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XXV KNIGHT OF THE
BRAZEN SERPENT.
THIS Degree is both
philosophical and moral. While it teaches the necessity of
reformation as well as repentance, as a means of obtaining mercy and
forgiveness, it is also devoted to an explanation of the symbols of
Masonry; and especially to those which are connected with that
ancient and universal legend, of which that of Khir-Om Abi is but a
variation; that legend which, representing a murder or a death, and
a restoration to life, by a drama in which figure Osiris, Isis and
Horus, Atys and Cybele, Adonis and Venus, the Cabiri, Dionusos, and
many another representative of the active and passive Powers of
Nature, taught the Initiates in the Mysteries that the rule of Evil
and Darkness is but temporary, and that that of Light and Good will
be eternal.
Maimonides says: "In
the days of Enos, the son of Seth, men fell into grievous errors,
and even Enos himself partook of their infatuation. Their language
was, that since God has placed on high the heavenly bodies, and used
them as His ministers, it was evidently His will that they should
receive from man the same veneration as the
servants of a great prince justly claim from the subject multitude.
Impressed with this notion, they began to build temples to the
Stars, to sacrifice to them, and to worship them, in the vain
expectation that they should thus please the Creator of all things.
At first, indeed, they did not suppose the Stars to be the only
Deities, but adored in conjunction with them the Lord God
Omnipotent. In process of time, however, that great and venerable
Name was totally forgotten, and the whole human race retained no
other religion than the idolatrous worship of the Host of Heaven."
The first learning in
the world consisted chiefly in symbols. The wisdom of the Chaldĉans,
Phnicians, Egyptians, Jews; of Zoroaster, Sanchoniathon, Pherecydes,
Syrus, Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato, of all the ancients, that is
come to our hand, is symbolic. It was the mode, says Serranus on
Plato's Symposium, of the Ancient Philosophers, to represent truth
by certain symbols and hidden images.
"All that can be said
concerning the Gods," says Strabo, "must be by the exposition of old
opinions and fables; it being the custom of the ancients to wrap up
in enigma and allegory their thoughts and discourses concerning
Nature; which are therefore not easily explained."
As you learned in the
24th Degree, my Brother, the ancient Philosophers regarded the soul
of man as having had its origin in Heaven. That was, Macrobius says,
a settled opinion among them all; and they held it to be the only
true wisdom, for the soul, while united with the body, to look ever
toward its source, and strive to return to the place whence it came.
Among the fixed stars it dwelt, until, seduced by the desire of
animating a body, it descended to be imprisoned in matter.
Thenceforward it has no other resource than recollection, and is
ever attracted toward its birth-place and home. The means of return
are to be sought for in itself. To re-ascend to its source, it must
do and suffer in the body.
Thus the Mysteries
taught the great doctrine of the divine nature and longings after
immortality of the soul, of the nobility of its origin, the grandeur
of its destiny, its superiority over the animals who have no
aspirations heavenward. If they struggled in vain to express its
nature, by comparing it to Fire and Light,--if they erred as to
its original place of abode, and the mode of its descent, and the path
which, descending and ascending, it pursued among the stars and
spheres, these were the accessories of the Great Truth, and mere
allegories designed to make the idea more impressive, and, as it
were, tangible, to the human mind.
Let us, in order to
understand this old Thought, first follow the soul in its descent.
The sphere or Heaven of the fixed stars was that Holy Region, and
those Elysian Fields, that were the native domicile of souls, and
the place to which they re-ascended, when they had recovered their
primitive purity and simplicity. From that luminous region the soul
set forth, when it journeyed toward the body; a destination which it
did not reach until it had undergone three degradations, designated
by the name of Deaths; and until it had passed through the several
spheres and the elements. All souls remained in possession of Heaven
and of happiness, so long as they were wise enough to avoid the
contagion of the body, and to keep themselves from any contact with
matter. But those who, from that lofty abode, where they were lapped
in eternal light, have looked longingly toward the body, and toward
that which we here below call life, but which is to the soul
a real death; and who have conceived for it a secret
desire,--those souls, victims of their concupiscence, are attracted
by degrees toward the inferior regions of the world, by the mere
weight of thought and of that terrestrial desire. The soul,
perfectly incorporeal, does not at once invest itself with the gross
envelope of the body, but little by little, by successive and
insensible alterations, and in proportion as it removes further and
further from the simple and perfect substance in which it dwelt at
first. It first surrounds itself with a body composed of the
substance of the stars; and afterward, as it descends through the
several spheres, with ethereal matter more and more gross, thus by
degrees descending to an earthly body; and its number of
degradations or deaths being the same as that of the spheres which
it traverses.
The Galaxy, Macrobius
says, crosses the Zodiac in two opposite points, Cancer and
Capricorn, the tropical points in the sun's course, ordinarily
called the Gates of the Sun. These two tropics, before his time,
corresponded with those constellations, but in his day with Gemini
and Sagittarius, in consequence of the precession of the equinoxes;
but the signs of the Zodiac remained unchanged; and the Milky
Way crossed at the signs Cancer and Capricorn, though not at
those constellations.
Through these
gates souls were supposed to descend to earth and re-ascend to
Heaven. One, Macrobius says, in his dream of Scipio, was styled the
Gate of Men; and the other, the Gate of the Gods. Cancer was the
former, because souls descended by it to the earth; and Capricorn
the latter, because by it they re-ascended to their seats of
immortality, and became Gods. From the. Milky Way, according to
Pythagoras, diverged the route to the dominions of Pluto. Until they
left the Galaxy, they were not deemed to have commenced to descend
toward the terrestrial bodies. From that they departed, and to that
they returned. Until they reached the sign Cancer, they had not left
it, and were still Gods. When they reached Leo, they commenced their
apprenticeship for their future condition; and when they were at
Aquarius, the sign opposite Leo, they were furthest removed from
human life.
The soul, descending
from the celestial limits, where the Zodiac and Galaxy unite, loses
its spherical shape, the shape of all Divine Nature, and is
lengthened into a cone, as a point is lengthened into a line; and
then, an indivisible monad before, it divides itself and becomes a
dead--that is, unity becomes division, disturbance, and conflict.
Then it begins to experience the disorder which reigns in matter, to
which it unites itself, becoming, as it were, intoxicated by
draughts of grosser matter: of which inebriation the cup of Bakchos,
between Cancer and Leo, is a symbol. It is for them the cup of
forgetfulness. They assemble, says Plato, in the fields of oblivion,
to drink there the water of the river Ameles, which causes men to
forget everything. This fiction is also found in Virgil. "If souls,"
says Macrobius, "carried with them into the bodies they occupy all
the knowledge which they had acquired of divine things, during their
sojourn in the Heavens, men would not differ in opinion as to the
Deity; but some of them forget more, and some less, of that which
they had learned."
We smile at these
notions of the ancients; but we must learn to look through these
material images and allegories, to the ideas, struggling for
utterance, the great speechless thoughts which they envelop: and it
is well for us to consider whether we ourselves have yet found out
any better way of representing to ourselves the soul's origin
and its advent into this body, so entirely foreign to it; if,
indeed, we have ever thought about it at all; or have not ceased to
think, in despair.
The highest and
purest portion of matter, which nourishes and constitutes divine
existences, is what the poets term nectar, the beverage of
the Gods. The lower, more disturbed and grosser portion, is what
intoxicates souls. The ancients symbolized it as the River Lethe,
dark stream of oblivion. How
do we explain the soul's
forgetfulness of its antecedents, or reconcile that utter absence of
remembrance of its former condition, with its essential immortality?
In truth, we for the most part dread and shrink from any attempt at
explanation of it to ourselves.
Dragged down by the
heaviness produced by this inebriating draught, the soul falls along
the zodiac and the milky way to the lower spheres, and in its
descent not only takes, in each sphere, a new envelope of the
material composing the luminous bodies of the planets, but receives
there the different faculties which it is to exercise while it
inhabits the body.
In Saturn, it
acquires the power of reasoning and intelligence, or what is termed
the logical and contemplative faculty. From Jupiter it receives the
power of action. Mars gives it valor, enterprise, and impetuosity.
From the Sun it receives the senses and imagination, which produce
sensation, perception, and thought. Venus inspires it with desires.
Mercury gives it the faculty of expressing and enunciating what it
thinks and feels. And, on entering the sphere of the Moon, it
acquires the force of generation and growth. This lunary sphere,
lowest and basest to divine bodies, is first and highest to
terrestrial bodies. And the lunary body there assumed by the soul,
while, as it were, the sediment of celestial matter, is also the
first substance of animal matter.
The celestial bodies,
Heaven, the Stars, and the other Divine elements, ever aspire to
rise. The soul reaching the region which mortality inhabits, tends
toward terrestrial bodies, and is deemed to die. Let no one, says
Macrobius, be surprised that we so frequently speak of the death
of this soul, which yet we call immortal. It is neither annulled nor
destroyed by such death: but merely enfeebled for a time; and does
not thereby forfeit its prerogative of immortality; for afterward,
freed from the body, when it has been purified from the vice-stains
contracted during that connection, it is re-established in all its
privileges, and returns to the luminous abode of its immortality.
On its return, it
restores to each sphere through which it ascends, the passions and
earthly faculties received from them: to the Moon, the faculty
of increase and diminution of the body; to Mercury, fraud, the
architect of evils; to Venus, the seductive love of pleasure; to the
Sun, the passion for greatness and empire; to Mars, audacity and
temerity; to Jupiter, avarice; and to Saturn, falsehood and deceit:
and at last, relieved of all, it enters naked and pure into the
eighth sphere or highest Heaven.
All this agrees with
the doctrine of Plato, that the soul cannot re-enter into Heaven,
until the revolutions of the Universe shall have restored it to its
primitive condition, and purified it from the effects of its contact
with the four elements.
This opinion of the
pre-existence of souls, as pure and celestial substances, before
their union with our bodies, to put on and animate which they
descend from Heaven, is one of great antiquity. A modern Rabbi,
Manasseh Ben Israel, says it was always the belief of the Hebrews.
It was that of most philosophers who admitted the immortality of the
soul: and therefore it was taught in the Mysteries; for, as
Lactantius says, they could not see how it was possible that the
soul should exist after the body, if it had not existed
before it, and if its nature was not independent of that of the
body. The same doctrine was adopted by the most learned of the Greek
Fathers, and by many of the Latins: and it would probably prevail
largely at the present day, if men troubled themselves to think upon
this subject at all, and to inquire whether the soul's immortality
involved its prior existence.
Some philosophers
held that the soul was incarcerated in the body, by way of
punishment for sins committed by it in a prior state. How they
reconciled this with the same soul's unconsciousness of any such
prior state, or of sin committed there, does not appear. Others held
that God, of his mere will, sent the soul to inhabit the body. The
Kabalists united the two opinions. They held that there are four
worlds, Aziluth, Briarth, Jezirath, and
Aziath; the world of emanation, that of creation,
that of forms, and the material world; one above and
more perfect than the other, in that order, both as regards their
own nature and that of the beings who inhabit them. All souls are
originally in the world Aziluth, the Supreme Heaven, abode of God,
and of pure and immortal spirits. Those who descend from it without
fault of their own, by God's order, are gifted with a divine fire,
which preserves them from the contagion of matter, and restores them
to Heaven so soon as their mission is ended. Those who descend
through, their own fault, go
from world to world, insensibly losing their love of Divine things,
and their self-contemplation; until they reach the world Aziath,
falling by their own weight. This is a pure Platonism, clothed with
the images and words peculiar to the Kabalists. It was the doctrine
of the Essenes, who, says Porphyry, "believe that souls descend from
the most subtile ether, attracted to bodies by the seductions of
matter." It was in substance the doctrine of Origen; and it came
from the Chaldĉans, who largely studied the theory of the Heavens,
the spheres, and the influences of the signs and constellations.
The Gnostics made
souls ascend and descend through eight Heavens, in each of which
were certain Powers that opposed their return, and often drove them
back to earth, when not sufficiently purified. The last of these
Powers, nearest the luminous abode of souls, was a serpent or
dragon.
In the ancient
doctrine, certain Genii were charged with the duty of conducting
souls to the bodies destined to receive them, and of withdrawing
them from those bodies. According to Plutarch, these were the
functions of Proserpine and Mercury. In Plato, a familiar Genius
accompanies man at his birth, follows and watches him all his life,
and at death conducts him to the tribunal of the Great Judge. These
Genii are the media of communication between man and the Gods; and
the soul is ever in their presence. This doctrine is taught in the
oracles of Zoroaster: and these Genii were the Intelligences that
resided in the planets.
Thus the secret
science and mysterious emblems of initiation were connected with the
Heavens, the Spheres, and the Constellations: and this connection
must be studied by whomsoever would understand the ancient mind, and
be enabled to interpret the allegories, and explore the meaning of
the symbols, in which the old sages endeavored to delineate the
ideas that struggled within them for utterance, and could be but
insufficiently and inadequately expressed by language, whose words
are images of those things alone that can be grasped by and are
within the empire of the senses.
It is not possible
for us thoroughly to appreciate the feelings with which the ancients
regarded the Heavenly bodies, and the ideas to which their
observation of the Heavens gave rise, because we cannot put
ourselves in their places, look at the stars with their eyes in the
world's youth, and divest ourselves of the knowledge which even the
commonest of us have, that makes us regard the Stars and Planets and
all the Universe of Suns and Worlds, as a mere inanimate machine and
aggregate of senseless orbs, no more astonishing, except in degree,
than a clock or an orrery. We wonder and are amazed at the
Power and Wisdom (to most men it seems only a kind of Infinite
Ingenuity) of the MAKER: they wondered at the Work, and
endowed it with Life and Force and mysterious Powers and mighty
Influences.
Memphis, in Egypt,
was in Latitude 29° 5" North, and in Longitude 30° 18' East. Thebes,
in Upper Egypt, in Latitude 25° 45' North, and Longitude 32° 43'
East. Babylon was in Latitude 32° 30' North, and Longitude 44° 23'
East: while Saba, the ancient Sabĉan capital of Ethiopia, was about
in Latitude 15° North.
Through Egypt ran the
great River Nile, coming from beyond Ethiopia, its source in regions
wholly unknown, in the abodes of heat and fire, and its course from
South to North. Its inundations had formed the alluvial lands of
Upper and Lower Egypt, which they continued to raise higher and
higher, and to fertilize by their deposits. At first, as in all
newly-settled countries, those inundations, occurring annually and
always at the same period of the year, were calamities: until, by
means of levees and drains and artificial lakes for irrigation, they
became blessings, and were looked for with joyful anticipation, as
they had before been awaited with terror. Upon the deposit left by
the Sacred River, as it withdrew into its banks, the husbandman
sowed his seed; and the rich soil and the genial sun insured him an
abundant harvest.
Babylon lay on the
Euphrates, which ran from Southeast to Northwest, blessing, as all
rivers in the Orient do, the arid country through which it flowed;
but its rapid and uncertain overflows bringing terror and disaster.
To the ancients, as
yet inventors of no astronomical instruments, and looking at the
Heavens with the eyes of children, this earth was a level plain of
unknown extent. About its boundaries there was speculation, but no
knowledge. The inequalities of its surface were the irregularities
of a plane. That it was a globe, or that anything lived on its under
surface, or on what it rested, they had no idea. Every twenty-four
hours the sun came up from beyond the Eastern rim of the world, and
travelled across the sky, over the earth, always South of, but
sometimes nearer and sometimes further from the point overhead; and
sunk below the world's Western rim.
With him went light, and after him followed darkness.
And every twenty-four
hours appeared in the Heavens another body, visible chiefly at
night, but sometimes even when the sun shone, which likewise, as if
following the sun at a greater or less distance, travelled across
the sky; sometimes as a thin crescent, and thence increasing to a
full orb resplendent with silver light; and sometimes more and
sometimes less to the Southward of the point overhead, within the
same limits as the Sun.
Man, enveloped by the
thick darkness of profoundest night, when everything around him has
disappeared, and he seems alone with himself and the black shades
that surround him, feels his existence a blank and nothingness,
except so far as memory recalls to him the glories and splendors of
light. Everything is dead to him, and he, as it were, to Nature. How
crushing and overwhelming the thought, the fear, the dread, that
perhaps that darkness may be eternal, and that day may possibly
never return; if it ever occurs to his mind, while the solid gloom
closes up against him like a wall! What then can restore him to
like, to energy, to activity, to fellowship and communion with the
great world which God has spread around him, and which perhaps in
the darkness may be passing away? LIGHT restores him to himself and
to nature which seemed lost to him. Naturally, therefore, the
primitive men regarded light as the principle of their real
existence, without which life would be but one continued weariness
and despair. This necessity for light, and its actual creative
energy, were felt by all men: and nothing was more alarming to them
than its absence. It became their first Divinity, a single ray of
which, flashing into the dark tumultuous bosom of chaos, caused man
and all the Universe to emerge from it. So all the poets sung who
imagined Cosmogonies; such was the first dogma of Orpheus, Moses,
and the Theologians. Light was Ormuzd, adored by the Persians, and
Darkness Ahriman, origin of all evils: Light was the life of the
Universe, the friend of man, the substance of the Gods and of the
Soul.
