Ancient and Modern Symbolism
Ancient and Modern SymbolismINTRODUCTION.PAGAN AND CHRISTIAN SYMBOLISM.APPENDIX: THE ASSYRIAN "GROVE" AND OTHER EMBLEMSCopyright
Ancient and Modern Symbolism
Thomas Inman
INTRODUCTION.
It may, we think, be taken for granted, that nothing is, or
has ever been, adopted into the service of Religion, without a
definite purpose. If it be supposed that a religion is built upon
the foundation of a distinct revelation from the Almighty, as the
Hebrew is said to be, there is a full belief that every emblem,
rite, ceremony, dress, symbol, etc., has a special signification.
Many earnest Christians, indeed, see in Judaic ordinances a
reference to Jesus of Nazareth. I have, for example, heard a pious
man assert that "leprosy" was only another word for "sin"; but he
was greatly staggered in this belief when I pointed out to him that
if a person's whole body was affected he was no longer unclean
(Lev. xiii. 13), which seemed on the proposed hypothesis to
demonstrate that when a sinner was as black as hell he was the
equal of a saint. According to such an interpreter, the paschal
lamb is a type of Jesus, and consequently all whom his blood
sprinkles are blocks of wood, lintels, and side-posts (Exod. xii.
22, 28). By the same style of metaphorical reasoning, Jesus was
typified by the "scape-goat," and the proof is clear, for one was
driven away into the wilderness, and the other voluntarily went
there—one to be destroyed, the other to be tempted by the devil!
Hence we infer that there is nothing repugnant to the minds of the
pious in an examination respecting the use of symbols, and into
that which is shadowed forth by them. What has been done for
Judaism may be attempted for other forms of religion.As the Hebrews and Christians believe their religion to be
God-given, so other nations, having a different theology, regard
their own peculiar tenets. Though we may, with that unreasoning
prejudice and blind bigotry which are common to the Briton and the
Spaniard, and pre-eminently so to the mass of Irish and Scotchmen
amongst ourselves, and to the Carlists in the peninsula, disbelieve
a heathen pretension to a divine revelation, we cannot doubt that
the symbols, etc., of Paganism have a meaning, and that it is as
lawful to scrutinise the mysteries which they enfold as it is to
speculate upon the Urim and Thummim of the Jews. Yet, even this
freedom has, by some, been denied; for there are a few amongst us
who adhere rigidly to the precept addressed to the followers of
Moses, viz., "Take heed that thou enquire not after their gods,
saying, How did these nations serve their gods?" (Deut. xii. 30.)
The intention of the prohibition thus enunciated is well marked in
the following words, 1 which indicate that the writer believed that
the adoption of heathen gods would follow inquiry respecting them.
It is not now-a-days feared that we may become Mahometans if we
read the Koran, or Buddhists if we study the Dhammapada; but there
are priests who fear that an inquiry into ecclesiastical matters
may make their followers Papists, Protestants, Wesleyans, Baptists,
Unitarians, or some other religion which the Presbytery object to.
