patches."[22]

"Light, then fire, the sun, and the 'whole host of heaven' seem
successively, and at last collectively, to have become objects of worship
to the Arian race; but first of all light, which was to them pre-eminently
the object of adoration in Northern India previous to the period of the
collection or composition of the hymns of the earliest Hindu Veda, or, in
round numbers, thirty-five centuries ago.

"According to Herodotus, the Persians venerated fire as a divinity, and
Pliny explains that the magic of Persia might apparently have been learned
from the practices of the Britons. There is abundant evidence to show that
our heathen ancestors worshipped the sun and moon. It might, therefore,
reasonably be inferred that in Britain, as in other countries, fire would
be substituted as typical of the great luminary--of its light and its
heat--and became an object of adoration, when the sun was obscured or
invisible in seasons set apart for celebrating the religious rites of a
Sabian worship. But we are not dependent on inference, however rational,
for a knowledge of the fact that fire was an object of adoration to our
heathen ancestors, even so late as the eleventh century; for in the laws
of Cnut fire appears as one of the objects the worship of which is
forbidden."

"Fire seems to have always had the firmest hold upon the wonderment and
then the adoration of the infant mind. To the present moment it is an
essential part of all Hindoo worship and ceremonies. From his cradle to
his grave, when the Hindoo is folded in the god's embrace, the ancient
races around me seek for it, use it, offer sacrifices to it, and adore
it."

The Chaldeans had a high veneration for fire, which they accounted a
divinity; and in the province of Babylon there was a city consecrated to
this usage, which was called the city of Ur, or of Fire.

The Persians also adored God under the image or representation of fire,
because it is fire that gives motion to everything in nature. They had
temples which they called "Pyræa," fire temples set apart solely for the
preservation of the sacred fire. They are said to have in that empire
fires still subsisting which have burnt many thousand years.

The worship of the goddess Vesta and of fire, was brought into Italy by
Æneas and the other Trojans who landed there; but the Phrygians themselves
had received it from the eastern nations. Fire was held in religious
veneration among the Gauls; and similar sentiments and practices have
prevailed in several countries of America.

The Hebrews kept up the holy fire in the temple. This holy fire descended
from heaven, first upon the altar in the tabernacle at the consecration of
Aaron and his sons to the priesthood, and afterwards it descended anew on
the altar in the temple of Solomon, at the consecration of that temple.
And there it was constantly maintained by the priest day and night,
without suffering it ever to go out; and with this all the sacrifices were
offered that required fire. This fire, according to some of the Jewish
writers, was extinguished in the days of Manasseh; but the more general
opinion among them is, that it continued till the destruction of the
temple by the Chaldeans; after that it was never more restored; but
instead of it, they had only common fire in the second temple.

The part played by fire in the life of a Hindoo is a remarkable one, and
shews the immense extent to which this form of worship has prevailed and
still prevails in some countries. In the man's earliest days--in his
childhood--at the ceremony called the investiture of the thread, fire is
kindled from the droppings of the sacred cow, sprinkled with holy water
and blessed. Then are brought to it various offerings of grain, butter,
&c., by the worshippers who are supplicating blessings, the officiating
priest all the while reading passages from the sacred books. The child's
father and mother pray to Agni (Fire) that its past sins may be forgiven,
having been done in ignorance; then they declare him to be of an age to
know good and evil--he is between seven and nine. The sacred thread is
then, after being duly washed and held over the fire, placed around the
child's neck, constituting him a Brahm Achari--one sworn to practise the
laws and behests of Brahm or Almighty God. Dubois, in Mœurs des Indes,
says--"A pious father will then say privately to his child, 'Remember, my
son, there is but one God, the Sovereign Master and Principle of all
things, and every Brahman is bound to worship him in secret.'"

A fortnight afterwards, a kind of confirmation ceremony takes place, again
before the fire, in which the parents promise that they will see that he
gets married and leads a good life.

Marriage is the principal feature in a Hindoo's life, and this, as most
people know, takes place very early and is attended with many important
ceremonies.

Here, again, fire is conspicuous as an object of worship, the ceremony
before it--the God Agni--being the last and most serious of all. With
clothes tied together, bride and bridegroom parade round about the deity
casting to him their offerings which now "symbolise," says Forlong, "the
sacrifice of all their virgin modesty to the god, as the emblem of sexual
fire." The final oath of mutual love and faith is then taken in an address
to the fire, and the pair, who are mere boy and girl, are duly married.

A little further on when the period arrives for cohabitation, the fourth
ceremony is then gone through, fire again being adored and sacrifice
offered.

In the final scene, when death has taken possession of the body, fire is
again called into requisition; it is carried before the corpse by the
nearest relatives, and ultimately reduces the inanimate form to its
original dust and ashes.

Forlong says--"Fire enters into every duty of a Hindoo's life. Before
partaking of his morning meal he utters incantations to Agni, offers to
him portions of that meal; and in like manner, before he wears a new cloth
or garment, he must take some threads or parts of it and offer these to
the same deity."

"It is from the rubbing together of the wood of trees, notably of the
three Banian figs--Peepal, Bar, and Gooler, the favourite woods for
Phallic images, that holy fire is drawn from heaven, and before all these
species do women crave their desires from God."

"Cave and fire rites are not yet extirpated from Jerusalem, nor, indeed,
from any nation of the earth. Christians still rush for sacred fire to the
holy cave at the birth of Sol, and men and women strive, in secret nooks,
to pass naked through holy fire."

"Syrians, as well as all other nations, connected the Serpent with Fire.
Thus the Jews had their fire altars, on which the holy flame must be ever
burning and never go out; and they carried about a serpent on a pole as
their healer. So also the writer of the Acts of the Apostles speaks of the
Christian Holy Ghost as having serpent-like 'cloven tongues of fire,'
which the margin of orthodox Bibles very properly connects with Isaiah's
Seraphim."

Forlong says:--"I began my study of British ruins about eight years ago
(from 1882), during a two-year-furlough, attracted to it at first by my
friend the late Sir James Simpson--President of the Society of
Antiquaries, Edinburgh--at that time writing and debating much on these
matters; and I came then to the same conclusion as I hold to-day; viz.:
that the ruins of Armorika, those of Stonehenge, Abury, and various
others, known popularly as 'Druid Circles,' are, or originally were,
Phallo-Pythic--Solar shrines, or places where all the first five elemental
faiths more or less flourished; the first (Tree) very little, and the last
(Sun) very abundantly; and if so, then we see the cause why European
writers so pugnaciously hold out, some for Sun, some for Fire; one that
they are mere places for sacrifices or burial, or for assembly of rulers,
clans, &c.; whilst a few outlying writers hint that the large stones are
Lingams, or mere groups of such stones as that of Kerloaz--the Newton
stone, &c. Colonel Forbes Leslie, in his 'Ancient Races of Scotland,' has
very nearly told us the truth, his long residence and travels in Asia
having enabled him almost to pierce the cloud, though he seems at first
not to have fully appreciated the ever very close connection between Sun,
Fire, Serpent and Lingam faiths, which I believe he does now."

"The European mind having once lost the old ideas of what these words
meant, and from having still such objects as Sun, Fire, and Serpent before
them, is always thinking of these visible objects, which I might almost
say a true Sivaite never recognises _per se_; for in fire the true Phallic
worshipper sees no flame, and in the sun no far-out resplendent orb as we
know, standing apart, as it were, in space, and to which we all gravitate;
he sees simply a source of fertility, without which the Serpent has no
power or passion, and in whose absence the animal and vegetable world must
cease to exist. The fire here, then, is not that which the real Sivaite
sees or cooks by, but Hot or _Holy Fire_, or the 'Holy Spirit,' or the
fire of passion, which to a certain small extent, and in certain symbolic
forms and positions, he recognises in flame, as when raised on a tower,
coming out of an obelisk, or rising in a column or pillar over an ark, or
smouldering in the secret adytum; for the first impresses him with the
Arkite, the second with the Phallic and Arkite, and the third with the
purely feminine idea; in all, he merely sees representative male and
female energies which are excited and fructified by the Sun, Apollo, or
the Sun-Serpent, as in his old coin, where fertility fed by fire feeds the
shell. In a column, be it wood, stone, or fire, he sees the Sun-stone,
such as the Mudros of Phœnicia, the Mindir of Ireland, and obelisk of
Egypt; and in the cist, shell, or Akros, the womb, Yoni, or sun-box; in
all, the column or Palas, and its Caput-oline."

"Leaping or walking through the fire, so frequently mentioned in Jewish
writings in connection with Molek, is still quite common in the less
civilised parts of India, being usually done in fulfilment of a vow for
blessings desired, or believed to have been conferred by the deity upon
the Nazarite or Vower. I have known of it being gone through for recovery
from a severe illness, and for success in an expedition or project which
the Nazarite had much at heart."

Some say fire should be trod because Drupadi, the mythical wife of the
Pandoos, did this, after defilement through the touch of Kichaka, and
because Sita proved her purity by fire. Where the British Government can
prevent this rite, flowers are thrown into the fire-pit, which seems as if
the fire were looked upon as a female energy. Fire-treading is commonly
accomplished by digging a deepish narrow pit, and filling it with
firewood, and then when the flames are scorching hot, leaping over it;
usually the rite begins by first walking closely round the fire, slowly at
first, then faster and faster, with occasional leaps into and out of it in
the wildest excitement. Mr. Stokes, of the Madras Civil Service, thus
describes the rite as it came officially to notice in April, 1873.

In a level place before the village deity, who was Drupadi Ama (Mother
D.), a fire-pit, in size 27 by 7-1/2 feet by 9 inches deep, was excavated
east and west, and the goddess set up at the west end. Six Babool or
Acacia trees (this being a fiercely burning wood) were cut and thrown in;
thirteen persons trod this fire, and one died from the effects. They
followed each other, some with tabors, others ringing a bell, and each,
after passing through the fire, went into a pit filled with water, called
the "milk pit." All merely wore a waist cloth, and had their bodies daubed
over with sandal. The one who died, fell into the fire, and had to be
pulled out. The fire was lit at noon, and "walking it" took place at two
p.m., when it had become very bright and hot. The Poojore, or priest of
the temple, said it was his duty to walk annually through the fire, and
that he had done so for seven or eight years. It was the mother of the
dead man who had vowed that if her son recovered from an attack of
jaundice she would tread the fire, but the old woman being blind, her son
fulfilled the vow. Some said that the dead man himself had vowed thus to
the Goddess Drupadi: "Mother, if I recover, I shall tread on your fire."
Death is rarely the result of this practice, but Mr. Stokes adds that a
few years ago, a mother and her infant died from the effects.

"On the 29th of June, men, and even babes, had to be passed through the
fire. 'On this night,' says Dr. Moresin, 'did the Highlanders run about on
the mountains and high grounds with lighted torches, like the Cicilian
women of old, in search of Proserpine,' and Scotch farmers then used to go
round their corn-fields with blazing torches, as was the custom at the
Cerealia. The ancient Roman Kalendar states, among other matter, that
fires are made on the 23rd; 'Boys dress in girls' clothes; waters are swum
in during the night. Water is fetched in vessels and hung up for purposes
of divination; fern is esteemed by the vulgar because of the seed...;
girls gather thistles, and place a hundred crosses by the same;' for has
not the thistle a cap like the lotus, and is it not a trefoil?

"In the 'Englishwoman in Russia,' p. 223, a writer says that 'on midsummer
eve a custom still (1855) exists in Russia, among the lower classes, that
could only be derived from a very remote antiquity, and is perhaps a
remnant of the worship of Baal. A party of peasant women and girls
assemble in some retired unfrequented spot, and light a large fire, over
which they leap in succession. If by chance one of the other sex should be
found near the place, or should have seen them in the act of performing
the rite, it is at the imminent hazard of his life, for the women would
not scruple to sacrifice him for his temerity.' The writer was assured
that such instances had often been known. Thus this 'Fire-dance' is a very
serious matter, and one which under the circumstances, we can learn very
little about: from its secret practice here by women it is clearly
connected with Agni, the Procreator or Fertiliser. Our ancestors were
inveterate fire-worshippers, especially at the four great solar festivals.
They thought no cattle safe unless passed through the May Day and
Midsummer Beltine fires, and no person would suffer a fire within their
parish which had not been then kindled afresh from the Tin-Egin, or sacred
fire produced by friction."

