登陆注册
5384200000022

第22章 SYSTEMS OF MYTHOLOGY(4)

If we look at Greek religious tradition, we observe the coexistence of the RATIONAL and the apparently IRRATIONAL elements. The RATIONAL myths are those which represent the gods as beautiful and wise beings. The Artemis of the Odyssey "taking her pastime in the chase of boars and swift deer, while with her the wild wood-nymphs disport them, and high over them all she rears her brow, and is easily to be known where all are fair," is a perfectly RATIONALmythic representation of a divine being. We feel, even now, that the conception of a "queen and goddess, chaste and fair," the abbess, as Paul de Saint-Victor calls her, of the woodlands, is a beautiful and natural fancy, which requires no explanation. On the other hand, the Artemis of Arcadia, who is confused with the nymph Callisto, who, again, is said to have become a she-bear, and later a star; and the Brauronian Artemis, whose maiden ministers danced a bear-dance, are goddesses whose legend seems unnatural, and needs to be made intelligible. Or, again, there is nothing not explicable and natural in the conception of the Olympian Zeus as represented by the great chryselephantine statue of Zeus at Olympia, or in the Homeric conception of Zeus as a god who "turns everywhere his shining eyes, and beholds all things, and protects the righteous, and deals good or evil fortune to men. But the Zeus whose grave was shown in Crete, or the Zeus who played Demeter an obscene trick by the aid of a ram, or the Zeus who, in the shape of a swan, became the father of Castor and Pollux, or the Zeus who deceived Hera by means of a feigned marriage with an inanimate object, or the Zeus who was afraid of Attes, or the Zeus who made love to women in the shape of an ant or a cuckoo, is a being whose myth is felt to be unnatural and bewildering. It is this IRRATIONAL and unnatural element, as Mr. Max Muller says, "the silly, senseless, and savage element," that makes mythology the puzzle which men have so long found it. For, observe, Greek myth does not represent merely a humorous play of fancy, dealing with things religiously sacred as if by way of relief from the strained reverential contemplation of the majesty of Zeus. Many stories of Greek mythology are such as could not cross, for the first time, the mind of a civilised Xenophanes or Theagenes, even in a dream.

THIS was the real puzzle.

Odyssey, vi. 102.

; compare Harpokration on this word.

These are the features in myth which provoke, for example, the wonder of Emeric-David. "The lizard, the wolf, the dog, the ass, the frog, and all the other brutes so common on religious monuments everywhere, do they not all imply a THOUGHT which we must divine?"He concludes that these animals, plants, and monsters of myths are so many "enigmas" and "symbols" veiling some deep, sacred idea, allegories of some esoteric religious creed. Jupiter, Paris, 1832, p. lxxvii.

We have offered examples--Savage, Indian, and Greek--of that element in mythology which, as all civilised races have felt, demands explanation.

To be still more explicit, we may draw up a brief list of the chief problems in the legendary stories attached to the old religions of the world--the problems which it is our special purpose to notice.

First we have, in the myths of all races, the most grotesque conceptions of the character of gods when mythically envisaged.

Beings who, in religion, leave little to be desired, and are spoken of as holy, immortal, omniscient, and kindly, are, in myth, represented as fashioned in the likeness not only of man, but of the beasts; as subject to death, as ignorant and impious.

Most pre-Christian religions had their "zoomorphic" or partially zoomorphic idols, gods in the shape of the lower animals, or with the heads and necks of the lower animals. In the same way all mythologies represent the gods as fond of appearing in animal forms. Under these disguises they conduct many amours, even with the daughters of men, and Greek houses were proud of their descent from Zeus in the shape of an eagle or ant, a serpent or a swan;while Cronus and the Vedic Tvashtri and Poseidon made love as horses, and Apollo as a dog. Not less wild are the legends about the births of gods from the thigh, or the head, or feet, or armpits of some parent; while tales describing and pictures representing unspeakable divine obscenities were frequent in the mythology and in the temples of Greece. Once more, the gods were said to possess and exercise the power of turning men and women into birds, beasts, fishes, trees, and stones, so that there was scarcely a familiar natural object in the Greek world which had not once (according to legend) been a man or a woman. The myths of the origin of the world and man, again, were in the last degree childish and disgusting. The Bushmen and Australians have, perhaps, no story of the origin of species quite so barbarous in style as the anecdotes about Phanes and Prajapati which are preserved in the Orphic hymns and in the Brahmanas. The conduct of the earlier dynasties of classical gods towards each other was as notoriously cruel and loathsome as their behaviour towards mortals was tricksy and capricious. The classical gods, with all their immortal might, are, by a mythical contradiction of the religious conception, regarded as capable of fear and pain, and are led into scrapes as ludicrous as those of Brer Wolf or Brer Terrapin in the tales of the Negroes of the Southern States of America. The stars, again, in mythology, are mixed up with beasts, planets and men in the same embroglio of fantastic opinion. The dead and the living, men, beasts and gods, trees and stars, and rivers, and sun, and moon, dance through the region of myths in a burlesque ballet of Priapus, where everything may be anything, where nature has no laws and imagination no limits.