The dislike of inquiry ever attends those who profess a religion
which is believed or known to be weak.* "even so will I do
likewise."The philosopher of the present day, being freed from the
shackles once riveted around him by a dominant hierarchy, may
regard the precept in Deuteronomy in another light. Seeing that the
same symbolism is common to many forms of religion, professed in
countries widely apart both as regards time and space, he thinks
that the danger of inquiry into faiths is not the adoption of
foreign, but the relinquishment of present methods of religious
belief. When we see the same ideas promulgated as divine truth, on
the ancient banks of the Ganges, and the modern shores of the
Mediterranean, we are constrained to admit that they have something
common in their source. They may be the result of celestial
revelation, or they may all alike emanate from human ingenuity. As
men invent new forms of religion now, there is a presumption that
others may have done so formerly. As all men are essentially human,
so we may believe that their inventions will be characterised by
the virtues and the failings of humanity. Again, experience tells
us that similarity in thought involves similarity in action. Two
sportsmen, seeing a hare run off from between them, will fire at it
so simultaneously that each is unaware that the other shot. So a
resemblance in religious belief will eventuate in the selection of
analogous symbolism.We search into emblems with an intention different from
that with which we inquire into ordinary language. The last tells
us of the relationship of nations upon Earth, the first of the
probable connections of mankind with Heaven. The devout Christian
believes that all who venerate the Cross may hope for a happy
eternity, without ever dreaming that the sign of his faith is as
ancient as Homeric Troy, and was used by the Phoenicians probably
before the Jews had any existence as a people; whilst an equally
pious Mahometan regards the Crescent as the passport to the realms
of bliss, without a thought that the symbol was in use long before
the Prophet of Allah was born, and amongst those nations which it
was the Prophet's mission to convert or to destroy. Letters and
words mark the ordinary current of man's thought, whilst religious
symbols show the nature of his aspirations. But all have this in
common, viz., that they may be misunderstood. Many a Brahmin has
uttered prayers in a language to him unintelligible; and many a
Christian uses words in his devotions of which he never seeks to
know the meaning. "Om manee pani" "Om manee padme
houm," "Amen" and "Ave Maria purissima" may
fairly be placed in the same category. In like manner, the
signification of an emblem may be unknown. The antiquary finds in
Lycian coins, and in Aztec ruins, figures for which he can frame no
meaning; whilst the ordinary church-goer also sees, in his place of
worship, designs of which none can give him a rational explanation.
Again, we find that a language may find professed interpreters,
whose system of exposition is wholly wrong; and the same may be
said of symbols. I have seen, for example, three distinctly
different interpretations given to one Assyrian inscription, and
have heard as many opposite explanations of a particular figure,
all of which have been incorrect.In the interpretation of unknown languages and symbols, the
observer gladly allows that much may be wrong; but this does not
prevent him believing that some may be right. In giving his
judgment, he will examine as closely as he can into the system
adopted by each inquirer, the amount of materials at his disposal,
and, generally, the acumen which has been brought to the task.
Perhaps, in an investigation such as we describe, the most
important ingredient is care in collation and comparison. But a
scholar can only collate satisfactorily when he has sufficient
means, and these demand much time and research. The labour requires
more time than ordinary working folk can command, and more patience
than those who have leisure are generally disposed to give.
Unquestionably, we have as yet had few attempts in England to
classify and explain ancient and modern symbols. It is perhaps not
strictly true that there has been so much a laxity in the research,
of which we here speak, as a dread of making public the results of
inquiry. Investigators, as a rule, have a respect for their own
prejudices, and dislike to make known to others a knowledge which
has brought pain to their own minds. Like the Brahmin of the story,
they will destroy a fine microscope rather than permit their
co-religionists to know that they drink living creatures in their
water, or eat mites in their fruit. The motto of such people is,
"If truth is disagreeable, cling to error."The following attempts to explain much of ancient and
modern symbolism can only be regarded as tentative. The various
devices contained herein seem to me to support the views which I
have been led to form from other sources, by a careful inquiry into
the signification of ancient names, and the examination of ancient
faiths. The figures were originally intended as corroborative of
evidence drawn from numerous ancient and modern writings; and the
idea of collecting them, and, as it were, making them speak for
themselves, has been an after-thought. In the following pages I
have simply reprinted the figures, etc., which appear inAncient Faiths embodied in Ancient Names(second edition). I make no attempt to exhaust the subject.
There are hundreds of emblems which find herein no place; and there
are explanations of symbols current to which I make no reference,
for they are simplyexoteric.For the benefit of many of my readers, I must explain
the meaning of the last word italicised. In most, if not in all,
forms of religion, there are tenets not generally imparted to the
vulgar, and only given to a select few under the seal of secrecy. A
similar reticence exists in common life. There are secrets kept
from children, for example, that are commonly known to all parents;
there arearcana, familiar to
doctors, of which patients have no idea. For example, when a lad
innocently asks the family surgeon, or his parent, where the last
new baby came from, he is put off with a reply, wide of the mark,
yet sufficient for him. When I put such a question to the maids in
the kitchen, to which place for a time I was relegated, the first
answer was that the baby came from the parsley bed. On hearing
this, I went into the garden, and, finding the bed had been
unmoved, came back and reproached my informant for falsehood.