The Medes were undoubtedly worshippers of Fire, "as the most subtle,
ethereal, incomprehensible, and powerful agent. They were averse to all
temples or personification of the material things, or of Ormazd. Like our
Parsee fellow-subjects, they never allowed their hearth-fires to be
extinguished, nor would they even blow out any ordinary fire or candle; in
the Magian days, he who did so forfeited his life."

"We still see the remains--some very perfect--of the lone Fire-towers,
which Greeks called _Puraitheia_, amidst the lofty hills of Armenia,
Azerbijan, Koordistan and Looristan, some of which were Dakmas, or 'Towers
of Silence,' having gratings for roofs, through which the bones fell when
the body was destroyed. The Fire-God was called _At-Ar_."

The Sabines were, perhaps, more nearly related to our ancestors than is
generally thought; at least we may believe so from the Sabine and Gælic
languages having more affinity even than the Welsh and Irish, and from
other evidence. Dr. Leatham, in his work on _Descriptive Ethnology_, says
that 'much of the blood of the Romans was Keltic, and so is much of the
Latin language,' and a study of the movements of ancient peoples will show
how this is so. Like the Skyths, these old Sabines were devoted to all the
worship of Sivaites, and particularly of Mars' symbol, the Quiris or
Spear, after which we still call their greatest fête Quirinalia, and their
Mount Zion, the Quirinal. The worship of the _Quiris_ has not yet ceased
in high Asia, nor, I believe, in America. It was prominent on the summits
of all the Skythian bonfire piles and mounds at which these Aryan fathers
worshipped, and is connected with most rites. We also see it on numerous
sculpturings which have been unearthed from the ruins of the Skuti, or
Kelts of Ireland and Scotland--much to the perplexity of local
antiquaries. Hue, in his 'Travels in Tartary,' gives us these Phalli as
existing all over the immense extent of country he traversed, including
Northern China, Mongolia, Thibet. Spears are, however, too valuable to be
left sticking in 'these _Obos_,' as he calls them, and therefore 'dried
branches of trees' are substituted in very good imitation of spears.

"We have abundant proof that Fire was never neglected by ancient
Christians, either on tomb or altar. In a letter from Rome, we find that
in front of the Cubiculum, or square tomb of Cornelius the martyr, is a
short pillar supporting an ever-burning lamp of oil; and when this custom
of never-dying flame--alike common to all faiths--was revived in the third
century A.C., we read that the Popes used to send to kings and queens a
few drops of the oil from this lamp of the tomb of Cornelius. (See
Cor.--Ill. Lon. News, 3-72.) Nor need we be astonished at this, seeing
that Vesta's shrine still flourished and received Papal attention, and
that in every corner of the world Fire-faith existed. To this day none may
neglect the rites of this faith in Syria--cradle of the God, as the poor
Turkish Bey of Antioch and his son found to their cost, when, after the
earthquake of April 3rd, 1872, they and their officers kindly, reverently
and wisely buried the Christian dead, but without the fire-symbols and
bell-ringing (which they failed to understand), thereby greatly offending
a powerful sect of Antioch, called the Dusars, who, still clearly
worshipping Baal and Astaroth, rose upon the poor Turks and smote them hip
and thigh."

"In the county of Kildare, Ireland, 'everlasting fire' was preserved by
'holy virgins--called _Ingheaw Andagha_, or _daughters of fire_,' down to
the time of the Reformation. These were often the first ladies of the
land, and never other than those of gentle birth."

"No blessing can be asked or granted from the altar of any Catholic Church
until the candles are lighted. If a woman when pregnant desires to be
blessed by the Christian Church, she is instructed 'to wait on her knees,
at the door of the church, with a lighted taper in her hand,' nor can any
cross be blessed until three tapers are lighted by the 'man of God,' had
placed at its base. See Picart II., 117, where he gives some graphic
plates of Christian Phallo-solar-fire rites.

"In Goodwin's _Civil and Ecclesiastical Rites_, under the head of _Feasts
of the Expiation_, which we have reason to believe was at one time a
period of human sacrifice, we have the great Winter-Christmas Saturnalia,
or Juvenalia Festival of Lights and Fires described, when not only the
temples of Jews and Christians, but every house had to be carefully
lighted. Jews taught that the lights must be held in the left hand, and
the holder must 'walk between two commandments,' which seems to denote the
climatic or solar turn of the year. This old writer tells us that it was
'woman's peculiar province to light their lamps;' and that 'there are
certain prayers appropriated to this festival, and among the rest _one in
praise of God, who hath ordained the lighting up of lamps upon Solemn
Days_.' Here we see a close resemblance between the faith of the Jew and
the Islami, whose wives are enjoined personally to see to the lighting of
the household lamps on Venus' Eve. Jerusalem, we know, acknowledges the
God of Agni to the present hour, by annually giving out that holy Fire
descends from heaven at a stated season into the dark Adyta of the Sacred
Shrine; all old fires must be extinguished at this the season of Sol's
renewed vigour, so when the priest emerges from the adytum with the new
fire in his hand (and Christian priests have often done this, if they do
not do so still), crowds of every hue and creed rush towards him, light
their tapers, and bear away the new fire to their homes."

Referring to the Temple of Vesta mentioned by Davies, Forlong says--"Now,
what was this Temple of Vesta? In its rites and surroundings, its duties
social and political, it was one with the temples still existing in Asia
devoted to Phallic and Fire-worship combined, or perhaps I should say a
temple to Phallic worship only, but the cult in the dawn of brighter
faiths was somewhat hid away by the priests in the darkest recesses of
their temples, and not well-known by many of the worshippers, and scarcely
at all by European writers even of the middle ages. Any student of Delphic
lore and of Eastern travel, however, will recognise at once in Delphi's
Oracle and Vesta's Temple, 'The Old Faith' and its priestess worshippers,
although the writer in Smith's Dictionary of Antiquities does not appear
to do so. He describes Vesta's as merely a Fire-temple, and says that
there were six Vestales or Virgin Priestesses to watch the eternal Fire
which blazed everlastingly on the altar of the goddess. On the Pope has
descended the name of their superior as 'Pontifex Maximus.' If by any
negligence or misfortune the Fire went out, the Pontifex Maximus scourged
the erring vestal virgin, for had not she--a woman--permitted the
procreative energy of the god to forsake mankind?"

"Dr. George Petrie, who in 1845 still combatted, but without force, the
pre-Christian idea of Irish Towers, acknowledges signs of a very strong
and all-prevailing Fire Worship in Ireland. This he sees in Bel or
Bil-tene--'the goodly fire,' in which Bel, the sun in Ireland, as of old
in Babylon, was the great purifier. The Druids, he says, used to worship
in presence of two fires, and make cattle walk between them to keep off
evil. Even in Dublin we have still May-fires, and those of St. John's Eve;
and an old manuscript of Trinity College tells us that 'Bel was the name
of an idol at whose festival (Bel-tine) a couple of all cattle were
exhibited as in his possession,' which I conclude means--fixed by his
rays. The name of this feast in Scotland was Egin-Tin, in which we can
recognise Agin, Ag, or Agni-fire, and the fire-god of all Asia. In the
island of Skye--says Dr. Martin, quoted by Petrie, page xxxviii.--the Tin
Egin was a forced fire or fire of necessity which cured the plague and
murrain amongst cattle. All the fires in the parish were extinguished, and
eighty-one married men (a multiple of the mystic number nine) being
thought the necessary number for effecting this design took two great
planks of wood, and nine of them were employed by turns, who, by their
repeated efforts, rubbed one of the planks against the other until the
heat thereof produced fire, and from this forced fire each family is
supplied with new fire.

"This is the true 'fire which falls from heaven,' and it must still be so
produced at the temples of all fire-worshipping races, and at the hearths
of the Guebre or Parsees, as it was in this remote Isle of Skye.

"I must now make a few general observations upon the marked Phallo-Fire
Worship of the Greeks and Romans, too commonly called 'Fire and Ancestor
Worship,' it not being perceived that the ancestor came to be honoured and
worshipped only as the _Generator_, and so also the Serpent, as his
symbol.

"The 'Signs' or Nishans of the generating parents, that is the Lares and
Penates, were placed in the family niches close to the holy flame--that
'hot air,' 'holy spirit,' or 'breath'--the active force of the Hebrew BRA,
and the Egyptian P'ta--the engenderer of the heavens and earth, before
which ignorant and superstitious races prayed and prostrated themselves,
just as they do to-day before very similar symbols.

"The Greeks and Romans watched over their fires as do our Parsees or
Zoroastrians. The males of the family had to see that the holy flame never
went out, but in the absence of the head, and practically at all times,
this sacred duty devolved on the matron of the house. Every evening the
sacred fire was carefully covered with ashes so that it might not go out
by oversight, but quietly smoulder on; and in the early morning the ashes
were removed, when it was brightened up and worshipped. In March or early
spring it was allowed to die out, but not before the New Year's Fire had
been kindled from Sol's rays and placed in the sanctuary. No unclean
object was allowed to come near Agni; none durst even warm themselves near
him; nor could any blameworthy action take place in his presence. He was
only approached for adoration or prayer; not as fire, which he was not,
but as _sexual flame_ or _life_. Prayers were offered to him similar to
those Christians use; and with most he held just such a mediatorial office
as Christ does. The Almighty was addressed through him, and he was asked
for health, happiness wisdom and foresight; guidance in prosperity and
comfort in adversity, long life, off-spring, and all manly and womanly
qualifications. His followers were taught that it was the most heinous sin
to approach him with unclean hearts or hands, and were encouraged to come
to him at all times for repentance and sanctification.

"Before leaving the house, prayer had to be made to the sacred fire; and
on returning, the father must do so even before embracing his wife and
children. Thus Agamemnon acted, we are told, on his return from Troy.
Sacrifices, libations, wine, oil and victims were regularly offered to the
Fire, and as the god brightened up under the oils, all exulted and fell
down before him. They believed that he ate and drank, and with more reason
than the Jew said this of his Jehovah and El-Shadai. Above all, it was
necessary to offer food and wine to him; to ask a blessing before every
meal, and return thanks when it was over. From Ovid and Horace we see it
was thought pious and proper to sup in presence of the sacred flame, and
to make oblations to it. There was no difference between Romans, Greeks,
and Hindoos in these respects, except that Soma wine in India took the
place of the grape of cooler lands. All alike besought Agni by fervent
prayers for increase of flocks and families, for happy lives and serene
old age, for wisdom and pardon of sin. We see the great antiquity of this
faith in the well-known fact, that even when the early Greeks were
sacrificing to Zeus and Athene at Olympia, they always first invoked Agni,
precisely as had been ordered in the Vedas some 2,000 years B.C., and
probably as he had been invoked many thousands of years before the art of
writing was known."




CHAPTER VI.

    _Fire-worship in the States of the Mediterranean--Special Sacredness
    of the public City-fire of Greece and Rome--The sacred Fire of
    Tlachtga--Ceylon Fire-worship--The Parsees--Persian Monuments--Impiety
    of Cambyses--Cingalese Terms, Sanscrit, Welsh, &c.--The Yule-log--
    Fire-worship in England--The Fire of Beltane--Druidical Fires--May-day
    Fires--November Fires in Ireland--Between Two Fires--Scotland--The
    Summer Solstice and Fire Ceremonies--Worship of Baal in Ireland--St.
    John's Day--Bonfires--Decree of Council of Constantinople._


"All the states of the Mediterranean and Persia had, like India, baptismal
forms connected with Fire. With the Greeks and Romans the baptismal
ceremony took place between the ninth and twelfth days of birth, and
generally commenced by women seizing the infant and running round, or
dashing through the fire with it. So also at marriages, fire was the
active and 'covenant god.' No account was taken of a bride's faith; to
marry was to embrace the husband's religion, to be to him _in filiæ loco_,
and to break entirely with her own family; nay, marriage was for long
entered into with a show of violence, as if to demonstrate the separation.
It certainly reminds one of early times when men thus obtained their
wives. The principal part of the marriage ceremony was to bring the bride
before her husband's hearth, anoint her with holy water, and make her
touch the sacred fire; after which she broke bread or ate a cake with him.
Fire was also the God who witnessed the separation of husband and wife,
which, if there were offspring, was a rare and difficult act; but if the
couple were childless, divorce was an easy matter."

