Part 16 (1/2)

G.o.d and man are of the same nature, the Greeks found; to arrive at a true idea of a G.o.d we have to form, on the basis of the natural object where he is supposed to dwell, the image of an ideal man or woman. This was a great step, but in this conception of deity the Greeks also laid up for themselves, as we shall see, many difficulties.

Early Eastern Influences.--Our positive knowledge of Greek history begins about the middle of the second millennium B.C.; we have information of this period in the ruins of Mycenae and Tiryns and other places. These remains attest a political condition widely different from that of the patriarchal settlements of the period when the Greeks were emerging from Aryan barbarism; very different also from the free city life which came afterwards. The recent excavations have brought to light the palaces of kings, built, it is evident, according to an Eastern type, and with arrangements for the burial and wors.h.i.+p of dead potentates, not unlike those of the pyramids. The art is rude, but shows large forces to have been at the command of those who directed it. We have here, therefore, a state of matters such as that described in the Homeric poems, in which petty kings rule in many of the Greek towns, some of them being personages of great rank and power. The movement in civilisation attested by these remains is admitted to be due to an impulse from the East; but whether this impulse was imparted by the voyages of Phenician discoverers and merchants, or whether it came by land along the trade routes of Asia Minor and across the Egean, is uncertain. It is in any case traceable to North Syria, where in the early part of the second millennium B.C. Babylonian and Egyptian influences met and gave rise to some rude civilisation. Greece was not conquered from the East, but stirred to new life by the communication of Eastern ideas.

Greek religion was not much a.s.sisted, or indeed much modified in any way, by this movement. The wors.h.i.+p of ancestors which went on in the palaces was not contrary to Greek sentiment, perhaps not even much more elaborate than that sentiment required. But this part of religion was not a growing thing in Greece; and the royal practices did not prevent it from dying gradually away in later times. That any G.o.d was imported into Greece at this time, is not proved. Where Greeks and Phenicians met, as in some of the islands, a Greek and an Eastern G.o.d might be identified; the wors.h.i.+p of Aphrodite and that of Astarte were fused in this way in Cyprus, and Aphrodite may thus have acquired some new characteristics even in Greece. This is not certain. Perhaps the most important thing to notice in this connection is that the new type of society at the royal courts may have furnished a model for the arrangement of the heavenly family when that arrangement came to be made. The Eastern influence came to an end in time, and the pressure being removed, the monarchies crumbled away, the court wors.h.i.+ps were discontinued, and Greece was left free, after this awaking to fuller life, to pursue her own thoughts in her own fas.h.i.+on.

Homer was regarded by the Greeks who lived after him as the founder of their religion. Herodotus considers (ii. 53) that Homer and Hesiod lived four hundred years before his time, and that it was they who framed a theogony for the Greeks, gave names to the G.o.ds, a.s.signed to them honours and arts, and declared their several forms. These writers accordingly formed a standard of religious belief; we know that their works were the basis of the education of the Greek, and they thus provided an early bond of national unity.

The Homeric poems are the outcome, whether we regard them as the work of one singer or of two, or of a whole school, of long processes of growth. The poetic art which makes them the delight of all mankind is not a first experiment, but the ripe result of an elaborate method.

The stories and the wisdom they contain are brought together from many quarters by long acc.u.mulation. And in the same way the accounts they give of the G.o.ds individually and of their relations to each other are not thrown together at haphazard, but are the result of a work of unconscious art which must have been carried on for centuries before it issued in this form. Homer does not by any means repeat all the stories he knows about the G.o.ds. He pa.s.ses over many local myths, especially those of the more repulsive order, which were known for centuries after, and undoubtedly existed in his day; only what is ”worthy of a pious bard” does he reproduce. A pious bard, however, had considerable lat.i.tude; and the phrase does not represent all that Homer was. He was an entertainer of the public at royal courts, where a feast was incomplete without him (_Odyssey_ viii.); he had to produce his songs at banquets or in the open air at festivals; what he gave had to be entertaining. This could not but influence his choice of materials even when the G.o.ds were his theme. He could not deal in what was most terrible about the G.o.ds, nor could he enter into speculations or mysteries, nor could he make use of a legend which, though it had point for the locality it belonged to, was not generally interesting. What was powerful and dramatic, what all men could understand, what was curious and piquant, what met the general sentiment, that he would be led to adopt and to work up into a telling form; he naturally sought after broad pictures, amusing conversations, simple and true emotions, curious incidents connected with well-known characters. Religion, it is plain, could not gain in depth and intensity from the treatment of such poets; many of the thoughts men had about the G.o.ds could not find expression in their lines. But, on the other hand, we have the fact that the Greeks accepted the Homeric representation of their religion as the standard one; not till it had existed for centuries were voices raised against it. And this is not strange. Homer took away nothing from the religion of any Greek; no local wors.h.i.+p was in any way infringed upon by him; and on the other side he gave to the Greek world, whose belief consisted formerly in a mult.i.tude of disconnected or even inconsistent legends, a united system of G.o.ds, in which there was at that stage rest for the mind, and for the imagination an inexhaustible spring of ideal beauty.