The sky was to them a
great, solid, concave arch; a hemisphere of unknown material, at an
unknown distance above the flat level earth; and along it journeyed
in their courses the Sun, the Moon, the Planets, and the Stars.
The Sun was to them a
great globe of fire, of unknown dimensions, at an unknown
distance. The Moon was a mass of softer light; the stars and planets
lucent bodies, armed with unknown and supernatural influences.
It could not fail to
be soon observed, that at regular intervals the days and nights were
equal; and that two of these intervals measured the same space of
time as elapsed between the successive inundations, and between the
returns of spring-time and harvest. Nor could it fail to be
perceived that the changes of the moon occurred regularly; the same
number of days always elapsing between the first appearance of her
silver crescent in the West at evening and that of her full orb
rising in the East at the same hour; and the same again, between
that and the new appearance of the crescent in the West.
It was also soon
observed that the Sun crossed the Heavens in a different line each
day, the days being longest and the nights shortest when the line of
his passage was furthest North, and the days shortest and nights
longest when that line was furthest South: that his progress North
and South was perfectly regular, marking four periods that were
always the same,--those when the days and nights were equal, or the
Vernal and Autumnal Equinoxes; that when the days were longest, or
the Summer Solstice; and that when they were shortest, or the Winter
Solstice.
With the Vernal
Equinox, or about the 25th of March of our Calendar, they found that
there unerringly came soft winds, the return of warmth, caused by
the Sun turning back to the Northward from the middle ground of his
course, the vegetation of the new year, and the impulse to amatory
action on the part of the animal creation. Then the Bull and the
Ram, animals most valuable to the agriculturist, and symbols
themselves of vigorous generative power, recovered their vigor, the
birds mated and budded their nests, the seeds germinated, the grass
grew, and the trees put forth leaves. With the Summer Solstice, when
the Sun reached the extreme northern limit of his course, came great
heat, and burning winds, and lassitude and exhaustion; then
vegetation withered, man longed for the cool breezes of Spring and
Autumn, and the cool water of the wintry Nile or Euphrates, and the
Lion sought for that element far from his home in the desert.
With the Autumnal
Equinox came ripe harvests, and fruits of the tree and vine, and
falling leaves, and cold evenings presaging wintry frosts; and the
Principle and Powers of Darkness, prevailing over those of Light,
drove the Sun further to the South, so that the nights grew longer
than the days. And at the Winter Solstice the earth, was wrinkled
with frost, the trees were leafless, and the Sun reaching the most
Southern point in his career, seemed to hesitate whether to continue
descending, to leave the world to darkness and despair, or to turn
upon his steps and retrace his course to the Northward, bringing
back seed-time and Spring, and green leaves and flowers, and all the
delights of love.
Thus, naturally and
necessarily, time was divided, first into days, and then into moons
or months, and years; and with these divisions and the movements of
the Heavenly bodies that marked them, were associated and connected
all men's physical enjoyments and privations. Wholly agricultural,
and in their frail habitations greatly at the mercy of the elements
and the changing seasons, the primitive people of the Orient were
most deeply interested in the recurrence of the periodical phenomena
presented by the two great luminaries of Heaven, on whose regularity
all their prosperity depended.
And the attentive
observer soon noticed that the smaller lights of Heaven were,
apparently, even more regular than the Sun and Moon, and foretold
with unerring certainty, by their risings and settings, the periods
of recurrence of the different phenomena and seasons on which the
physical well-being of all men depended. They soon felt the
necessity of distinguishing the individual stars, or groups of
stars, and giving them names, that they might understand each other,
when referring to and designating them. Necessity produced
designations at once natural and artificial. Observing that, in the
circle of the year, the renewal and periodical appearance of the
productions of the earth were constantly associated, not only with
the courses of the Sun, but also with the rising and setting of
certain Stars, and with their position relatively to the Sun, the
centre to which they referred the whole starry host, the mind
naturally connected the celestial and terrestrial objects that were
in fact connected: and they commenced by giving to particular
Stars or groups of Stars the names of those terrestrial objects
which seemed connected with them; and for those which still remained
unnamed by this nomenclature, they, to complete a system, assumed
arbitrary and fanciful names.
Thus the Ethiopian of
Thebes or Saba styled those Stars under which the Nile
commenced to overflow, Stars of Inundation, or that poured out
water (AQUARIUS).
Those Stars among
which the Sun was, when he had reached the Northern Tropic and began
to retreat Southward, were termed, from his retrograde
motion, the Crab (CANCER).
As he approached, in
Autumn, the middle point between the Northern and Southern extremes
of his journeying, the days and nights became equal; and the Stars
among which he was then found were called Stars of the Balance
(LIBRA).
Those stars among
which the Sun was, when the Lion, driven from the Desert by thirst,
came to slake it at the Nile, were called Stars of the Lion (LEO).
Those among which the
Sun was at harvest, were called those of the Gleaning Virgin,
holding a Sheaf of Wheat (VIRGO).
Those among which he
was found in February, when the Ewes brought forth their young, were
called Stars of the Lamb (Arms).
Those in March, when
it was time to plough, were called Stars of the Ox (TAURUS).
Those under which hot
and burning winds came from the desert, venomous like poisonous
reptiles, were called Stars of the Scorpion (SCORPIO).
Observing that the
annual return of the rising of the Nile was always accompanied by
the appearance of a beautiful Star, which at that period showed
itself in the direction of the sources of that river, and seemed to
warn the husbandman to be careful not to be surprised by the
inundation, the Ethiopian compared this act of that Star to that of
the Animal which by barking gives warning of danger, and styled it
the Dog (SIRIUS).
Thus commencing, and
as astronomy came to be more studied, imaginary figures were traced
all over the Heavens, to which the different Stars were assigned.
Chief among them were those that lay along the path which the Sun
travelled as he climbed toward the North and descended to the South:
lying within certain limits and extending to an equal distance on
each side of the line of equal nights and days. This belt, curving
like a Serpent, was termed the Zodiac, and divided into twelve
Signs.
At the Vernal
Equinox, 2455 years before our Era, the Sun was entering the sign
and constellation Taurus, or the Bull; having passed through, since
he commenced, at the Winter Solstice, to ascend Northward, the Signs
Aquarius, Pisces and Aries; on entering the first of
which he reached the lowest limit of his journey Southward.
From TAURUS, he
passed through Gemini and Cancer, and reached LEO when he arrived at
the terminus of his journey Northward. Thence, through Leo, Virgo,
and Libra, he entered SCORPIO at the Autumnal Equinox, and journeyed
Southward through Scorpia, Sagittarius, and Capricornus to AQUARIUS,
the terminus of his journey South.
The path by which he
journeyed through these signs became the Ecliptic; and that
which passes through the two equinoxes, the Equator.
They knew nothing of
the immutable laws of nature; and whenever the Sun commenced to tend
Southward, they feared lest he might continue to do so, and by
degrees disappear forever, leaving the earth to be ruled forever by
darkness, storm, and cold.
Hence they rejoiced
when he commenced to re-ascend after the Winter Solstice, struggling
against the malign influences of Aquarius and Pisces, and amicably
received by the Lamb. And when at the Vernal Equinox he entered
Taurus, they still more rejoiced at the assurance that the days
would again be longer than the nights, that the season of seed-time
had come, and the Summer and harvest would follow.
And they lamented
when, after the Autumnal Equinox, the malign influence of the
venomous Scorpion, and vindictive Archer, and the filthy and
ill-omened He-Goat dragged him down toward the Winter Solstice.
Arriving there, they
said he had been slain, and had gone to the realm of darkness.
Remaining there three days, he rose again, and again ascended
Northward in the heavens, to redeem the earth from the gloom and
darkness of Winter, which soon became emblematical of sin, and evil,
and suffering; as the Spring, Summer, and Autumn became emblems of
happiness and immortality.
Soon they personified
the Sun, and worshipped him under the name of OSIRIS, and transmuted
the legend of his descent among the Winter Signs, into 'a fable of
his death, his descent into the infernal regions, and his
resurrection.
The Moon became Isis,
the wife of Osiris; and Winter, as well as the desert or the ocean
into which the Sun descended, became TYPHON, the Spirit or Principle
of Evil, warring against and destroying Osiris.
From the journey of
the Sun through the twelve signs came the legend of the twelve
labors of Hercules, and the incarnations of Vishnu and Buddha. Hence
came the legend of the murder of Khūrūm, representative of the Sun,
by the three Fellow-crafts, symbols of the three Winter signs,
Capricornus, Aquarius, and Pisces, who assailed him at the three
gates of Heaven and slew him at the Winter Solstice. Hence the
search for him by the nine Fellow-crafts, the other nine signs, his
finding, burial, and resurrection.
The celestial Taurus,
opening the new year, was the Creative Bull of the Hindus and
Japanese, breaking with his horn the egg out of which the world is
born. Hence the bull Arts was worshipped by the Egyptians, and
reproduced as a golden calf by Aaron in the desert. Hence the cow
was sacred to the Hindus. Hence, from the sacred and beneficent
signs of Taurus and Leo, the human-headed winged lions and bulls in
the palaces at Kouyounjik and Nimroud, like which were the Cherubim
set by Solomon in his Temple: and hence the twelve brazen or bronze
oxen, on which the laver of brass was supported.
The Celestial Vulture
or Eagle, rising and setting with the Scorpion, was substituted in
its place, in many cases, on account of the malign influences of the
latter: and thus the four great periods of the year were marked by
the Bull, the Lion, the Man (Aquarius) and the Eagle; which were
upon the respective standards of Ephraim, Judah, Reuben, and Dan;
and still appear on the shield of American Royal Arch Masonry.
Afterward the Ram or
Lamb became an object of adoration, when, in his turn, he opened the
equinox, to deliver the world from the wintry reign of darkness and
evil.
Around the central
and simple idea of the annual death and resurrection of the Sun a
multitude of circumstantial details soon clustered. Some were
derived from other astronomical phenomena; while many were merely
poetical ornaments and inventions.
Besides the Sun and
Moon, those ancients also saw a beautiful Star, shining with a soft,
silvery light, always following the Sun at no great distance when he
set, or preceding him when he rose. Another of a red and angry
color, and still another more kingly and brilliant than all, early
attracted their attention, by their free movements among the fixed
hosts of Heaven: and the latter by his unusual brilliancy, and the
regularity with which he rose and set. These were Venus, Mars, and
Jupiter. Mercury and Saturn could scarcely have
been noticed in the world's infancy, or until astronomy began to
assume the proportions of a science.
In the projection of
the celestial sphere by the astronomical priests, the zodiac and
constellations, arranged in a circle, presented their halves in
diametrical opposition; and the hemisphere of Winter was said to be
adverse, opposed, contrary, to that of Summer. Over the angels of
the latter ruled a king (OSIRIS or ORMUZD), enlightened,
intelligent, creative, and beneficent. Over the fallen angels or
evil genii of the former, the demons or Devs of the subterranean
empire of darkness and sorrow, and its stars, ruled also a chief. In
Egypt the Scorpion first ruled, the sign next the Balance, and long
the chief of the Winter signs; and then the Polar Bear or Ass,
called Typhon, that is, deluge, on account of the rains which
inundated the earth while that constellation domineered. In Persia,
at a later day, it was the serpent, which, personified as Ahriman,
was the Evil Principle of the religion of Zoroaster.
The Sun does not
arrive at the same moment in each year at the equinoctial point on
the equator. The explanation of his anticipating that point belongs
to the science of astronomy; and to that we refer you for it. The
consequence is, what is termed the precession of the equinoxes, by
means of which the Sun is constantly changing his place in the
zodiac, at each vernal equinox; so that now, the signs retaining the
names which they had 300 years before Christ, they and the
constellations do not correspond; the Sun being now in the
constellation Pisces, when he is in the sign Aries.
The annual amount of
precession is 50 seconds and a little over [50" 1.]. The period of a
complete Revolution of the Equinoxes, 25,856 years. The precession
amounts to 30° or a sign, in 2155.6 years. So that, as the sun now
enters Pisces at the Vernal Equinox, he entered Aries at that
period, 300 years B. C., and Taurus 2455 B. C. And the division of
the Ecliptic, now called Taurus, lies in the Constellation
Aries; while the sign Gemini is in the Constellation
Taurus. Four thousand six hundred and ten years before Christ, the
sun entered Gemini at the Vernal Equinox.
At the two periods,
2455 and 300 years before Christ, and now, the entrances of the sun
at the Equinoxes and Solstices into the signs, were and are as
follows:--
|
B.C. 2455 |
| Vern. Equinox, he entered Taurus
|
from Aries |
| Summer Solstice
|
Leo |
from
Cancer |
| Autumnal Equinox
|
Scorpio
|
from
Libra |
|
B.C. 300 |
| Vern. Eq
|
Aries |
from Pisces
|
| Summer Sols
|
Cancer |
from Gemini |
| Autumn Eq
|
Libra |
from Virgo |
| Winter Sols
|
Capricornus |
from Sagittarius |
|
1872 |
| Vern. Eq |
Pisces |
from Aquarius |
| Sum. Sols
|
Gemini |
from Taurus |
| Aut. Eq
|
Virgo |
from Leo |
| Winter Sols
|
Sagittarius |
from Scorpio |
From confounding
signs with causes came the worship of the sun and stars.
"If," says Job, "I beheld the sun when it shined, or the moon
progressive in brightness; and my heart hath been secretly enticed,
or my mouth hath kissed my hand, this were an iniquity to be
punished by the Judge; for I should have denied the God that is
above."
Perhaps we are not,
on the whole, much wiser than those simple men of the old time. For
what do we know of effect and cause, except that one
thing regularly or habitually follows another?
So, because the
heliacal rising of Sirius preceded the rising of the Nile, it
was deemed to cause it; and other stars were in like manner
held to cause extreme heat, bitter cold, and watery storm.
A religious reverence
for the zodiacal Bull [TAURUS] appears, from a very early period, to
have been pretty general, perhaps it was universal, throughout Asia;
from that chain or region of Caucasus to which it gave name; and
which is still known under the appellation of Mount Taurus, to the
Southern extremities of the Indian Peninsula; extending itself also
into Europe, and through the Eastern parts of Africa.
This evidently
originated during those remote ages of the world, when the colure of
the vernal equinox passed across the stars in the head of the sign
Taurus [among which was Aldebarán]; a period when, as the
most ancient monuments of all the oriental nations attest, the light
of arts and letters first shone forth.
The Arabian word
AL-DE-BARÁN, means the foremost, or leading, star: and
it could only have been so named, when it did precede, or
lead, all others. The year then opened with the sun in Taurus;
and the multitude of ancient sculptures, both in Assyria and Egypt,
wherein the bull appears with lunette or crescent horns, and the
disk of the sun between them, are direct allusions to the important
festival of the first new moon of the year: and there was everywhere
an annual celebration of the festival of the first new moon, when
the year opened with Sol and Luna in Taurus.
David sings: "Blow
the trumpet in the New Moon; in the time appointed; on our
solemn feast-day: for this is a statute unto Israel, and a law of
the God of Jacob. This he ordained to Joseph, for a testimony, when
he came out of the land of Egypt."
The reverence paid to
Taurus continued long after, by the precession of the Equinoxes, the
colure of the vernal equinox had come to pass through Aries. The
Chinese still have a temple, called "The Palace of the horned Bull";
and the same symbol is worshipped in Japan and all over Hindostan.
The Cimbrians carried a brazen bull with them, as the image of their
God, when they overran Spain and Gaul; and the representation of the
Creation, by the Deity in the shape of a bull, breaking the shell of
an egg with his horns, meant Taurus, opening the year, and bursting
the symbolical shell of the annually-recurring orb of the new year.
Theophilus says that
the Osiris of Egypt was supposed to be dead or absent fifty days in
each year. Landseer thinks that this was because the Sabĉan priests
were accustomed to see, in the lower latitudes of Egypt and
Ethiopia, the first or chief stars of the Husbandman [BOÖTES] sink
achronically beneath the Western horizon; and then to begin their
lamentations, or hold forth the signal for others to weep: and when
his prolific virtues were supposed to be transferred to the vernal
sun, bacchanalian revelry became devotion.
Before the colure of
the Vernal Equinox had passed into Aries, and after it had left
Aldebarán and the Hyades, the Pleiades were, for seven or eight
centuries, the leading stars of the Sabĉan year. And thus we see, on
the monuments, the disk and crescent, symbols of the sun and moon
in conjunction, appear successively,--first on the head, and then on
the neck and back of the Zodiacal Bull, and more recently on the
forehead of the Ram.
The diagrammatical character or symbol, still in use to denote Taurus,
is this very
crescent and disk: a symbol that has come down to us from those
remote ages when this memorable conjunction in Taurus, by marking
the commencement, at once of the Sabĉan year and of the cycle of the
Chaldĉan Saros, so pre-eminently distinguished that sign as to
become its characteristic symbol. On a bronze bull from China, the
crescent is attached to the back of the Bull, by means of a cloud,
and a curved groove is provided for the occasional introduction of
the disk of the sun, when solar and lunar time were coincident and
conjunctive, at the commencement of the year, and of the lunar
cycle. When that was made, the year did not open with the stars in
the head of the Bull, but when the colure of the vernal
equinox passed across the middle or later degrees of the asterism
Taurus, and the Pleiades were, in China, as in Canaan, the leading
stars of the year.