"No stranger dared appear before the city-fire either in Greece or Rome,
indeed the _mere look_ of a person foreign to the worship would profane a
sacred act, and disturb the auspices. The very name of strangers was
_hostis_, or enemy to the gods. When the Roman Pontiff had to sacrifice
out-of-doors, he veiled his face so that the chance sight of strangers
might be thus atoned for to the gods, who were supposed to dislike
foreigners so much, that the most laborious ceremonies were undertaken if
any of these passed near, not to say handled any holy object. Every sacred
fire had to be re-lit if a stranger entered a temple; and so in India,
every sacred place must be carefully purified if a foreigner (ruler and
highly respected though he may be) pass too close to a Hindoo shrine. I
have seen Government servants under me, and Sepoys, who meant no
disrespect, throw away the whole of a day's food, and dig up the little
fire-places they had prepared before cooking and eating, because, by
accident or oversight, my shadow had passed over it; though sometimes, if
there were no onlookers, this extreme measure was not carried out, partly
out of regard for me."

Dr. Keating, in his "History of Ireland," speaks of the royal seat of
Tlachtga, where the Fire Tlachtga was ordained to be kindled. He
says:--"The use of this sacred fire was to summon the Priests, the Augurs,
and Druids of Ireland to repair thither and assemble upon the Eve of All
Saints, in order to consume the sacrifices that were offered to their
Pagan Gods; and it was established under the penalty of a great fine, that
no other fire should be kindled upon that night throughout the kingdom; so
that the fire that was to be used in the country, was to be derived from
this holy fire; for which privilege the people were to pay a _Scraball_,
which amounts to threepence every year as an acknowledgment to the King of
Munster, because the palace of Tlachtga, where this fire burned, was the
proportion taken from the province of Munster, and added to the country of
Meath.

"The second royal palace that was erected was in the proportion taken from
the province of Conacht, and here was a general convocation assembled of
all the inhabitants of the kingdom that were able to appear, which was
called the Convocation of Visneach, and kept upon the first day of May,
where they offered sacrifices to the principal deity in the island, whom
they adored under the name of Beul. Upon this occasion they were used to
kindle two fires in every territory in the kingdom, in honour of this
pagan god. It was a solemn ceremony at this time to drive a number of
cattle of every kind between these fires; this was conceived to be an
antidote and a preservation against the murrain, or any other pestilential
distemper among cattle for the year following; and from these fires that
were made in worship of the god Beul, the day upon which the Christian
festival of St. Philip and St. James is observed, is called in the Irish
language Beul-tinne. The derivation of the word is thus: La in Irish
signifies a day, Beul is the name of the pagan deity, and Teinne is the
same with fire in the English, which words, when they are pronounced
together, sound La Beultinne."

Leslie in his "Early Races of Scotland," says: "From Dondera Head in
Ceylon to the Himalaya Mountains, and from the borders of China to the
extremities of Western Europe and its islands, we find clear evidence of
the former prevalence of the earliest form of false worship, viz., the
adoration of light, the sun, and 'the whole host of heaven.' In the
Rajpoot state of Marwar, in its capital Udayayoor, 'The City of the Rising
Sun!' the precedence of Surya, the sun god, is still maintained. The
sacred standard of the country bears his image, and the Raja, claiming to
be his descendant, appears as his representative."

"In a complicated form the Parsees of British India still retain that
worship of light, symbolised in the sun and fire, for which they became
exiles when their faith was proscribed in the land of their ancestors."

Leslie quotes various authors and travellers who had personally witnessed
the remains of many of these altars. "Chardin," he says, "in his travels
in Media in the end of the seventeenth century describes circles of large
stones that must have been brought a distance of six leagues to the place
where he observed them. The tradition regarding these circles was, that
councils were there held, each member of the assembly being seated on a
separate stone."[23]

In the Persian province of Fars, Sir William Ouseley observed a monolith
ten or twelve feet high, surrounded by a fence of stones. This rude column
had a cavity on the top. Similar instances--viz., of monoliths having a
cavity in the top--existed among the primitive monuments of Scotland. In
Kincardineshire, at Auchincorthie, there were five circles of stones. On
the top of one of the stones which stood on the east side of the largest
circle, there was a hollow three inches deep, along the bottom of which,
and down the side of the stone, a channel was cut. Another of the stones
in this group had a similar cavity and channel. Other examples of such
artificial cavities in ancient British monuments could be pointed
out.--(Gibson's Camden, vol. ii., p. 291.) The same traveller remarked a
few old trees which grew near this column, and these he supposed to be the
remains of a consecrated grove. One of the trees was thickly hung with
rags, the native offerings of the inhabitants of the country. Trees with
such garniture may commonly be observed in the Dekhan and other parts of
India, and not long since might be seen in many places in Britain. The
Monolith thus described, and adjacent to the grove, was called by an
expression equivalent to "Stone of the Fire Temple." We know from
Herodotus that the ancient Persians, like their expatriated descendants
the Parsees, were worshippers of the sun and fire, and the mysterious
rites of the heathen inhabitants of Britain must have closely resembled
those of the Persians, when the similarity induced Pliny to remark that
Britain cultivates magic with ceremonial so august that it might be
supposed that the art was first communicated from them to the people of
Persia.

Turning to Herodotus as here suggested, speaking of the order given by
Cambyses to burn the corpse of Amasis, after his people had failed to tear
it apart, owing to its having been embalmed, the historian says:--"This
was truly an impious command to give, for the Persians hold fire to be a
god, and never by any chance burn their dead. Indeed this practice is
unlawful, both with them and with the Egyptians--with them for the reason
above mentioned, since they deem it wrong to give the corpse of a man to a
god; and with the Egyptians, because they believe fire to be a live
animal, which eats whatever it can seize, and then glutted with the food,
dies with the matter it feeds upon."[24]

Leslie says "it is important, as a prelude to the description of rites in
a worship common to the early inhabitants of the Indian Peninsula and to
the Celtic population of Gaul and Britain, to refer to the cognate
expressions which they employed for the object of their adoration. In
Cingalese, Ja, Jwala, signifies light, lustre, flame; Jwalana, light; also
Agni, or personified and deified fire. Eliya is also Cingalese for light;
in Welsh, Lleuer and Lleuad, the moon; in Gaelic, Eibhle, anything on
fire. In Sanscrit, Jwala signifies light, flame; in Cornish, Gwawl; in
Welsh, Goleu; in Armorican, Goleu. In Gaelic, Geal and Eallaidhe is white;
Soillse, light, sunlight; Suil, the eye. In Cingalese, Haili and Hel, and
in Sanscrit, Heli or Helis is the sun. In Welsh it is Haul, pronounced
Hail; in Armorican, Haul and Heol; in Cornish, Houl and Heul. The great
festival of heathen Britain--viz, Yeul--was celebrated at that period of
the year when the sun having obtained the greatest distance from the
earth, commenced his return to restore warmth and to revivify nature.
Although Christmas superseded the heathen festival, not only the ancient
name of Yeul, but many of the customs, evidently connected with the
heathen rites, are not yet obsolete in South Britain; and in Scotland, at
least in the more remote parts, and in agricultural districts, Yeul is
still the word in general use for Christmas Day."

Hone, in his "Every-day Book" vol. I. p. 204, says: "The Yeul feast and
Yeul log can be clearly traced to their original source. The blaze of
lights, and the kindling of the great Yule log on Christmas Eve by a
portion of the Yule brand of the former year, is as clearly a heathen
ceremony, and for the same object of worship, as the fires on Midsummer
Eve. As to the feast, in times comparatively recent, the Greenlanders held
a sun-feast at the winter solstice, to rejoice in the conmencement of
returning light and warmth."

"From Teinidh and Tein, Irish and Gaelic for fire, is probably derived the
obsolete English word 'to teend.' Herrich, speaking of the Christmas
brand, says part must be kept wherewith to _teend_ the Christmas by next
year."

Evidence of some sort of fire-worship in England at various times is to be
found in the _Confessional_ of Ecgbert, Archbishop of York (8th century)
and the Penitential of Theodore, Archbishop of Canterbury (7th century),
and that this included the adoration of the light of the sun and moon
seems probable from the prohibition of the practice of passing children
through fire extending to that of exposing them on the house-tops for the
benefit of their health.

Leslie remarks that it is curious to compare these restrictions and
penalties to be enforced by English ecclesiastical authorites with the
denunciation of the same heathen practices by the prophet Zephaniah,
(Chap. I., 4, 5.) "I will cut off the remnant of Baal, and them that
worship the host of heaven upon the house-tops."

The allusion to the Midsummer Eve Fire in Hone, reminds us of the "Fire of
Bel" or Beltane of Scotland, a festival generally celebrated on May-day
old style. Leslie says, in other Celtic countries of Western Europe the
same expression, with slight variations in sound, was also used for the
great heathen festival which was held about the beginning of the month of
May. He further says: "Beltane is also used to express the fires that were
kindled in honour of Bel on that and on other days connected with his
worship, as on Midsummer Eve, afterwards called the vigil of St. John, on
All-Hallowe'en, and on Yeule, which is now Christmas. Of the ceremonies
practised at Beltane, and continued almost to our own times, the most
remarkable and general were the fires lighted in honour of Bel."

"Kindling fires at Beltane, on the hills and conspicuous places in level
districts, was so universal in Scotland--also in Ireland and
Cornwall--that it is unnecessary to refer to records for proof of events
which may still be witnessed in this year 1865.

"Conjoined with Apollo in the inscription on a Roman altar found at
Inveresk is an epithet bearing a considerable resemblance to the name of
the sun in Gaelic. Apollini-Granno is the commencement of the inscription.
Grian or Greine is the sun in Gaelic, and Grianach is 'the sunny.' This
resemblance it is as well to notice, for epithets not similar in sound but
identical in meaning are used for Apollo or the sun by classic authors and
the Scottish Celts, as Gruagach, the fair-haired. Enclosures called
Grianan or Greinham, 'the house of the sun,' where the people worshipped
the sun, are to be met with everywhere. On the Gruagach stones libations
of milk were poured. A clergyman of the Western Isles says that about a
century ago (this was in 1774), Gruagach got credit for being the father
of a child at Shulista, near Duntulme, the seat of M'Donald. Gruagach, the
sun, was represented by certain rude stones of large size. On the island
of Bernera, in the parish of Harris, a circle, defined by long sharp
pointed stones, has in the centre a stone in the form of an inverted
pyramid, called Clach-na-Greine, 'the stone of the sun.'"

Toland, in his "History of Druids," gathers together a good deal of
important information relative to Fire Customs in various parts of
England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, and the adjacent islands. He speaks
of the carns (cairns) or heaps of stones which are found on mountain tops
and other eminencies in different localities, and after alluding to the
uses they served in course of time as beacons, being conveniently situated
for such a purpose, says--"They were originally designed for fires of
another nature. The fact stood thus. On May-eve the Druids made prodigious
fires on those carns, which being every one in sight, could not but afford
a glorious show over a whole nation. These fires were in honour of Beal or
Bealan, latinised by the Roman authors into Belenus, by which name the
Gauls and their colonies understood the sun: and, therefore, to this hour
the first day of May is by the aboriginal Irish called La Bealteine, or
the day of Belen's fire."

"May-day is likewise called La Bealteine by the Highlanders of Scotland,
who are no contemptible part of the Celtic offspring. So it is in the Isle
of Man; and in Armoric a priest is still called Belec, or the Servant of
Bel, and priesthood Belegieth. Two such fires as we have mentioned were
kindled by one another on May-eve in every village of the nation (as well
throughout all Gaul, as in Britain, Ireland, and the adjoining lesser
islands), between which fires the men and the beasts to be sacrificed were
to pass; from whence came the proverb, _Between Bel's two fires_, meaning
one in a great strait, not knowing how to extricate himself. One of the
fires was on the carn, another on the ground. On the eve of the first day
of November there were also such fires kindled, accompanied (as they
constantly were) with sacrifices and feasting. These November fires were
in Ireland called Tine tlach'd gha, from tlach'd-gha, a place hence so
called in Meath where the Archdruid of the realm had his fire on the said
eve; and for which piece of ground, because originally belonging to
Munster, but appointed by the supreme monarch for this use, there was an
annual acknowledgement (called sgreaboll) paid to the king of that
province.

