CHAPTER I.RIVERS OF LIFE.
CHAPTER II.PHALLISM IN ANCIENT RELIGIONS.
CHAPTER III.THE ORIGIN OF SERPENT-WORSHIP.
CHAPTER IV.THE ADAMITES.
CHAPTER V.THE DESCENDANTS OF CAIN.
CHAPTER VI.SACRED PROSTITUTION.
CHAPTER VII.MARRIAGE AMONG PRIMITIVE PEOPLES.
CHAPTER VIII.MARRIAGE BY CAPTURE.
CHAPTER XI.SPIRITISM AND MODERN SPIRITUALISM.
CHAPTER XII.TOTEMS AND TOTEMISM.
CHAPTER XIII.MAN AND THE APE.
CHAPTER I.RIVERS OF LIFE.
The
lines of development of the religious faiths of mankind have been
aptly termed by Major-General Forlong “Rivers of Life.” The
streams of faiths are marvellously depicted by this writer in a
chart
which shows “the rise and fall of the various religious ideas,
mythologies, and rites which have at any time prevailed among
nations.” This chart ingeniously shows, moreover, “the degrees of
intensity manifested at stated periods by any particular wave of
doctrine or worship, and the mode in which the tributary streams of
mythological or theological thought become in turn absorbed in the
central River of Life.” The views adopted by General Forlong have
much in common with those embodied in the works of Godfrey Higgins
and some later writers, but they have a special value as being
based
on personal observation. The author of “Rivers of Life” had the
inestimable advantage of being admitted to shrines and of receiving
instructions in sacred mysteries which are generally closed to
European inquirers, and of having made “a diligent exploration of
ruined temples, pillars, and mounds, and all such traces of a
primitive symbolism, which lie scattered over the East and West, as
religious fossils underlying the superficial crust of theological
strata.”Rivers
of religious life have a beginning, like other streams, and what
are
the sources to which man’s primitive faiths may be traced? The
early “symbolic objects of man’s adoration” are arranged by
General Forlong in the following order: First, Tree; 2nd, Phallic;
3rd, Serpent; 4th, Fire; 5th, Sun; 6th, Ancestral. The first
“breathings of the human soul” were manifested under the sacred
tree or grove, whose refreshing shade is so highly valued in the
East. All nations, particularly the Aryan peoples, have considered
tree-planting a sacred duty, and the grove was man’s first temple,
“and became a sanctuary, asylum, or place of refuge, and as time
passed on, temples came to be built in the sacred groves.” If
tree-worship had such an origin as this, its origin ought to be
shown
in the ideas associated with it. What, then, are those ideas?
General
Forlong, after referring to Dr. Fergusson’s statement that the tree
and serpent are symbolised in every religious system which the
world
has known, says that the two together are typical of the
reproductive
powers of vegetable and animal life. The connection between tree
and
serpent-worship is often so intimate that we may expect one to
throw
light on the other. The Aryans generally may be called
“tree-worshippers,” and according to Fergusson they as a rule
destroyed serpents and serpent-worshipping races. Yet at Athens and
near Rome both those faiths flourished together, as they appear to
have done also in many parts of Western Asia. They are intimately
associated with religious notions of many Buddhist peoples. This is
shown curiously in the early legends of Kambodia. These are said by
General Forlong to present two striking features. First, a holy
tree,
which the kingly race, who came to this serpent country, reposed
under, or descended from heaven by; secondly, that this tree-loving
race are captivated by the dragon princess of the land. It is the
serpent king, however, who builds the city of
Nakon Thom for his
daughter and her stranger husband. It is not improbable that
Buddhism
originated among a people who were both tree and
serpent-worshippers,
although the former became more intimately and at an earlier period
associated with its founder.Let
us now see what ideas are symbolised by the serpent. We are told
that
he is “an emblem of the Sun, Time, Kronos, and Eternity.” The
serpent was, indeed, the Sun-God, or spirit of the sun, and
therefore
Power, Wisdom, Light, and a fit type of creation and generative
power. Dr. Donaldson came to the conclusion that the serpent has
always a Phallic significance, a remark which exactly accords with
General Forlong’s experience, “founded simply upon
close observation
in Eastern lands, and conclusions drawn by himself, unaided by
books
or teachers, from thousands of stories and conversations with
Eastern
priests and people.” The testimony of a competent and honest
observer is all important, and we must believe when we are told
that
the serpent, or the constant early attendant on the Lingam, is the
special symbol which veils the actual God. The same may be said,
indeed, of Tree Worship, and as tree-worship and serpent-worship
embrace the Phallic faith, the first three streams of faiths are
represented by them. It is evident, however, that Phallic ideas are
at the foundation of both tree and serpent-worship, and the Phallic
stream of faith should be given the first place as the actual
source
of the Rivers of Life. General Forlong does, indeed, affirm that
Phallic worship enters so closely into union with
all faiths to the
present hour that it is impossible to keep it out of view. We can
well understand how this should be as to the tree, serpent, and
solar
cults, but it is not so evident at first sight in relation to
fire-worship. If fire was, however, regarded as the servant of
Siva,
and all creating gods, there is no difficulty in accepting the
position. The object of the worship offered to the sacred fire is
consistent with that view. Thus Greeks, Romans, and Hindoos
“besought
Agni by fervent prayers for increase of flocks and families, for
happy lives and serene old age, for wisdom and pardon from sin.”