The crescent and disk
combined always represent the conjunctive Sun and Moon; and when
placed on the head of the Zodiacal Bull, the commencement of the
cycle termed SAROS by the Chaldĉans, and Metonic by the Greeks; and
supposed to be alluded to in Job, by the phrase, "Mazzaroth in his
season"; that is to say, when the first new Moon and new Sun of the
year were coincident, which happened once in eighteen years and a
fraction.
On the sarcophagus of
Alexander, the same symbol appears on the head of a Rain, which, in
the time of that monarch, was the leading sign. So too in the
sculptured temples of the Upper Nile, the crescent and disk appear,
not on the head of Taurus, but on the forehead of the Ram or the
Ram-headed God, whom the Grecian Mythologists called Jupiter Ammon,
really the Sun in Aries.
If we now look for a
moment at the individual stars which composed and were near to the
respective constellations, we may find something that will connect
itself with the symbols of the Ancient Mysteries and of Masonry.
It is to be noticed
that when the Sun is in a particular constellation, no part of that
constellation will be seen, except just before sunrise and just
after sunset; and then only the edge of it: but the constellations
opposite to it will be visible. When the Sun is in Taurus,
for example, that is, when Taurus sets with the Sun,
Scorpio rises as he sets, and continues visible throughout the
night. And if Taurus rises and sets with the Sun to-day, he will,
six months hence, rise at sunset and set at sunrise; for the stars
thus gain on the Sun two hours a month.
Going back to the
time when, watched by the Chaldĉan shepherds, and the husbandmen of
Ethiopia and Egypt,
"The milk-white Bull with
golden horns
"Led on the new-born year,"
we see in the neck of
TAURUS, the Pleiades, and in his face the Hyades, "which Grecia from
their showering names," and of whom the brilliant Aldebarán is the
chief; while to the southwestward is that most splendid of all the
constellations, Orion, with Betelgueux in his right shoulder,
Bellatrix in his left shoulder, Rigel on the left foot, and in his
belt the three stars known as the Three Kings, and now as the Yard
and Ell. Orion, ran the legend, persecuted the Pleiades; and to save
them from his fury, Jupiter placed them in the Heavens, where he
still pursues them, but in vain. They, with Arcturus and the Bands
of Orion, are mentioned in the Book of Job. They are usually called
the Seven Stars, and it is said there were seven, before the
fall of Troy; though now only six are visible.
The Pleiades were so
named from a Greek word signifying to sail. In all ages they
have been observed for signs and seasons. Virgil says that the
sailors gave names to "the Pleiades, Hyades, and the Northern Car:
Pleiadas, Hyadas, Claramque Lycaonis Arcton." And Palinurus,
he says,
Arcturum, pluviasque Hyadas,
Geminosque Triones,
Armatumque auro circumspicit Oriona,--
studied Arcturus and
the rainy Hyades and the Twin Triones, and Orion cinctured with
gold.
Taurus was the prince
and leader of the celestial host for more than two thousand years;
and when his head set with the Sun about the last of May, the
Scorpion was seen to rise in the South-east.
The Pleiades were
sometimes called Vergiliĉ, or the Virgins of Spring; because
the Sun entered this cluster of stars in the season of blossoms.
Their Syrian name was Succoth, or Succothbeneth,
derived from a Chaldĉan word signifying to speculate or observe.
The Hyades are
five stars in the form of a V, 11° southeast of the Pleiades. The
Greeks counted them as seven. When the Vernal Equinox was in Taurus,
Aldebarán led up the starry host; and as he rose in the East, Aries
was about 27° high.
When he was close
upon the meridian, the Heavens presented their most magnificent
appearance. Capella was a little further from the meridian, to the
north; and Orion still further from it to the southward. Procyon,
Sirius, Castor and Pollux had climbed about halfway from the horizon
to the meridian. Regulus had just risen upon the ecliptic. The
Virgin still lingered below the horizon. Fomalhaut was halfway to
the meridian in the Southwest; and to the Northwest were the
brilliant constellations, Perseus, Cepheus, Cassiopeia, and
Andromeda; while the Pleiades had just passed the meridian.
ORION is visible to
all the habitable world. The equinoctial line passes through the
centre of it. When Aldebarán rose in the East, the Three Kings in
Orion followed him; and as Taurus set, the Scorpion, by whose sting
it was said Orion died, rose in the East.
Orion rises at noon
about the 9th of March. His rising was accompanied with great rains
and storms, and it became very terrible to mariners.
In Boötes, called by
the ancient Greeks Lycaon, from lukos, a wolf, and by
the Hebrews, Caleb Anubach, the Barking Dog, is the Great Star
ARCTURUS, which, when Taurus opened the year, corresponded with a
season remarkable for its great heat.
Next comes GEMINI,
the Twins, two human figures, in the heads of which are the bright
Stars CASTOR and POLLUX, the Dioscuri, and the Cabiri of Samothrace,
patrons of navigation; while South of Pollux are the brilliant Stars
SIRIUS and PROCYON, the greater and lesser Dog: and still further
South, Canopus, in the Ship Argo.
Sirius is apparently
the largest and brightest Star in the Heavens. When the Vernal
Equinox was in Taurus, he rose heliacally, that is, just before the
Sun, when, at the Summer Solstice, the Sun entered Leo, about the
21st of June, fifteen days previous to the swelling of the Nile. The
heliacal rising of Canopus was also a precursor of the rising of the
Nile. Procyon was the forerunner of Sirius, and rose before him.
There are no
important Stars in CANCER. In the Zodiacs of Esne and Dendera, and
in most of the astrological remains of
Egypt, the sign of this constellation was a beetle (Scarabĉus),
which thence became sacred, as an emblem of the gate through which
souls descended from Heaven. In the crest of Cancer is a cluster of
Stars formerly called Prĉsepe, the Manger, on each side of
which is a small Star, the two of which were called Aselli
little asses.
In Leo are the
splendid Stars, REGULUS, directly on the ecliptic, and DENEBOLA in
the Lion's tail. Southeast of Regulus is the fine Star COR HYDRĈ.
The combat of
Hercules with the Nemĉan lion was his first labor. It was the first
sign into which the Sun passed, after falling below the Summer
Solstice; from which time he struggled to re-ascend.
The Nile overflowed
in this sign. It stands first in the Zodiac of Dendera, and is in
all the Indian and Egyptian Zodiacs.
In the left hand of
VIRGO (Isis or Ceres) is the beautiful Star SPICA Virginis, a little
South of the ecliptic. VINDEMIATRIX, of less magnitude, is in the
right arm; and Northwest of Spica, in Boötes (the husbandman,
Osiris), is the splendid star ARCTURUS.
The division of the
first Decan of the Virgin, Aben Ezra says, represents a beautiful
Virgin with flowing hair, sitting in a chair, with two ears of corn
in her hand, and suckling an infant. In an Arabian MS. in the Royal
Library at Paris, is a picture of the Twelve Signs. That of Virgo is
a young girl with an infant by her side. Virgo was Isis; and her
representation, carrying a child (Horus) in her arms, exhibited in
her temple, was accompanied by this inscription: "I AM ALL THAT IS,
THAT WAS, AND THAT SHALL BE; and the fruit which I brought forth is
the Sun."
Nine months after the
Sun enters Virgo, he reaches the Twins. When Scorpio begins to rise,
Orion sets: when Scorpio comes to the meridian, Leo begins to set,
Typhon reigns, Osiris is slain, and Isis (the Virgin) his sister and
wife, follows him to the tomb, weeping.
The Virgin and
Boötes, setting heliacally at the Autumnal Equinox, delivered the
world to the wintry constellations, and introduced into it the
genius of Evil, represented by Ophiucus, the Serpent.
At the moment of the
Winter Solstice, the Virgin rose heliacally (with the Sun),
having the Sun (Horus) in her bosom.
In LIBRA are four
Stars of the second and third magnitude, which we shall mention
hereafter. They are Zuben-es-Chamali, Zuben-el-Gemabi,
Zuben-hak-rabi, and Zuben-el-Gubi. Near the last of these is the
brilliant and malign Star, ANTARES in Scorpio.
In SCORPIO, ANTARES,
of the 1st magnitude, and remarkably red, was one of the four great
Stars, FOMALHAUT, in Cetus, ALDEBARAN in Taurus, REGULUS in Leo, and
ANTARES, that formerly answered to the Solstitial and Equinoctial
points, and were much noticed by astronomers. This sign was
sometimes represented by a Snake, and sometimes by a Crocodile, but
generally by a Scorpion, which last is found on the Mithriac
Monuments, and on the Zodiac of Dendera. It was considered a sign
accursed, and the entrance of the Sun into it commenced the reign of
Typhon.
In Sagittarius,
Capricornus, and Aquarius there are no Stars of importance.
Near Pisces is the
brilliant Star FOMALHAUT. No sign in the Zodiac is considered of
more malignant influence than this. It was deemed indicative of
Violence and Death. Both the Syrians and Egyptians
abstained from eating fish, out of dread and abhor-hence; and when
the latter would represent anything as odious, or express hatred by
Hieroglyphics, they painted a fish.
In Auriga is the
bright Star CAPELLA, which to the Egyptians never set.
And, circling ever
round the North Pole are Seven Stars, known as Ursa Major, or the
Great Bear, which have been an object of universal observation in
all ages of the world. They were venerated alike by the Priests of
Bel, the Magi of Persia, the Shepherds of Chaldea, and the Phnician
navigators, as well as by the astronomers of Egypt. Two of them,
MERAK and DUBHE, always point to the North Pole.
The Phnicians and
Egyptians, says Eusebius, were the first who ascribed divinity to
the Sun, Moon, and Stars, and regarded them as the sole causes of
the production and destruction of all beings. From them vent abroad
over all the world all known opinions as to the generation and
descent of the Gods. Only the Hebrews looked beyond the visible
world to an invisible Creator. All the rest of the world regarded as
Gods those luminous bodies that blaze in the firmament, offered them
sacrifices, bowed down before them, and
raised neither their souls nor their worship above the visible
heavens.
The Chaldĉans,
Canaanites, and Syrians, among whom Abraham lived, did the same. The
Canaanites consecrated horses and chariots to the Sun. The
inhabitants of Emesa in Phnicia adored him under the name of
Elagabalus; and the Sun, as Hercules, was the great Deity of the
Tyrians. The Syrians worshipped, with fear and dread, the Stars of
the Constellation Pisces, and consecrated images of them in their
temples. The Sun as Adonis was worshipped in Byblos and about Mount
Libanus. There was a magnificent Temple of the Sun at Palmyra, which
was pillaged by the soldiers of Aurelian, who rebuilt it and
dedicated it anew. The Pleiades, under the name of Succoth-Beneth,
were worshipped by the Babylonian colonists who settled in the
country of the Samaritans. Saturn, under the name of Remphan, was
worshipped among the Copts. The planet Jupiter was worshipped as Bel
or Baal; Mars as Malec, Melech, or Moloch; Venus as Ashtaroth or
Astarte, and Mercury as Nebo, among the Syrians, Assyrians,
Phnicians, and Canaanites.
Sanchoniathon says
that the earliest Phnicians adored the Sun, whom they deemed sole
Lord of the Heavens; and honored him, under the name of BEEL-SAMIN,
signifying King of Heaven. They raised columns to the
elements, fire, and air or wind, and worshipped them; and Sabĉism,
or the worship of the Stars, flourished everywhere in Babylonia. The
Arabs, under a sky always clear and serene, adored the Sun, Moon,
and Stars. Abulfaragius so informs us, and that each of the twelve
Arab Tribes invoked a particular Star as its Patron. The Tribe
Hamyar was consecrated to the Sun, the Tribe Cennah to the Moon; the
Tribe Misa was under the protection of the beautiful Star in Taurus,
Aldebarán; the Tribe Tai under that of Canopus; the Tribe Kais, of
Sirius; the Tribes Lachamus and Idamus, of Jupiter; the Tribe Asad,
of Mercury; and so on.
The Saracens, in the
time of Heraclius, worshipped Venus, whom they called CABAR, or The
Great; and they swore by the Sun, Moon, and Stars. Shahristan, an
Arabic author, says that the Arabs and Indians before his time had
temples dedicated to the seven Planets. Abulfaragius says that the
seven great primitive nations, from whom all others descended, the
Persians, Chaldĉans, Greeks, Egyptians, Turks, Indians, and Chinese,
all originally were Sabĉists, and worshipped the Stars. They all, he
says, like the Chaldĉans, prayed, turning toward the North Pole, three times a day, at
Sunrise, Noon, and Sunset, bowing themselves three times before the
Sun. They invoked the Stars and the Intelligences which inhabited
them, offered them sacrifices, and called the fixed stars and
planets gods. Philo says that the Chaldĉans regarded the stars as
sovereign arbiters of the order of the world, and did not look
beyond the visible causes to any invisible and intellectual being.
They regarded NATURE as the great divinity, that exercised its
powers through the action of its parts, the Sun, Moon, Planets, and
Fixed Stars, the successive revolutions of the seasons, and the
combined action of Heaven and Earth. The great feast of the Sabĉans
was when the Sun reached the Vernal Equinox: and they had five other
feasts, at the times when the five minor planets entered the signs
in which they had their exaltation.
Diodorus Siculus
informs us that the Egyptians recognized two great Divinities,
primary and eternal, the Sun and Moon, which they thought governed
the world, and from which everything receives its nourishment and
growth: that on them depended all the great work of generation, and
the perfection of all effects produced in nature. We know that the
two great Divinities of Egypt were Osiris and Isis, the greatest
agents of nature; according to some, the Sun and Moon, and according
to others, Heaven and Earth, or the active and passive principles of
generation.
And we learn from
Porphyry that Chĉremon, a learned priest of Egypt, and many other
learned men of that nation, said that the Egyptians recognized as
gods the stars composing the zodiac, and all those that by their
rising or setting marked its divisions; the subdivisions of the
signs into decans, the horoscope and the stars that presided
therein, and which were called Potent Chiefs of Heaven: that
considering the Sun as the Great God, Architect, and Ruler of the
World, they explained not only the fable of Osiris and Isis, but
generally all their sacred legends, by the stars, by their
appearance and disappearance, by their ascension, by the phases of
the moon, and the increase and diminution of her light; by the march
of the sun, the division of time and the heavens into two parts, one
assigned to darkness and the other to light; by the Nile and, in
fine, by the whole round of physical causes.
Lucian tells us that
the bull Apis, sacred to the Egyptians, was the image of the
celestial Bull, or Taurus; and that Jupiter Ammon, horned like a
ram, was an image of the constellation Aries. Arid Clemens of
Alexandria assures us that the four principal sacred animals,
carried in their processions, were emblems of the four signs or
cardinal points which fixed the seasons at the equinoxes and
solstices, and divided into four parts the yearly march of the sun.
They worshipped fire also, and water, and the Nile, which river they
styled Father, Preserver of Egypt, sacred emanation from the Great
God Osiris; and in their hymns in which they called it the god
crowned with millet (which grain, represented by the pschent,
was part of the head-dress of their kings), bringing with him
abundance. The other elements were also revered by them: and the
Great Gods, whose names are found inscribed on an ancient column,
are the Air, Heaven, the Earth, the Sun, the Moon, Night, and Day.
And, in fine, as Eusebius says, they regarded the Universe as a
great Deity, composed of a great number of gods, the different parts
of itself.
The same worship of
the Heavenly Host extended into every part of Europe, into Asia
Minor, and among the Turks, Scythians, and Tartars. The ancient
Persians adored the Sun as Mithras, and also the Moon, Venus, Fire,
Earth, Air, and Water; and, having no statues or altars, they
sacrificed on high places to the Heavens and to the Sun. On seven
ancient pyrea they burned incense to the Seven Planets, and
considered the elements to be divinities. In the Zend-Avesta we find
invocations addressed to Mithras, the stars, the elements, trees,
mountains, and every part of nature. The Celestial Bull is invoked
there, to which the Moon unites herself; and the four great stars,
Taschter, Satevis, Haftorang, and Venant, the great Star Rapitan,
and the other constellations which watch over the different portions
of the earth.
The Magi, like a
multitude of ancient nations, worshipped fire, above all the other
elements and powers of nature. In India, the Ganges and the Indus
were worshipped, and the Sun was the Great Divinity. They worshipped
the Moon also, and kept up the sacred fire. In Ceylon, the Sun,
Moon, and other planets were worshipped: in Sumatra, the Sun, called
Iri, and the Moon, called Handa. And the Chinese built Temples to
Heaven, the Earth, and genii of the air, of the water, of the
mountains, and of the stars, to the sea-dragon, and to the planet
Mars.