"On the aforesaid eve all the people of the country, out of a religious
persuasion instilled into them by the Druids, extinguished their fires as
entirely as the Jews are wont to sweep their houses the night before the
feast of unleavened bread. Then every master of a family was religiously
obliged to take a portion of the consecrated fire home, and to kindle the
fire anew in his house, which for the ensuing year was to be lucky and
prosperous. He was to pay, however, for his future happiness whether the
event proved answerable or not; and though his house should be afterwards
burnt, yet he must deem it the punishment of some new sin, or ascribe it
to anything rather than to want of virtue in the consecration of the fire,
or of validity in the benediction of the Druid, who, from officiating at
the carns, was likewise called Cairnech, a name that continued to signify
priest even in Christian times. But if any man had not cleared with the
Druids for the last year's dues, he was neither to have a spark of this
holy fire from the carns, nor durst any of his neighbours let him take the
benefit of theirs under pain of excommunication, which, as managed by the
Druids, was worse than death. If he would brew, therefore, or bake, or
roast, or boil, or warm himself and family; in a word, if he would live
the winter out, the Druid's dues must be paid by the last of October, so
that this trick alone was more effectual than are all the Acts of
Parliament made for securing our present clergy's dues.

"As to the fire-worship which (by the way) prevailed over all the world,
the Celtic nations kindled other fires on Midsummer-eve, which are still
continued by the Roman Catholics of Ireland; making them in all their
grounds, and carrying flaming brands about their corn-fields. This they do
likewise all over France and in some of the Scottish Isles. These
midsummer fires and sacrifices were to obtain a blessing on the fruits of
the earth, now becoming ready for gathering; as those of the first of May,
that they might prosperously grow; and those of the last of October were a
thanksgiving for finishing their harvest. But in all of them regard was
also had to the several degrees of increase and decrease in the heat of
the sun's rays."

With regard to the proverb "Between Bel's two fires," Mr. Huddleston in
his new edition of Toland (1814) adds a note in which he says:--"As Mr.
Toland in his note on this passage, informs us the Irish phrase is Ittir
dha theine Bheil; Dr. Smith has also given us the Scottish phrase, Gabha
Bheil, _i.e._, the jeopardy of Bel. Both agree that these expressions
denote one in the most imminent danger. Mr. Toland says the men and beasts
to be sacrificed passed between two fires, and that hence the proverb
originated. Dr. Smith, on the contrary, imagines that this was one of the
Druidical ordeals whereby criminals were tried; and instead of making them
pass betwixt the fires, makes them march directly across them. Indeed, he
supposed the Druids were kind enough to anoint the feet of the criminals,
and render them invulnerable to the flames. If so there could have been
neither danger nor trial. It may also be remarked, that had the doctor's
hypothesis been well founded, there was no occasion for two fires, whereas
by the phrase, _between Bel's two fires_, we know that two were used.
Doctor Smith has evidently confounded the Gabha Bheil with a feat
practised by the Hirpins on Mount Soracte."

It seems that the expression used by the Scotch expressive of a man in
difficulties, "He is between the two fires of Bel," was common enough to
attract the attention of other writers than those we have cited, and of
most travellers in the Highlands. Martin mentions it in his "Western
Isles," as also Shaw and the Rev. D. M'Queen. The latter is cited by
Leslie as a Gaelic scholar of the last century, who in regard to the
expression, "He is betwixt two Beltein fires," gives as an explanation
that the Celtic tribes in their sacred enclosures offered sacrifices,
commonly horses, that were burnt between two large fires, and Leslie adds,
"On this it may be remarked that horses were sacrificed to the sun by the
Arian race from the earliest times; and this continued to be practised by
Hindus, Persians, and other nations. In Britain it is probable that our
heathen ancestors sacrificed horses, and it is certain that they ate
them."

Jamieson's splendid "Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language,"
supplies us with valuable information on the point we are discussing,
drawn from a variety of reliable authorities. Under "BELTANE, Beltein, the
name of a sort of festival observed on the first day of May, O.S.;" we
have:--"A town in Perthshire, on the borders of the Highlands, is called
_Tillie-_ (or _Tullie_) _beltane_, _i.e._ the eminence or rising ground of
the fire of Baal. In the neighbourhood is a druidical temple of eight
upright stones, where it is supposed the fire was kindled. At some
distance from this is another temple of the same kind, but smaller, and
near it a well still held in great veneration. On Beltane morning
superstitious people go to this well, and drink of it; then they make a
procession round it, as I am informed, nine times. After this, they in
like manner go round the temple. So deep rooted is this heathenish
superstition in the minds of many who reckon themselves good Protestants,
that they will not neglect these rites, even when Beltane falls on
Sabbath."

Quoting from P. Loudon, Statist. Acc. iii., 105, the writer
proceeds:--"The custom still remains [in the West of Scotland] among the
herds and young people to kindle fires in the high grounds, in honour of
Beltan. _Beltan_, which in Gaelic signifies _Baal_ or _Bel's fire_, was
anciently the time of this solemnity. It is now kept on St. Peter's Day."

Just here we may turn to Mr. Pennant's "Tour in Scotland," for the
following interesting particulars. "On the first of May, the herdsmen of
every village hold their Beltein, a rural sacrifice. They cut a square
trench on the ground, leaving the turf in the middle; on that they make a
fire of wood, on which they dress a large caudle of eggs, butter, oatmeal,
and milk; and bring, besides the ingredients of the caudle, plenty of beer
and whisky; for each of the company must contribute something. The rites
begin with spilling some of the caudle on the ground by way of libation:
on that every one takes a cake of oatmeal, upon which are raised nine
square knobs, each dedicated to some particular being, the supposed
preserver of their flocks and herds, or to some particular animal, the
real destroyer of them: each person then turns his face to the fire,
breaks off a knob, and flinging it over his shoulder, says--_This I give
to thee, preserve thou my horses; this to thee, preserve thou my sheep_;
and so on. After that they use the same ceremony to the noxious animals;
_This I give to thee, O Fox! spare thou my lambs; this to thee, O hooded
Crow! this to thee, O Eagle!_"[25]

Further on the same traveller writes:--"The Beltein, or the rural
sacrifice on the first of May, O.S., has been mentioned before. Hallow-eve
is also kept sacred: as soon as it is dark, a person sets fire to a bush
of broom fastened round a pole, and attended with a crowd, runs round the
village. He then flings it down, keeps a great quantity of combustible
matters in it, and makes a great bonfire. A whole tract is thus
illuminated at the same time, and makes a fine appearance. The carrying of
the fiery pole appears to be a relic of Drudism."[26]

The "Statistical Account of Scotland, Parish of Callander, Perths,"
supplies several important and interesting facts relating to this. "The
people of this district have two customs which are fast wearing out, not
only here, but all over the Highlands, and therefore ought to be taken
notice of while they remain. Upon the first day of May, which is called
_Beltau_ or _Baltein Day_, all the boys in a township or hamlet meet in
the moors. They cut a table in the green sod, of a round figure, by
casting a trench in the ground of such circumference as to hold the whole
company. They kindle a fire, and dress a repast of eggs and milk in the
consistence of a custard. They knead a cake of oatmeal, which is toasted
at the embers against a stone. After the custard is eaten up, they divide
the cake into so many portions, as similar as possible to one another in
size and shape, as there are persons in the company. They daub one of
these portions all over with charcoal, until it be perfectly black. They
put all the bits of cake into a bonnet. Every one, blindfold, draws out a
portion. He who holds the bonnet is entitled to the last bit. Whoever
draws the black bit is the devoted person who is to be sacrificed to Baal,
whose favour they mean to implore, in rendering the year productive of the
sustenance of man and beast. There is little doubt of these inhuman
sacrifices having been once offered in this country, as well as in the
east, although they now pass from the act of sacrificing, and only compel
the devoted person to leap three times through the flames; with which the
ceremonies of this festival are closed."

Again referring to Jamieson, he says:--"The respect paid by the ancient
Britons to Belus, or Belinus, is evident from the names of some of their
kings. As the Babylonians had their _Beletis_ or _Belibus_, _Rige-Belus_,
_Merodoch-Baladan_ and _Belshazzar_; the Tyrians their _Ich-baals_ and
_Balator_, the Britons had their _Cassi-belin_, and their _Cuno-belin_.

"The Gael and Ir. word _Beal-tine_ or _Beil-teine_ signifies _Belus'
Fire_; as composed of Baal or Belis, one of the names of the sun in Gaul,
and _tein_ signifying fire. Even in Angus a spark of fire is called a
_tein_ or _teind_."

Martin's Western Islands bears similar testimony, thus:--"Another god of
the Britons was Belus or Belinus, which seems to have been the Assyrian
god Bel, or Belus; and probably from this Pagan deity comes the Scots'
term of Beltin--having its first rise from the custom practised by the
Druids in the isles, of extinguishing all the fires in the parish until
the tythes were paid; and upon payment of them, the fires were kindled in
each family, and never till then. In those days malefactors were burnt
between two fires; hence when they would express a man in a great strait,
they say, He is between two fires of Bel, which in their language they
express thus, Edir da hin Veaul or Bel."

It has been remarked that the Pagan rites of the festival of Midsummer
Eve, the Summer Solstice may be considered as a counterpart of those used
at the Winter Solstice of Yule-tide. "There is one thing," says Brand,
"that seems to prove this beyond the possibility of a doubt. In the old
Runic Fasti, a wheel was used to denote the festival of Christmas. Thus
Durandus, when speaking of the Rites of the Feast of St. John Baptist,
informs us of this curious circumstance, that in some places they roll a
wheel about to signify that the Sun, then occupying the highest place in
the Zodiac, is beginning to descend; and in the amplified account given by
Naogeorgus, we read that this wheel was taken up to the top of a mountain
and rolled down from thence; and that, as it had been previously covered
with straw, twisted about it and set on fire, it appeared at a distance as
if the sun had been falling from the sky. And he further observes, that
the people imagine that all their ill-luck rolls away from them together
with this wheel."

"Leaping over the fires is mentioned among the superstitious rites used at
the Palilia in Ovid's Fasti. The Palilia were feasts instituted in honour
of Pales, the goddess of shepherds (though Varro makes Pales masculine),
on the calends of May. In order to drive away wolves from the folds, and
distempers from the cattle, the shepherds on this day kindled several
heaps of straw in their fields, which they leaped over."

"Bourne tells us that it was the custom in his time, in the North of
England, chiefly in country villages, for old and young people to meet
together and be merry over a large fire, which was made for that purpose
in the open street. This, of whatever materials it consisted, was called a
Bone-fire. Over and about this fire they frequently leap, and play at
various games such as running, wrestling, dancing, &c.; this, however, is
generally confined to the younger sort; for the old ones, for the most
part, sit by as spectators only, and enjoy themselves over their bottle,
which they do not quit till midnight, and sometimes till cock-crow the
next morning."

A correspondent of the _Gentleman's Magazine_ for February, 1795, writing
from Skye, gives us:--"Curious fact relating to the worship of Baal in
Ireland. The Irish have ever been worshippers of fire, and of Baal, and
are so to this day. The chief festival in honour of the sun and fire, is
upon the twenty-first of June, when the sun arrives at the Summer
Solstice, or rather begins its retrograde movement. I was so fortunate, in
the summer of 1782, as to have my curiosity gratified by a sight of this
ceremony over a very great extent of country. At the house where I was
entertained, it was told me that we should see at midnight the most
singular sight in Ireland, which was the lighting of Fires in honour of
the Sun. Accordingly, exactly at midnight, the Fires began to appear; and
taking the advantage of going up to the leads of the house, which had a
widely-extended view, I saw on a radius of thirty miles, all around, the
Fires burning on every eminence which the country afforded. I had a
farther satisfaction, in learning from undoubted authority, that the
people danced round the Fires, and at the close went through these Fires,
and made their sons and daughters, together with their cattle, pass
through the Fire; and the whole was conducted with religious solemnity.
This account is exceedingly curious, and though I forbear the mention of
names, I can venture to assure you that it is authentic."

The remarks of Borlase in his "Antiquities of Cornwall," come in here very
suitably. He says--"Of the fires we kindle in many parts of England, at
some stated time of the year, we know not certainly the rise, reason or
occasion, but they may probably be reckoned among the relicks of the Druid
superstitious fires. In Cornwall, the festival fires called Bonfires, are
kindled on the Eve of St. John the Baptist and St. Peter's Day; and
Midsummer is thence, in the Cornish tongue, called 'Golnan,' which
signifies both light and rejoicing. At these fires the Cornish attend with
lighted torches, tarred and pitched at the end, and make their
perambulations round their fires, and go from village to village carrying
their torches before them, and this is certainly the remains of the Druid
superstition, for 'faces præferre,' to carry lighted torches, was reckoned
a kind of Gentilism, and as such particularly prohibited by the Gallick
Councils. They were in the eye of the law '_accensores facularum_,' and
thought to sacrifice to the devil, and to deserve capital punishment."

