Part 4 (2/2)
_R.C. Thompson's Translation._
Saliva, like tears, had creative and therefore curative qualities; it also expelled and injured demons and brought good luck. Spitting ceremonies are referred to in the religious literature of Ancient Egypt. When the Eye of Ra was blinded by Set, Thoth spat in it to restore vision. The sun G.o.d Tum, who was linked with Ra as Ra-Tum, spat on the ground, and his saliva became the G.o.ds Shu and Tefnut. In the Underworld the devil serpent Apep was spat upon to curse it, as was also its waxen image which the priests fas.h.i.+oned.[53]
Several African tribes spit to make compacts, declare friends.h.i.+p, and to curse.
Park, the explorer, refers in his _Travels_ to his carriers spitting on a flat stone to ensure a good journey. Arabian holy men and descendants of Mohammed spit to cure diseases. Mohammed spat in the mouth of his grandson Hasen soon after birth. Theocritus, Sophocles, and Plutarch testify to the ancient Grecian customs of spitting to cure and to curse, and also to bless when children were named. Pliny has expressed belief in the efficacy of the fasting spittle for curing disease, and referred to the custom of spitting to avert witchcraft.
In England, Scotland, and Ireland spitting customs are not yet obsolete. North of England boys used to talk of ”spitting their sauls”
(souls). When the Newcastle colliers held their earliest strikes they made compacts by spitting on a stone. There are still ”spitting stones” in the north of Scotland. When bargains are made in rural districts, hands are spat upon before they are shaken. The first money taken each day by fishwives and other dealers is spat upon to ensure increased drawings. Brand, who refers to various spitting customs, quotes _Scot's Discovery of Witchcraft_ regarding the saliva cure for king's evil, which is still, by the way, practised in the Hebrides.
Like Pliny, Scot recommended ceremonial spitting as a charm against witchcraft.[54] In China spitting to expel demons is a common practice. We still call a hasty person a ”spitfire”, and a calumniator a ”spit-poison”.
The life principle in trees, &c., as we have seen, was believed to have been derived from the tears of deities. In India sap was called the ”blood of trees”, and references to ”bleeding trees” are still widespread and common. ”Among the ancients”, wrote Professor Robertson Smith, ”blood is generally conceived as the principle or vehicle of life, and so the account often given of sacred waters is that the blood of the deity flows in them. Thus as Milton writes:
Smooth Adonis from his native rock Ran purple to the sea, supposed with blood Of Thammuz yearly wounded.
_Paradise Lost_, i, 450.
The ruddy colour which the swollen river derived from the soil at a certain season was ascribed to the blood of the G.o.d, who received his death wound in Lebanon at that time of the year, and lay buried beside the sacred source.”[55]
In Babylonia the river was regarded as the source of the life blood and the seat of the soul. No doubt this theory was based on the fact that the human liver contains about a sixth of the blood in the body, the largest proportion required by any single organ. Jeremiah makes ”Mother Jerusalem” exclaim: ”My liver is poured upon the earth for the destruction of the daughter of my people”, meaning that her life is spent with grief.
Inspiration was derived by drinking blood as well as by drinking intoxicating liquors--the mead of the G.o.ds. Indian magicians who drink the blood of the goat sacrificed to the G.o.ddess Kali, are believed to be temporarily possessed by her spirit, and thus enabled to prophesy.[56] Malayan exorcists still expel demons while they suck the blood from a decapitated fowl.[57]
Similar customs were prevalent in Ancient Greece. A woman who drank the blood of a sacrificed lamb or bull uttered prophetic sayings.[58]
But while most Babylonians appear to have believed that the life principle was in blood, some were apparently of opinion that it was in breath--the air of life. A man died when he ceased to breathe; his spirit, therefore, it was argued, was identical with the atmosphere--the moving wind--and was accordingly derived from the atmospheric or wind G.o.d. When, in the Gilgamesh epic, the hero invokes the dead Ea-bani, the ghost rises up like a ”breath of wind”. A Babylonian charm runs:
The G.o.ds which seize on men Came forth from the grave; The evil wind gusts Have come forth from the grave, To demand payment of rites and the pouring out of libations They have come forth from the grave; All that is evil in their hosts, like a whirlwind, Hath come forth from the grave.[59]
The Hebrew ”nephesh ruach” and ”neshamah” (in Arabic ”ruh” and ”nefs”) pa.s.s from meaning ”breath” to ”spirit”.[60] In Egypt the G.o.d Khnumu was ”Kneph” in his character as an atmospheric deity. The ascendancy of storm and wind G.o.ds in some Babylonian cities may have been due to the belief that they were the source of the ”air of life”. It is possible that this conception was popularized by the Semites.
Inspiration was perhaps derived from these deities by burning incense, which, if we follow evidence obtained elsewhere, induced a prophetic trance. The G.o.ds were also invoked by incense. In the Flood legend the Babylonian Noah burned incense. ”The G.o.ds smelled a sweet savour and gathered like flies over the sacrificer.” In Egypt devotees who inhaled the breath of the Apis bull were enabled to prophesy.
In addition to water and atmospheric deities Babylonia had also its fire G.o.ds, Girru, Gish Bar, Gibil, and Nusku. Their origin is obscure.