Another then took up the word, and said it was the carrot bed which
the baby came from. As a roar of laughter followed this remark, I
felt that I was being cheated, and asked no more questions. Then I
could not, now I can, understand theesotericsense of the sayings. They had
to the servants two distinct significations. The only one which I
could then comprehend wasexoteric; that which was known to my elders was theesotericmeaning. In what is called
"religion" there has been a similar distinction. We see this, not
only in the "mysteries" of Greece and Rome, but amongst the Jews;
Esdras stating the following as a command from God, "Some things
shalt thou publish, and some things shalt thou show secretly to the
wise" (2 Esdras xv. 26).When there exist two distinct explanations, or statements,
about the signification of an emblem, the one "esoteric," true, and
known only to the few, the other "exoteric," incorrect, and known
to the many, it is clear that a time may come when the first may be
lost, and the last alone remain. As an illustration, we can point
to the original and correct pronunciation of the word [—Hebrew—],
commonly pronounced Jehovah. Known only to a select few, it became
lost when these died without imparting it; yet what is considered
to be the incorrect method of pronouncing the word survives until
to-day.** It is supposed by some that Jahveh
is the proper
pronunciation of this word, but as the
first letter may
represent, ja, ya, or e, and the third u,
v, or o, whilst
the second and fourth are the soft h, one
may read the word
Jhuh, analogous to the Ju in Jupiter;
Jehu, the name of a
king of Israel; Tahu as it is read on
Assyrian inscriptions;
Jeho, as in Jehoshaphat; Ehoh, analogous
to the Evoe or Ewe
associated with Bacchus; and Jaho,
analogous to the J. A. O.
of the Gnostics. The Greek "Fathers" give
the word as if
equivalent to yave, yaoh, yeho, and
too.But the question is not how the word may be pronounced, but
how it was expressed in sound when used in religion by the Hebrew
and other Semitic nations, amongst whom it was a sacred secret, or
ineffable name, not lightly to be "taken in vain."———We may fairly assume that, when two such meanings exist, they
are not identical, and that the one most commonly received is not
the correct one. But when one alone is known to exist, it becomes a
question whether another should be sought. If, it may be asked, the
common people are contented with a fable, believing it true, why
seek to enlighten them upon its hidden meaning? To show the bearing
of this subject, let us notice what has always struck me as
remarkable. The second commandment declares to the Jews, "Thou
shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of
anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath,
or that is in the water under the earth; thou shalt not bow down
thyself to them," etc. (Exod. xx. 4). Yet we find, in Numbers xxi.,
that Jehovah ordered Moses to frame a brazen serpent, whose power
was so miraculous that those who only looked at it were cured of
the evils inflicted by thanatoid snakes.Then again, in the temple of the God who is reported to have
thus spoken, and who is also said to have declared that He would
dwell in the house that Solomon made for Him, an ark, or box, was
worshipped, and over it Cherubim were seen. These were likenesses
of something, and the first was worshipped. We find it described as
being so sacred that death once followed a profane touching of it
(2 Sam. vi. 6, 7), and no fewer than 50,070 people were done to
death at Bethshemesh because somebody had ventured to look inside
the box, and had tried to search into the mystery contained therein
(1 Sam. vi. 19). It is curious that the Philistines, who must have
touched the box to put their strange offerings beside it (see 1
Sam. vi. 8), were not particularly bothered. They were "profane";
and priests only invent stories, which are applicable to the arcana
which they use in worship, to blind the eyes of and give a holy
horror to the people whom they govern. How David worshipped the ark
as being the representative of God we see in 2 Sam. vi. 14, 16, 17,
21.The ark of the covenant was indeed regarded by the Jews much
as a saint's toe-nail, a crucifix, an image of the Virgin, a bit of
wood, or a rusty old nail is by the Roman Catholics. So flagrant an
apparent breach of the second commandment was covered for the
common Hebrews by the assertion that the mysterious box was a token
of God's covenant with His people; but that this statement was
"exoteric," we feel sure, when we find a similar ark existing and
used in "the mysteries" of Egypt and Greece, amongst people who
probably never heard of Jews, and could by no chance know what