The Homeric G.o.ds.--What, then, is the religion of Homer? The G.o.ds are a set of beings not very unlike men; they present a curious combination of human frailty with superhuman powers and virtues. To speak first of the physical side of their nature, the G.o.ds are far stronger than men, their frame is huger, their eye keener, their voice louder; like the sorcerer of savage times, they can a.s.sume other shapes to gain their ends, they can become invisible, or they can travel very swiftly through the air. Yet, on the other hand, they can be wounded when they strive even with men; accidents happen to them, they require to eat and drink. They eat, it is true, ambrosia, and drink nectar, which give immortality; and they have in their veins not human blood but divine ichor. It is the fact of their immortality that makes them different from men; it has happened that a man obtained immortality and became thereby a G.o.d. The line between G.o.ds and men may be crossed; in former times it was crossed more frequently. The G.o.ds entered into relations with mortals; many of the heroes are of divine extraction, and the G.o.ds are still interested in the royal houses they thus founded. But such unions do not take place in the poet's time. The world is growing less divine.

Homer, however, looks further back than this, and we find in him the belief, found also in India and in Iceland, that an older and more savage race of G.o.ds once ruled, whom the present dynasty conquered and dethroned. Of that older set was Kronos, the father of Zeus, and the t.i.tans, who are now cast down to Tartarus, the nethermost region of all. The world known to men was apportioned at the beginning of the present age to the three sons of Kronos, Zeus obtaining the upper world, including heaven, which is at the top of Mount Olympus in Thessaly; Poseidon the sea, and Hades the under-world, above Tartarus, to which men go after death.

Zeus rules in Olympus. He presides there over those G.o.ds who are at present in power. He summons them to council, he sits at meals with them. They are a very human set of beings. They are moved by ordinary human motives; love and revenge, jealousy and anger, rule in their b.r.e.a.s.t.s. They do not act from eternal principles, but as men do, from sudden impulses or from the desire of temporary advantages for themselves or for their favourites. They even indulge in loose amours, and are brought into ridiculous situations. They laugh at each other; the stronger G.o.d hurls the weaker out of Olympus to the earth. Taking them together, we do not find the Olympians an impressive set of beings. Taking them, however, one by one, we judge of them quite differently. The individual G.o.ds represent lofty ideals and are not unworthy of wors.h.i.+p. Whatever they were once, powers of nature, fetishes or men, whatever village legends they have brought with them from their native place, or whatever traits of savage life still cleave to them, to the poet they are the embodiments of various moral excellences. Zeus, father of G.o.ds and men, combines in his character the attributes of righteousness and of kindness; he is the founder of social order and the defender of suppliants, he possesses all wisdom. Hera is the matron of fully unfolded beauty and matchless dignity; Apollo is the faithful son who carries out his father's counsel; Athene is the warrior-maiden skilled in battle but equipped with every kind of skill, best counsellor and guide for the mortal whom she favours; Aphrodite is the G.o.ddess of love, in whose girdle are contained all charms; Ares is the impetuous warrior, Hermes the trusty messenger, of the heavenly circle; Hephaestus, the lame and awkward smith, is the artificer for the G.o.ds of all manner of cunning work in metal. Around and under the Olympians are many other deities; such as Hebe, the budding girl, and Ganymede, the youth born of human race but taken up to heaven for his beauty to minister to the G.o.ds at their banquets. Aphrodite is attended by the graces, Apollo by the Muses, and the world is not stripped by Homer of its local deities, although the chief deities now dwell aloft; mountains, rivers, caves and isles of ocean, all have their immortal occupants.

Wors.h.i.+p in Homer.--The G.o.ds being of such a nature, what relations does man keep up with them, and how do they affect his life? Wors.h.i.+p follows the simple practice of the early world. It is not priestly.