It is doubtful if their wors.h.i.+ppers, like those of the Indian Agni, believed that fire, the ”vital spark”, was the principle of life which was manifested by bodily heat. The Aryan fire wors.h.i.+ppers cremated their dead so that the spirits might be transferred by fire to Paradise. This practice, however, did not obtain among the fire wors.h.i.+ppers of Persia, nor, as was once believed, in Sumer or Akkad either. Fire was, however, used in Babylonia for magical purposes. It destroyed demons, and put to flight the spirits of disease. Possibly the fire-purification ceremonies resembled those which were practised by the Canaanites, and are referred to in the Bible. Ahaz ”made his son to pa.s.s through the fire, according to the abominations of the heathen”.[61] Ezekiel declared that ”when ye offer your gifts, when ye make your sons to pa.s.s through the fire, ye pollute yourselves with all your idols”.[62] In _Leviticus_ it is laid down: ”Thou shalt not let any of thy seed pa.s.s through the fire to Moloch”.[63] It may be that in Babylonia the fire-cleansing ceremony resembled that which obtained at Beltane (May Day) in Scotland, Germany, and other countries. Human sacrifices might also have been offered up as burnt offerings. Abraham, who came from the Sumerian city of Ur, was prepared to sacrifice Isaac, Sarah's first-born. The fire G.o.ds of Babylonia never achieved the ascendancy of the Indian Agni; they appear to have resembled him mainly in so far as he was connected with the sun. Nusku, like Agni, was also the ”messenger of the G.o.ds”. When Merodach or Babylon was exalted as chief G.o.d of the pantheon his messages were carried to Ea by Nusku. He may have therefore symbolized the sun rays, for Merodach had solar attributes. It is possible that the belief obtained among even the water wors.h.i.+ppers of Eridu that the sun and moon, which rose from the primordial deep, had their origin in the everlasting fire in Ea's domain at the bottom of the sea. In the Indian G.o.d Varuna's ocean home an ”Asura fire” (demon fire) burned constantly; it was ”bound and confined”, but could not be extinguished. Fed by water, this fire, it was believed, would burst forth at the last day and consume the universe.[64] A similar belief can be traced in Teutonic mythology. The Babylonian incantation cult appealed to many G.o.ds, but ”the most important share in the rites”, says Jastrow, ”are taken by fire and water--suggesting, therefore, that the G.o.d of water--more particularly Ea--and the G.o.d of fire ...
are the chief deities on which the ritual itself hinges”. In some temples there was a _bit rimki_, a ”house of was.h.i.+ng”, and a _bit nuri_, a ”house of light”.[65]
It is possible, of course, that fire was regarded as the vital principle by some city cults, which were influenced by imported ideas.
If so, the belief never became prevalent. The most enduring influence in Babylonian religion was the early Sumerian; and as Sumerian modes of thought were the outcome of habits of life necessitated by the character of the country, they were bound, sooner or later, to leave a deep impress on the minds of foreign peoples who settled in the Garden of Western Asia. It is not surprising, therefore, to find that imported deities a.s.sumed Babylonian characteristics, and were identified or a.s.sociated with Babylonian G.o.ds in the later imperial pantheon.
Moon wors.h.i.+p appears to have been as ancient as water wors.h.i.+p, with which, as we have seen, it was closely a.s.sociated. It was widely prevalent throughout Babylonia. The chief seat of the lunar deity, Nannar or Sin, was the ancient city of Ur, from which Abraham migrated to Harran, where the ”Baal” (the lord) was also a moon G.o.d. Ur was situated in Sumer, in the south, between the west bank of the Euphrates and the low hills bordering the Arabian desert, and not far distant from sea-washed Eridu. No doubt, like that city, it had its origin at an exceedingly remote period. At any rate, the excavations conducted there have afforded proof that it flourished in the prehistoric period.
As in Arabia, Egypt, and throughout ancient Europe and elsewhere, the moon G.o.d of Sumeria was regarded as the ”friend of man”. He controlled nature as a fertilizing agency; he caused gra.s.s, trees, and crops to grow; he increased flocks and herds, and gave human offspring. At Ur he was exalted above Ea as ”the lord and prince of the G.o.ds, supreme in heaven, the Father of all”; he was also called ”great Anu”, an indication that Anu, the sky G.o.d, had at one time a lunar character.
The moon G.o.d was believed to be the father of the sun G.o.d: he was the ”great steer with mighty horns and perfect limbs”.
His name Sin is believed to be a corruption of ”Zu-ena”, which signifies ”knowledge lord”.[66] Like the lunar Osiris of Egypt, he was apparently an instructor of mankind; the moon measured time and controlled the seasons; seeds were sown at a certain phase of the moon, and crops were ripened by the harvest moon. The mountains of Sinai and the desert of Sin are called after this deity.
As Nannar, which Jastrow considers to be a variation of ”Narnar”, the ”light producer”, the moon G.o.d scattered darkness and reduced the terrors of night. His spirit inhabited the lunar stone, so that moon and stone wors.h.i.+p were closely a.s.sociated; it also entered trees and crops, so that moon wors.h.i.+p linked with earth wors.h.i.+p, as both linked with water wors.h.i.+p.
The consort of Nannar was Nin-Uruwa, ”the lady of Ur”, who was also called Nin-gala. She links with Ishtar as Nin, as Isis of Egypt linked with other mother deities. The twin children of the moon were Mashu and Mashtu, a brother and sister, like the lunar girl and boy of Teutonic mythology immortalized in nursery rhymes as Jack and Jill.
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