FOOTNOTES:[388]Benfey and Cosquin. See Lang's Myth, Ritual, and Religion, 2, 299.[389]Lang, Myth, Ritual, and Religion, 2, 300; Cox, Mythology of the Aryan Nations, 1, 100.[390]The Rev. Sir G. W. Cox, Mythology of Aryan Nations, 1, 99; also, same theory, Max Müller's Chips from a German Workshop; Andrew Lang, Myth, Ritual, and Religion, 2, 297.[391]Encyc. Brit., 9th ed. Article,Mythology. Cf. Tylor's Primitive Culture, 1, 369; Tylor's Anthropology, p. 397.[392]See T. C. Johnston's Did the Phœnicians Discover America? 1892.
[388]Benfey and Cosquin. See Lang's Myth, Ritual, and Religion, 2, 299.
[388]Benfey and Cosquin. See Lang's Myth, Ritual, and Religion, 2, 299.
[389]Lang, Myth, Ritual, and Religion, 2, 300; Cox, Mythology of the Aryan Nations, 1, 100.
[389]Lang, Myth, Ritual, and Religion, 2, 300; Cox, Mythology of the Aryan Nations, 1, 100.
[390]The Rev. Sir G. W. Cox, Mythology of Aryan Nations, 1, 99; also, same theory, Max Müller's Chips from a German Workshop; Andrew Lang, Myth, Ritual, and Religion, 2, 297.
[390]The Rev. Sir G. W. Cox, Mythology of Aryan Nations, 1, 99; also, same theory, Max Müller's Chips from a German Workshop; Andrew Lang, Myth, Ritual, and Religion, 2, 297.
[391]Encyc. Brit., 9th ed. Article,Mythology. Cf. Tylor's Primitive Culture, 1, 369; Tylor's Anthropology, p. 397.
[391]Encyc. Brit., 9th ed. Article,Mythology. Cf. Tylor's Primitive Culture, 1, 369; Tylor's Anthropology, p. 397.
[392]See T. C. Johnston's Did the Phœnicians Discover America? 1892.
[392]See T. C. Johnston's Did the Phœnicians Discover America? 1892.
297. Traditional History.Before the introduction of writing, myths were preserved in popular traditions, in the sacred ceremonials of colleges of priests, in the narratives chanted by families of minstrels or by professional bards wandering from village to village or from court to court, and in occasional hymns sung by privileged harpists, like Demodocus of Phæacia,[393]in honor of a chieftain, an ancestor, or a god. Many of these early bards are mere names to us. Most of them are probably as mythical as the songs with which they are accredited. The following is a brief account of mythical prophets, of mythical musicians and poets, and of the actual poets and historians who recorded the mythologies from which English literature draws its classical myths,—the Greek, the Roman, the Norse, and the German.
298. In Greece.(1)Mythical Prophets.To some of the oldest bards was attributed the gift of prophecy. Indeed, nearly every expedition of mythology was accompanied by one of these seers, priests, or "medicine men," as we might call them.
Melampuswas the first Greek said to be endowed with prophetic powers. Before his house there stood an oak tree containing a serpent's nest. The old serpents were killed by the slaves, but Melampus saved the young ones. One day when he was asleep under the oak, the serpents licked his ears with their tongues, enabling him to understand the language of birds and creeping things.[394]At one time his enemies seized and imprisoned him. But Melampus, in the silence of the night, heard from the woodworms in the timbers that the supports of the house were nearly eaten through and the roof would soon fall in. He told his captors. They took his warning, escaped destruction, rewarded the prophet, and held him in high honor.
Other famous soothsayers were Amphiaraüs, who took part in the War of the Seven against Thebes; Calchas, who accompanied the Greeks during the Trojan War; Helenus and Cassandra, of King Priam's family, who prophesied for the Trojan forces; Tiresias, the blind prophet of Thebes; and Mopsus, who attended the Argonauts. The stories of these expeditions are given in preceding chapters.
(2)Mythical Musicians and Poets.Since the poets of antiquity sang their stories or hymns to an accompaniment of their own upon the harp or lyre, they were skilled in the art of music as well as in that of verse.
Orpheus, whose adventures have been narrated, passes in tradition for the oldest of Greek lyrists, and the special favorite, even the son, of the god Apollo, patron of musicians. This Thracian bard is said to have taught mysterious truths concerning the origin of things and the immortality of the soul. But the fragments of Orphic hymns which are attributed to him are probably the work of philosophers of a much later period in Greek literature.
Another Thracian bard,Thamyris, is said in his presumption to have challenged the Muses to a trial of skill. Conquered in the contest, he was deprived of his sight. ToMusæus, the son of Orpheus, was attributed a hymn on the Eleusinian mysteries, and other sacred poems and oracles. Milton couples his name with that of Orpheus:
But, O sad Virgin! that thy powerMight raise Musæus from his bower,Or bid the soul of Orpheus singSuch notes as, warbled to the string,Drew iron tears down Pluto's cheek,And made Hell grant what love did seek.[395]
But, O sad Virgin! that thy powerMight raise Musæus from his bower,Or bid the soul of Orpheus singSuch notes as, warbled to the string,Drew iron tears down Pluto's cheek,And made Hell grant what love did seek.[395]
Other legendary bards or musicians were Linus, Marsyas, and Amphion.