The celebrated
Labyrinth was built in honor of the Sun; and its twelve palaces,
like the twelve superb columns of the Temple at Hieropolis, covered
with symbols relating to the twelve signs and the occult qualities
of the elements, were consecrated to the twelve gods or tutelary
genii of the signs of the Zodiac. The figure of the pyramid
and that of the obelisk, resembling the shape of a flame, caused
these monuments to be consecrated to the Sun and to Fire. And Timĉus
of Locria says: "The equilateral triangle enters into the
composition of the pyramid, which has four equal faces and equal
angles, and which in this is like fire, the most subtle and mobile
of the elements." They and the obelisks were erected in honor of the
Sun, termed in an inscription upon one of the latter, translated by
the Egyptian Hermapion, and to be found in Ammianus Marcellinus,
"Apollo the strong, Son of God, He who made the world, true Lord of
the diadems, who possesses Egypt and fills it with His glory."
The two most famous
divisions of the Heavens, by seven, which is that of the planets,
and by twelve, which is that of the signs, are found on the
religious monuments of all the people of the ancient world. The
twelve Great Gods of Egypt are met with everywhere. They were
adopted by the Greeks and Romans; and the latter assigned one of
them to each sign of the Zodiac. Their images were seen at Athens,
where an altar was erected to each; and they were painted on the
porticos. The People of the North had their twelve Azes, or
Senate of twelve great gods, of whom Odin was chief. The Japanese
had the same number, and like the Egyptians divided them into
classes, seven, who were the most ancient, and five, afterward
added: both of which numbers are well known and consecrated in
Masonry.
There is no more
striking proof of the universal adoration paid the stars and
constellations, than the arrangement of the Hebrew camp in the
Desert, and the allegory in regard to the twelve Tribes of Israel,
ascribed in the Hebrew legends to Jacob. The Hebrew camp was a
quadrilateral, in sixteen divisions, of which the central four were
occupied by images of the four elements. The four divisions at the
four angles of the quadrilateral exhibited the four signs that the
astrologers called fixed, and which they regard as subject to the
influence of the four great Royal Stars, Regulus in Leo, Aldebarán
in Taurus, Antares in Scorpio, and Fomalhaut in the mouth of Pisces,
on which falls the water poured out by Aquarius; of which
constellations the Scorpion was represented in the Hebrew blazonry
by the Celestial Vulture or Eagle, that rises at the same time with
it and is its paranatellon. The other signs were arranged on the
four faces of the quadrilateral, and in the parallel and interior
divisions.
There is an
astonishing coincidence between the characteristics assigned by
Jacob to his sons, and those of the signs of the Zodiac, or the
planets that have their domicile in those signs.
Reuben is
compared to running water, unstable, and that cannot excel; and he
answers to Aquarius, his ensign being a man. The water poured out by
Aquarius flows toward the South Pole, and it is the first of the
four Royal Signs, ascending from the Winter Solstice.
The Lion (Leo) is the
device of Judah; and Jacob compares him to that animal, whose
constellation in the Heavens is the domicile of the Sun; the Lion of
the Tribe of Judah; by whose grip, when that of apprentice and that
of fellow-craft,--of Aquarius at the Winter Solstice and of Cancer
at the Vernal Equinox,--had not succeeded in raising him, Khūrūm was
lifted out of the grave.
Ephraim, on
whose ensign appears the Celestial Bull, Jacob compares to the ox.
Dan, bearing as his device a Scorpion, he compares to the
Cerastes or horned Serpent, synonymous in astrological language with
the vulture or pouncing eagle; and which bird was often substituted
on the flag of Dan, in place of the venomous scorpion, on account of
the terror which that reptile inspired, as the symbol of Typhon and
his malign influences; wherefore the Eagle, as its paranatellon,
that is, rising and setting at the same time with it, was naturally
used in its stead. Hence the four famous figures in the sacred
pictures of the Jews and Christians, and in Royal Arch Masonry, of
the Lion, the Ox, the Man, and the Eagle, the four creatures of the
Apocalypse, copied there from Ezekiel, in whose reveries and
rhapsodies they are seen revolving around blazing circles.
The Ram, domicile of
Mars, chief of the Celestial Soldiery and of the twelve Signs, is
the device of Gad, whom Jacob characterizes as a warrior,
chief of his army.
Cancer, in which are
the stars termed Aselli, or little asses, is the device of
the flag of Issachar, whom Jacob compares to an ass.
Capricorn, of old
represented with the tail of a fish, and called by astronomers the
Son of Neptune, is the device of Zebulon, of whom Jacob says
that he dwells on the shore of the sea.
Sagittarius, chasing
the Celestial Wolf, is the emblem of Benjamin, whom Jacob
compares to a hunter: and in that constellation the Romans placed
the domicile of Diana the huntress. Virgo, the domicile of
Mercury, is borne on the flag of Naphtali, whose eloquence
and agility Jacob magnifies, both of which are attributes of the
Courier of the Gods. And of Simeon and Levi he speaks
as united, as are the two fishes that make the Constellation Pisces,
which is their armorial emblem.
Plato, in his
Republic, followed the divisions of the Zodiac and the planets. So
also did Lycurgus at Sparta, and Cecrops in the Athenian
Commonwealth. Chun, the Chinese legislator, divided China into
twelve Tcheou, and specially designated twelve mountains. The
Etruscans divided themselves into twelve Cantons. Romulus appointed
twelve Lictors. There were twelve tribes of Ishmael and twelve
disciples of the Hebrew Reformer. The New Jerusalem of the
Apocalypse has twelve gates.
The Souciet, a
Chinese book, speaks of a palace composed of four buildings, whose
gates looked toward the four corners of the world. That on the East
was dedicated to the new moons of the months of Spring; that on the
West to those of Autumn; that on the South to those of Summer; and
that on the North to those of Winter: and in this palace the Emperor
and his grandees sacrificed a lamb, the animal that represented the
Sun at the Vernal Equinox.
Among the Greeks, the
march of the Choruses in their theatres represented the movements of
the Heavens and the planets, and the Strophe and Anti-Strophe
imitated, Aristoxenes says, the movements of the Stars. The number
five was sacred among the Chinese, as that of the planets other than
the Sun and Moon. Astrology consecrated the numbers twelve, seven,
thirty, and three hundred and sixty; and everywhere seven,
the number of the planets, was as sacred as twelve, that of
the signs, the months, the oriental cycles, and the sections of the
horizon. We shall speak more at large hereafter, in another Degree,
as to these and other numbers, to which the ancients ascribed
mysterious powers.
The Signs of the
Zodiac and the Stars appeared on many of the ancient coins and
medals. On the public seal of the Locrians, Ozoles was Hesperus, or
the planet Venus. On the medals of Antioch on the Orontes was the
ram and crescent; and the Ram was the special Deity of Syria,
assigned to it in the division of the earth among the twelve signs.
On the Cretan coins was the Equinoctial Bull; and he also appeared
on those of the Mamertins and of Athens. Sagittarius appeared on
those of the Persians. In
India the twelve signs appeared upon the ancient coins. The Scorpion
was engraved on the medals of the Kings of Comagena, and Capricorn
on those of Zeugma, Anazorba, and other cities. On the medals of
Antoninus are found nearly all the signs of the Zodiac.
Astrology was
practised among all the ancient nations. In Egypt, the book of
Astrology was borne reverentially in the religious processions; in
which the few sacred animals were also carried, as emblems of the
equinoxes and solstices. The same science flourished among the
Chaldĉans, and over the whole of Asia and Africa. When Alexander
invaded India, the astrologers of the Oxydraces came to him to
disclose the secrets of their science of Heaven and the Stars. The
Brahmins whom Apollonius consulted, taught him the secrets of
Astronomy, with the ceremonies and prayers whereby to appease the
gods and learn the future from the stars. In China, astrology taught
the mode of governing the State and families. In Arabia it was
deemed the mother of the sciences; and old libraries are full of
Arabic books on this pretended science. It flourished at Rome.
Constantine had his horoscope drawn by the astrologer Valens. It was
a science in the middle ages, and even to this day is neither
forgotten nor unpractised. Catherine de Medici was fond of it. Louis
XIV. consulted his horoscope, and the learned Casini commenced his
career as an astrologer.
The ancient Sabĉans
established feasts in honor of each planet, on the day, for each,
when it entered its place of exaltation, or reached the
particular degree in the particular sign of the zodiac in which
astrology had fixed the place of its exaltation; that is, the place
in the Heavens where its influence was supposed to be greatest, and
where it acted on Nature with the greatest energy. The place of
exaltation of the Sun was in Aries, because, reaching that point, he
awakens all Nature, and warms into life all the germs of vegetation;
and therefore his most solemn feast among all nations, for many
years before our Era, was fixed at the time of his entrance into
that sign. In Egypt, it was called the Feast of Fire and Light. It
was the Passover, when the Paschal Lamb was slain and eaten, among
the Jews, and Neurouz among the Persians. The Romans preferred the
place of domicile to that of exaltation; and celebrated the
feasts of the planets under the signs that were their houses.
The Chaldĉans, whom, and not the Egyptians, the Sabĉans followed in
this, preferred the places of exaltation.
Saturn, from the
length of time required for his apparent revolution, was considered
the most remote, and the Moon the nearest planet. After the Moon
came Mercury and Venus, then the Sun, and then Mars, Jupiter, and
Saturn.
So the risings and
settings of the Fixed Stars, and their conjunctions with the Sun,
and their first appearance as they emerged from his rays, fixed the
epochs for the feasts instituted in their honor; and the Sacred
Calendars of the ancients were regulated accordingly.
In the Roman games of
the circus, celebrated in honor of the Sun and of entire Nature, the
Sun, Moon, Planets, Zodiac, Elements, and the most apparent parts
and potent agents of Nature were personified and represented, and
the courses of the Sun in the Heavens were imitated in the
Hippodrome; his chariot being drawn by four horses of different
colors, representing the four elements and seasons. The courses were
from East to West, like the circuits round the Lodge, and seven in
number, to correspond with the number of planets. The movements of
the Seven Stars that revolve around the pole were also represented,
as were those of Capella, which by its heliacal rising at the moment
when the Sun reached the Pleiades, in Taurus, announced the
commencement of the annual revolution of the Sun.
The intersection of
the Zodiac by the colures at the Equinoctial and Solstitial points,
fixed four periods, each of which has, by one or more nations, and
in some cases by the same nation at different periods, been taken
for the commencement of the year. Some adopted the Vernal Equinox,
because then day began to prevail over night, and light gained a
victory over darkness. Sometimes the Summer Solstice was preferred;
because then day attained its maximum of duration, and the acme of
its glory and perfection. In Egypt, another reason was, that then
the Nile began to over-flow, at the heliacal rising of Sirius. Some
preferred the Autumnal Equinox, because then the harvests were
gathered, and the hopes of a new crop were deposited in the bosom of
the earth. And some preferred the Winter Solstice, because then, the
shortest day having arrived, their length commenced to increase, and
Light began the career destined to end in victory at the Vernal
Equinox.
The Sun was
figuratively said to die and be born again at the
Winter Solstice; the games of the Circus, in honor of the invincible
God-Sun, were then celebrated, and the Roman year, established or reformed by Numa,
commenced. Many peoples of Italy commenced their year, Macrobius
says, at that time; and represented by the four ages of man the
gradual succession of periodical increase and diminution of day, and
the light of the Sun; likening him to an infant born at the Winter
Solstice, a young man at the Vernal Equinox, a robust man at the
Summer Solstice, and an old man at the Autumnal Equinox.
This idea was
borrowed from the Egyptians, who adored the Sun at the Winter
Solstice, under the figure of an infant.
The image of the Sign
in which each of the four seasons commenced, became the form under
which was figured the Sun of that particular season. The Lion's skin
was worn by Hercules; the horns of the Bull adorned the forehead of
Bacchus; and the autumnal serpent wound its long folds round the
Statue of Serapis, 2500 years before our era; when those Signs
corresponded with the commencement of the Seasons. When other
constellations replaced them at those points, by means of the
precession of the Equinoxes, those attributes were changed. Then the
Ram furnished the horns for the head of the Sun, under the name of
Jupiter Ammon. He was no longer born exposed to the waters of
Aquarius, like Bacchus, nor enclosed in an urn like the God Canopus;
but in the Stables of Augeas or the Celestial Goat. He then
completed his triumph, mounted on an ass, in the constellation
Cancer, which then occupied the Solstitial point of Summer.
Other attributes the
images of the Sun borrowed from the constellations which, by their
rising and setting, fixed the points of departure of the year, and
the commencements of its four principal divisions.
First the Bull and
afterward the Ram (called by the Persians the Lamb), was regarded as
the regenerator of Nature, through his union with the Sun. Each, in
his turn, was an emblem of the Sun overcoming the winter darkness,
and repairing the disorders of Nature, which every year was
regenerated under these Signs, after the Scorpion and Serpent of
Autumn had brought upon it barrenness, disaster, and darkness.
Mithras was represented sitting on a Bull; and that animal was an
image of Osiris: while the Greek Bacchus armed his front with its
horns, and was pictured with its tail and feet.
The Constellations
also became noteworthy to the husbandman, which by their rising or
setting, at morning or evening, indicated the coming of this
period of renewed fruitfulness and new life. Capella, or the kid
Amalthea, whose horn is called that of abundance, and whose place is
over the equinoctial point, or Taurus; and the Pleiades, that long
indicated the Seasons, and gave rise to a multitude of poetic
fables, were the most observed and most celebrated in antiquity.
The original Roman
year commenced at the Vernal Equinox. July was formerly called
Quintilis, the 5th month, and August Sextilis, the 6th,
as September is still the 7th month, October the 8th,
and so on. The Persians commenced their year at the same time, and
celebrated their great feast of Neurouz when the Sun entered Aries
and the Constellation Perseus rose,--Perseus, who first brought down
to earth the heavenly fire consecrated in their temples: and all the
ceremonies then practised reminded men of the renovation of Nature
and the triumph of Ormuzd, the Light-God, over the powers of
Darkness and Ahriman their Chief.
The Legislator of the
Jews fixed the commencement of their year in the month Nisan, at the
Vernal Equinox, at which season the Israelites marched out of Egypt
and were relieved of their long bondage; in commemoration of which
Exodus, they ate the Paschal Lamb at that Equinox. And when Bacchus
and his army had long marched in burning deserts, they were led by a
Lamb or Ram into beautiful meadows, and to the Springs that watered
the Temple of Jupiter Ammon. For, to the Arabs and Ethiopians, whose
great Divinity Bacchus was, nothing was so perfect a type of Elysium
as a Country abounding in springs and rivulets.
Orion, on the same
meridian with the Stars of Taurus, died of the sting of the
celestial Scorpion, that rises when he sets; as dies the Bull of
Mithras in Autumn: and in the Stars that correspond with the
Autumnal Equinox we find those malevolent genii that ever war
against the Principle of good, and that take from the Sun and the
Heavens the fruit-producing power that they communicate to the
earth.
With the Vernal
Equinox, dear to the sailor as to the husbandman, came the Stars
that, with the Sun, open navigation, and rule the stormy Seas. Then
the Twins plunge into the solar fires, or disappear at setting,
going down with the Sun into the bosom of the waters. And these
tutelary Divinities of mariners, the Dioscuri or Chief Cabiri of
Samothrace, sailed with Jason to possess themselves of the
golden-fleeced ram, or Aries, whose rising in the morning announced the
Sun's entry into Taurus, when the Serpent-bearer Jason rose in the
evening, and, in aspect with the Dioscuri, was deemed their brother.
And Orion, son of Neptune, and most potent controller of the
tempest-tortured ocean, announcing sometimes calm and sometimes
tempest, rose after Taurus, rejoicing in the forehead of the new
year.
The Summer Solstice
was not less an important point in the Sun's march than the Vernal
Equinox, especially to the Egyptians, to whom it not only marked the
end and term of the increasing length of the days and of the
domination of light, and the maximum of the Sun's elevation; but
also the annual recurrence of that phenomenon peculiar to Egypt, the
rising of the Nile, which, ever accompanying the Sun in his course,
seemed to rise and fall as the days grew longer and shorter, being
lowest at the Winter Solstice, and highest at that of Summer. Thus
the Sun seemed to regulate its swelling; and the time of his arrival
at the solstitial point being that of the first rising of the Nile,
was selected by the Egyptians as the beginning of a year which they
called the Year of God, and of the Sothiac Period, or the period of
Sothis, the Dog-Star, who, rising in the morning, fixed that epoch,
so important to the people of Egypt. This year was also called the
Heliac, that is the Solar year, and the Canicular year; and it
consisted of three hundred and sixty-five days, without
intercalation; so that at the end of four years, or of four times
three hundred and sixty-five days, making 1460 days, it needed to
add a day, to make four complete revolutions of the Sun. To correct
this, some Nations made every fourth year consist, as we do now, of
366 days: but the Egyptians preferred to add nothing to the year of
365 days, which, at the end of 120 years, or of 30 times 4 years,
was short 30 days or a month; that is to say, it required a month
more to complete the 120 revolutions of the Sun, though so many were
counted, that is, so many years. Of course the commencement of the
121st year would not correspond with the Summer Solstice, but would
precede it by a month: so that, when the Sun arrived at the
Solstitial point whence he at first set out, and whereto he must
needs return, to make in reality 120 years, or 120 complete
revolutions, the first month of the 121st year would have ended.