passed in the Hebrew temple.When become dissatisfied with a statement, which is evidently
intended to be a blind, some individuals naturally endeavour to
ascertain what is behind the curtain. In this they resemble the
brave boy, who rushes upon a sheet and turnip lantern, which has
imposed upon his companions and passed for a ghost. What is a
bugbear to the many is often a contemptible reptile to the few. Yet
there are a great number who would rather run from a phantom night
after night than grapple with it once, and would dissuade others
from being bold enough to encounter it. Nevertheless, even the
former rejoice when the cheat is exposed.As when, by some courageous hand, that which has been
mistaken by hundreds for a spectre has been demonstrated to be a
crafty man, no one would endeavour to demonstrate the reality of
ghosts by referring to the many scores of men of all ranks who had
been duped by the apparition thus detected; so, in like manner,
when the falsehood of an exoteric story is exhibited, it is no
argument in its favour that the vulgar in thousands and many a wise
man have believed it. Speaking metaphorically, we have many such
ghosts amongst ourselves; phantoms, which pass for powerful giants,
but are in reality perfect shams. Such we may describe by comparing
them to the apocryphal vampires. It is to me a melancholy thing to
contemplate the manner in which mankind have, in every age and
nation, made for themselves bugbears, and then have felt fear at
them. We deride the African, who manufactures a Fetish, and then
trembles at its power, but the learned know perfectly well that men
made the devil, whom the pious fear, just as a negro dreads Mumbo
Jumbo.In the fictitious narratives which passed for truth in the
dark ages of Christianity, there were accounts of individuals who
died and were buried, and who, after a brief repose in the tomb,
rose again. Some imagined that the resuscitated being was the
identical one who had been interred. Others believed that some evil
spirit had appropriated the body, and restored to it apparent
vitality. Whatever the fiction was, the statement remained
unchallenged, that some dead folk returned to earth, having the
same guise as when they quitted it. We believe that a similar
occurrence has taken place in religion. Heathendom died, and was
buried; yet, after a brief interval, it rose again from its tomb.
But, unlike the vampire, its garb was changed, and it was not
recognised. It moved through Christendom in a seductive dress. If
it were a devil, yet its clothing was that of a sheep; if a wolf,
it wore broadcloth. If it ravened, the victims were not pitied.
Heathenism, by which I mean the manners, morals and rites prevalent
in pagan times or countries, like a resuscitated vampire, once bore
rule throughout Christendom, in which term is included all those
parts where Christian baptism is used by all the people, or the
vast majority. In most parts it still reigns supreme.When vampires were discovered by the acumen of any observer,
they were, we are told, ignominiously killed, by a stake being
driven through the body; but experience showed them to have such
tenacity of life that they rose again, and again, notwithstanding
renewed impalement, and were not ultimately laid to rest till
wholly burnt. In like manner, the regenerated Heathendom, which
dominates over the followers of Jesus of Nazareth, has risen again
and again, after being transfixed. Still cherished by the many, it
is denounced by the few. Amongst other accusers, I raise my voice
against the Paganism which exists so extensively in ecclesiastical
Christianity, and will do my utmost to expose the
imposture.In a vampire story, told inThalaba, by Southey, the resuscitated
being takes the form of a dearly beloved maiden, and the hero is
obliged to kill her with his own hand. He does so; but, whilst he
strikes the form of the loved one, he feels sure that he slays only
a demon. In like manner, when I endeavour to destroy the current
Heathenism, which has assumed the garb of Christianity, I do not
attack real religion. Few would accuse a workman of malignancy who
cleanses from filth the surface of a noble statue. There may be
some who are too nice to touch a nasty subject; yet even they will
rejoice when some one else removes the dirt. Such a scavenger is
much wanted.If I were to assert, as a general proposition, that religion
does not require any symbolism, I should probably win assent from
every true Scotch Presbyterian, every Wesleyan, and every
Independent. Yet I should be opposed by every Papist, and by most
Anglican Churchmen. But why? Is it not because their ecclesiastics
have adopted symbolism into their churches and into their ritual?