There are priests, and they offer sacrifices regularly at the shrines of which they have charge, but the king can sacrifice, or the head of the house; and while one or two temples are mentioned in the _Iliad_, sacrifice may be offered anywhere. Temples first appear in Greece merely as shelters for images, but in the _Iliad_ the G.o.d is generally wors.h.i.+pped not by means of an image but as himself directly present; the need of temples has not yet arisen. In the _Odyssey_ temples of the G.o.ds are spoken of as buildings no town could be without, but this is less primitive. Sacrifice is a feast in which the G.o.d's portion of the viands is first offered to him, and the wors.h.i.+ppers then eat and drink to their hearts' content. There is a detailed description of the proceedings in _Iliad_ i. 456 _sqq._ Here after the feast there is music; ”All day long wors.h.i.+pped they the G.o.d with music, singing the beautiful paean to the Fardarter (Apollo); and his heart was glad to hear.” ”The G.o.ds appear manifest amongst us,”

we read in the seventh book of the _Odyssey_, ”whensoever we offer glorious hecatombs, and they feast by our side, sitting at the same board.” There is nothing of the nature of an expiation about such a sacrifice; it is simply the renewal of the bond between the G.o.d and those who look for his aid, when a new enterprise is about to be undertaken or a solemn engagement is entered on. Prayers are very simple. Thus prays the wounded Diomede to Athene (_Iliad_ v. 115): ”Hear me, daughter of aegis-bearing Zeus, unwearied maiden! If ever in kindly mood thou stoodest by my father in the heat of battle, even so be thou kind to me, Athene! Grant me to slay this man, and bring within my spear-cast him that took advantage to shoot me, and boasteth over me!”

As there are no bad G.o.ds, good and evil are considered to be sent by the same beings. Thus there is a great deal of uncertainty in men's relations to the G.o.ds. ”All men need the G.o.ds,” we read; the Homeric hero regards the companions.h.i.+p of a G.o.d as proper and necessary for his enterprises. But some trouble must be taken in order to secure their favour. They must not be neglected; their signs must be attended to; above all, a man must be reverent and must studiously practise moderation in his conduct and in his ways of thinking; else the G.o.ds may easily be offended or made jealous, and withdraw their countenance. And if they are to a certain extent capricious, there is another consideration which impairs confidence in them. They are not all-powerful. There is a point beyond which they cannot give a man any help. Each man has a fate or destiny, which the G.o.ds did not fix and with which they cannot interfere. When his hour comes, they must leave him to his doom; indeed they may even deceive him, and lead him into folly so that his fate shall overtake him. The punishment of crime, both in this world and afterwards, is committed to a special set of beings, the Erinnyes. The G.o.ds who are most wors.h.i.+pped do not exercise that function; they are not immovably identified with the moral order of the world, but frequently deviate from it themselves.

In the _Odyssey_, it is true, we meet with a deeper feeling. Here Zeus is a kind of providence, in whom a man may trust when he does right, and to all whose dispensations it behoves him humbly to submit. A root of monotheism is present here, as in all the Aryan religions from the first, and in Greece it is destined to have a stately growth. The Homeric pantheon, however, as a whole, shows religion at a stage in which it is rather an external ornament to life than an inner inspiration. Perhaps there was never a set of real men who thought of the G.o.ds and addressed them according to the fas.h.i.+on of Homer. If such a religion ever actually existed, it was not a strong one. These G.o.ds, with their caprices and infirmities and their limited power, could never exercise any strong moral influence or rouse any pa.s.sion in their wors.h.i.+ppers. They are fair-weather G.o.ds; the religion is one of children, in whom conscience is not yet awake and the deeper spiritual needs have not yet appeared. What the mind of the Greek has done up to this stage is to discover that nature is not above him; the powers of nature are human to him; they are divine not because they are essentially different from himself, but because they are matchless ideals of his own qualities. It is a religion of free men. But the Greek has not yet discovered how different he himself is from all that is around him; that element of himself which is above nature will when he discovers it make such a religion as the Homeric for ever impossible to him.

Omens.--As the G.o.dhead is never far away from the Homeric Greek, and is an active being who takes an interest in human affairs, signs of his presence are not infrequent. The air is the scene of them; in the flight of birds, in sudden noises, the G.o.ds send messages; lightning is a sign from Zeus of approaching rain or hail, it may be of approaching war. There are rules for the interpretation of signs, which, however, are in many cases of doubtful significance. Dreams also are a favourite channel for divine communications, but they also may be interpreted wrongly. There are persons who have a special gift for knowing the divine will; the seer ([Greek: mantis]) is enlightened by the deity not by an outward sign but inwardly; he hears the G.o.d's voice, and can declare the divine will directly. This gift may reside in a certain family, and may be attached to a certain spot, where a regular oracle is open for consultation. At Dodona we read that the Selloi or h.e.l.loi, a band or family of priests of ascetic habits, interpret the rustling of the sacred oak, and Agamemnon consults the Pythia, the Delphic priestess, before the Trojan war.