(3)The Poets of Mythology.Homer, from whose poems of the Iliad and Odyssey we have taken the chief part of our chapters on the Trojan War and the return of the Grecians, is almost as mythical a personage as the heroes he celebrates. The traditionary story is that he was a wandering minstrel, blind and old, who traveledfrom place to place singing his lays to the music of his harp, in the courts of princes or the cottages of peasants,—a dependent upon the voluntary offerings of his hearers. Byron calls him "the blind old man of Scio's rocky isle"; and a well-known epigram, alluding to the uncertainty of the fact of his birthplace, runs:
Seven wealthy towns contend for Homer dead,Through which the living Homer begged his bread.
Seven wealthy towns contend for Homer dead,Through which the living Homer begged his bread.
These seven places were Smyrna, Chios (now Scio), Colophon, Ithaca, Pylos, Argos, and Athens.
Modern scholars have doubted whether the Homeric poems are the work of any single mind. This uncertainty arises, in part, from the difficulty of believing that poems of such length could have been committed to writing in the age usually assigned to these, when materials capable of transmitting long productions were not yet in use. On the other hand, it is asked how poems of such length could have been handed down from age to age by means of the memory alone. This question is answered by the statement that there was a professional body of men whose business it was to commit to memory and rehearse for pay the national and patriotic legends.
Pisistratus of Athens ordered a commission of scholars (about 537B.C.) to collect and revise the Homeric poems; and it is probable that at that time certain passages of the Iliad and Odyssey, as we now have them, were interpolated. Beside the Iliad and the Odyssey, many other epics passed in antiquity under Homer's name. The so-called Homeric Hymns to the gods, which were composed by various poets after the death of Homer, are a source of valuable information concerning the attributes of the divinities addressed.
The date assigned to Homer, on the authority of Herodotus, is 850B.C.The preservation and further fashioning of myths fell, after Homer's time, into the hands of the Rhapsodists, who chanted epic songs, and of the Cyclic poets, who elaborated into various epiccircles, or completed wholes, neglected traditions of the Trojan War. Among these cyclic poems were the Cyprian Lays, which related the beginnings of the Trojan War and the first nine years of thesiege, thus leading up to the Iliad; the Æthiopis, which continued the Iliad and told of the death of Achilles; the Little Iliad and the Iliupersis, which narrated the fall of Troy and magnified the exploits of Ajax and Philoctetes; and the Nostoi, or Home-Comings, which told the adventures of various Greek heroes during the period of ten years between the end of the Iliad and the beginning of the Odyssey. Most of these poems were once attributed to Homer. They are all lost, but the names of some of their authors survive. There was also a cycle which told of the two wars against Thebes.
Hesiodis, like Homer, one of the most important sources of our knowledge of Greek mythology. He is thought by some to have been a contemporary of Homer, but concerning the relative dates of the two poets there is no certainty. Hesiod was born in Ascra in Bœotia; he spent his youth as a shepherd on Mount Helicon, his manhood in the neighborhood of Corinth, and wrote two great poems, the Works and Days, and the Theogony, or Genealogy of the Gods. From the former we obtain a connected account of Greek traditions concerning the primitive commodities of life, the arts of agriculture and navigation, the sacred calendar, and the various prehistoric ages. From the latter poem we learn the Greek mythology of the creation of the world, the family of the gods, their wars, and their attitude toward primeval man. While Hesiod may have composed his works at a somewhat later period than Homer, it is noteworthy that his stories of the gods have more of the savage or senseless element than those attributed to Homer. The artist, or artists, of the Iliad and the Odyssey seem to have refined the stories into poetic gold; Hesiod has gathered them in the ore, like so many specimens for a museum.
A company ofLyric Poets, of whom Stesichorus (620B.C.), Alcæus (611B.C.), Sappho (610B.C.), Arion (600B.C.), Simonides of Ceos (556B.C.), Ibycus (540B.C.), Anacreon (530B.C.), and Pindar (522B.C.) are the most prominent, have contributed much to our knowledge of mythology. They have left us hymns to the gods, references to mythical heroes, and accounts of more or less pathetic legendary adventures.
Of the works ofSapphofew fragments remain, but they establish her claim to eminent poetical genius. Her story is frequentlyalluded to. Being passionately in love with a beautiful youth named Phaon, and failing to obtain a return of affection, she is said to have thrown herself from the promontory of Leucadia into the sea, under a superstition that those who should take that "Lover's Leap" would, if not destroyed, be cured of their love.
OfArionthe greatest work was a dithyramb or choral hymn to the god of wine. It is said that his music and song were of such sweetness as to charm the monsters of the sea; and that when thrown overboard on one occasion by avaricious seamen, he was borne safely to land by an admiring dolphin. Spenser represents Arion, mounted on his dolphin, accompanying the train of Neptune and Amphitrite:
Then was there heard a most celestial soundOf dainty music, which did next ensueBefore the spouse: that was Arion crownedWho, playing on his harp, unto him drewThe ears and hearts of all that goodly crew;That even yet the dolphin which him boreThrough the Ægean seas from pirates' view,Stood still by him astonished at his lore,And all the raging seas for joy forgot to roar.[396]
Then was there heard a most celestial soundOf dainty music, which did next ensueBefore the spouse: that was Arion crownedWho, playing on his harp, unto him drewThe ears and hearts of all that goodly crew;That even yet the dolphin which him boreThrough the Ægean seas from pirates' view,Stood still by him astonished at his lore,And all the raging seas for joy forgot to roar.[396]
Simonideswas one of the most prolific of the early poets of Greece, but only a few fragments of his compositions have descended to us. He wrote hymns, triumphal odes, and elegies, and in the last species of composition he particularly excelled. His genius was inclined to the pathetic; none could touch with truer effect the chords of human sympathy. The Lamentation of Danaë, the most important of the fragments which remain of his poetry, is based upon the tradition that Danaë and her infant son were confined by order of her father Acrisius in a chest and set adrift on the sea. The myth of her son, Perseus, has already been narrated.