They have broken the second commandment of Jehovah, and refuse to
see anything wrong in their practice or gross in their imagery. But
they adopt Jehovah rather than Elohim, and break the commandments,
said to be given upon Sinai, in good company.The reader of the following pages will probably feel more
interest therein if he has some clue whereby he may guide himself
through their labyrinth.From the earliest known times there seems to have been in
every civilised nation the idea of an unseen power. In the
speculations of thoughtful minds a necessity is recognised for the
existence of a Being who made all things—who is at times
beneficent, sending rain and warmth, and who at others sends storm,
plague, famine, and war. After the crude idea has taken possession
of the thoughts, there has been a desire to know something more of
this Creator, and an examination into the works of Nature has been
made with the view to ascertain the will and designs of the
Supreme. In every country this great One has been supposed to
inhabit the heaven above us, and consequently all celestial
phenomena have been noticed carefully. But the mind soon got weary
of contemplating about an essence, and, contenting itself with the
belief that there was a Power, began to investigate the nature of
His ministers. These, amongst the Aryans, were the sun, fire,
storm, wind, the sky, the day, night, etc. An intoxicating drink,
too, was regarded as an emanation from the Supreme. With this form
of belief men lived as they had done ere it existed, and in their
relations with each other may be compared to such high class
animals as elephants. Men can live peaceably together without
religion, just as do the bisons, buffaloes, antelopes, and even
wolves. The assumption that some form of faith is absolutely a
necessity for man is only founded on the fancies of some religious
fanatics who know little of the world.** Whilst these sheets were passing
through the press, there
appeared a work, published anonymously,
but reported to be
by one of the most esteemed theologians
who ever sat upon an
episcopal bench. It is entitled
Supernatural Religion.
London: Longmans, 1874. From it we quote
the following, vol.
ii., p. 489:—
"We gain infinitely more than we lose in
abandoning belief
in the reality of Divine Revelation.
Whilst we retain pure
and unimpaired the treasure of Christian
Morality, we
relinquish nothing but the debasing
elements added to it by
human superstition. We are no longer bound
to believe a
theology which outrages reason and moral
sense. We are freed
from base anthropomorphic views of God and
His government of
the universe; and from Jewish Mythology we
rise to higher
conceptions of an infinitely wise and
beneficent Being,
hidden from our finite minds, it is true,
in the
impenetrable glory of Divinity, but whose
Laws of wondrous
comprehensiveness and perfection we ever
perceive in
operation around us. We are no longer
disturbed by visions
of fitful interference with the order of
Nature, but we
recognise that the Being who regulates the
universe is
without variableness or shadow of turning.
It is singular
how little there is in the supposed
Revelation of alleged
information, however incredible, regarding
that which is
beyond the limits of human thought, but
that little is of a
character which reason declares to be the
wildest delusion.
Let no man whose belief in the reality of
a Divine
Revelation may be destroyed by such an
inquiry complain that
he has lost a precious possession, and
that nothing is left
but a blank. The Revelation not being a
reality, that which
he has lost was but an illusion, and that
which is left is
the Truth. If he be content with
illusions, he will speedily
be consoled; if he be a lover only of
truth, instead of a
blank, he will recognise that the reality
before him is full
of great peace.
"If we know less than we have supposed of
man's destiny, we
may at least rejoice that we are no longer
compelled to
believe that which is unworthy. The limits
of thought once
attained, we may well be unmoved in the
assurance that all
that we do know of the regulation of the
universe being so
perfect and wise, all that we do not know
must be equally
so. Here enters the true and noble
Faith—which is the child
of reason. If we have believed a system,
the details of
which must at one time or another have
shocked the mind of
every intelligent man, and believed it
simply because it was
supposed to be revealed, we may equally
believe in the
wisdom and goodness of what is not
revealed. The mere act of
communication to us is nothing: Faith in
the perfect
ordering of all things is independent of
Revelation.
"The argument so often employed by
Theologians that Divine
Revelation is necessary for man, and that
certain views
contained in that Revelation are required
by our moral
consciousness, is purely imaginary, and
derived from the
Revelation which it seeks to maintain. The
only thing
absolutely necessary for man is Truth and
to that, and that
alone, must our moral consciousness adapt
itself."