Celestial Phenomena and Ordeal of Fire and Water

38 0 0
                                    

<pre style="font-size: 13px; line-height: normal; text-align: left;">CELESTIAL PHENOMENA.

their carnival until Science struck the hour for unmasking.

.Tte costumes and masks have with us become materials

for- .studying ]t{i$ ty$tory of the human mind, but to know

theovve-nuist translate our senses back into that phase of

biirdWri early *exis*tehce, so far as is consistent with carry-

ing our culture with us.

Without conceding too much f o Solar mythology, it may

be pronounced tolerably clear that the earliest emotion of

worship was born out of the wonder with which man looked

up to the heavens above him. /The splendours of the morn-

ing and evening; the azure vault, painted with frescoes of

cloud or blackened by the storm ; the night, crowned with

constellations : these awakened imagination, inspired awe,

kindled admiration, and at length adoration, in the being

who had reached intervals in which his eye was lifted

above the earth. Amid the rapture of Vedic hymns to

these sublimities we meet sharp questionings whether

there be any such gods as the priests say, and suspicion is

sometimes cast on sacrifices. The forms that peopled the

celestial spaces may have been those of ancestors, kings,

and great men, but anterior to all forms was the poetic

enthusiasm which built heavenly mansions for them ; and

the crude cosmogonies of primitive science were probably

caught up by this spirit, and consecrated as slowly as

scientific generalisations now are.

Our modern ideas of evolution might suggest the reverse

of this — that human worship began with things low and

gradually ascended to high objects ; that from rude ages,

in which adoration was directed to stock and stone, tree

and reptile, the human mind climbed by degrees to the

contemplation and reverence of celestial grandeurs. But

the accord of this view with our ideas of evolution is appa-

rent only. The real progress seems here to have been

from the far to the near, from the great to the small. It

----

</pre>

<pre style="font-size: 13px; line-height: normal; text-align: left;">ORDEAL OF FIRE AND WATER. 3

is, indeed, probably inexact to speak of the worship of

stock and stone, weed and wort, insect and reptile, as

primitive. There are many indications that such things

were by no race considered intrinsically sacred, nor were

they really worshipped until the origin of their sanctity

was lost ; and even now, ages after their oracular or sym-

bolical character has been fprgotten, the superstitions that

have survived in connection with such insignificant objects

point to an original association with the phenomena of the

heavens. No religions could, at first glance, seem wider

apart than the worship of the serpent and that of the

glorious sun ; yet many ancient temples are coverofl with

symbols ' combining sun and snake, and no form is more

familiar in Egypt than the solar serpent standing erect

upon its tail, with rays around its head.

Nor is this high relationship of the adored reptile found

only in regions where it might have been raised up by

ethnical combinations as the mere survival of a savage

symbol. William Craft, an African who resided for some

time in the kingdom of Dahomey, informed me of the

following incident which he had witnessed there. The

sacred serpents are kept in a grand house, which they

sometimes leave to crawl in their neighbouring grounds.

One day a negro from some distant region encountered

one of these animals and killed it. The people learning

that one of their gods had been slain, seized the stranger,

and having surrounded him with a circle of brushwood, set

it on fire. The poor wretch broke through the circle of

fire and ran, pursued by the crowd, who struck him with

heavy sticks. Smarting from the flames and blows, he

pushed into a river ; but no sooner had he entered there

than the pursuit ceased, and he was told that, having

gone through fire and water, he was purified, and might

emerge with safety. Thus, even in that distant and savage </pre>

demonology and devil-loreWhere stories live. Discover now