Myths received their freest and perhaps most ideal treatment at the hands of the greatest lyric poet of Greece,Pindar(522B.C.). In his hymns and songs of praise to gods and in his odes composedfor the victors in the national athletic contests, he was accustomed to use the mythical exploits of Greek heroes as a text from which to draw morals appropriate to the occasion.[397]
The three greatTragic Poetsof Greece have handed down to us a wealth of mythological material. From the plays ofÆschylus(525B.C.) we gather, among other noble lessons, the fortunes of the family of Agamemnon, the narrative of the expedition against Thebes, the sufferings of Prometheus, benefactor of men. In the tragedies ofSophocles(495B.C.) we have a further account of the family of Agamemnon, myths of Œdipus of Thebes and his children, stories connected with the Trojan War, and the last adventure and the death of Hercules. Of the dramas ofEuripides(480B.C.) there remain to us seventeen, in which are found stories of the daughters of Agamemnon, the rare and beautiful narrative of Alcestis, and the adventures of Medea. All of these stories have been recounted in their proper places.
TheComedies of Aristophanes, also, are replete with matters of mythological import.
Of the later poets of mythology, only two need be mentioned here,—Apolloniusof Rhodes (194B.C.), who wrote in frigid style the story of Jason's Voyage for the Golden Fleece; andTheocritusof Sicily (270B.C.), whose rural idyls are at once charmingly natural and romantic.[398]
(4)Historians of Mythology.The earliest narrators in prose of the myths, legends and genealogies of Greece lived about 600B.C.Herodotus, the "father of history" (484B.C.), embalms various myths in his account of the conflicts between Asia and Greece. Apollodorus (140B.C.) gathers the legends of Greece later incorporated in the Library of Greek Mythology. That delightful traveler, Pausanias, makes special mention, in his Tour of Greece, of the sacred customs and legends that had maintained themselves as late as his time (160A.D.). Lucian, in his Dialogues of the Gods and Dialogues of the Dead, awakens "inextinguishable laughter" by his satire on ancient faith and fable.
299. Roman Poets of Mythology.Virgil, called also by his surname, Maro, from whose poem of the Æneid we have taken the story of Æneas, was one of the great poets who made the age of the Roman emperor, Augustus, celebrated. Virgil was born in Mantua in the year 70B.C.His great poem is ranked next to those of Homer, in that noble class of poetical composition, the epic. Virgil is inferior to Homer in originality and invention. The Æneid, written in an age of culture and science, lacks that charming atmosphere of belief which invests the naïve, orpopular, epic. The myths concerning the founding of Rome, which Virgil has received from earlier writers, he has here fused into aliteraryepic. But what the Æneid lacks of epic simplicity, it makes up in patriotic spirit, in lofty moral and civic ideals, in correctness of taste, and in stylistic form.
Ovid, often alluded to in poetry by his other name, Naso, was born in the year 43B.C.He was educated for public life and held some offices of considerable dignity; but poetry was his delight, and he early resolved to cultivate it. He accordingly sought the society of contemporary poets and was acquainted with Horace and saw Virgil, though the latter died when Ovid was yet too young and undistinguished to have formed his acquaintance. Ovid spent an easy life at Rome in the enjoyment of a competent income. He was intimate with the family of Augustus, the emperor; and it is supposed that some serious offense given to a member of that family was the cause of an event which reversed the poet's happy circumstances and clouded the latter portion of his life. At the age of fifty he was banished from Rome and ordered to betake himself to Tomi on the borders of the Black Sea. His only consolation in exile was to address his wife and absent friends. His letters were all in verse. They are called the "Tristia," or Sorrows, and Letters from Pontus. The two great works of Ovid are his "Metamorphoses" or Transformations, and his "Fasti," or Poetic Calendar. They are both mythological poems, and from the former we have taken many of our stories of Grecian and Roman mythology. These poems have thus been characterized:
"The rich mythology of Greece furnished Ovid, as it may still furnish the poet, the painter, and the sculptor, with materials forhis art. With exquisite taste, simplicity, and pathos he has narrated the fabulous traditions of early ages, and given to them that appearance of reality which only a master hand could impart. His pictures of nature are striking and true; he selects with care that which is appropriate; he rejects the superfluous, and when he has completed his work, it is neither defective nor redundant. The 'Metamorphoses' are read with pleasure by the young and old of every civilized land."
In an incidental manner,Horace, the prince of Roman lyric poets, and the lyric and elegiac writers,Catullus,Tibullus, andPropertius, have liberally increased our knowledge of Greek and Roman myth.[399]
Seneca, the teacher of Nero, is best known for his philosophical treatises; but he wrote, also, tragedies, the materials of which are well-known Greek legends.Apuleius, born in Africa, 114A.D., interests us as the compiler of a clever romance, The Golden Ass;[400]the most pleasing episode of which, the story of Cupid and Psyche, has been elsewhere related.[401]
300. Records of Norse Mythology.[402]A system of mythology of especial interest,—as belonging to the race from which we, through our English ancestors, derive our origin,—is that of the Norsemen, who inhabited the countries now known as Sweden, Denmark, Norway, and Iceland. Their mythological lore has been transmitted by means of Runes, Skaldic poems, the Eddas, and the Sagas.