同类推荐
  • 金刚顶经一字顶轮王仪轨音义

    金刚顶经一字顶轮王仪轨音义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 根本说一切有部目得迦

    根本说一切有部目得迦

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 天老神光经

    天老神光经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说十号经

    佛说十号经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • King Henry VIII

    King Henry VIII

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 最佳娱乐时代

    最佳娱乐时代

    新书《拼搏年代》已经上传。这是最坏的时代,六大公司垄断好莱坞;这是最好的时代,互联网不断冲击传统模式。罗南要爬上这个娱乐时代的巅峰,俯瞰脚下无数森林。
  • 封修神

    封修神

    为了去世的爷爷报仇,为了寻找失踪的父母,走入了修炼界。
  • 莫生心易

    莫生心易

    他戴着鸭舌帽,戴着口罩,只露出来的眼睛里只有她。光鲜亮丽的他,在舆论的欺压下,在黑粉的伤害下,他是否还可以保护住她?谁说小奶狗不是看家护院的好狗,小奶狗的爱情可是粉色的呢!
  • 历史原来这么八卦

    历史原来这么八卦

    本书包括生活用品、衣着服饰、美味佳肴、蔬菜水果、良辰佳节、民间风俗、官衔职务、俗语谚语、称谓沿袭九大部分内容。涉及两百多个发明、发现、发展故事与史实,涵盖生活方方面面。有妙趣横生的典故传说如“寿桃” “混帐” “万岁”等,也有丰富的娱乐生活。既可得知传统民俗的流传,又可知悉人间万事的变迁。作为生活中的细节和常识,本书将带你进入历史隧道,分享有趣的新鲜事,为你增加茶余饭后的谈资。
  • 血与月的传说

    血与月的传说

    传说,红色血月,他会降临,他,黑发黑眼,能看见万物,但是那双眸子,白色的瞳孔,看到的不是万物,是人心。传说他的脸上总是挂着笑容,但谁知道,他的关心除了自己不给任何人。传说,他实力恐怖,让人畏惧,其实他只是暗黑世界里贩卖各种奇怪东西,诸如:感情,友情之类的商品的一名‘普通商人’而已。
  • 我所创造的怪物Ⅱ

    我所创造的怪物Ⅱ

    日本文坛鬼才——乙一倾注巨大心血写就的长篇小说“Arknoah”系列,第二弹重磅上市!艾尔和格雷两兄弟,无意间发现了亡父遗留的一本绘本,从而迷失在了名叫“Arknoah”的奇异世界。而在那里等待着他们的,除了令人瞠目结舌的房间构造,还有手拿大锤的神秘少女,长生不老的本地居民,和由自己的心魔幻化而生的恐怖怪物。“不消灭那两个怪物的话,你们两个就无法回到原来的世界哦。”横亘在少年和怪物之间的,是生与死的抉择。第二弹中,鲜有笑容的神秘少女玛丽娜误闯进Arknoah,更带来了人人为之颤栗的灾难——巨龙。巨龙侵袭,脑洞世界再次颠覆,少年就此踏上全新征程。
  • 对不起,我爱你

    对不起,我爱你

    她有一个梦,直到死都放不下。从他救下她的那一刻起,她的人生就不是自己的,因他而活,因他而死。直到筋疲力尽,直到痛不欲生,再也没有力气去爱他。她说:“我愿来生,不再遇见你!”他说:“对不起,我爱你!”
  • 南风知卿语

    南风知卿语

    这是一个奇幻的故事,一个势均力敌的较量;一种至死不渝的深情。
  • 在镖局抢劫的日子

    在镖局抢劫的日子

    一个跌入人生低谷的江湖菜鸟,在门派学艺被大佬排挤,去京城求职四处碰壁,到酒楼打工沦落为杂役,幸好否极泰来,在女鬼的调教下,修炼绝世功法,走上了土匪头子的混世之路。抢一人为罪,抢一城为匪,抢遍天下,我看谁还敢治我的罪。
  • 武运昌盛

    武运昌盛

    什么江湖,不过是自己想过却没过上的生活,什么豪侠,不过是苦难后苟延活着的幸存者,镜中花,花中人,此事两乾坤。