Thus, if the
commencement of the year went back 30 days every 120 years, this
commencement of the year, continuing to recede, would, at the
end of 12 times 120 years, or of 1460 years, get back to the
Solstitial point, or primitive point of departure of the period. The
Sun would then have made but 1459 revolutions, though 1460 were
counted; to make up which, a year more would need to be added. So
that the Sun would not have made his 1460 revolutions until the end
of 1461 years of 365 days each,--each revolution being in reality
not 365 days exactly, but 365ĵ.
This period of 1461
years, each of 365 days, bringing back the commencement of the Solar
year to the Solstitial point, at the rising of Sirius, after 1460
complete Solar revolutions, was called in Egypt the Sothiac
period, the point of departure whereof was the Summer Solstice,
first occupied by the Lion and afterward by Cancer, under which sign
is Sirius, which opened the period. It was, says Porphyry, at this
Solstitial New Moon, accompanied by the rising of Seth or the
Dog-Star, that the beginning of the year was fixed, and that of the
generation of all things, or, as it were, the natal hour of the
world.
Not Sirius alone
determined the period of the rising of the Nile. Aquarius, his urn,
and the stream flowing from it, in opposition to the sign of the
Summer Solstice then occupied by the Sun, opened in the evening the
march of Night, and received the full Moon in his cup. Above him and
with him rose the feet of Pegasus, struck wherewith the waters flow
forth that the Muses drink. The Lion and the Dog, indicating, were
supposed to cause the inundation, and so were worshipped. While the
Sun passed through Leo, the waters doubled their depth; and the
sacred fountains poured their streams through the heads of lions.
Hydra, rising between Sirius and Leo, extended under three signs.
Its head rose with Cancer, and its tail with the feet of the Virgin
and the beginning of Libra; and the inundation continued while the
Sun passed along its whole extent.
The successive
contest of light and darkness for the possession of the lunar disk,
each being by turns victor and vanquished, exactly resembled what
passed upon the earth by the action of the Sun and his journeys from
one Solstice to the other. The lunary revolution presented the same
periods of light and darkness as the year, and was the object of the
sane religious fictions. Above the Moon, Pliny said, everything is
pure, and filled with eternal light. There ends the cone of shadow
which the earth projects, and which produces night; there ends the
sojourn of night and darkness; to it the
air extends; but there we enter the pure substance.
The Egyptians
assigned to the Moon the demiurgic or creative force of Osiris, who
united himself to her in the spring, when the Sun communicated to
her the principles of generation which she afterward disseminated in
the air and all the elements. The Persians considered the Moon to
have been impregnated by the Celestial Bull, first of the signs of
spring. In all ages, the Moon has been supposed to have great
influence upon vegetation, and the birth and growth of animals; and
the belief is as widely entertained now as ever, and that influence
regarded as a mysterious and inexplicable one. Not the astrologers
alone, but Naturalists like Pliny, Philosophers like Plutarch and
Cicero, Theologians like the Egyptian Priests, and Metaphysicians
like Proclus, believed firmly in these lunar influences.
"The Egyptians," says
Diodorus Siculus, "acknowledged two great gods, the Sun and Moon, or
Osiris and Isis, who govern the world and regulate its
administration by the dispensation of the seasons. . . . Such is the
nature of these two great Divinities, that they impress an active
and fecundating force, by which the generation of beings in
effected; the Sun, by heat and that spiritual principle that forms
the breath of the winds; the Moon by humidity and dryness; and both
by the forces of the air which they share in common. By this
beneficial influence everything is born, grows, and vegetates.
Wherefore this whole huge body, in which nature resides, is
maintained by the combined action of the Sun and Moon, and their
five qualities, the principles spiritual, fiery, dry, humid, and
airy."
So five primitive
powers, elements, or elementary qualities, are united with the Sun
and Moon in the Indian theology: air, spirit, fire, water, and
earth: and the same five elements are recognized by the Chinese. The
Phnicians, like the Egyptians, regarded the Sun and Moon and Stars
as sole causes of generation and destruction here below.
The Moon, like the
Sun, changed continually the track in which she crossed the Heavens,
moving ever to and fro between the upper and lower limits of the
Zodiac; and her different places, phases, and aspects there, and her
relations with the Sun and the constellations, have been a fruitful
source of mythological fables.
All the planets had
what astrology termed their houses, in the Zodiac. The House of the Sun was in Leo, and that of the Moon
in Cancer. Each other planet had two signs; Mercury had Gemini and
Virgo; Venus, Taurus and Libra; Mars, Aries and Scorpio; Jupiter,
Pisces and Sagittarius; and Saturn, Aquarius and Capricornus. From
this distribution of the signs also came many mythological emblems
and fables; as also many came from the places of exaltation of the
planets. Diana of Ephesus, the Moon, wore the image of a crab on her
bosom, because in that sign was the Moon's domicile; and lions bore
up the throne of Horns, the Egyptian Apollo, the Sun personified,
for a like reason: while the Egyptians consecrated the tauriform
scarabĉus to the Moon, because she had her place of exaltation in
Taurus; and for the same reason Mercury is said to have presented
Isis with a helmet like a bull's head.
A further division of
the Zodiac was of each sign into three parts of 10° each, called
Decans, or, in the whole Zodiac, 36 parts, among which the seven
planets were apportioned anew, each planet having an equal number of
Decans, except the first, which, opening and closing the series of
planets five times repeated, necessarily had one Decan more than the
others. This subdivision was not invented until after Aries opened
the Vernal Equinox; and accordingly Mars, having his house in Aries,
opens the series of decans and closes it; the planets following each
other, five times in succession, in the following order, Mars, the
Sun, Venus, Mercury, the Moon, Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, etc.; so that
to each sign are assigned three planets, each occupying 10 degrees.
To each Decan a God or Genius was assigned, making thirty-six in
all, one of whom, the Chaldĉans said, came down upon earth every ten
days, remained so many days, and re-ascended to Heaven. This
division is found on the Indian sphere, the Persian, and that
Barbaric one which Aben Ezra describes. Each genius of the Decans
had a name and special characteristics. They concur and aid in the
effects produced by the Sun, Moon, and other planets charged with
the administration of the world: and the doctrine in regard to them,
secret and august as it was held, was considered of the gravest
importance; and its principles, Firmicus says, were not entrusted by
the ancients, inspired as they were by the Deity, to any but the
Initiates, and to them only with great reserve, and a kind of fear,
and when cautiously enveloped with an obscure veil, that they might
not come to be known by the profane.
With these Decans
were connected the paranatellons or those stars outside
of the Zodiac, that rise and set at the same moment with the several
divisions of 10° of each sign. As there were anciently only
forty-eight celestial figures or constellations, of which twelve
were in the Zodiac, it follows that there were, outside of the
Zodiac, thirty-six other asterisms, paranatellons of the several
thirty-six Decans. For example, as when Capricorn set, Sirius and
Procyon, or Canis Major and Canis Minor, rose, they were the
Paranatellons of Capricorn, though at a great distance from it in
the heavens. The rising of Cancer was known from the setting of
Corona Borealis and the rising of the Great and Little Dog, its
three paranatellons.
The risings and
settings of the Stars are always spoken of as connected with the
Sun. In that connection there are three kinds of them, cosmical,
achronical, and heliacal, important to be distinguished by all who
would understand this ancient learning.
When any Star rises
or sets with the same degree of the same sign of the Zodiac that the
Sun occupies at the time, it rises and sets simultaneously with the
Sun, and this is termed rising or setting cosmically; but a
star that so rises and sets can never be seen, on account of the
light that precedes, and is left behind by the Sun. It is therefore
necessary, in order to know his place in the Zodiac, to observe
stars that rise just before or set just after him.
A Star that is in the
East when night commences, and in the West when it ends, is said to
rise and set achronically. A Star so rising or setting was in
opposition to the Sun, rising at the end of evening twilight,
and setting at the beginning of morning twilight, and this happened
to each Star but once a year, because the Sun moves from West to
East, with reference to the Stars, one degree a day.
When a Star rises as
night ends in the morning, or sets as night commences in the
evening, it is said to rise or set heliacally, because the
Sun (Helios) seems to touch it with his luminous atmosphere.
A Star thus reappears after a disappearance, often, of several
months, and thenceforward it rises an hour earlier each day,
gradually emerging from the Sun's rays, until at the end of three
months it precedes the Sun six hours, and rises at midnight. A Star
sets heliacally, when no longer remaining visible above the western
horizon after sunset, the day arrives when they cease to be seen setting in
the West. They so remain invisible, until the Sun passes so far to
the Eastward as not to eclipse them with his light; and then they
reappear, but in the East, about an hour and a half before sunrise:
and this is their heliacal rising. In this interval, the
cosmical rising and setting take place.
Besides the relations
of the constellations and their paranatellons with the houses and
places of exaltation of the Planets, and with their places in the
respective Signs and Decans, the Stars were supposed to produce
different effects according as they rose or set, and according as
they did so either cosmically, achronically, or heliacally; and also
according to the different seasons of the year in which 'these
phenomena occurred; and these differences were carefully marked on
the old Calendars; and many things in the ancient allegories are
referable to them.
Another and most
important division of the Stars was into good and bad, beneficent
and malevolent. With the Persians, the former, of the Zodiacal
Constellations, were from Aries to Virgo, inclusive; and the latter
from Libra to Pisces, inclusive. Hence the good Angels and Genii,
and the bad Angels, Devs, Evil Genii, Devils, Fallen Angels, Titans,
and Giants of the Mythology. The other thirty-six Constellations
were equally divided, eighteen on each side, or, with those of the
Zodiac, twenty-four.
Thus the symbolic
Egg, that issued from the mouth of the invisible Egyptian God KNEPH;
known in the Grecian Mysteries as the Orphic Egg; from which issued
the God CHUMONG of the Coresians, and the Egyptian OSIRIS, and
PHANES, God and Principle of Light; from which, broken by the Sacred
Bull of the Japanese, the world emerged; and which the Greeks placed
at the feet of BACCHUS TAURI-CORNUS; the Magian Egg of ORMUZD, from
which came the Amshaspands and Devs; was divided into two halves,
and equally apportioned between the Good and Evil Constellations and
Angels. Those of Spring, as for example Aries and Taurus, Auriga and
Capella, were the beneficent stars; and those of Autumn, as the
Balance, Scorpio, the Serpent of Ophiucus, and the Dragon of the
Hesperides, were types and subjects of the Evil Principle, and
regarded as malevolent causes of the ill effects experienced in
Autumn and Winter. Thus are explained the mysteries of the
journeyings of the human soul through the spheres, when it descends
to the earth by the Sign of the Serpent, and returns to the Empire
of light by that of the Lamb or Bull.
The creative action
of Heaven was manifested, and all its demiurgic energy developed,
most of all at the Vernal Equinox, to which refer all the fables
that typify the victory of Light over Darkness, by the triumphs of
Jupiter, Osiris, Ormuzd, and Apollo. Always the triumphant god takes
the form of the Bull, the Ram, or the Lamb. Then Jupiter wrests from
Typhon his thunderbolts, of which that malignant Deity had possessed
himself during the Winter. Then the God of Light overwhelms his foe,
pictured as a huge Serpent. Then Winter ends; the Sun, seated on the
Bull and accompanied by Orion, blazes in the Heavens. All nature
rejoices at the victory; and Order and Harmony are everywhere
re-established, in place of the dire confusion that reigned while
gloomy Typhon domineered, and Ahriman prevailed against Ormuzd.
The universal Soul of
the World, motive power of Heaven and of the Spheres, it was held,
exercises its creative energy chiefly through the medium of the Sun,
during his revolution along the signs of the Zodiac, with which
signs unite the paranatellons that modify their influence, and
concur in furnishing the symbolic attributes of the Great Luminary
that regulates Nature and is the depository of her greatest powers.
The action of this Universal Soul of the World is displayed in the
movements of the Spheres, and above all in that of the Sun, in the
successions of the risings and settings of the Stars, and in their
periodical returns. By these are explainable all the metamorphoses
of that Soul, personified as Jupiter, as Bacchus, as Vishnu, or as
Buddha, and all the various attributes ascribed to it; and also the
worship of those animals that were consecrated in the ancient
Temples, representatives on earth of the Celestial Signs, and
supposed to receive by transmission from them the rays and
emanations which in them flow from the Universal Soul.
All the old Adorers
of Nature, the Theologians, Astrologers. and Poets, as well as the
most distinguished Philosophers, supposed that the Stars were so
many animated and intelligent beings, or eternal bodies, active
causes of effect here below, animated by a living principle, and
directed by an intelligence that was itself but an emanation from
and a part of the life and universal intelligence of the world: and
we find in the hierarchical order and distribution of their eternal
and divine Intelligences, known by the names of Gods, Angels, and
Genii, the same distributions and the same divisions as
those by which the ancients divided the visible Universe and
distributed its parts. And the famous divisions by seven and by
twelve, appertaining to the planets and the signs of the zodiac, is
everywhere found in the hierarchical order of the Gods, and Angels,
and the other Ministers that are the depositaries of that Divine
Force which moves and rules the world.
These, and the other
Intelligences assigned to the other Stars, have absolute dominion
over all parts of Nature; over the elements, the animal and
vegetable kingdoms, over man and all his actions, over his virtues
and vices, and over good and evil, which divide between them his
life. The passions of his soul and the maladies of his body,--these
and the entire man are dependent on the heavens and the genii that
there inhabit, who preside at his birth, control his fortunes during
life, and receive his soul or active and intelligent part when it is
to be re-united to the pure life of the lofty Stars. And all through
the great body of the world are disseminated portions of the
universal Soul, impressing movement on everything that seems to move
of itself, giving life to the plants and trees, directing by a
regular and settled plan the organization and development of their
germs, imparting constant mobility to the running waters and
maintaining their eternal motion, impelling the winds and changing
their direction or stilling them, calming and arousing the ocean,
unchaining the storms, pouring out the fires of volcanoes, or with
earthquakes shaking the roots of huge mountains and the foundations
of vast continents; by means of a force that, belonging to Nature,
is a mystery to man.
And these invisible
Intelligences, like the stars, are marshalled in two great
divisions, under the banners of the two Principles of Good and Evil,
Light and Darkness; under Ormuzd and Ahriman, Osiris and Typhon. The
Evil Principle was the motive power of brute matter; and it,
personified as Ahriman and Typhon, had its hosts and armies of Devs
and Genii, Fallen Angels and Malevolent Spirits, who waged continual
wage with the Good Principle, the Principle of Empyreal Light and
Splendor, Osiris, Ormuzd, Jupiter or Dionusos, with 'his bright
hosts of Amshaspands, Izeds, Angels, and Archangels; a warfare that
goes on from birth until death, in the soul of every man that lives.
We have heretofore,
in the 24th Degree, recited the principal incidents in the legend of
Osiris and Isis, and it remains but to point out the astronomical
phenomena which it has converted into mythological facts.
The Sun, at the
Vernal Equinox, was the fruit-compelling star that by his warmth
provoked generation and poured upon the sublunary world all the
blessings of Heaven; the beneficent god, tutelary genius of
universal vegetation, that communicates to the dull earth new
activity, and stirs her great heart, long chilled by Winter and his
frosts, until from her bosom burst all the greenness and perfume of
spring, making her rejoice in leafy forests and grassy lawns and
flower-enamelled meadows, and the promise of abundant crops of grain
and fruits and purple grapes in their due season.
He was then called
Osiris, Husband of Isis, God of Cultivation and Benefactor of Men,
pouring on them and on the earth the choicest blessings within the
gift of the Divinity. Opposed to him was Typhon, his antagonist in
the Egyptian mythology, as Ahriman was the foe of Ormuzd, the Good
Principle, in the theology of the Persians.
The first inhabitants
of Egypt and Ethiopia, as Diodorus Siculus informs us, saw in the
Heavens two first eternal causes of things, or great Divinities, one
the Sun, whom they called Osiris, and the other the Moon, whom they
called Isis; and these they considered the causes of all the
generations of earth. This idea, we learn from Eusebius, was the
same as that of the Phnicians. On these two great Divinities the
administration of the world depended. All sublunary bodies received
from them their nourishment and increase, during the annual
revolution which they controlled, and the different seasons into
which it was divided.
To Osiris and Isis,
it was held, were owing civilization, the discovery of agriculture,
laws, arts of all kinds, religious worship, temples, the invention
of letters, astronomy, the gymnastic arts, and music; and thus they
were the universal benefactors. Osiris travelled to civilize the
countries which he passed through, and communicate to them his
valuable discoveries. He built cities, and taught men to cultivate
the earth. Wheat and wine were his first presents to men. Europe,
Asia, and Africa partook of the blessings which he communicated, and
the most remote regions of India remembered him, and claimed him as
one of their great gods.