The Runes.The earliest method of writing prevalent among the Norsemen was by runes. The word meanshidden lore, ormystery. The earliest runes were merely fanciful signs supposed to possess mysterious power. As a synonym forwriting, the term was first applied to the Northern alphabet, itself derived from ancient Greek and Roman coins. Of the old Scandinavian runes several specimens have been found—one an inscription on a golden horn of the third or fourth centuryA.D., which was dugup in Schleswig a hundred and sixty years ago; another, on a stone at Tune in Norway. From such an alphabet the Anglo-Saxon runes were derived. Inscriptions in later Scandinavian runes have been discovered in Sweden, Denmark, and the Isle of Man. The characters are of the stiff and angular form necessitated by the materials on which they were inscribed,—tombstones, spoons, chairs, oars, and so forth.[403]It is doubtful whether mythological poems were ever written in this way; dedications to pagan deities, ditties of the eleventh century, and love-spells have, however, been found.
The Skaldic Poems.The bards and poets of the Norsemen were the Skalds. They were the depositaries of whatever historic lore there was; and it was their office to mingle something of intellectual gratification with the rude feasts of the warriors, by rehearsing, with such accompaniments of poetry and music as their skill could afford, the exploits of heroes living or dead. Such songs were called Drapas. The origin of Skaldic poetry is lost in mythic or prehistoric darkness, but the Skalds of Iceland continued to play a most important part in the literary development of the north as late as the end of the fourteenth century. Without their coöperation, the greater part of the songs and sagas of genuine antiquity could hardly have reached us. The Skaldic diction, which was polished to an artistic extreme, with its pagan metaphors and similes retained its supremacy over literary form even after the influence of Christianity had revolutionized national thought.[404]
The Eddas.The chief mythological records of the Norse are the Eddas and the Sagas. The wordEddahas usually been connected with the Icelandic forgreat-grandmother;[405]it has also been regarded as a corruption of the High GermanErda, Mother Earth, from whom, according to the lay in which the word first occurs, the earliest race of mankind sprang,[406]—or as thepointorheadof Norse poetry,[407]or as a tale concerned withdeath,[408]or as derived from Odde, the home of the reputed collector of theElder Edda. But, of recent years, scholars have looked with most favor upon a derivation from the Icelandicóðr, which means mind, or poetry.[409]There are two Icelandic collections called Eddas: Snorri's and Sæmund's. Until the year 1643 the name was applied to a book, principally in prose, containing Mythical Tales, a Treatise on the Poetic Art and Diction, a Poem on Meters, and a Rhymed Glossary of Synonyms, with an appendix of minor treatises on grammar and rhetoric—the whole intended as a guide for poets. Although a note in the Upsala manuscript, of date about 1300A.D., asserted that this work was "put together" by Snorri Sturlason, who lived 1178-1241, the world was not informed of the fact until 1609, when Arngrim Johnsson made the announcement in his Constitutional History of Iceland.[410]While the main treatises on the poetic art are, in general, Snorri's, the treatises on grammar and rhetoric have been, with more or less certitude, assigned to other writers of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. It is probable, too, that in the Mythical Tales, or the Delusion of Gylfi, Snorri merely enlarged and edited with poetical illustrations the work of earlier hands. The poets of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries do not speak of Snorri, but they refer continually to the "rules of Edda," and frequently to the obscurity and the conventionality of Eddic phraseology, figures, and art. Even at the present day in Iceland it is common to hear the term "void of Eddic art," or "a bungler in Eddic art." A rearrangement of Snorri's Edda, by Magnus Olafsson (1574-1636), is much better known than the original work.