Brand mentions a few additional particulars which we here transcribe.

"Torreblanca, in his 'Demonology,' has a passage in which he tells us how
the ancients were accustomed to pass their children of both sexes through
the fire for the sake of securing them a prosperous and fortunate lot, and
he adds that the Germans imitated this profane usage in their Midsummer
pyres in honour of the anniversary of St. John's Day.

"Moresin appears to have been of opinion that the custom of leaping over
these fires is a vestige of the ordeal, where to be able to pass through
fires with safety was held to be an indication of innocence. To strengthen
the probability of this conjecture, we may observe that not only the young
and vigorous, but even those of grave characters used to leap over them,
and there was an interdiction of ecclesiastical authority to deter
clergymen from this superstitious instance of agility. A note at the foot
of the page says that Mr. Brand saw in the possession of Douce, a French
print, entitled 'L'este le Feu de la St. Jean,' from the hand of Mariette.
In the centre was the fire made of wood piled up very regularly, and
having a tree stuck up in the midst of it. Young men and women were
represented dancing round it hand in hand. Herbs were stuck in their hats
and caps, and garlands of the same surrounded their waists or were slung
across their shoulders.

"In the 'Traite des Superstitions,' we read 'Whoever desires to know the
colour of his future wife's hair, has only to walk three times round the
fire of St. John, and when the fire is half extinguished he must take a
brand, let it go out, and then put it under his pillow, and the next
morning he will find encircling it threads of hair of the desired colour.'
But this must be done with the eyes shut. We are further told, where there
is a widow or a marriageable girl in a house, it is necessary to be very
careful not to remove the brands, as this drives away lovers.

"The third Council of Constantinople, A.D. 680, in its sixty-fifth canon,
enacted the following interdiction:--'Those Bonefires that are kindled by
certaine people on New Moones before their shops and houses, over which
also they do foolishly leape, by a certaine ancient custome, we command
them from henceforth to cease. Whoever, therefore, shall doe any such
thing; if he be a clergyman, let him be deposed; if a layman, let him be
excommunicated. For, in the Fourth Book of the Kings it is written: And
Manasseh built an altar to all the host of heaven, in the two courts of
the Lord's house, and made his children to passe through the Fire, &c.'
Prynne observes upon this: 'Bonefires, therefore, had their originall from
this idolatrous custome, as this Generall Councell hath defined; therefore
all Christians should avoid them.' And the Synodus Francica under Pope
Zachary, A.D. 742, inhibits 'those sacrilegious Fires which they call
_Nedfri_ (or Bonefires), and all other observations of the Pagans
whatsoever.'"




CHAPTER VII.

    _Paradise Lost and Moloch--The God of the Ammonites--The slaughter of
    Children by Fire, notices in the Scriptures--Fire Ceremonies and
    Moloch--Sacred Fires of the Phœnicians--The Carthaginians--Custom
    of the Oziese--Sardinian Customs and Moloch--The Cuthites--Persian
    Fire Worship--The House-Fires of Greece and Rome--Sacred Books of the
    East--Laws of Manu--The Rig Veda and Hymns to Agni, the God of Fire--
    Vesta, worship of--The Magi--Zoroaster._


In Milton's "Paradise Lost" we read:--

  "First, Moloch, horrid king, besmeared with blood
  Of human sacrifice, and parents' tears;
  Though for the noise of drums and timbrels loud,
  Their children's cries unheard, that passed through fire,
  To his grim idol. Him the Ammonite
  Worshipped in Rabba and her watery plain,
  In Argob and in Basan, to the stream
  Of utmost Arnon: nor content with such
  Audacious neighbourhood, the wisest heart
  Of Solomon he led by fraud to build
  His temple right against the temple of God,
  On that opprobrious hill, and made his grove
  The pleasant valley of Hinnom, Tophet thence
  And black Gehenna called, the type of Hell."

"Moloch was the god of the Ammonites. In the worship and sacrifices in his
honour they burnt their sons and daughters, with the accustomed forms and
ceremonies." In Leviticus xviii. 21 we find a prohibition of passing the
children through the fire and in chapter xx. the punishment of death by
stoning is awarded to any who gave their seed to Moloch.

"However," says Selden, "many of the Hebrews write that the children were
neither burnt nor slain, but that two funeral pyres were constructed by
the priests of Moloch, and that they led the children only between the
pyres, as if in this way to purify them. Moses Ben Maimon says that in
those days the servitors of the fires made men believe that their sons and
daughters would die unless they were thus led, and on this account and
the love of their children they hastened to do that which was so easy, and
there was no other way of saving the children from the fire. There are
some who say that the father in due form delivered the child to the
priests to be given back, and that he led it through, carrying it on his
shoulders. It is nevertheless true that the children were not only led
between the fires, but were also burnt in the sacrifices of the idols. See
Psalm cvi. 37 and 38, and read, "Yea, they sacrificed their sons and their
daughters unto devils, and shed innocent blood, even the blood of their
sons and their daughters, whom they sacrificed unto the idols of Canaan,
and the land was polluted with the blood."

Philastrius says "that they placed an altar in the valley of the children
of Hinnom, and so called after the name of a certain Tophet, and in that
place the Jews sacrificed their sons and daughters to demons." There are
other places which sufficiently indicate immolation of children in those
regions of Syria where Moloch was adored. Thus, see Wisdom of Solomon,
xii. 5, "And also those merciless murders of children and devourers of
men's flesh, the feasts of blood;" and xiv. 23, "For whilst they slew
their children in sacrifices"; and Jeremiah vii. 31, says "And they have
built the high places of Tophet, which is in the valley of the son of
Hinnom, to burn their sons and their daughters in the fire." See also
nineteenth chapter, verse 5; Ezekiel xvi. 20, 21, and xxiii. 37 and 39.
From this affair perhaps arose the delusion of the Greeks and Hebrews
that, by another ancient rite, they who took an oath were accustomed to
pass through fire, as if by escaping from injury their words would be
proved true. The learned Paul Fagius, in speaking of him, says, "The
statue of Moloch was such that it had seven hollow chambers. One was open
for meal offerings, another for turtle doves, the third for sheep, the
fourth for the ram, the fifth for the calf, the sixth for the bull, and a
seventh was open for him who wished to offer his child." The face of the
idol was the same as that of the calf, and the hands were evidently
disposed and arranged conveniently to receive from the bystanders all that
was offered. While the child was burning in the blazing fire, they danced
about and beat drums to drown the horrible cries and lamentations. There
is a question whether the author of these seven hollow chambers did not
learn it from the sacred rites of the Persian Mithra, for he also had
seven sacred doors, which referred to the number of the planets, and men,
women and children were likewise sacrificed to him.

It was necessary to such as were initiated to this god to pass through
eighty kinds of sufferings, that is, through fire and cold and most
serious dangers of every kind, before they could be received as epoptas,
or regularly initiated. It is proper to add that neither elsewhere than in
Moloch will be found Adrammelech and Anammelech, the gods of Sepharvaim.
See II. Kings xviii. 31: "And they burnt their children in fire to
Adrammelech and Anammelech, the gods of Sepharvaim." His priests, who were
also frequently the priests of other gods, were called Cemerin. This word
in the Chaldee dialect Comeraja, is everywhere in the Targum substituted
for priests of idolatry. In II. Kings xxiii. 10, it reads, "And he
(Josiah) defiled Topheth, which is in the valley of the children of
Hinnom, that no man might make his son or his daughter pass through the
fire to Moloch." The valley of the children of Hinnom, which in Hebrew is
gi ber Hinnom, was a field near the city, and is so called from the groans
or lamentations of the children while they were burning. Hinnom is from
the Hebrew word nahmen, and means that he groans or gnashed his teeth from
intense pain. That place is watered by the streams of Siloe, and in the
time of St. Jerome was beautiful, and ornamented with shady groves and
delightful gardens. And there he remarks "that it was a custom among other
nations to select the head of streams and groves for sacred rites." But
the word Tophet is from the Hebrew Toph, that is, "they ask for a drum,"
which was beaten and loudly sounded in the vicinity to prevent the parents
hearing the most doleful lamentations and wailings of their children while
the sacred rites were performing.

Moloch is also called Baal. See Jeremiah xix. 5., "They have built also
the high places of Baal to burn their sons with fire." He is also called
Milcolm in Kings xi. 5., "For Solomon went after Ashtoreth the goddess of
the Zidonians, and after Milcolm the abominations of the Ammonites." And
Luke, in Acts viii. 43., says, "Yea, ye took up the tabernacle of Molech."
The Syrians and Arabians call it Melcom. In many oriental languages
Melech, means king, Milcom means their king, and Malcecem, our king, and
both words in sacred scripture designate Moloch. To him reference is had
in Zephaniah i. 5., "And them that worship and swear by the Lord, and that
swear by Melcham," because Moloch was especially worshipped under the name
of king. As thus Baal means Lord, and as Melech or Molech or Moloch means
king, they denote this god of the Ammonites; and it is perhaps, he himself
who, in the most ancient theology of the Phœnicians, was often called
by the singular title of king of gods. He was also called Adodus, and was
worshipped by the Syrians not only as Adad-Hadad and Benhadad (and which
could readily pass into Adodus), but the very name Adad was propagated
continually for ten generations in their royal families. These names, and
Bedad, Hedar Mesahab, and Ahab, will be found in Genesis xxxvi. and I
Kings xx. Macrobius, speaking of the Syrians and this god Adodus and king
of gods, says, "They gave to the god whom they venerate as the highest and
the greatest the name Adad, and which means unus or one. Hada or Chada is
a god of the female sex, and agrees with Adardaga or Atergatis, and was
worshipped in that name in the neighbourhood of Syria. Heseychius says
that Hada was the goddess of Juno, and Adad a god and the sun. But Hadad
very well denotes the clamour or loud noise of persons exhorting; neither
is it altogether unlike the lamentations of children in the sacrifices to
Moloch. And ancient writers say that the effigies of both Adad and Moloch
were the same, and fashioned for expressing the sun.

Theophylactus says "that the bright shining stone in the image of
Phosphorus he understands to be the sun." All these are very proper for
the sun, the king of gods or stars, and which he also thought who made the
first mention of the seven hollow chambers in the statue of Moloch. In the
same number is ascribed to Mithra, who by the unanimous consent of
antiquity, and especially of the ancient inscriptions, is regarded as
being the same as the sun, shines with many colours. But Mithri, Mithir or
Mether, in Persian, signifies dynasty or lord, and this is also one of the
titles of Moloch.

Saturn among the Latins, and Chronos among the Greeks, is oft-times
considered to be Moch. Infants or children were victims common to both,
and that nefarious sacred rite would seem to have migrated from Syria
into Europe and Africa. Pescennius Festus says "that the Carthaginians
were accustomed to offer human victims to Saturn, and when they were
overcome in battle by Agathocles, king of the Siculi, he (the king)
believed that his god was angry with him, and, therefore, that he might
diligently make the necessary expiation, he immolated to this god two
hundred children of the nobility. Those who had no children were forced to
buy them from the poor."

Tertullian writes:--"That impious custom continued in Africa down to the
times of Tiberias." These sacred rites of the Phœnicians proceeded from
those of the Syrians, as the solemn use of fifes and drums among them will
prove. For the lamentations of the children or parents among those about
to be sacrificed is held to be an atonement. It is almost certain that by
the name of Moloch this God was worshipped in like manner among the
Carthaginians.