General Forlong appears to see in the worship of fire essentially a
household faith, and this was undoubtedly so if his explanation of
the Lares and Penates is correct. These symbols represented
“the
past vital fire or
energy of the tribe, as the patriarch, his stalwart sons and
daughters did that of the
present living fire
the sacred hearth.” General Forlong states, indeed, that everything
relating to blood used to be connected with fire, and he supposed,
therefore, that
agnatio may have
been relation by
fire, for the
agnati can only be
those of the fire or father’s side.If
the father derived his authority in the household from the sacred
hearth-fire, we can understand why General Forlong has assigned to
ancestor-worship the last place in his scheme. He says, moreover,
that ancestor-worship is “a development and sequence of that
idiosyncracy of man which has led him to worship and deify even the
living—that which, according to the teaching of Euemerus, accounts
for all the mythological tales of the gods and god-like men of
Greece.” The ancestor was worshipped in the great chief, the Father
of Fathers, each of whom was worshipped in the
Dii Gentiles of his
own class, and this not only during the comparatively modern Roman
sway, but during the ages of serpent, fire, and solar faiths. In
the
still earlier faiths he was represented in the rude pillar, as well
as in the little Lares and Penates of the hearths. In this case,
however, ancestor-worship would seem to be entitled to stand on the
same level as tree-worship and serpent-worship as a phase of the
Phallic faith. In fact, it is in a sense identified with
serpent-worship. General Forlong remarks that among the Greeks and
Romans “the ancestor came to be honoured and worshipped only as the
Generator, and so also the serpent as his symbol.” This agrees with
the conclusion I have elsewhere endeavoured to establish, that the
serpent is really regarded as the representative of the ancestor,
in
which case ancestor-worship is a very primitive faith, although, in
a
specialised form, it may possibly, as asserted by General Forlong,
come later than fire-worship.It
can hardly now be doubted that the same ideas underlie all the
early
faiths. This view is entertained by General Forlong, who says: “So
imperceptibly arose the serpent on pure Phallic faiths, fire on
these, and sun on all, and so intimately did all blend with one
another, that even in the ages of true history it was often
impossible to descry the exact God alluded to.” The foundations of
all those faiths, and of ancestor-worship as allied to them, must
therefore be sought in the ideas entertained by mankind in the
earliest times, “when the races lived untaught, herded with their
cattle, and had as their sole object in life the multiplication of
these and of themselves.” The question arises, however, whether the
simple faith which man then entertained was the earliest he had
evolved. General Forlong answers this question in the negative, for
he says, then referring to the serpent Buddhism of Kambodia, that
“Fetish worship was the
first worship, and
to a great extent is still the
real faith of the
ignorant, especially about these parts.” He finds that nearly one
quarter of the world yet deifies, or at least reverences, sticks
and
stones, rams’ horns and charms, a practice not unknown even to
later faiths. The fundamental belief which furnishes the key to
those
phenomena, as well as to the animal-worship which is so closely
associated with one or other of the great faith streams, should not
be lost sight of. Jacob Grimm pointed out, in his “Teutonic
Mythology,”1
that all nature was thought of by the heathen Germans as living.
Gods
and men transformed themselves into trees, plants, or beasts;
spirits
and elements attained animal forms; and therefore we cannot wonder
at
the heavenly bodies, and even day and night, summer and winter,
being
actually personified. These ideas lend themselves as well to
fetishism as to sun-worship, and all the ancient faiths alike may
justly, therefore, be regarded as phases of one universal
nature-worship. Mankind prays only for that which is thought good,
and if one man seeks to obtain his desire through the agency of a
stick or a stone, and another through a serpent or planetary god,
the
difference between them is purely objective. The prayers which were
offered to the Vedic gods would be equally appropriate in the mouth
of a native of Western Africa. They had relation simply to temporal
needs, and were, says Mr. Talboys Wheeler,2
for plenty of rain, abundant harvests, and prolific cattle, for
bodily vigour, long life, numerous offspring, and protection
against
all foes and robbers. Moreover, the observances of the more
advanced
faiths have little practical difference from the fetishist. All
alike
have for their object the compelling the good countenance, or
counteracting the evil designs, of the gods or spirits, and the
real
difference is to be sought in the symbols under which they are
represented. Thus the Vedic Aryans regarded their deified
abstractions as personified with human wants, and invoked them with
rites which “may have formed an accompaniment to every meal, and
may have been regarded almost as a part of the cooking.” Mr.
Wheeler adds3
that “Sometimes a deity is supposed to be attracted by the grateful
sound of the stone and mortar by which the
soma juice was
expressed from the plant, or by the musical noise of the churning
sticks by which the wine was apparently stirred up and mixed with
curds; and the eager invokers implore the god not to turn aside to
the dwelling of any other worshipper, but to come to them only, and
drink the libation which they had prepared, and reserve for them
all
his favours and benefits.”