You have learned how
Typhon, his brother, slew him. His body was cut into pieces, all of
which were collected by Isis, except his organs of generation,
which had been thrown into and devoured in the waters of the river
that every year fertilized Egypt. The other portions were buried by
Isis, and over them she erected a tomb. Thereafter she remained
single, loading her subjects with blessings. She cured the sick,
restored sight to the blind, made the paralytic whole, and even
raised the dead. From her Horus or Apollo learned divination and the
science of medicine.
Thus the Egyptians
pictured the beneficent action of the two luminaries that, from the
bosom of the elements, produced all animals and men, and all bodies
that are born, grow, and die in the eternal circle of generation and
destruction here below.
When the Celestial
Bull opened the new year at the Vernal Equinox, Osiris, united with
the Moon, communicated to her the seeds of fruitfulness which she
poured upon the air, and therewith impregnated the generative
principles which gave activity to universal vegetation. Apis,
represented by a bull, was the living and sensible image of the Sun
or Osiris, when in union with Isis or the Moon at the Vernal
Equinox, concurring with her in provoking everything that lives to
generation. This conjunction of the Sun with the Moon at the Vernal
Equinox, in the constellation Taurus, required the Bull Apis to have
on his shoulder a mark resembling the Crescent Moon. And the
fecundating influence of these two luminaries was expressed by
images that would now be deemed gross and indecent, but which then
were not misunderstood.
Everything good in
Nature comes from Osiris,--order, harmony, and the favorable
temperature of the seasons and celestial periods. From Typhon come
the stormy passions and irregular impulses that agitate the brute
and material part of man; maladies of the body, and violent shocks
that injure the health and derange the system; inclement weather,
derangement of the seasons, and eclipses. Osiris and Typhon were the
Ormuzd and Ahriman of the Persians; principles of good and evil, of
light and darkness, ever at war in the administration of the
Universe.
Osiris was the image
of generative power. This was expressed by his symbolic statues, and
by the sign into which he entered at the Vernal Equinox. He
especially dispensed the humid principle of Nature, generative
element of all things; and the Nile and all moisture were regarded
as emanations from him, without which there could be no vegetation.
That Osiris and Isis
were the Sun and Moon, is attested by many ancient writers;
by Diogenes Laertius, Plutarch, Lucian, Suidas, Macrobius, Martianus
Capella, and others. His power was symbolized by an Eye over a
Sceptre. The Sun was termed by the Greeks the Eye of Jupiter, and
the Eye of the World; and his is the All-Seeing Eye in our Lodges.
The oracle of Claros styled him King of the Stars and of the Eternal
Fire, that en-genders the year and the seasons, dispenses rain and
winds, and brings about daybreak and night. And Osiris was invoked
as the God that resides in the Sun and is enveloped by his rays, the
invisible and eternal force that modifies the sublunary world by
means of the Sun.
Osiris was the same
God known as Bacchus, Dionusos, and Serapis. Serapis is the author
of the regularity and harmony of the world. Bacchus, jointly with
Ceres (identified by Herodotus with Isis) presides over the
distribution of all our blessings; and from the two emanates
everything beautiful and good in Nature. One furnishes the germ and
principle of every good; the other receives and preserves it as a
deposit; and the latter is the function of the Moon in the theology
of the Persians. In each theology, Persian and Egyptian, the Moon
acts directly on the earth; but she is fecundated, in one by the
Celestial Bull and in the other by Osiris, with whom she is united
at the Vernal Equinox, in the sign Taurus, the place of her
exaltation or greatest influence on the earth. The force of Osiris,
says Plutarch, is exercised through the Moon. She is the passive
cause relatively to him, and the active cause relatively to the
earth, to which she transmits the germs of fruitfulness received
from him.
In Egypt the earliest
movement in the waters of the Nile began to appear at the Vernal
Equinox, when the new Moon occurred at the entrance of the Sun into
the constellation Taurus; and thus the Nile was held to receive its
fertilizing power from the combined action of the equinoctial Sun
and the new Moon, meeting in Taurus. Osiris was often confounded
with the Nile, and Isis with the earth; and Osiris was deemed to act
on the earth, and to transmit to it his emanations, through both the
Moon and the Nile; whence the fable that his generative organs were
thrown into that river. Typhon, on the other hand, was the principle
of aridity and barrenness; and by his mutilation of Osiris was meant
that drought which caused the Nile to retire within his bed and
shrink up in Autumn.
Elsewhere than in
Egypt, Osiris was the symbol of the refreshing rains that descend to
fertilize the earth; and Typhon the burning winds of Autumn; the
stormy rains that rot the flowers, the plants, and leaves; the
short, cold days; and everything injurious in Nature, and that
produces corruption and destruction.
In short, Typhon is
the principle of corruption, of darkness, of the lower world from
which come earthquakes, tumultuous corn-motions of the air, burning
heat, lightning, and fiery meteors, and plague and pestilence. Such
too was the Ahriman of the Persians; and this revolt of the Evil
Principle against the Principle of Good and Light, has been
represented in every cosmogony, under many varying forms. Osiris, on
the contrary, by the intermediation of Isis, fills the material
world with happiness, purity, and order, by which the harmony of
Nature is maintained. It was said that he died at the Autumnal
Equinox, when Taurus or the Pleiades rose in the evening, and that
he rose to life again in the Spring, when vegetation was inspired
with new activity.
Of course the two
signs of Taurus and Scorpio will figure most largely in the
mythological history of Osiris, for they marked the two equinoxes,
2500 years before our Era; and next to them the other
constellations, near the equinoxes, that fixed the limits of the
duration of the fertilizing action of the Sun; and it is also to be
remarked that Venus, the Goddess of Generation, has her domicile in
Taurus, as the Moon has there her place of exaltation.
When the Sun was in
Scorpio, Osiris lost his life, and that fruitfulness which, under
the form of the Bull, he had communicated, through the Moon, to the
Earth. Typhon, his hands and feet horrid with serpents, and whose
habitat in the Egyptian planisphere was under Scorpio, confined him
in a chest and flung him into the Nile, under the 17th degree of
Scorpio. Under that sign he lost his life and virility; and he
recovered them in the Spring, when he had connection with the Moon.
When he entered Scorpio, his light diminished, Night reassumed her
dominion, the Nile shrunk within its banks, and the earth lost her
verdure and the trees their leaves. Therefore it is that on the
Mithriac Monuments, the Scorpion bites the testicles of the
Equinoctial Bull, on which sits Mithras, the Sun of Spring and God
of Generation; and that, on the same monuments, we see two trees,
one covered with young leaves, and at its foot a little bull and a
torch burning; and the other loaded with
fruit, and at its foot a Scorpion, and a torch reversed and
extinguished.
Ormuzd or Osiris, the
beneficent Principle that gives the world light, was personified by
the Sun, apparent source of light. Darkness, personified by Typhon
or Ahriman, was his natural enemy. The Sages of Egypt described the
necessary and eternal rivalry or opposition of these principles,
ever pursuing one the other, and one dethroning the other in every
annual revolution, and at a particular period, one in the Spring
under the Bull, and the other in Autumn under the Scorpion, by the
legendary history of Osiris and Typhon, detailed to us by Diodorus
and Synesius; in which history were also personified the Stars and
constellations Orion, Capella, the Twins, the Wolf, Sirius, and
Hercules, whose risings and settings noted the advent of one or the
other equinox.
Plutarch gives us the
positions in the Heavens of the Sun and Moon, at the moment when
Osiris was murdered by Typhon. The Sun, he says, was in the Sign of
the Scorpion, which he then entered at the Autumnal Equinox. The
Moon was full, the adds; and consequently, as it rose at sunset, it
occupied Taurus, which, opposite to Scorpio, rose as it and the Sun
sank together, so that she was then found alone in the sign Taurus,
where, six months before, she had been in union or conjunction with
Osiris, the Sun, receiving from him those germs of universal
fertilization which he communicated to her. It was the sign through
which Osiris first ascended into his empire of light and good. It
rose with the Sun on the day of the Vernal Equinox; it remained six
months in the luminous hemisphere, ever preceding the Sun and above
the horizon during the day; until in Autumn, the Sun arriving at
Scorpio, Taurus was in complete opposition with him, rose when he
set, and completed its entire course above the horizon during the
night; presiding, by rising in the evening, over the commencement of
the long nights. Hence in the sad ceremonies commemorating the death
of Osiris, there was borne in procession a golden bull covered with
black crape, image of the darkness into which the familiar sign of
Osiris was entering, and which was to spread over the Northern
regions, while the Sun, prolonging the nights, was to be absent, and
each to remain under the dominion of Typhon, Principle of Evil and
Darkness.
Setting out from the
sign Taurus, Isis, as the Moon, went seeking for Osiris through all
the superior signs, in each of which she became full in the
successive months from the Autumnal to the Vernal Equinox, without
finding him in either. Let us follow her in her allegorical
wanderings.
Osiris was slain by
Typhon his rival, with whom conspired a Queen of Ethiopia, by whom,
says Plutarch, were designated the winds. The paranatellons of
Scorpio, the sign occupied by the Sun when Osiris was slain, were
the Serpents, reptiles which sup-plied the attributes of the Evil
Genii and of Typhon, who himself bore the form of a serpent in the
Egyptian planisphere. And in the division of Scorpio is also found
Cassiopeia, Queen of Ethiopia, whose setting brings stormy winds.
Osiris descended to
the shades or infernal regions. There he took the name of Serapis,
identical with Pluto, and assumed his nature. He was then in
conjunction with Serpentarius, identical with Ĉsculapius, whose form
he took in his passage to the lower signs, where he takes the names
of Pluto and Ades.
Then Isis wept for
the death of Osiris, and the golden bull covered with crape was
carried in procession. Nature mourned the impending loss of her
Summer glories, and the advent of the empire of night, the
withdrawing of the waters, made fruitful by the Bull in Spring, the
cessation of the winds that brought rains to swell the Nile, the
shortening of the days, and the despoiling of the earth. Then
Taurus, directly opposite the Sun, entered into the cone of shadow
which the earth projects, by which the Moon is eclipsed at full, and
with which, making night, the Bull rises and descends as if covered
with a veil, while he remains above our horizon.
The body of Osiris,
enclosed in a chest or coffin, was cast into the Nile. Pan and the
Satyrs, near Chemmis, first discovered his death, announced it by
their cries, and everywhere created sorrow and alarm. Taurus, with
the full Moon, then entered into the cone of shadow, and under him
was the Celestial River, most properly called the Nile, and below,
Perseus, the God of Chemmis, and Auriga, leading a she-goat, himself
identical with Pan, whose wife Aiga the she-goat was styled.
Then Isis went in
search of the body. She first met certain children who had seen it,
received from them their information, and gave them in return the
gift of divination. The second full Moon occurred in Gemini, the
Twins, who presided over the oracles of Didymus, and one of whom was
Apollo, the God of Divination.
She learned that
Osiris had, through mistake, had connection with her sister Nephte,
which she discovered by a crown of leaves of the melilot, which he
had left behind him. Of this connection a child was born, whom Isis,
aided by her dogs, sought for, found, reared, and attached to
herself, by the name of Anubis, her faithful guardian. The third
full Moon occurs in Cancer, domicile of the Moon. The paranatellons
of that sign are, the crown of Ariadne or Proserpine, made of leaves
of the melilot, Procyon and Canis Major, one star of which was
called the Star of Isis, while Sirius himself was honored in Egypt
under the name of Anubis.
Isis repaired to
Byblos, and seated herself near a fountain, where she was found by
the women of the Court of a King. She was induced to visit his
Court, and became the nurse of his son. The fourth full Moon was in
Leo, domicile of the Sun, or of Adonis, King of Byblos. The
paranatellons of this sign are the flowing water of Aquarius, and
Cepheus, King of Ethiopia, called Regulus, or simply The King.
Behind him rise Cassiopeia his wife, Queen of Ethiopia, Andromeda
his daughter, and Perseus his son-in-law, all paranatellons in part
of this sign, and in part of Virgo.
Isis suckled the
child, not at her breast, but with the end of her finger, at night.
She burned all the mortal parts of its body, and then, taking the
shape of a swallow, she flew to the great column of the palace, made
of the tamarisk-tree that grew up round the coffin containing the
body of Osiris, and within which it was still enclosed. The fifth
full Moon occurred in Virgo, the true image of Isis, and which
Eratosthenes calls by that name. It pictured a woman suckling an
infant, the son of Isis, born near the Winter Solstice. This sign
has for paranatellons the mast of the Celestial Ship, and the
swallow-tailed fish or swallow above it, and a portion of Perseus,
son-in-law of the King of Ethiopia.
Isis, having
recovered the sacred coffer, sailed from Byblos in a vessel with the
eldest son of the King, toward Boutos, where Anubis was, having
charge of her son Horus; and in the morning dried up a river, whence
arose a strong wind. Landing, she hid the coffer in a forest.
Typhon, hunting a wild boar by moonlight, discovered it, recognized
the body of his rival, and cut it into fourteen pieces, the number
of days between the full and new Moon, and in every one of which
days the Moon loses a portion of the light that at the commencement
filled her whole disk. The sixth full Moon occurred in Libra, over
the divisions separating which from Virgo are the
Celestial Ship, Perseus, son of the King of Ethiopia and Boötes,
said to have nursed Horus. The river of Orion that sets in the
morning is also a paranatellon of Libra, as are Ursa Major, the
Great Bear or Wild Boar of Erymanthus, and the Dragon of the North
Pole, or the celebrated Python from which the attributes of Typhon
were borrowed. All these surround the full Moon of Libra, last of
the Superior Signs, and the one that precedes the new Moon of
Spring, about to be reproduced in Taurus, and there be once more in
conjunction with the Sun.
Isis collects the
scattered fragments of the body of Osiris, buries them, and
consecrates the phallus, carried in pomp at the Pamylia, or
feasts of the Vernal Equinox, at which time the congress of Osiris
and the Moon was celebrated. Then Osiris had returned from the
shades, to aid Horus his son and Isis his wife against the forces of
Typhon. He thus reappeared, say some, under the form of a wolf, or,
others say, under that of a horse. The Moon, fourteen days after she
is full in Libra, arrives at Taurus and unites herself to the Sun,
whose fires she thereafter for fourteen days continues to accumulate
on her disk from new Moon to full. Then she unites with herself all
the months in that superior portion of the world where light always
reigns, with harmony and order, and she borrows from him the force
which is to destroy the germs of evil that Typhon had, during the
winter, planted everywhere in nature. This passage of the Sun into
Taurus, whose attributes he assumes on his return from the lower
hemisphere or the shades, is marked by the rising in the evening of
the Wolf and the Centaur, and by the heliacal setting of Orion,
called the Star of Horns, and which thenceforward is in conjunction
with the Sun of Spring, in his triumph over the darkness or Typhon.
Isis, during the
absence of Osiris, and after she had hidden the coffer in the place
where Typhon found it, had rejoined that malignant enemy; indignant
at which, Horns her son deprived her of her ancient diadem, when she
rejoined Osiris as he was about to attack Typhon: but Mercury gave
her in its place a helmet shaped like the head of a bull. Then
Horus, as a mighty warrior, such as Orion was described, fought with
and defeated Typhon; who, in the shape of the Serpent or Dragon of
the Pole, had assailed his father. So, in Ovid, Apollo destroys the
same Python, when Io, fascinated by Jupiter, is metamorphosed into a
cow, and placed in the sign of the Celestial Bull, where she becomes
Isis. The equinoctial year ends at the
moment when the Sun and Moon, at the Vernal Equinox, are united with
Orion, the Star of Horus, placed in the Heavens under Taurus. The
new Moon becomes young again in Taurus, and shows herself as a
crescent, for the first time, in the next sign, Gemini, the domicile
of Mercury. Then Orion, in conjunction with the Sun, with whom he
rises, precipitates the Scorpion, his rival, into the shades of
night, causing him to set whenever he himself reappears on the
eastern horizon, with the Sun. Day lengthens and the germs of evil
are by degrees eradicated: and Horus (from Aur, Light) reigns
triumphant, symbolizing, by his succession to the characteristics of
Osiris, the eternal renewal of the Sun's youth and creative vigor at
the Vernal Equinox.
Such are the
coincidences of astronomical phenomena with the legend of Osiris and
Isis; sufficing to show the origin of the legend, overloaded as it
became at length with all the ornamentation natural to the poetical
and figurative genius of the Orient.
Not only into this
legend, but into those of all the ancient nations, enter the Bull,
the Lamb, the Lion, and the Scorpion or the Serpent; and traces of
the worship of the Sun yet linger in all religions. Everywhere, even
in our Order, survive the equinoctial and solstitial feasts. Our
ceilings still glitter with the greater and lesser luminaries of the
Heavens, and our lights, in their number and arrangement, have
astronomical references. In all churches and chapels, as in all
Pagan temples and pagodas, the altar is in the East; and the ivy
over the east windows of old churches is the Hedera Helix of
Bacchus. Even the cross had an astronomical origin; and our Lodges
are full of the ancient symbols.