The Carthaginians worshipped Amilear, and that name comes from the same
source as Molech. Both words are pure Hebrew or Punic, if you regard their
etymology, and they mean king, or perhaps Ameliar may be queen, that is,
may mean Basilia, queen of the Atlantians, and which may refer to
Celestis, queen of the Carthaginians. For as among them Bel or Uranus is a
god, and Cœlestis a goddess, so Uranus and Basilia may be a god and
goddess among them. And from the same source we must look for the name of
Milicus, the father-in-law of Hannibal, and of his daughter Imilcis, which
is queen, and of Imilco, a Carthaginian general. Melech means king, and
Malcha queen, which they pronounce Molicus and Imilcis. Strabo says "that
Hercules, worshipped among the Tyrians, was called Melcartos or
Melcarthos. But he was the son of Jove Demaruns, and he is the same as the
Phœnician and Carthaginian Hercules, who was appeased by human victims
as Moloch was. The first part of his name was evidently derived from
Melech of the Hebrews, for almost by the same word Hercules was known
among the Amathusians. Amathus was a city of Phœnicia, and an island of
the Phœnician sea adjoins Cyprus, and in it there is also a city called
Amathus. The latter had sacred rites in common with the former. What the
words Artos or Arthos in the name mean is not clear. Traces of it,
however, are seen in the Punic names Bomilcar and Hamilcar. In Bœotia,
which retains many names which Cadmus brought with him from Phœnicia,
there is a river and a city called Haliartus, named after the builder and
discoverer. In Scolus there is likewise an image of Megalartus held in
great esteem. Some think it is the image of the Megalartian Ceres, and
derive it from the Greek word artos, which means bread, because she was
the goddess of corn."

"But whatever the god was, his Phœnician origin is evident, for Cadmus,
Ismenus, and Thebes were all Phœnician names, and perhaps the Hebrew
word Aritz in artes passed into Melicartes, which some read Melicatus.
Aritz means very strong, and thus Melicaritz signifies a strong king or
tyrant, and the word could readily pass into Melicartos. Thence perhaps in
the Persian language Artaioi is heroes, or those who in the olden periods
made themselves particularly illustrious, and the word with this idea is
present in the names Artoxerxis and Artabasis. Hence in Persian, Artas
meant great or illustrious, and Artana kingdoms, and Herodotus says that
Artoxerxis means a great warrior.

"Among the ancient Persians and Syrians in customs and languages many
things were common to both. The Persians are accounted among our Syrians
now and then by European writers, and Babylon is called a Persian city.

"As to the horrid sacrifice, the slaying of children, its origin does not
lie concealed if there is any truth in Phœnician annals. There is a
tradition among them that Saturn, one of the most ancient kings of
Phœnicia, and whom they called Israel in order that he might deliver
his kingdom from the greatest peril of an impending war, to render the
gods propitious, immolated an only begotten son of himself and wife
Anobreta. He was first ornamented with the royal fillets, and then led to
the altar built for that purpose, and a wicked posterity, not
understanding the case or the circumstances, continued to follow his
example."[27]

Among the many usages derived by the Sardes from their Phœnician
ancestors, one of a singular character is still practised by the Oziese,
of which Father Bresciani gives the following account:--"Towards the end
of March, or the beginning of April, it is the custom for young men and
women to agree together to fill the relation of godfathers and godmothers
of St. John, _compare e comare_--such is the phrase--for the ensuing year.
At the end of May the proposed _comare_, having procured a segment of the
bark of a cork tree, fashions it in the shape of a vase, and fills it with
rich light mould in which are planted some grains of barley or wheat. The
vase being placed in the sunshine, well watered and carefully tended, the
seed soon germinates, blades spring up, and, making a rapid growth, in the
course of twenty-one days--that is, before the eve of St. John--the vase
is filled by a spreading and vigorous plant of young corn. It then
receives the name of Hermes, or, more commonly, of _Su Nennere_, from a
Sarde word, which possibly has the same signification as the Phœnician
name of garden; similar vases being called, in ancient times, the gardens
of Adonis."

Forester in his "Rambles in Corsica and Sardinia," quoting the above and
remarking upon it says:--"On the eve of St. John, the cereal vase,
ornamented with ribbons, is exposed on a balcony, decorated with garlands
and flags. Formerly, also a little image in female attire, or _phallic_
emblems moulded in clay, such as were exhibited in the feasts of Hermes,
were placed among the blades of corn; but these representations have been
so severely denounced by the Church, that they are fallen into disuse. The
young men flock in crowds to witness the spectacle and attend the maidens
who come out to grace the feast. A great fire is lit on the piazza, round
which they leap and gambol, the couple who have agreed to be St. John's
_compare_ completing the ceremony in this manner:--The man is placed on
one side of the fire, the woman on the other, each holding opposite ends
of a stick extended over the burning embers, which they pass rapidly
backwards and forwards. This is repeated three times, so that the hand of
each party passes thrice through the flames. The union being thus sealed,
the _comparatico_ or spiritual alliance is considered perfect. After that,
the music strikes up, and the festival is concluded by dances, prolonged
to a late hour of the night."

"Father Bresciani, La Marmora, and other writers, justly consider the
Nennere as one of the many relics of the Phœnician colonisation of
Sardinia. Every one knows that the sun and moon, under various names such
as Isis and Osiris, Adonis and Astarte, were the principal objects of
worship in the east from the earliest times; the sun being considered as
the vivifying power of universal nature, the moon represented as a female,
deriving her light from the sun, as the passive principle of production.
The abstruse doctrines on the origin of things, thus shadowed out by the
ancient seers, generated the grossest ideas, expressed in the _phallic_
emblems, the lewdness and obscenities mixed up in the popular worship of
the deified principles of all existence. Of the prevalence in Sardinia of
the Egypto-Phœnician mythology, in times the most remote, no one who
has examined the large collection of relics in the Royal Museum at
Cagliari, or who consults the plates attached to La Marmora's work, can
entertain any doubt. But it is surprising to find, among the usages of the
Sardes at the present day, a very exact representation of the rites of a
primitive religion, introduced into the island nearly thirty-five years
ago, though it now partakes more of the character of a popular festival
than a religious ceremony.

"One of the principal incidents in the _Sarde Nennere_ consists in the
consecration of the spiritual relation between the _compare_ and _comare_,
by their thrice crossing hands over the fire in the ceremonies of St.
John's Day. A still more extraordinary vestige of the idolatrous rite of
passing through the fire, is said to be still subsisting among the customs
of the people of Logudoro, in the neighbourhood of Ozieri, and in other
parts of Sardinia.

"Of the worship of Moloch--_par excellence_ the Syrian and Phœnician
god of fire--by the ancient Sardes, there is undoubted proof. We find
among the prodigious quantity of such relics, collected from all parts of
the island, in the Royal Museum at Cagliari, a statuette of this idol,
supposed to have been a household god. Its features are appalling: great
goggle eyes leer fiercely from their hollow sockets; the broad nostrils
seem ready to sniff the fumes of the horrid sacrifice; a wide gaping mouth
grins with rabid fury at the supposed victim; dark plumes spring from the
forehead, like horns, and expanded wings from each shoulder and knee. The
image brandishes a sword with the left hand, holding in the right a small
grate, formed of metal bars. It would appear that, this being heated, the
wretched victim was placed on it, and then, scorched so that the fumes of
the disgusting incense savoured in the nostrils of the rabid idol, it fell
upon a brazier of burning coals beneath, where it was consumed. There is
another idol in this collection with the same truculent cast of features,
but horned, and clasping a bunch of snakes in the right hand, a trident in
the left, with serpents twined round its legs. This image has a large
orifice in the belly, and flames are issuing between the ribs, so that it
would appear that when the brazen image of the idol was thoroughly heated,
the unhappy children intended for sacrifice were thrust into the mouth in
the navel, and there grilled--savoury morsels, on which the idol seems,
from its features, rabidly gloating, while the priests, we are told,
endeavoured to drown the cries of the sufferers by shouts and the noise of
drums and timbrels--

  '... horrid king, besmeared with blood
  Of human sacrifice, and parents' tears;
  Though, for the noise of drums and timbrels loud,
  Their children's cries unheard, that passed through fire
  To his grim idol.'--_Par. Lost_, i. 392.

"This cruel child-sacrifice was probably the giving of his seed to Moloch,
for which any Israelite or stranger that sojourned in Israel guilty of the
crime was, according to the Mosaic law, to be stoned to death. We are
informed in the Sacred Records that no such denunciations of the
idolatries of the surrounding nations, no revelations of the attributes or
teachings of the pure worship of Jehovah, restrained the Israelites from
the practice of the foul and cruel rites of their heathen neighbours; and
we find in the latter days of the Jewish Commonwealth the prophet Jeremiah
predicting the desolation of the people for this sin among others, that
they had estranged themselves from the worship of Jehovah, and burned
incense to strange gods, and filled the holy place with the blood of
innocents, and burned their sons and their daughters with fire for
burnt-offerings unto Baal.

"There appear to have been two modes in which the ancient idolaters
devoted their children to Moloch. In one they were sacrificed and consumed
in the manner already described, a burnt offering to the idol for the
expiation of the sins of their parents or their people. In the other they
were only made to pass through the fire, in honour of the deity, and as a
sort of initiation into his mysteries, and consecration to his service.

"Thus Ahaz, King of Judah, is said to have made his son to pass through
the fire, according to the abominations of the heathen. And it is reckoned
in the catalogue of the sins of Judah, which drew on them the vengeance of
God, that they 'built the high places of Baal, to cause their sons and
their daughters to pass through the fire unto Moloch.'[28]

"In the case of infants, it is supposed that this initiation, this
'baptism by fire' was performed either by placing them on a sort of grate
suspended by chains from the vault of the temple, and passed rapidly over
the sacred fire, or by the priests taking the infants in their arms and
swaying them to and fro over or across the fire, chanting meanwhile
certain prayers or incantations. With respect to children of older growth,
they were made to leap naked through the fire before the idol, so that
their whole bodies might be touched by the sacred flames, and purified, as
it were, by contact with the divinity.

"The Sardes, we are informed by Father Bresciani, still preserve a custom
representing this initiation by fire, but as in other Phœnician rites
and practices, without the slightest idea of their profane origin. In the
first days of spring, from one end of the island to the other, the
villagers assemble and light great fires in the piazza and at the cross
roads. The flames beginning to ascend, the children leap through them at a
bound, so rapidly and with such dexterity that when the flames are highest
it is seldom that their clothes or a hair of their head are singed. They
continue this practice till the fuel is reduced to embers, the musicians
meanwhile playing on the _lionedda_ tunes adapted to a Phyrric dance.
This, says the learned father, is a representation of the initiation
through fire into the mysteries of Moloch."[29]

"Nergal, which is a Hebrew word, was, perhaps, a perpetual fire most
religiously preserved in their Sefta, or sacred places. The Cuthites were
so called from Cuthus, which was both the name of a river and region in
Persia, and from which they were carried into Samaria in very large
numbers. Strabo confirms the existence of the sacred fire in Persia in
book fifteen. He says 'that in the temples of the worshippers of Anaitis
and Omanus, or Amanus, Persian gods among the Cappadocians, the care of
the perpetual fire was committed to magi, who were called Pyrethri, or
fire worshippers.' He further says, 'In that country there is a great
multitude of them, and likewise many temples of the Persian gods; that
they do not slay the victims with a knife, but with a certain kind of
club, as pounding them to death with a pestle; that there were also
certain chapels in which these fires were kept worthy of being remembered;
that the altar was in the centre of the chapel, and upon which there were
many cinders, and there the priests watched the inextinguishable fires;
that they entered there daily, and sang or chanted for the space of almost
an hour, at the same time holding a bundle of rods before the fire; that
they were veiled in a woollen tiara, which, fitting well on all sides,
covered their lips and jaws. These, which were built in their shrines, and
which were called Pyratheia, were the eternal fires of the magi. That
which they chanted was the theogony, or primeval history of the gods.'