In 1642, Bishop Bryniolf Sveinsson discovered a manuscript of the mythological poems of Iceland. Misled by theories of his own and by a fanciful suggestion of the famous antiquary Biorn of Scardsa, he attributed the composition of these poems to Sæmund the Wise, a historian who lived 1056-1133. Henceforth, consequently, Snorri's work is called the Younger, or Prose Edda, in contradistinction to Bryniolf's find, which is known as the Elder, the Poetical Edda, or the Edda of Sæmund. The oldest manuscript of the Poetical Edda is of the thirteenth century. Itscontents were probably collected not later than 1150. The composition of the poems cannot well be placed earlier than the ninth or tenth centuries after Christ; and a consideration of the habits, laws, geography, and vocabulary illustrated by the poems leads eminent scholars to assign the authorship to emigrants of the south Norwegian tribes who, sailing westward, "won Waterford and Limerick, and kinged it in York and East England."[411]The poems are Icelandic, however, in their general character and history. They are principally of heroic and mythical import: such as the stories of Balder's Fate, of Skirnir's Journey, of Thor's Hammer, of Helgi the Hunding's Bane, and the twenty lays that in fragmentary fashion tell the eventful history of the Volsungs and the Nibelungs.[412]
The Sagas.The Eddas contain many myths and mythical features that contradict the national character of both Germans and Norsemen, but the sagas have their roots in Norse civilization and are national property.[413]Of these mythic-heroic prose compositions the most important to us is the Volsunga Saga, which was put together probably in the twelfth century and is based in part upon the poems of the Elder Edda, in part upon floating traditions, and in part upon popular songs that now are lost.[414]
301. Records of German Mythology.[**412] The story of the Volsungs and the Nibelungs springs from mythological sources common to the whole Teutonic race. Two distinct versions of the saga survive,—the Low or North German, which we have already noticed in the lays of the Elder Edda and in the Norse Volsunga Saga, and the High or South German, which has been preserved in German folk songs and in the Nibelungenlied, or Lay of the Nibelungs, that has grown out of them. The Norse form of the story exhibits a later survival of the credulous, or myth-making, mental condition. The Lay of the Nibelungs absorbed, at an earlier date, historical elements, and began sooner to restrict the personality of its heroes within the compass of human limitations.[415]
Although there are many manuscripts, or fragments of manuscripts, of the Nibelungenlied that attest its popularity between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries, it was not until the Swiss critic, J. J. Bodmer, published, in 1757, portions of two ancient poems, "The Revenge of Kriemhild" and "The Lament over the Heroes of Etzel," that the attention of modern scholars was called to this famous German epic. Since that time many theories of the composition of the Nibelungenlied have been advanced. It has been held by some that the German epic is an adaptation of the Norse version;[416]by others, that the Scandinavians, not the Germans, borrowed the story; and by others still, that the epics, while proceeding from a common cradle, are of independent growth. The last theory is the most tenable.[417]Concerning the history of the Nibelungenlied, it has been maintained that since, during the twelfth century, when no poet would adopt any other poet's stanzaic form, the Austrian Von Kürenberg used the stanzaic form of the Nibelungenlied, the epic must be his.[418]It has also been urged that the poem, having been written down about 1140, was altered in metrical form by younger poets, until, in 1200 or thereabouts, it assumed the form preserved in the latest of the three great manuscripts.[419]But the theory advanced by Lachmann is still of great value: that the poem consists of a number of ancient ballads of various age and uneven worth; and that, about 1210, a collector, mending some of the ballads to suit himself, strung them together on a thread of his own invention.
In fine, the materials of the poem would persuade us not only of its origin in very ancient popular lays, but of their fusion and improvement by the imaginative effort of at least one, and probably of several poets, who lived and wrote between 1120 and 1200A.D.The metrical structure, also, would indicate derivation from the German folk song and modification due to multifarious handling on the part of popular minstrels and poets of written verse.[420]
302. Records of Oriental Mythology: Egyptian.[421]Although the myths of Egypt, India, and Persia are of intense interest and importance, they have not materially affected English literature. The following is, however, a brief outline of the means by which some of them have been preserved.
The Egyptian records are (1)The Hieroglyphs, or sacred inscriptions in Tombs of the Kings, and other solemn places,—conveying ideas by symbols, by phonetic signs, or by both; (2)The Sacred Papyri, containing hymns to the gods; (3)TheBooks of the Deadand of theLower Hemisphere,—devoted to necromantic incantations, prayers for the souls of the departed, and other rituals.
303. Indian Records.(1)The Vedas, or Holy Scriptures of the Hindus, which fall into four divisions. The most ancient, the Rig-Veda, consists of hymns of an elevated and spiritual character composed by families of Rishis, or psalmists, as far back, perhaps, as 3000B.C., not later than 1400B.C.They give us the religious conceptions of the Aryans when they crossed the Himalayas and began to push toward Southern Hindustan. The Sama-Veda is a book of solemn chants and tunes. The Yajur-Veda comprises prayers for sacrificial occasions, and interpretations of the same. The Atharva-Veda shows, as might be expected of the youngest of the series, the influence upon the purer Aryan creed of superstitions borrowed, perhaps, from the aboriginal tribes of India. It contains spells for exorcising demons and placating them.
(2)The Indian Epicsof classical standing. They are the Mahâbhârata and the Râmâyana. Scholars differ as to the chronological precedence. The Great Feud of the Bhâratas has the air of superior antiquity because of the numerous hands and generations that have contributed to its composition. The Adventures of Râma, on the other hand, recalls a more primitive stage of credulity and of savage invention. The Mahâbhârata is a storehouse of mythical tradition. It contains several well-rounded epic poems, the most beautiful of which is the Episode of Nala,—a prince who, succumbing to a weakness common tohis contemporaries, has gambled away his kingdom. The Great Feud of the Bhâratas is, indeed, assigned to an author—but his name, Vyâsa, means simply the Arranger. The Râmâyana purports to have been written by the poet Vâlmîki. It tells how Sita, the wife of Prince Râma, is carried off to Ceylon by Râvana, king of the demons, and how Râma, by the aid of an army of monkeys, bridges the straits between India and Ceylon and, slaying the demon, recovers his lovely and innocent wife. The resemblance between the plot and that of the Iliad has inclined some scholars to derive the Indian from the Greek epic. But, until the relative antiquity of the poems is established, the Iliad might as well be derived from the Râmâyana. The theory is unsubstantiated. These epics of India lack the artistic spirit and grace of the Iliad and the Odyssey, but they display a keener sympathy with nature and a more romantic appreciation of the loves and sorrows of mankind.