The learned author of
the Sabĉan Researches, Landseer, advances another theory in regard
to the legend of Osiris; in which he makes the constellation Boötes
play a leading part. He observes that, as none of the stars were
visible at the same time with the Sun, his actual place in the
Zodiac, at any given time, could only be ascertained by the Sabĉan
astronomers by their observations of the stars, and of their
heliacal and achronical risings and settings. There were many solar
festivals among the Sabĉans, and part of them agricultural ones; and
the concomitant signs of those festivals were the risings and
settings of the stars of the Husbandman, Bear-driver, or Hunter,
BOÖTES. His stars were, among the
Hierophants, the established nocturnal indices or signs of the Sun's
place in the ecliptic at different seasons of the year, and the
festivals were named, one, that of the Aphanism or
disappearance; another, that of the Zetesis, or search, etc.,
of Osiris or Adonis, that is, of Boötes.
The returns of
certain stars, as connected with their concomitant seasons of spring
(or seed-time) and harvest, seemed to the ancients, who had not yet
discovered that gradual change, resulting from the apparent movement
of the stars in longitude, which has been termed the precession of
the equinoxes, to be eternal and immutable; and those periodical
returns were to the initiated, even more than to the vulgar,
celestial oracles, announcing the approach of those important
changes, upon which the prosperity, and even the very existence of
man must ever depend; and the oldest of the Sabĉan constellations
seem to have been, an astronomical Priest, a King, a
Queen, a Husbandman, and a Warrior; and these
more frequently recur on the Sabĉan cylinders than any other
constellations whatever. The King was Cepheus or
Chepheus of Ethiopia: the Husbandman, Osiris,
Bacchus, Sabazeus, Noah or Boötes. To the
latter sign, the Egyptians were nationally, traditionally and
habitually grateful; for they conceived that from Osiris all the
greatest of terrestrial enjoyments were derived. The stars of the
Husbandman were the signal for those successive agricultural labors
on which the annual produce of the soil depended; and they came in
consequence to be considered and hailed, in Egypt and Ethiopia, as
the genial stars of terrestrial productiveness; to which the
oblations, prayers, and vows of the pious Sabĉan were regularly
offered up.
Landseer says that
the stars in Boötes, reckoning down to those of the 5th magnitude
inclusive, are twenty-six, which, seeming achronically to
disappear in succession, produced the fable of the cutting of Osiris
into twenty-six pieces by Typhon. There are more stars than this in
the constellation; but no more that the ancient votaries of Osiris,
even in the clear atmosphere of the Sabĉan climates, could observe
without telescopes.
Plutarch says Osiris
was cut into fourteen pieces: Diodorus, into twenty-six;
in regard to which, and to the whole legend, Landseer's ideas,
varying from those commonly entertained, are as follows:
Typhon, Landseer
thinks, was the ocean, which the ancients fabled or believed
surrounded the Earth, and into which all the stars in their turn
appear successively to sink; [perhaps it was DARKNESS personified,
which the ancients called TYPHON. He was hunting by moonlight, says
the old legend, when he met with Osiris].
The ancient Saba must
have been near latitude 15° north. Axoum is nearly in 14°, and the
Western Saba or Meroe is to the north of that. Forty-eight centuries
ago, Aldebarán, the leading star of the year, had, at the Vernal
Equinox, attained at daylight in the morning, an elevation of about
14 degrees, sufficient for him to have ceased to be combust,
that is, to have emerged from the Sun's rays, so as to be visible.
The ancients allowed twelve days for a star of the first
magnitude to emerge from the solar rays; and there is less twilight,
the further South we go.
At the same period,
too, Cynosura was not the pole-star, but Alpha Draconis was; and the
stars rose and set with very different degrees of obliquity from
those of their present risings and settings. By having a globe
constructed with circumvolving poles, capable of any adjustment with
regard to the colures, Mr. Landseer ascertained that, at that remote
period, in lat. 15° north, the 26 stars in Boötes, or 27, including
Arcturus, did not set anchronically in succession; but several set
simultaneously in couples, and six by threes simultaneously; so
that, in all, there were but fourteen separate settings or
disappearances, corresponding with the fourteen pieces into
which Osiris was cut, according to Plutarch. Kappa, Iota, and Theta,
in the uplifted western hand, disappeared together, and last of all.
They really skirted the horizon; but were invisible in that low
latitude, for the three or four days mentioned in some of the
versions; while the Zetesis or search was proceeding, and the
women of Phnicia and Jerusalem sat weeping for the Wonder, Thammuz;
after which they immediately reappeared, below and to the eastward
of α Draconis.
And, on the very
morning after the achronical departure of the last star of the
Husbandman, Aldebarán rose heliacally, and became visible in the
East in the morning before day.
And precisely at the
moment of the heliacal rising of Arcturus, also rose Spica Virginis.
One is near the middle of the Husbandman, and the other near that of
the Virgin; and Arcturus may have been the part of Osiris which Isis
did not recover with the other pieces of the body.
At Dedan and Saba it
was thirty-six days, from the beginning of the aphanism,
i.e., the disappearances of these stars, to the heliacal
rising of Aldebarán. During these days, or forty at Medina, or a few
more at Babylon and Byblos, the stars of the Husbandman successively
sank out of sight, during the crepusculum or short-lived
morning twilight of those Southern climes. They disappear during the
glancings of the dawn, the special season of ancient sidereal
observation.
Thus the forty days
of mourning for Osiris were measured out by the period of the
departure of his Stars. When the last had sunken out of sight, the
vernal season was ushered in; and the Sun arose with the splendid
Aldebarán, the Tauric leader of the Hosts of Heaven; and the whole
East rejoiced and kept holiday.
With the exception of
the Stars χ, ι and δ, Boötes did not begin to reappear in the
Eastern quarter of the Heavens till after the lapse of about four
months. Then the Stars of Taurus had declined Westward, and Virgo
was rising heliacally. In that latitude, also, the Stars of Ursa
Major [termed anciently the Ark of Osiris] set; and Benetnasch, the
last of them, returned to the Eastern horizon, with those in the
head of Leo, a little before the Summer Solstice. In about a month,
followed the Stars of the Husbandman; the chief of them, Ras,
Mirach, and Arcturus, being very nearly simultaneous in their
heliacal rising.
Thus the Stars of
Boötes rose in the East immediately after Vindemiatrix, and as if
under the genial influence of its rays; he had his annual career of
prosperity; he revelled orientally for a quarter of a year, and
attained his meridian altitude with Virgo; and then, as the Stars of
the Water-Urn rose, and Aquarius began to pour forth his annual
deluge, he declined Westward, preceded by the Ark of Osiris. In the
East, he was the sign of that happiness in which Nature, the great
Goddess of passive production, rejoiced. Now, in the West, as he
declines toward the Northwestern horizon, his generative vigor
gradually abates; the Solar year grows old; and as his Stars descend
beneath the Western Wave, Osiris dies, and the world mourns.
The Ancient
Astronomers saw all the great Symbols of Masonry in the Stars.
Sirius still glitters in our Lodges as the Blazing Star, (lEtoile
Flamboyante). The Sun is still symbolized by the point within a
Circle; and, with the Moon and Mercury or Anubis, in the three Great
Lights of the Lodge. Not only to these, but to the figures and
numbers exhibited by the Stars, were ascribed peculiar and divine
powers. The veneration paid to numbers had its source there. The
three Kings in Orion are in a straight line, and equidistant from
each other, the two extreme Stars being 3° apart, and each of the
three distant from the one nearest it 1° 30'. And as the number
three is peculiar to apprentices, so the straight line is the
first principle of Geometry, having length but no breadth, and being
but the extension of a point, and an emblem of Unity, and thus of
Good, as the divided or broken line is of Duality or Evil. Near
these Stars are the Hyades, five in number, appropriate to
the Fellow-Craft; and close to them the Pleiades, of the master's
number, seven; and thus these three sacred numbers,
consecrated in Masonry as they were in the Pythagorean philosophy,
always appear together in the Heavens, when the Bull, emblem of
fertility and production, glitters among the Stars, and Aldebarán
leads the Hosts of Heaven (Tsbauth).
Algenib in Perseus
and Almaach and Algol in Andromeda form a right-angled triangle,
illustrate the 47th problem, and display the Grand Master's square
upon the skies. Denebola in Leo, Arcturus in Boötes, and Spica in
Virgo form an equilateral triangle, universal emblem of Perfection,
and the Deity with His Trinity of Infinite Attributes, Wisdom,
Power, and Harmony; and that other, the generative, preserving, and
destroying Powers. The Three Kings form, with Rigel in Orion, two
triangles included in one: and Capella and Menkalina in Auriga, with
Bellatrix and Betelgueux in Orion, form two isosceles triangles with
β Tauri, that is equidistant from each pair; while the first four
make a right-angled parallelogram,--the oblong square so often
mentioned in our Degrees.
Julius Firmicus, in
his description of the Mysteries, says, "But in those funerals and
lamentations which are annually celebrated in honor of Osiris, their
defenders pretend a physical reason. They call the seeds of fruit,
Osiris; the Earth, Isis; the natural heat, Typhon: and because the
fruits are ripened by the natural heat, and collected for the life
of man, and are separated from their marriage to the earth, and are
sown again when Winter approaches, this they would have to be the
death of Osiris: but when the fruits, by the genial fostering of the
earth, begin again to be generated by a new procreation, this is the
finding of Osiris."
No doubt the decay of
vegetation and the falling of the leaves, emblems of
dissolution and evidences of the action of that Power that changes
Life into Death, in order to bring Life again out of Death, were
regarded as signs of that Death that seemed coming upon all Nature;
as the springing of leaves and buds and flowers in the spring was a
sign of restoration to life: but these were all secondary, and
referred to the Sun as first cause. It was his figurative
death that was mourned, and not theirs; and that with that death, as
with his return to life, many of the stars were connected.
We have already
alluded to the relations which the twelve signs of the Zodiac bear
to the legend of the Master's Degree. Some other coincidences may
have sufficient interest to warrant mention.
Khir-Om was assailed
at the East, West, and South Gates of the Temple. The two equinoxes
were called, we have seen, by all the Ancients, the Gates of Heaven,
and the Syrians and Egyptians considered the Fish (the Constellation
near Aquarius, and one of the Stars whereof is Fomalhaut) to be
indicative of violence and death.
Khir-Om lay several
days in the grave; and, at the Winter Solstice, for five or six
days, the length of the days did not perceptibly increase. Then, the
Sun commencing again to climb Northward, as Osiris was said to arise
from the dead, so Khir-Om was raised, by the powerful attraction of
the Lion (Leo), who waited for him at the Summer Solstice, and drew
him to himself.
The names of the
three assassins may have been adopted from three Stars that we have
already named. We search in vain in the Hebrew or Arabic for the
names Jubelo, Jubela, and Jubelum. They embody
an utter absurdity, and are capable of no explanation in those
languages. Nor are the names Gibs, Gravelot, Hobhen,
and the like, in the Ancient and Accepted Rite, any more plausible,
or better referable to any ancient language. But when, by the
precession of the Equinoxes, the Sun was in Libra at the Autumnal
Equinox, he met in that sign, where the reign of Typhon commenced,
three Stars forming a triangle, Zuben-es Chamali in the West,
Zuben-Hak-Rabi in the East, and Zuben-El-Gubi in the
South, the latter immediately below the Tropic of Capricorn, and so
within the realm of Darkness. From these names, those of the
murderers have perhaps been corrupted. In Zuben-Hak-Rabi we may see
the original of Jubelum Akirop; and in Zuben-El-Gubi, that of Jubelo
Gibs: and time and ignorance may even have transmuted the words Es
Chamali into one as little like them as Gravelot.
Isis, the Moon
personified, sorrowing sought for her husband. Nine or twelve
Fellow-Crafts (the Rites vary as to the number), in white aprons,
were sent to search for Khir-Om, in the Legend of the Master's
Degree; or, in this Rite, the Nine Knights Elu. Along the path that
the Moon travels are nine conspicuous Stars, by which nautical men
determine their longitude at Sea;--Arietis, Aldebarán, Pollux,
Regulus, Spica Virginis, Antares, Altair, Fomalhaut, and Markab.
These might well be said to accompany Isis in her search.
In the York Rite,
twelve Fellow-Crafts were sent to search for the body of Khir-Om
and the murderers. Their number corresponds with that of the
Pleiades and Hyades in Taurus, among which Stars the Sun was found
when Light began to prevail over Darkness, and the Mysteries were
held. These Stars, we have shown, received early and particular
attention from the astronomers and poets. The Pleiades were the
Stars of the ocean to the benighted mariner; the. Virgins of Spring,
heralding the season of blossoms.
As six Pleiades only
are now visible, the number twelve may have been obtained by them,
with Aldebarán, and five far more brilliant Stars than any other of
the Hyades, in the same region of the Heavens, and which were always
spoken of in connection with the Pleiades;--the Three Kings in the
belt of Orion, and Bellatrix and Betelgueux on his shoulders;
brightest of the flashing starry hosts.
"Canst thou," asks
Job, "bind the sweet influences of the Pleiades or loose the bands
of Orion?" And in the book of Amos we find these Stars connected
with the victory of Light over Darkness: "Seek Him," says that Seer,
"that maketh the Seven Stars (the familiar name of the Pleiades),
and Orion, AND TURNETH THE SHADOW OF DEATH INTO MORNING."
An old legend in
Masonry says that a dog led the Nine this to the cavern where Abiram
was hid. Boötes was anciently called Caleb Anubach, a Barking Dog;
and was personified in Anubis, who bore the head of a dog, and aided
Isis in her search. Arcturus, one of his Stars, fiery red, as if
fervent and zealous, is also connected by Job with the Pleiades and
Orion. When Taurus opened the year, Arcturus rose after the Sun, at
the time of the Winter Solstice, and seemed searching him through
the darkness, until, sixty days afterward, he rose at the same hour,
Orion then also, at the Winter
Solstice, rose at noon, and at night seemed to be in search of the
Sun.
So, referring again
to the time when the Sun entered the Autumnal Equinox, there are
nine remarkable Stars that come to the meridian nearly at the same
time, rising as Libra sets, and so seeming to chase that
Constellation. They are Capella and Menkalina in the Charioteer,
Aldebarán in Taurus, Bellatrix, Betelgueux, the Three Kings, and
Rigel in Orion. Aldebarán passes the meridian first, indicating his
right to his peculiar title of Leader. Nowhere in the
heavens are there, near the same meridian, so many splendid Stars.
And close behind them, but further South, follows Sirius, the
Dog-Star, who showed the nine Elus the way to the murderer's cave.
Besides the division
of the signs into the ascending and descending series (referring to
the upward and downward progress of the soul), the latter from
Cancer to Capricorn, and the former from Capricorn to Cancer, there
was another division of them not less important; that of the six
superior and six inferior signs; the former, 2455 years before our
era, from Taurus to Scorpio, and 300 years before our era, from
Aries to Libra; and the latter, 2455 years B. C. from Scorpio to
Taurus, and 300 years B. C. from Libra to Aries; of which we have
already spoken, as the two Hemispheres, or Kingdoms of Good and
Evil, Light and Darkness; of Ormuzd and Ahriman among the Persians,
and Osiris and Typhon among the Egyptians.
With the Persians,
the first six Genii, created by Ormuzd, presided over the first six
signs, Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, and Virgo: and the six
evil Genii, or Devs, created by Ahriman, over the six others, Libra,
Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricornus, Aquarius, and Pisces. The soul
was fortunate and happy under the Empire of the first six; and began
to be sensible of evil, when it passed under the Balance or Libra,
the seventh sign. Thus the soul entered the realm of Evil and
Darkness when it passed into the Constellations that belong to and
succeed the Autumnal Equinox; and it re-entered the realm of Good
and Light, when it arrived, returning, at those of the Vernal
Equinox. It lost its felicity by means of the Balance, and regained
it by means of the Lamb. This is a necessary consequence of the
premises; and it is confirmed by the authorities and by emblems
still extant.
Sallust the
Philosopher, speaking of the Feasts of Rejoicing celebrated at the
Vernal Equinox, and those of Mourning, in memory of the rape of
Proserpine, at the Autumnal Equinox, says that the former were
celebrated, because then is effected, as it were, the return of the
soul toward the Gods; that the time when the principle of Light
recovered its superiority over that of Darkness, or day over night,
was the most favorable one for souls that tend to re-ascend to their
Principle; and that when Darkness and the Night again become
victors, was most favorable to the descent of souls toward the
infernal regions.
For that reason, the
old astrologers, as Firmicus states, fixed the locality of the river
Styx in the 8th degree of the Balance. And he thinks that by Styx
was allegorically meant the earth.