The State after Death.--With regard to the state after death, belief is not uniform in Homer. There are elaborate funeral rites which point to the a.s.sumption that the spirit of the hero is living somewhere and needs various things. But the life of the departed was not mapped out in Greece as it was in Egypt. The ritual of Mycenae had little influence, for the funeral celebrations in Homer are very similar to those of other early Aryan peoples, and undoubtedly were not imported. What then is thought of the present existence of the hero? He has ceased to exist. The body is the man, the spirit when it has left the body has but a shadow-life, without any strength or hope; at the most it may revive a little at the taste of blood. But while the wors.h.i.+p of the departed is seen from Homer to be decaying among the Greeks, imagination is seen to be occupied in more than one direction with the regions where they are, and to be a.s.serting for them a more real and active existence than the old beliefs allowed.

The subterranean kingdom of Hades (the ”Invisible”) is acquiring clearer shape. The punishments are described which certain great transgressors, such as Tantalus and Ixion, are there undergoing; and other details are also known. Of a different spirit is the conception of the Elysian plains in the far west, whither the hero is taken by the G.o.ds when he dies, and where there is no snow nor storm nor rain.

Homer was not the only poet who furnished the Greeks with a system of their G.o.ds; nor was his system everywhere accepted without demur.

Hesiod, writing in the latter half of the eighth century B.C., gives a ”theogony” or birth of the G.o.ds, which is also a genesis or origin of the world, for to the Greek mind the G.o.ds and the world came into existence together. He complains of those who on this subject have taught fictions which resemble truths, referring perhaps to Homer.

His own system of the world is not a light and airy fabric but a laborious work, due no doubt to professional or priestly industry, in which the attempt is made to treat all the divine figures or half-figured spirits the Greeks knew, genealogically, and to give a complete enumeration of them. Myths are given, some of them of a horrible character, which do not occur in Homer. The battle of the G.o.ds with the t.i.tans occupies a large part of the poem, and it concludes with a collection of stories showing the descent of heroes from alliances between G.o.ds and mortals. This work, as we saw, was considered, along with the Homeric poems, as a standard authority on the subject of the G.o.ds, and was appealed to even in the early Christian centuries as showing what the Greeks believed.

The Poets and the Working Religion.--The work of these poets proves that the Greeks in their days were anxious to arrive at clear and harmonious conceptions about the G.o.ds. The movement on which Homer and Hesiod set their seal, of fixing the characters and attributes of the various deities, must have been long going on; and it led, as we see, to different results in different places. That labour when accomplished endowed Greece with a new religion. The local rite still went on, which acknowledged no central authority and presented the spectacle of an infinite diversity. Each city carried on in grave and solemn fas.h.i.+on the traditional wors.h.i.+p of its own G.o.ds, on whose favour its prosperity depended. The other G.o.ds of the Pantheon the city did not need to wors.h.i.+p; and moreover local wors.h.i.+p was addressed to a large extent to the Chthonian or earth-G.o.ds, as Demeter and Dionysus, of whom the epic poems know but little. The poets were of little a.s.sistance therefore to the working religion; but on the other hand the happy and beautiful deities of Homer found entrance wherever poetry was loved. This was a religion for all Greece; these G.o.ds were national; though some of them belonged originally to aeolia, they had become national by being enshrined in poetry which the whole nation regarded as its own. The Homeric conception of deity acted therefore on the whole Greek mind; all G.o.ds rose in rank by the example, a subject was set before the mind of the people, which the closely succeeding development of religious art shows to have been studied in the n.o.blest way.

Rise of Religious Art.--The seventh century B.C. was a period of rapid development and of great prosperity in Greece. It was the age of colonisation; manufacture and trade were active, and though the Phenicians were not now in the Egean, Greeks sailed to the East and brought home with them many ideas. It was a time like the sixteenth century in Europe, when the world of geography was quickly opening out, and views and sentiments were also widening. Wors.h.i.+p could not fail to share in the upward movement of such a period, and it is here that we find the appearance of the ideas in religious art which have made Greece the envy of the world. Architecture received a new impulse from Egypt and Babylon; dwellings were built, not for human rulers, as in the Mycenaean period, but for the G.o.ds. In country districts or small towns the wooden shed might still suffice to shelter the rude image, but in large towns, where the higher conception of the G.o.ds and the artistic impulse were both present in many minds, temples of more durable material were built. This came to be a universal practice; among the first tasks of a new colony was always that of erecting on a commanding site in the rising town, splendid temples to the G.o.ds of the mother city. The Greek temple is not a place to accommodate a large body of wors.h.i.+ppers, but a dwelling for the G.o.d. It is of oblong shape, and is placed on a raised platform which is ascended by steps. It is generally surrounded by pillars, is roofed, and has a low gable at each end.