304. Persian Records.The Avesta, or Sacred Book of the ancient Persians, composed in the Zend language and later translated into medieval Persian,—or Pahlavi,—contains the Gáthás, or hymns of Zoroaster and his contemporaries, and scriptures of as recent a date as the fifth centuryB.C.Zoroaster, a holy man of God, was the founder or the reformer of the Persian religion. He lived as early as the fourteenth or fifteenth centuryB.C., and his system became the dominant religion of Western Asia from the time of Cyrus (550B.C.) to the conquest of Persia by Alexander the Great. The teachings of Zoroaster are characterized by beautiful simplicity, and by an unwavering faith in the ultimate victory of righteousness (Ormuzd) over evil (Ahriman).
FOOTNOTES:[393]Odyssey 8, 250.[394]Cf. the experience of Sigurd.[395]Il Penseroso, II. 103-108.[396]Faerie Queene, 4, 11, 23.[397]See E. B. Clapp, Greek Morality and Religion as Set forth by Pindar (Hibbert Journal, 8, 283).[398]For other authorities and for a few standard translations of the Greek Classics, see Commentary, § 298.[399]With regard to translations of these and other Latin poets, see Commentary, § 299.[400]Based upon Lucian's Lucius or the Ass, and other Greek stories.[401]Translation in Walter Pater's Marius the Epicurean.[402]For literature, see Commentary.[403]Cleasby and Vigfusson's Icelandic-English Dictionary.[404]F. W. Horn's Geschichte d. Literatur d. Skandinavischen Nordens, 27-42.[405]Cleasby and Vigfusson's Dictionary; Lüning's Die Edda, 1859.[406]The Lay of Rig in Snorri's Edda; Vigfusson and Powell's Corpus Poeticum Boreale, 2, 514.[407]Jacob Grimm.[408]The Celticaideadh: Professor Rhys,Academy, January 31, 1880.[409]Arne Magnússon, see Morley's English Writers, 2, 336, and Murray's New English Dictionary.[410]Corpus Poeticum Boreale, 1; xxvii, etc.[411]Corpus Poeticum Boreale, 1; lxxi; lxiii-lxiv.[412]For literature, see Commentary.[413]Paul's Grundriss d. Germanischen Philologie: Bd. 1, Lfg. 5,Mythologie.[414]Morris and Magnusson's The Story of the Volsungs and Nibelungs. Horn's Geschichte d. Literatur d. Skandinavischen Nordens, 27-42, 58, etc.[415]Werner Hahn, Das Nibelungenlied.[416]The Grimm Brothers; v. d. Hagen; Vilmar.[417]Werner Hahn; Jas. Sime, Encyc. Brit.Nibelungenlied.[418]Pfeiffer.[419]Bartsch, see Encyc. Brit.[420]Werner Hahn, 18, 58-60.[421]For translations of Oriental Myths, see Commentary. For mythical personages, see Index and Dictionary.
[393]Odyssey 8, 250.
[393]Odyssey 8, 250.
[394]Cf. the experience of Sigurd.
[394]Cf. the experience of Sigurd.
[395]Il Penseroso, II. 103-108.
[395]Il Penseroso, II. 103-108.
[396]Faerie Queene, 4, 11, 23.
[396]Faerie Queene, 4, 11, 23.
[397]See E. B. Clapp, Greek Morality and Religion as Set forth by Pindar (Hibbert Journal, 8, 283).
[397]See E. B. Clapp, Greek Morality and Religion as Set forth by Pindar (Hibbert Journal, 8, 283).
[398]For other authorities and for a few standard translations of the Greek Classics, see Commentary, § 298.
[398]For other authorities and for a few standard translations of the Greek Classics, see Commentary, § 298.
[399]With regard to translations of these and other Latin poets, see Commentary, § 299.
[399]With regard to translations of these and other Latin poets, see Commentary, § 299.
[400]Based upon Lucian's Lucius or the Ass, and other Greek stories.
[400]Based upon Lucian's Lucius or the Ass, and other Greek stories.
[401]Translation in Walter Pater's Marius the Epicurean.
[401]Translation in Walter Pater's Marius the Epicurean.
[402]For literature, see Commentary.
[402]For literature, see Commentary.
[403]Cleasby and Vigfusson's Icelandic-English Dictionary.
[403]Cleasby and Vigfusson's Icelandic-English Dictionary.
[404]F. W. Horn's Geschichte d. Literatur d. Skandinavischen Nordens, 27-42.
[404]F. W. Horn's Geschichte d. Literatur d. Skandinavischen Nordens, 27-42.
[405]Cleasby and Vigfusson's Dictionary; Lüning's Die Edda, 1859.
[405]Cleasby and Vigfusson's Dictionary; Lüning's Die Edda, 1859.
[406]The Lay of Rig in Snorri's Edda; Vigfusson and Powell's Corpus Poeticum Boreale, 2, 514.
[406]The Lay of Rig in Snorri's Edda; Vigfusson and Powell's Corpus Poeticum Boreale, 2, 514.
[407]Jacob Grimm.
[407]Jacob Grimm.
[408]The Celticaideadh: Professor Rhys,Academy, January 31, 1880.
[408]The Celticaideadh: Professor Rhys,Academy, January 31, 1880.
[409]Arne Magnússon, see Morley's English Writers, 2, 336, and Murray's New English Dictionary.
[409]Arne Magnússon, see Morley's English Writers, 2, 336, and Murray's New English Dictionary.
[410]Corpus Poeticum Boreale, 1; xxvii, etc.
[410]Corpus Poeticum Boreale, 1; xxvii, etc.
[411]Corpus Poeticum Boreale, 1; lxxi; lxiii-lxiv.