"The Persians believed that every song was not equally efficacious in
sacred rites. The rods seem to have been of tamarisk, and without a magus
no kind of sacrifices were performed. In the other sacred rites it was an
annual custom for the magi to hold the tamarisk while they chanted the
theogony, as it was the habit of the ancient poets while singing to carry
laurel in their hands. For this reason some believed that they were called
rhapsodists, from the Greek word rhabdos, which means a rod. While
chanting they stirred the fires with their rods and increased the flames.
That which the ancients write is true regarding the institutions of the
Persians, that any one who was about to become a king should be initiated
into the magic rites, and that Ninus could not be more a king than a magus
from that custom. The Persians received these sacred rites from the most
ancient Chaldeans, and the latter called them Nergal, from two Hebrew
words, nir and gal, which may mean either the fountain of fire or light,
or fire or versatile light, and especially that inextinguishable fire
which they watched in their holy places as the symbol of the sun. And
although there were many gods in Persia, yet fire was worshipped by them
before and above all other gods, and in every sacrifice they especially
invoked him as the Romans did Janus. And hence, bound by religion, they
did not dare to pollute fire destined for daily uses with any
uncleanliness. The Pyratheia, or fires, were called Pyreia by others.
Suidas says that Heraclius destroyed the Persian cities and overthrew
their Pyreia. But so ancient do the Hebrews make the worship of fire among
the Chaldeans, that Ur of the Chaldeans, mentioned in Genesis XI., they
took for their fire god. Neither do the writings of the ancients quoted by
Maimonides prove anything else than that fire was held in so much honour
because it was a symbol of the sun. In regard to this most ancient worship
in Chaldæa he thus discourses in 'More Nebochim,' book three, chapter
thirty:--'It is known that Abraham was born among a people who served
fire, and who, in their credulity, believed there was no other god except
the stars, and I will in this chapter make you acquainted with their
books, which are not found with us translated in the Arabic language. In
their narrations and ancient contentions you will know their reasons and
opinions. Their credulity is proved to you in their worship of the stars
which they believed to be gods, and that the sun is the greater among the
gods. And they said that the other planets are gods, but that the sun and
moon are the greatest of their gods. You will find what they undoubtedly
say, that the sun governs the upper and lower world. All this you will
find in their books; and they speak of the condition of Abraham, and they
declare further that Abraham was born and educated in the land of fire
worshippers. He there contradicted their opinions, saying that there was
another operator besides the sun. And they offered their reasons opposed
to his, and among which they mentioned the operations of the sun, which
are manifest and which appear to be seen throughout the universe.' But
Abraham was cast into chains because he refused to adore their sun, and
after that he was robbed of his goods, and by the king banished into
Canaan. They believed that the sun ruled the world, that there was no god
superior to him, and they adored fire. Therefore, what else was fire than
the sign or symbol of the sun, and very consonant to his nature? And here,
I think, is seen the god of Nahor, son of Terah, referred to in Genesis
XXXI., 53:--'The god of Abraham, the God of Nahor, the god of their
father, judge betwixt us.' Here, likewise, you have the foreign gods,
which the ancients served in the time of Abraham, as the Sacred Scriptures
testify, in Joshua XXIV., 2:--'And Joshua said unto all the people, Thus
saith the Lord God of Israel, your fathers dwelt on the other side of the
flood in the olden time, even Terah, the father of Abraham and the father
of Nahor: and they served other gods.' Certainly before the Babylonian
captivity also, and in the kingdom of Judea, those Pyratheia and the
worship of fire existed, if Joseph Scaliger conjectures correctly in
Catullus, when, in the sacred language, or that of the prophets, he says
that the Pyratheia are called Chamanim.

"In II. Chronicles, XXXIV., 4, we find as follows in regard to Josiah, the
king:--'And they broke down the altars of Baalim in his presence, and he
broke into pieces the images that were sacred to him.' The images here in
Hebrew are called Chamanim, and the Rabbins understand them to be effigies
of the sun. For the sun and heat were called Chamha, thence Chamanim was
used for the images, chapels, or Pyrathean consecrated to the sun. In
Leviticus XXVI., 30, the words are as follows:--'I will destroy your high
places, and cut down Chamanicem, that is, your images,' &c. The Hebrews
understand that their idols were dedicated in honour of the sun. In that
place in Leviticus and elsewhere Chamanim and other sacred rites borrowed
from the Persians are reproved, and among these 'high places,' called
Bamoth in Hebrew. It was a custom of the Persians to perform their sacred
rites in the most high and elevated places, and in this way they offered
sacrifice to heaven or Jove. Herodotus, in Clio, says 'it was their custom
to ascend the most lofty summits of the mountains, and there immolate
their victims to Jove, and calling by the name of Jove every circle of the
heavens.' But it was a custom both of the Europeans and Asiatics to ascend
the summits of mountains to worship Jove. Hence he was called Epakrios, or
the Lofty.

"That Jupiter, with Herodotus, is Belus and Assyrius, for in that name he
was called Jove in the most ancient theology of the Persians, as Berosus,
Athenocles, and Simachus write. It is a question for the learned whether
in the god Omanus, or Amanus, whom Strabo mentions, reference may be had
to Chamanim, or Hamanim. Scaliger thinks in the affirmative, and he thence
deduces Achæmenis and Achæmeniss, who denote Persian extraction. Amanus
was indeed the sun, as Anaitis was the moon, and who were called Diana and
Venus. No one, however, is ignorant that the Persians worshipped fire as a
symbol of the sun, and that is the reason why Datis, the captain of a ship
under Xerxes, left the island of Delos unharmed, inasmuch as it was sacred
to the sun, or Apollo. As to the other kind of Chamanim, or effigy reduced
to powder by King Josiah, the following will be found in II. Kings,
XXIII., 11, 'And in process of time he removed the horses which the King
of Judah had given to the sun, in the entrance of the temple of the Lord,
near the tabernacle of Nathan-melech the eunuch, who was a prince in the
suburbs, and he burnt the chariots of the sun in fire.' These also,
perhaps, should be called Chamanim, as Cimchi, Solomon Jarchi, and Levi
Ben Gershon explain that place concerning the horses and chariot, that,
while adoring the rising sun, they led them in solemn pomp from the
entrance of the temple to the tabernacle of Nathan-melech. This more
probably means the molten images of the horses and chariots consecrated to
the sun, for, among the Persians, the horse was sacred to the sun, and
accustomed to be sacrificed to it. The same custom was transplanted among
the Grecians. In ancient times the chariots were also dedicated to the
same, as the swiftest of swift gods. But their place was at the door of
the True God. The Jews worshipped the sun towards the east within the
vestibule of the door. Thus in Ezekiel VIII., 14, 'And behold, near the
temple of the Lord, between the vestibule and the altar, there were as if
twenty-five men, whose backs were towards the temple of the Lord, and
their faces towards the east, and they adored the sun in the east.'"[30]

From most of the classic authors, such as Homer, Tibullus, Horace, Ovid,
Euripides, Aristophanes, Virgil, &c., we gather that every Greek and Roman
house had its altar on which fire was ever burning. At night it was
covered up with ashes so as to reserve some of the wood for the morrow and
keep it gently and slowly smouldering. Day by day, the first thing in the
morning, the master of the house applied himself to the rousing up or
rekindling of the fire, in order that it might be ready for the coming
ceremonies and worship; in his absence from home this duty devolved upon
his wife as his nearest relation. Writers tell us that the fire did not
cease to burn until the family had altogether perished, and an
extinguished hearth in early days meant the same thing as an extinguished
family.

Nor was the keeping up of this fire a mere matter of unmeaning form, a
simple custom to which no signification of any particular importance was
attached; it was essentially connected with the people's most ancient and
cherished religious beliefs. So serious a matter was it that even the
particular kind of wood was specified. Virgil and Plutarch distinctly
state that only certain trees ought to be used for such a purpose, and
these were kept sacred and forbidden for other uses. The fire, according
to Euripides and Ovid, must be kept pure--no polluted object might be cast
into it, no offensive action might be performed in its presence.

As we remark in another place, there was one day in the year (March 1st in
Rome) when all fires and lights were put out--but immediately renewed with
the observation of many rites. The strictest rules had to be attended to
on these occasions; it was forbidden to renew the fire from any remaining
spark of the old--indeed it was essential to thoroughly extinguish every
spark of the previous flame--neither might a spark be struck from flint
and steel; only by the sun's rays or by rubbing two pieces of wood
together might the new fire be started into being, for the fire was
regarded as the representative of the sun--the greatest of lights and
fires, and as such was adored. Well it was not unreasonable or to be
wondered at, that men, for want of better knowledge, should render divine
honours to that from which they received such benefits; they saw the light
and heat of the sun pouring down upon the earth and in conjunction with
the rain and dew, softening its crust, swelling and fructifying its seed
and bringing forth from it food and nourishment for man and beast. And so
they prayed as we read in the Orphic hymns: "Render us always flourishing,
always happy, O fire: thou who art eternal, beautiful, ever young; thou
who nourishest, thou who art rich, receive favourably these our offerings,
and in return give us happiness and sweet health."

The fire seems to have been perpetually invoked; hardly a monument was
made, hardly a household or business duty performed or engagement
fulfilled, without a prayer to it; if a man left his home for a brief
while, he worshipped the fire; when he returned, before he saluted his
nearest relatives, the same duty was observed. Æschylus tells of Agamemnon
returning from Troy, and instead of going to the temple and returning
thanks to Jupiter, offering thanksgiving before the fire in his own house.
Euripides, also, represents the dying Alcestis speaking to the fire:
"Mistress, I go beneath the earth, and for the last time fall before thee,
and address thee. Protect my infant children; give to my boy a tender
wife, and to my daughter a noble husband. Let them not die, like their
mother, before the time, but may they lead a long and happy life in their
fatherland."

De Coulanges says "the sacred fire was a sort of providence in the family.
Sacrifices were offered to it, and not merely was the flame supplied with
wood, but upon the altar were poured wine, oil, incense and the fat of
victims. The god graciously received these offerings and devoured them.
Radiant with satisfaction, he rose above the altar, and lit up the
worshipper with his brightness. Then was the moment for the suppliant
humbly to invoke him and give heartfelt utterance to his prayer."

Corresponding with the "grace" of modern times, recited before and after
meals, was the tribute of prayer and praise uttered by the ancient before
his fire when he was about to partake of food and when he had satisfied
his hunger. He went even further than the modern does, for before a
particle of food was eaten a due proportion of meat and drink had to be
poured out upon the altar and presented to the god. And when the flame
rose up, they regarded it as the deity rearing himself in their midst and
consuming what had been presented.

If we turn to the Sacred Books of the East we shall find how strong a hold
this Fire Worship has upon the Hindoo mind, and the importance attached to
a due observance of all points of ritual connected with it. In the "Laws
of Manu" we find directions for his guidance extending to the most
ordinary domestic necessities and some of which we cannot very well repeat
in these pages. Some of his private necessities must not be satisfied in
view of the fire but he must retire either into darkness or out of sight
of it. "Let him not blow a fire with his mouth--Let him not throw any
impure substance into the fire, let him not warm his feet at it--Let him
not place fire under a bed or the like; nor step over it, nor place it
when he sleeps at the footend of his bed--Let him keep his right arm
uncovered in a place where a sacred fire is kept--A Brahmana who is impure
must not touch with his hand a cow, a Brahmana, or fire; nor, being in
good health, let him look at the luminaries in the sky while he is
impure." Then again, "A Brahmana shall offer of the cooked food destined
for the Vaisvadeva in the sacred domestic fire to the following deities:
First to Agni, and next to Soma, then to both these gods conjointly,
further to all the gods, and then to Dhanvautari, further to Kuhu (the
goddess of the new moon day), to Anumati (the goddess of the full moon
day), to Pragapati (the lord of creatures), to heaven and earth
conjointly, and finally to Agni Svishtakrit (the fire which performs the
sacrifice well)." And so on in many other places, in one of which the king
is to behave like fire. "Let the king emulate the energetic action of
Indra, of the sun, of the wind, of Yama, of Varuna, of the moon, of the
fire, and of the earth. If he is ardent in wrath against criminals and
endowed with brilliant energy, and destroys wicked vassals, then his
character is said to resemble that of fire."

Turning to the Rig Veda we find "Hymns to Agni (the god of fire) and the
Maruts (the storm gods)."

"1. Thou art called forth to this fair sacrifice for a draught of milk;
with the Maruts come hither, O Agni!"

"2. No god, indeed, no mortal, is beyond the might of thee, the mighty
one; with the Maruts come hither, O Agni!"

"3. Those who know of the great sky, the Visne Devas without guile; with
those Maruts come hither, O Agni!"

"4. The wild ones who sing their song, unconquerable by force; with the
Maruts come hither, O Agni!"

"5. Those who are brilliant, of awful shape, powerful, and devourers of
foes; with the Maruts come hither, O Agni!"

"6. They who in heaven are enthroned as gods, in the light of the
firmament; with the Maruts come hither, O Agni!"

"7. They who shoot with their darts across the sea with might; with the
Maruts come hither, O Agni!"

"9. I pour out to thee for the early draught the sweet juice of Soma; with
the Maruts come hither, O Agni!"

Another one says:--"O Agni, thou art the life, thou art the patron of man.
In return for our prayers, bestow glory and riches on the father of a
family who now addresses thee. Agni, thou art a wise protector and a
father; to thee we owe life, we are of thy household."