The most important chamber in it is that containing the image of the G.o.d. From his dim chamber the G.o.d looks out to the east through the doorway facing him, which opens on the pillared portico in front.

Here the wors.h.i.+pper stands when praying, his face turned westward to the G.o.d. As it was essential that the smoke of the sacrifice should ascend freely to heaven, the G.o.d's real dwelling, the altar stood outside. In some cases the roof was partly open, and the altar could stand under the sky in the _cella_ of the G.o.d.

In the building and adornment of the temples Greek art found its highest exercise. The architecture of those specimens which can still be seen or described is of a dignity and beauty never before attained; the beings must have been lofty and reverend indeed for whom such dwellings were formed. The gable s.p.a.ces and the flat surfaces between the tops of the pillars and the roof gave opportunity for sculpture; and the archaeologist traces on these metopes (s.p.a.ces between the beam-ends under the roof) and friezes, the progress of Greek sculpture from a rude stage to that in which the sculptor has gained complete mastery over his material, and can give an imposing representation of a myth, or place on the marble a complete religious procession of brave men and fair women. The images of the G.o.ds to be placed in the temples called forth the artist's highest skill; even when the rude old G.o.d was retained, a fine work of art could also find place. It is the ideal G.o.ds of poetry that are coming to be wors.h.i.+pped; the conception of the poet is expressed in marble. Sculpture, however, came to its highest point in Greece somewhat later than architecture. And offerings were made to the temples of just such rare and costly things as men loved then and love still to store up in their houses,--bowls and cups wrought curiously in precious metals, statues and tapestries and all kinds of treasure.

Festivals and Games.--The temple for which so much was done, formed the centre of the city where it stood. In it the town deposited its treasure and its doc.u.ments; there oaths and agreements were ratified.

There also at certain times, such as the annual festival of the G.o.d or the anniversary of some happy event in the history of the town,--and as time went on such occasions tended to multiply,--the town kept holiday. Women escaped from their monotonous confinement and joined the procession to the holy place, perhaps carrying a new dress for the deity. A sacrifice was offered, the G.o.d received his share of the victim or victims, and the wors.h.i.+ppers feasted on what remained. But before this part of the proceedings arrived there was a pause, which was filled up with various exercises all connected with the act of wors.h.i.+p, but tending also in a high degree to the delight of those taking part in it. Dancing formed a part of every rite, accompanied of course with music, and consisting not of a careless exercise of the limbs, but of a measured and carefully trained set of movements expressive of the emotions connected with the occasion.

This part of the religious act is obviously capable of great expansion. We find the art of poetry also making its contributions to religious art; poems are recited bearing on the history of the G.o.d.

The sacrifice is followed by contests of various kinds; the singers compete for a prize, and athletic sports also take place, the compet.i.tors for which have long been in training for them. The winners are crowned with a wreath or branch of the plant sacred to the G.o.d. The games of Greece, which thus arose out of acts of wors.h.i.+p, and some of which became so famous and attracted compet.i.tors from every Greek-speaking land, are a notable sign of the spirit of Greek piety. There is no asceticism in Greek religion; the G.o.d is represented as a beautiful human person, and his wors.h.i.+ppers appear before him naked, in the fulness of their youthful beauty and of their well-trained vigour, and offer him their strength and skill in highest exercise;--the whole city, or a crowd much larger than the city, rejoicing in the spectacle.

Thus does Greek religion enlist in its service all the arts, and increase as they increase. At this period irrational manifestations of piety tend to disappear, human sacrifice and the wors.h.i.+p of animals are heard of afterwards only in remote quarters. The religion which now prevails is a bright and happy self-identification with a being conceived as a type of human beauty and excellence, by being as far as possible beautiful oneself, creating beautiful objects, composing beautiful verse, training the body to its highest pitch of strength and agility, and displaying its powers in manly contests.

This conception of religion, for a short time realised in Greece, still haunts the mind as a vision which once seen can never be forgotten. No one whose eyes have opened to that vision can regard any religious acts in which the effort after harmony and beauty forms no part, as other than degraded and unworthy.