[411]Corpus Poeticum Boreale, 1; lxxi; lxiii-lxiv.
[412]For literature, see Commentary.
[412]For literature, see Commentary.
[413]Paul's Grundriss d. Germanischen Philologie: Bd. 1, Lfg. 5,Mythologie.
[413]Paul's Grundriss d. Germanischen Philologie: Bd. 1, Lfg. 5,Mythologie.
[414]Morris and Magnusson's The Story of the Volsungs and Nibelungs. Horn's Geschichte d. Literatur d. Skandinavischen Nordens, 27-42, 58, etc.
[414]Morris and Magnusson's The Story of the Volsungs and Nibelungs. Horn's Geschichte d. Literatur d. Skandinavischen Nordens, 27-42, 58, etc.
[415]Werner Hahn, Das Nibelungenlied.
[415]Werner Hahn, Das Nibelungenlied.
[416]The Grimm Brothers; v. d. Hagen; Vilmar.
[416]The Grimm Brothers; v. d. Hagen; Vilmar.
[417]Werner Hahn; Jas. Sime, Encyc. Brit.Nibelungenlied.
[417]Werner Hahn; Jas. Sime, Encyc. Brit.Nibelungenlied.
[418]Pfeiffer.
[418]Pfeiffer.
[419]Bartsch, see Encyc. Brit.
[419]Bartsch, see Encyc. Brit.
[420]Werner Hahn, 18, 58-60.
[420]Werner Hahn, 18, 58-60.
[421]For translations of Oriental Myths, see Commentary. For mythical personages, see Index and Dictionary.
[421]For translations of Oriental Myths, see Commentary. For mythical personages, see Index and Dictionary.
[It is hoped that this Commentary may be useful to general readers, to students of art, and to teachers in the secondary schools, as well as to pupils. The cross references are always to sections; and the section numbers correspond with those of the text in the body of the book. The letter C. prefixed to a number indicates Commentary.]
[It is hoped that this Commentary may be useful to general readers, to students of art, and to teachers in the secondary schools, as well as to pupils. The cross references are always to sections; and the section numbers correspond with those of the text in the body of the book. The letter C. prefixed to a number indicates Commentary.]
3. Chaos: a gap. Compare the "Beginning Gap" of Norse mythology.Eros: a yearning.Erebus: black, from root meaningto cover.
4. Uranus(GreekOuranos) corresponds with the name of the Indian divinity Varunas, rootvar, 'to cover.' Uranus is the starry vault that covers the earth; Varunas became the rain-giving sky.Titan: the honorable, powerful; the king; later, the signification was limited to the sun.Oceanusprobably meansflood.Tethys: the nourisher, nurse.Hyperion: the wanderer on high;[423]the sun.Thea: the beautiful, shining; the moon. She is called by Homer Euryphaëssa, the far-shining.Iapetus: the sender, hurler, wounder.Themis: that which is established, law.Mnemosyne: memory. Other Titans were Cœus and Phœbe, figurative of the radiant lights of heaven; Creüs and Eurybië, mighty powers, probably of the sea; Ophion, the great serpent, and Eurynome, the far-ruling, who, according to Apollonius of Rhodes, held sway over the Titans until Cronus cast them into the Ocean, or into Tartarus.
Cronus(GreekKronos) is, as his name shows, the god of ripening, harvest, maturity.Rheacomes from Asia Minor, and was there worshiped as the Mother Earth, dwelling creative among the mountains. Cronus (Kronos) has been naturally, but wrongly, identified with Chronos, the personification ofTime, which, as it brings all things to an end, devours its own offspring; and also with the Latin Saturn, who, as a god of agriculture and harvest, was represented with pruning-knife in hand, and regarded as the lord of an ancient golden age.
The threeCyclopeswere Brontes, Steropes, and Arges. Cyclops means the round-eyed. TheHecatonchireswere Briareus, the strong, called also Ægæon; Cottus, the striker; Gyes, or Gyges, the vaulter, or crippler. Gyges is called by Horace (Carm. 2, 17, 14) Centimanus,—the hundred-handed.
Illustrative.Milton, in Paradise Lost, 10, 581, refers to the tradition of Ophion and Eurynome, who "had first the rule of high Olympus, thence by Saturn driven."Hyperion: see Shakespeare's Hamlet, "Hyperion's curls, the front of Jovehimself." Also Henry V, IV, i; Troilus and Cressida, II, iii; Titus Andronicus, V, iii; Gray, Progress of Poesy, "Hyperion's march they spy, and glittering shafts of war"; Spenser, Prothalamion, "Hot Titans beames." OnOceanus, Ben Jonson, Neptune's Triumph. OnSaturn, see Shakespeare, Much Ado About Nothing, I, iii; 2 Henry IV, II, iv; Cymbeline, II, v; Titus Andronicus, II, iii; IV, iii; Milton, Paradise Lost, 1. 512, 519, 583, and Il Penseroso, 24. See Robert Buchanan, Cloudland, "One like a Titan cold," etc.; Keats, Hyperion; B. W. Procter, The Fall of Saturn.
In Art.Helios (Hyperion) rising from the sea: sculpture of eastern pediment of the frieze of the Parthenon (British Museum). Mnemosyne: D. G. Rossetti (crayons and oil).