De Coulanges says:--"So the hearth-god was, as in Greece, a tutelary
deity. Men asked of him abundance, and that the earth might be productive.
He was prayed to for health, and that a man might long enjoy the light and
arrive at old age like the sun at his setting. Even wisdom is demanded,
and pardon for sin. For as in Greece the fire-god was essentially pure, so
not only was the Brahmin forbidden to throw anything filthy into his fire,
but he might not even warm his feet at it. The guilty man, also, as in
Greece, might not approach his own hearth before he was purified from the
stain he had contracted."

Assuredly the Greeks did not borrow this religion from the Hindoos, nor
the Hindoos from the Greeks; but Greeks, Italians, and Hindoos, belonged
to one and the same race, and their ancestors at a very early period had
lived together in Central Asia. There they had learnt this creed, and
established their rites. When the tribes gradually moved further away from
one another, they transported this religion with them, the one to the
banks of the Ganges, and the others to the Mediterranean. Afterwards, some
learnt to worship Brahma, others Zeus, and others again Janus; but all had
preserved as a legacy the earlier religion which they had practised at the
common cradle of the race.

It is remarkable that in all sacrifices, even in those offered to Zeus or
to Athene, it was always to the fire that the first invocation was made.
At Olympia assembled Greece offered her first sacrifice to the
hearth-fire, and the second to Zeus. Similarly at Rome, the first to be
adored was always Vesta, who was nothing else but the fire. And so we read
in the hymns of the Veda: "Before all gods, Agni must be invoked. We will
pronounce thy holy name before that of all the other immortals. O Agni,
whatever be the god we honour by our sacrifice, to thee is the holocaust
offered." It was not that Jupiter and Brahma had not acquired a much
greater importance in the minds of men, but it was remembered that the
fire was much older than the gods.

When the populations of Greece and Italy had learnt to represent their
Gods as persons, and had given each a proper name and a human shape, the
old worship of the fire was similarly modified. The sacred fire was called
Vesta. The common noun was made a proper name, and a legend by degrees
attached to it. They even went so far as to represent the fire in statues
under the features of a woman, the gender of the noun having determined
the sex of the deity.

Vesta, in mythology, was one of the principal deities of the Pagans. Those
who have diligently investigated the religion of the Pythagorean
philosophers pretend that by Vesta they meant the universe, to which they
ascribed a soul, and which they worshipped as the sole divinity sometime
under the name of το παν, the whole, and sometimes under the
appellation of μονος, unity. However, fabulous history records
two goddesses under the name of Vesta; one the mother of Saturn, and wife
of Cœlum, and the other the daughter of Saturn, by his wife Rhea. The
first was Terra, or the Earth, called also Cybele, and derived her name
Vesta, according to some, from clothing, because the earth is clothed,
_vestitur_, with plants and fruits, or, according to Ovid, from the
stability of the earth because _stat vi terra sua_, or it supports itself.
Hence the first oblations in all sacrifices were offered to her, because
whatsoever is sacrificed springs from the earth; and the Greeks both began
and concluded their sacrifices with Vesta, because they esteemed her the
mother of all gods.

The second was Fire, and Vesta whose power was exercised about altars and
houses, derives her name, according to Cicero, from fire or hearth.
Accordingly the poets frequently use Vesta for fire or flame; as they do
Jupiter for air, Ceres for corn, &c. An image of Vesta, to which they
sacrificed every day, was placed before the doors of the houses at Rome;
and the places where these statues were erected were called _vestibula_,
from Vesta. This goddess was a virgin, and so great an admirer of
virginity, that when Jupiter her brother gave her leave to ask what she
would, she besought that she might always be a virgin, and have the first
oblations in all sacrifices.

This goddess is called by Horace _æterna Vesta_, and it was in honour of
her that Numa erected a temple at Rome, and dedicated virgins to keep a
perpetual fire upon her altars. One way of representing this goddess, it
is said, was in the habit of a matron, holding in her right hand a
flambeau or lamp, and sometimes a Palladium or small Victory.

The worship of Vesta and of fire was brought from Phrygia into Italy by
Æneas and the other Trojans who resorted thither. To this purpose Virgil
observes that Æneas, before he left the palace of his father, had taken
away the fire from the sacred hearth. The name Vesta was synonymous with
the Chaldean and Persian Avesta and hence Zoroaster gave to his book on
the worship of fire, the name of Avesta or Abesta, _i.e._, the custody of
fire.

The Vestals were the virgins in Ancient Rome, consecrated to the service
of the goddess Vesta, whose worship, we have said, was brought into Italy
by Æneas, and one of their special duties was the watching of the sacred
fire, the going out of which was visited upon them with such severe
whipping. This fire, which they had to watch so jealously and carefully,
was neither on an altar nor on a hearth, but in little earthen vessels
with two handles, called _capeduncula_. It was held a pledge of the empire
of the world. If it went out, it was judged a very unlucky prognostic, and
was to be expiated with infinite ceremonies. Among the Romans, Festus
tells us, it was only to be rekindled by rubbing a kind of wood proper for
the purpose. But among the Greeks, Plutarch, in his life of Numa,
observes, it was to be rekindled by exposing some inflammable matter in
the centre of a concave vessel held to the sun. It is to be noted, the
Romans were not the only people who kept the perpetual fire of Vesta, in
imitation of the celestial fires; but the Greeks were possessed with the
same superstition; particularly the Delphians, Athenians, Tenedians,
Argives, Rhodians, Cyzicenians, Milesians, Ephesians, &c.

Magi, or Magians, was the title which the ancient Persians gave to their
wise men and philosophers. Whatever may be the origin of the word, and
upon this great diversity of opinion seems to have prevailed, it
corresponds with the σοφοι among the Greeks; sapientes among the
Latins; Druids among the Gauls; Gynosophists among the Indians; and
prophets, priests among the Egyptians.

Plato, Apuleius, Laertius, and others agree that the philosophy of the
Magi related principally to the worship of the gods; they were the persons
who were to offer prayers, supplications and sacrifices, as if the gods
would be heard by them alone.

They teach their doctrine concerning the nature and origin of the gods,
says Laertius, whom they think to be fire, earth, and water; they reject
the use of pictures and images, and reprobate the opinion that the gods
are male and female; they discourse to the people concerning justice; they
think it impious to consume dead bodies with fire; they all practise
divination and prophecy, pretending that the gods appear to them; they
forbid the use of ornaments in dress; they clothe themselves in a white
robe; they make use of the ground as their bed, of herbs, cheese and bread
for food, and of a reed for their staff. Strabo also relates, that there
were in Cappadocia a great number of Magi, who were called "Pyrethi," or
worshippers of fire, and many temples of the Persian gods, in the midst of
which were altars attended by priests, who daily renewed the sacred fire,
accompanying the ceremony with music.

The chief doctrine of the Magi was, that there were two principles, one of
which was the cause of all good, and the other the cause of all evil. The
former was represented by light, and the latter by darkness, as their
truest symbols; and of the composition of these two they supposed that all
things in the world were made. The good god they always worshipped before
fire, as being the cause of light, and especially before the sun, as being
in their opinion the most perfect fire, and causing the most perfect
light; and for this reason they had in all their temples fire constantly
burning on altars erected in them for that purpose. Before these sacred
fires, they performed all their public acts of devotion, as they likewise
practised their private devotions before their private fires in their own
houses. Such were the tenets of this sect when Smerdis, who was the
principal leader of it, having usurped the crown after the death of
Cambyses, was slain by seven princes of Persia; and many of the Magians,
who adhered to him, shared likewise the same fate. In consequence of this
event, those who adopted the sentiments of this sect were called, by way
of derision, Magians, from _mige-gush_, which signified, in the language
of the country then in use, one that had his ears cropped. The whole sect
of the Magians would soon have sunk into utter extinction if it had not,
in a few years after this period, been revived and reformed by Zoroaster.
This celebrated philosopher, called by the Persians Zerdusht or Zaratusht,
began about the thirty-sixth year of the reign of Darius to restore and
reform the Magian system of religion. He was not only excellently skilled
in all the learning of the East that prevailed in his time, but likewise
thoroughly versed in the Jewish religion, and in all the sacred writings
of the Old Testament that were then extant, whence some have inferred that
he was a native Jew both by birth and profession; and that he had been
servant to one of the prophets, probably Ezekiel or Daniel. He made his
first appearance in Media, in the city of Xiz, afterwards called
Aderbijan, as some say; or according to others, in Ecbatana, afterwards
Tauris. Instead of admitting the existence of two first causes with the
Magians, he introduced a principle superior to them both--one supreme God,
who created both these, and out of these two produced, according to his
sovereign pleasure, everything else.

Zoroaster caused fire temples to be erected wherever he came: for having
feigned that he was taken up into heaven, and there instructed in the
doctrines he taught by God himself, out of the midst of a great and most
bright flame of fire, he taught his followers that fire was the truest
shekinah of the divine presence; that the sun being the most perfect fire,
God had there the throne of his glory, and the residence of his divine
presence in a peculiar manner; and next to this in our elementary fire;
and, therefore, he ordered them to direct all their worship to God, first
towards the sun, which they called Mithra, and next towards their sacred
fires; and when they came before these fires to worship, they always
approached them on the west side, that having their faces towards them,
and also towards the rising sun at the same time, they might direct their
worship towards both. And in this posture they always performed every act
of their worship. Zoroaster also pretended that he brought some of the
heavenly fire with him on his return and placed it on the altar of the
first fire temple, which he erected at Xiz, in Media, whence it was
propagated to all the rest; and on this account their priests carefully
watched it and never suffered it to be extinguished.

Zoroaster, having assumed the character of a divine prophet and reformer
of religion, retired into a cave, devoting himself to prayer and
meditation, where he composed the book called the Zend, in which his
pretended revelations were contained. From Media he removed into Bactria;
and he went also into India among the Brachmans, and having acquired all
their knowledge in mathematics, philosophy and astronomy, returned and
communicated the knowledge to his Magians; and thus they became famous for
their skill in these sciences; so that a learned man and a Magian were
equivalent terms. The vulgar conceived of them as persons actuated and
inspired by supernatural powers; and hence those who pretended to wicked
and diabolical acts, assumed the name of Magians; and the term Magician
acquired its evil meaning. However, this distinguished knowledge was
confined to those who were by way of eminence, the Magi, or the priests;
who, like those of the Jews, being of the same tribe, appropriated their
learning to their own families. These priests were distributed into three
orders, viz.: the inferior priests, who conducted the ordinary ceremonies
of religion; the superintendents who governed them and presided over the
sacred fire; and the archimagus, or high-priest, who possessed supreme
authority over the whole order; and their churches or temples were also of
three sorts, parochial or oratories, in which the people performed their
devotions, and where the sacred fire was kept only in lamps; fire-temples,
in which fire was kept continually burning on a sacred altar, where the
higher order of the Magi directed the public devotions, and the people
assembled to perform magical incantations, hear interpretations of dreams,
and practise other superstitions; and lastly, the fire-temple in which the
archimagus resided, which was visited by the people at certain seasons
with peculiar solemnity, and to which it was deemed an indispensable duty
for every one to repair at least once in his life. Zoroaster at length
carried his religious system to the royal court at Susa, and made Darius a
proselyte, together with most of the great men of the kingdom.


THE END.




FOOTNOTES:

[1] Moule's Heraldry.

[2] Maitland's Church in the Catacombs.

[3] Forlong.

[4] Moule's Heraldry.

[5] Northern Tour.

[6] Gorham, Hist. S. Neots.

[7] Rivers of Life.

[8] Ancient Faiths, vol. i.

[9] Rivers of Life.

[10] Riv. Life, Forlong.

[11] Nineveh, &c.

[12] Selden's Syrian Deities.

[13] Forlong.

[14] Rivers of Life.

[15] Leslie's Early Races of Scotland.

[16] Rivers of Life.

[17] Forlong, Riv. Life.

[18] Rivers of Life.

[19] See Pop. Science Rev., vol. x.

[20] Hindu Pantheon.

[21] See Asiat. Res., vol. iii.

[22] For a somewhat longer account of this and other Myths, see Rev. W.
Gill's Book.

[23] Chardin's Voyages, vol. ii.

[24] Thalia, 16, Rawlinson.

[25] Pennant, vol. I., p. 111.

[26] Pennant, vol. III.

[27] Selden's Syrian Deities. Hauser's Translation.

[28] Jeremiah xxxii. 35.

[29] See Bresciani and Forrester's Sardinia.

[30] Selden's Syrian Deities, Hausser's Translation.




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