5.Homer makes Zeus (Jupiter) the oldest of the sons of Cronus; Hesiod makes him the youngest, in accordance with a widespread savage custom which makes the youngest child heir in chief.—Lang, Myth, Ritual, etc., 1, 297. According to other legends Zeus was born in Arcadia, or even in Epirus at Dodona, where was his sacred grove. He was in either case reared by the nymphs of the locality. According to Hesiod, Theog. 730, he was born in a cave of Mount Dicte, in Crete.
6. Atlas, according to other accounts, was not doomed to support the heavens until after his encounter with Perseus.
8.See Milton's Hymn on the Nativity, "NotTyphonhuge ending in snaky twine." The monster is also called Typhoeus (Hesiod, Theog. 1137). The name meansto smoke,to burn. The monster personifies fiery vapors proceeding from subterranean places. Other famousGiantswere Mimas, Polybotes, Ephialtes, Rhœtus, Clytius. See Preller, 1, 60. Briareus (really a Centimanus) is frequently ranked among the giants.
Illustrative.Shakespeare, Troilus and Cressida, I, ii; Milton, Paradise Lost, 1, 199, and Hymn on the Nativity, 226; M. Arnold, Empedocles, Act 2; Pope, Dunciad, 4, 66. For giants, in general, see Milton, Paradise Lost, 3, 464; 11. 642, 688; Samson Agonistes, 148.
10-15. Prometheus: forethought.[424]Epimetheus: afterthought. According to Æschylus (Prometheus Bound) the doom of Zeus (Jupiter) was only contingent. If he should refuse to set Prometheus free and should, therefore, ignorant of the secret, wed Thetis, of whom it was known to Prometheus that her son should be greater than his father, then Zeus would be dethroned. If, however, Zeus himself delivered Prometheus, that Titan would reveal his secret and Zeus would escape both the marriage and its fateful result. The Prometheus Unbound of Æschylus is lost; but its name indicates that in the sequel the Titan is freed from his chains. And from hints in the Prometheus Bound we gather that this liberation was to come about in the way mentioned above, Prometheus warning Zeus to marry Thetis to Peleus (whose son, Achilles, proved greater than his father,—see191); or by the intervention of Hercules who was to be descended in the thirteenth generation from Zeus and Io (see161andC. 149); or by the voluntary sacrifice of the Centaur Chiron, who, when Zeus should hurl Prometheus and his rock into Hades, was destined to substitute himselffor the Titan, and so by vicarious atonement to restore him to the life of the upper world. In Shelley's great drama of Prometheus Unbound, the Zeus of tyranny and ignorance and superstition is overthrown by Reason, the gift of Prometheus to mankind.Sicyon(or Mecone): a city of the Peloponnesus, near Corinth.
Illustrative.Milton, Paradise Lost, "More lovely thanPandorawhom the gods endowed with all their gifts." Shakespeare, Titus Andronicus, II, i, 16.
Poems.D. G. Rossetti, Pandora; Longfellow, Masque of Pandora, Prometheus, and Epimetheus; Thos. Parnell, Hesiod, or the Rise of Woman.Prometheus, by Byron, Lowell, H. Coleridge, Robert Bridges; Prometheus Bound, by Mrs. Browning; translations of Æschylus, Prometheus Bound, Augusta Webster, E. H. Plumptre; Shelley, Prometheus Unbound; R. H. Horne, Prometheus, the Fire-bringer; E. Myers, The Judgment of Prometheus; George Cabot Lodge, Herakles, a drama. See Byron's Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte.The Golden Age: Chaucer, The Former Age (Ætas Prima); Milton, Hymn on the Nativity.
In Art.Ancient: Prometheus Unbound, vase picture (Monuments Inédits, Rome and Paris). Modern: Thorwaldsen's sculpture, Minerva and Prometheus. Pandora: Sichel (oil), Rossetti (crayons and oil), F. S. Church (water colors).
16. Dante(Durante)degli Alighieriwas born in Florence, 1265. Banished by his political opponents, 1302, he remained in exile until his death, which took place in Ravenna, 1321. His Vita Nuova (New Life), recounting his ideal love for Beatrice Portinari, was written between 1290 and 1300; his great poem, the Divina Commedia (the Divine Comedy) consisting of three parts,—Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso,—during the years of his exile. Of the Divine Comedy, says Lowell, "It is the real history of a brother man, of a tempted, purified, and at last triumphant human soul."John Milton(b. 1608) was carried by the stress of the civil war, 1641-1649, away from poetry, music, and the art which he had sedulously cultivated, into the stormy sea of politics and war. Perhaps the severity of his later sonnets and the sublimity of his Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes are the fruit of the stern years of controversy through which he lived, not as a poet, but as a statesman and a pamphleteer.Cervantes(1547-1616), the author of the greatest of Spanish romances, Don Quixote. His life was full of adventure, privation, suffering, with but brief seasons of happiness and renown. He distinguished himself at the battle of Lepanto, 1571; but in 1575, being captured by Algerine cruisers, he remained five years in harsh captivity. After his return to Spain he was neglected by those in power. For full twenty years he struggled for his daily bread. Don Quixote was published in and after 1605.Corybantes: the priests of Cybele, whose festivals were violent, and whose worship consisted of dances and noise suggestive of battle.
18. Astræawas placed among the stars as the constellation Virgo, the virgin. Her mother was Themis (Justice). Astræa holds aloft a pair of scales, in which she weighs the conflicting claims of parties. The old poets prophesied a return of these goddesses and of the Golden Age. See also Pope's Messiah,—