The Emperor Julian
gives the same explanation, but more fully developed. He states, as
a reason why the august Mysteries of Ceres and Proserpine were
celebrated at the Autumnal Equinox, that at that period of the year
men feared lest the impious and dark power of the Evil Principle,
then commencing to conquer, should do harm to their souls. They were
a precaution and means of safety, thought to be necessary at the
moment when the God of Light was passing into the opposite or
adverse region of the world; while at the Vernal Equinox there was
less to be feared, because then that God, present in one portion of
the world, recalled souls to Him, he says, and showed
Himself to be their Saviour. He had a little before developed
that theological idea, of the attractive force which the Sun
exercises over souls, drawing them to him and raising them to his
luminous sphere. He attributes this effect to him at the feasts of
Atys, dead and restored to life, or the feasts of Rejoicing, which
at the end of three days succeeded the mourning for that death; and
he inquires why those Mysteries were celebrated at the Vernal
Equinox. The reason, he says, is evident. As the sun, arriving at
the equinoctial point of Spring, drawing nearer to us, increases the
length of the days, that period seems most appropriate for those
ceremonies. For, besides that there is a great affinity between the
substance of Light and the nature of the Gods, the Sun has that
occult force of attraction, by which he draws matter toward himself,
by means of his warmth, making plants to shoot and grow, etc.; and
why can he not, by the same divine and pure action of his rays,
attract and draw to him fortunate souls? Then, as light is analogous
to the Divine Nature, and favorable to souls. struggling to return
to their First
Principle, and as that light so increases at the Vernal Equinox,
that the days prevail in duration over the nights, and as the Sun
has an attractive force, besides the visible energy of his rays, it
follows that souls are attracted toward the solar light. He does not
further pursue the explanation; because, he says, it belongs to a
mysterious doctrine, beyond the reach of the vulgar and known only
to those who understand the mode of action of Deity, like the
Chaldĉan author whom he cites, who had treated of the Mysteries of
Light, or the God with seven rays.
Souls, the Ancients
held, having emanated from the Principle of Light, partaking of its
destiny here below, cannot be indifferent to nor unaffected by these
revolutions of the Great Luminary, alternately victor and overcome
during every Solar revolution.
This will be found to
be confirmed by an examination of some of the Symbols used in the
Mysteries. One of the most famous of these was THE SERPENT, the
peculiar Symbol also of this Degree. The Cosmogony of the Hebrews
and that of the Gnostics designated this reptile as the author of
the fate of Souls. It was consecrated in the Mysteries of Bacchus
and in those of Eleusis. Pluto overcame the virtue of Proserpine
under the form of a serpent; and, like the Egyptian God Serapis, was
always pictured seated on a serpent, or with that reptile entwined
about him. It is found on the Mithriac Monuments, and supplied with
attributes of Typhon to the Egyptians. The sacred basilisc, in coil,
with head and neck erect, was the royal ensign of the Pharaohs. Two
of them were entwined around and hung suspended from the winged
Globe on the Egyptian Monuments. On a tablet in one of the Tombs at
Thebes, a God with a spear pierces a serpent's head. On a tablet
from the Temple of Osiris at Philĉ is a tree, with a man on one
side, and a woman on the other, and in front of the woman an erect
basilisc, with horns on its head and a disk between the horns. The
head of Medusa was encircled by winged snakes, which, the head
removed, left the Hierogram or Sacred Cypher of the Ophites or
Serpent-worshippers. And the Serpent, in connection with the Globe
or circle, is found upon the monuments of all the Ancient Nations.
Over Libra, the sign
through which souls were said to descend or fall, is found, on the
Celestial Globe, the Serpent, grasped by Serpentarius, the
Serpent-bearer. The head of the reptile is under Corona Borealis,
the Northern Crown, called by Ovid, Libera, or
Proserpine; and the two Constellations rise, with the
Balance, after the Virgin (or Isis), whose feet rest on the eastern
horizon at Sunrise on the day of the equinox. As the Serpent extends
over both signs, Libra and Scorpio, it has been the gate through
which souls descend, during the whole time that those two signs in
succession marked the Autumnal Equinox. To this alluded the Serpent,
which, in the Mysteries of Bacchus Saba-Zeus, was flung into the
bosom of the Initiate.
And hence came the
enigmatical expression, the Serpent engenders the Bull, and the
Bull the Serpent; alluding to the two adverse constellations,
answering to the two equinoxes, one of which rose as the other set,
and which were at the two points of the heavens through which souls
passed, ascending and descending. By the Serpent of Autumn, souls
fell; and they were regenerated again by the Bull on which Mithras
sate, and whose attributes Bacchus-Zagreus and the Egyptian Osiris
assumed, in their Mysteries, wherein were represented the fall and
regeneration of souls, by the Bull slain and restored to life.
Afterward the
regenerating Sun assumed the attributes of Aries or the Lamb;
and in the Mysteries of Ammon, souls were regenerated by passing
through that sign, after having fallen through the Serpent.
The Serpent-bearer,
or Ophicus, was Ĉsculapius, God of Healing. In the Mysteries of
Eleusis, that Constellation was placed in the eighth Heaven: and on
the eighth day of those Mysteries, the feast of Ĉsculapius was
celebrated. It was also termed Epidaurus, or the feast of the
Serpent of Epidaurus. The Serpent was sacred to Ĉsculapius; and was
connected in various ways with the mythological adventures of Ceres.
So the libations to
Souls, by pouring wine on the ground, and looking toward the two
gates of Heaven, those of day and night, referred to the ascent and
descent of Souls.
Ceres and the
Serpent, Jupiter Ammon and the Bull, all figured in the Mysteries of
Bacchus. Suppose Aries, or Jupiter Ammon occupied by the Sun setting
in the West;--Virgo (Ceres) will be on the Eastern horizon, and in
her train the Crown, or Proserpine. Suppose Taurus setting;--then
the Serpent is in the East; and reciprocally; so that Jupiter Ammon,
or the Sun of Aries, causes the Crown to rise after the Virgin, in
the train of which comes the Serpent. Place reciprocally the Sun at
the other equinox, with the balance in
the West, in conjunction with the Serpent under the Crown; and we
shall see the Bull and the Pleiades rise in the East. Thus are
explained all the fables as to the generation of the Bull by the
Serpent and of the Serpent by the Bull, the biting of the testicles
of the Bull by the Scorpion, on the Mithriac Monuments; and that
Jupiter made Ceres with child by tossing into her bosom the
testicles of a Ram.
In the Mysteries of
the bull-horned Bacchus, the officers held serpents in their hands,
raised them above their heads, and cried aloud "Eva!" the generic
oriental name of the serpent, and the particular name of the
constellation in which the Persians placed Eve and the serpent. The
Arabians call it Hevan, Ophiucus himself, Hawa, and
the brilliant star in his head, Ras-al-Hawa. The use of this
word Eva or Evoë caused Clemens of Alexandria to say
that the priests in the Mysteries invoked Eve, by whom evil
was brought into the world.
The mystic
winnowing-fan, encircled by serpents, was used in the feasts of
Bacchus. In the Isiac Mysteries a basilisc twined round the handle
of the mystic vase. The Ophites fed a serpent in a mysterious ark,
from which they took him when they celebrated the Mysteries, and
allowed him to glide among the sacred bread. The Romans kept
serpents in the Temples of Bona Dea and Ĉsculapius. In the Mysteries
of Apollo, the pursuit of Latona by the serpent Python was
represented. In the Egyptian Mysteries, the dragon Typhon pursued
Isis.
According to
Sanchoniathon, TAAUT, the interpreter of Heaven to men, attributed
something divine to the nature of the dragon and serpents, in which
die Phnicians and Egyptians followed him. They have more vitality,
more spiritual force, than any other creature; of a fiery nature,
shown by the rapidity of their motions, without the limbs of other
animals. They assume many shapes and attitudes, and dart with
extraordinary quickness and force. When they have reached old age,
they throw off that age and are young again, and increase in size
and strength, for a certain period of years.
The Egyptian Priests
fed the sacred serpents in the temple at Thebes. Taaut himself had
in his writings discussed these mysteries in regard to the serpent.
Sanchoniathon said in another work, that the serpent was immortal,
and re-entered into himself; which, according to some ancient
theosophists, particularly those of India, was an
attribute of the Deity. And he also said that the serpent never
died, unless by a violent death.
The Phnicians called
the serpent Agathodemon [the good spirit]; and Kneph was the
Serpent-God of the Egyptians.
The Egyptians,
Sanchoniathon said, represented the serpent with the head of a hawk,
on account of the swift flight of that bird: and the chief
Hierophant, the sacred interpreter, gave very mysterious
explanations of that symbol; saying that such a serpent was a very
divine creature, and that, opening his eyes, he lighted with their
rays the whole of first-born space: when he closes them, it is
darkness again. In reality, the hawk-headed serpent, genius of
light, or good genius, was the symbol of the Sun.
In the hieroglyphic
characters, a snake was the letter T or DJ. It occurs many times on
the Rosetta stone. The horned serpent was the hieroglyphic for a
God.
According to
Eusebius, the Egyptians represented the world by a blue circle,
sprinkled with flames, within which was extended a serpent with the
head of a hawk. Proclus says they represented the four quarters of
the world by a cross, and the soul of the world, or Kneph, by a
serpent surrounding it in the form of a circle.
We read in
Anaxagoras, that Orpheus said, that the water, and the vessel that
produced it, were the primitive principles of things, and together
gave existence to an animated being, which was a serpent, with two
heads, one of a lion and the other of a bull, between which was the
figure of a God whose name was Hercules or Kronos: that from
Hercules came the egg of the world, which produced Heaven and earth,
by dividing itself into two hemispheres: and that the God Phanes,
which issued from that egg, was in the shape of a serpent.
The Egyptian Goddess
Ken, represented standing naked on a lion, held two serpents
in her hand. She is the same as the Astarte or Ashtaroth
of the Assyrians. Hera, worshipped in the Great Temple at
Babylon, held in her right hand a serpent by the head; and near
Khea, also worshipped there, were two large silver serpents.
In a sculpture from
Kouyunjik, two serpents attached to poles are near a fire-altar, at
which two eunuchs are standing. Upon it is the sacred fire, and a
bearded figure leads a wild goat to the sacrifice.
The serpent of the
Temple of Epidaurus was sacred to Ĉsculapius, the God of
Medicine, and 462 years after the building of the city, was taken to
Rome after a pestilence.
The Phnicians
represented the God Nomu (Kneph or Amun-Kneph)
by a serpent. In Egypt, a Sun supported by two asps was the emblem
of Horhat the good genius; and the serpent with the winged
globe was placed over the doors and windows of the Temples as a
tutelary God. Antipater of Sidon calls Amun "the renowned
Serpent," and the Cerastes is often found embalmed in the Thebaid.
On ancient Tyrian
coins and Indian medals, a serpent was represented, coiled round the
trunk of a tree. Python, the Serpent Deity, was esteemed
oracular; and the tripod at Delphi was a triple-headed serpent of
gold.
The portals of all
the Egyptian Temples are decorated with the hierogram of the Circle
and the Serpent. It is also found upon the Temple of Naki-Rustan in
Persia; on the triumphal arch at Pechin, in China; over the gates of
the great Temple of Chaundi Teeva, in Java; upon the walls of
Athens; and in the Temple of Minerva at Tegea. The Mexican hierogram
was formed by the intersecting of two great Serpents, which
described the circle with their bodies, and had each a human head in
its mouth.
All the Buddhists
crosses in Ireland had serpents carved upon them. Wreaths of snakes
are on the columns of the ancient Hindu Temple at Burwah-Sangor.
Among the Egyptians,
it was a symbol of Divine Wisdom, when extended at length; and, with
its tail in its mouth, of Eternity.
In the ritual of
Zoroaster, the Serpent was a symbol of the Universe. In China, the
ring between two Serpents was the symbol of the world governed by
the power and wisdom of the Creator. The Bacchanals carried serpents
in their hands or round their heads.
The Serpent entwined
round an Egg, was a symbol common to the Indians, the Egyptians, and
the Druids. It referred to the creation of the Universe. A Serpent
with an egg in his mouth was a symbol of the Universe containing
within itself the germ of all things that the Sun develops.
The property
possessed by the Serpent, of casting its skin, and apparently
renewing its youth, made it an emblem of eternity and immortality.
The Syrian women still employ it as a charm against barrenness, as did
the devotees of Mithras and Saba-Zeus. The Earth-born civilizers of
the early world, Fohi, Cecrops, and Erechtheus, were half-man,
half-serpent. The snake was the guardian of the Athenian Acropolis.
NAKHUSTAN, the brazen serpent of the wilderness, became naturalized
among the Hebrews as a token of healing power. "Be ye," said Christ,
"wise as serpents, and harmless as doves."
The Serpent was as
often a symbol of malevolence and enmity. It appears among the
emblems of Siva-Roudra, the power of desolation and death: it is the
bane of Aëpytus, Idom, Archemorus, and Philoctetes: it gnaws the
roots of the tree of life in the Eddas, and bites the heel of
unfortunate Eurydice. In Hebrew writers it is generally a type of
evil; and is particularly so in the Indian and Persian Mythologies.
When the Sea is churned by Mount Mandar rotating within the coils of
the Cosmical Serpent Vasouki, to produce the Amrita or water of
immortality, the serpent vomits a hideous poison, which spreads
through and infects the Universe, but which Vishnu renders harmless
by swallowing it. Ahriman in serpent-form invades the realm of
Ormuzd; and the Bull, emblem of life, is wounded by him and dies. It
was therefore a religious obligation with every devout follower of
Zoroaster to exterminate reptiles, and other impure animals,
especially serpents. The moral and astronomical significance of the
Serpent were connected. It became a maxim of the Zend-Avesta, that
Ahriman, the Principle of Evil, made the Great Serpent of Winter,
who assaulted the creation of Ormuzd.
A serpent-ring was a
well-known symbol of time: and to express dramatically how time
preys upon itself, the Egyptian priests fed vipers in a subterranean
chamber, as it were in the sun's Winter abode on the fat of bulls,
or the year's plenteousness. The dragon of Winter pursues Ammon, the
golden ram, to Mount Casius. The Virgin of the zodiac is bitten in
the heel by Serpens, who, with Scorpio, rises immediately behind
her; and as honey, the emblem of purity and salvation, was thought
to be an antidote to the serpent's bite, so the bees of Aristĉus,
the emblems of nature's abundance, are destroyed through the agency
of the serpent, and regenerated within the entrails of the Vernal
Bull.
The Sun-God is
finally victorious. Chrishna crushes the head of the serpent Calyia;
Apollo destroys Python, and Hercules that Lernĉan monster whose
poison festered in the foot of Philoctetes, of Mopsus, of Chiron,
or of Sagittarius. The infant Hercules destroys the pernicious
snakes detested of the gods, and ever, like St. George of England
and Michael the Archangel, wars against hydras and dragons.
The eclipses of the
sun and moon were believed by the orientals to be caused by the
assaults of a dĉmon in dragon-form; and they endeavored to scare
away the intruder by shouts and menaces. This was the original
Leviathan or Crooked Serpent of old, transfixed in the olden time by
the power of Jehovah, and suspended as a glittering trophy in the
sky; yet also the Power of Darkness supposed to be ever in pursuit
of the Sun and Moon. When it finally overtakes them, it will entwine
them in its folds, and prevent their shining. In the last Indian
Avatara, as in the Eddas, a serpent vomiting flames is expected to
destroy the world, The serpent presides over the close of the year,
where it guards the approach to the golden fleece of Aries, and the
three apples or seasons of the Hesperides; presenting a formidable
obstacle to the career of the Sun-God. The Great Destroyer of snakes
is occasionally married to them; Hercules with the northern dragon
begets the three ancestors of Scythia; for the Sun seems at one time
to rise victorious from the contest with darkness, and at another to
sink into its embraces. The northern constellation Draco, whose
sinuosities wind like a river through the wintry bear, was made the
astronomical cincture of the Universe, as the serpent encircles the
mundane egg in Egyptian hieroglyphics.
The Persian Ahriman
was called "The old serpent, the liar from the beginning, the Prince
of Darkness, and the rover up and down." The Dragon was a well-known
symbol of the waters and of great rivers; and it was natural that by
the pastoral Asiatic Tribes, the powerful nations of the alluvial
plains in their neighborhood who adored the dragon or Fish, should
themselves be symbolized under the form of dragons; and overcome by
the superior might of the Hebrew God, as monstrous Leviathans maimed
and destroyed by him. Ophioneus, in the old Greek Theology, warred
against Kronos, and was overcome and cast into his proper element,
the sea. There he is installed as the Sea-God Oannes or Dragon, the
Leviathan of the watery half of creation, the dragon who vomited a
flood of water after the persecuted woman of the Apocalypse, the
monster who threatened to devour Hesione and Andromeda, and who for
a time became the grave of Hercules and
Jonah; and he corresponds with the obscure name of Rahab,
whom Jehovah is said in Job to have transfixed and overcome.
In the Spring, the
year or Sun-God appears as Mithras or Europa mounted on the Bull;
but in the opposite half of the Zodiac he rides the emblem of the
waters, the winged horse of Nestor or Poseidon: and the Serpent,
rising heliacally at the Autumnal Equinox, besetting with poisonous
influence the cold constellation Sagittarius, is explained as the
reptile in the path who "bites the horse's heels, so that his rider
falls backward." The same serpent, the Oannes Aphrenos or Musaros of
Syncellus, was the Midgard Serpent which Odin sunk beneath the sea,
but which grew to such a size as to encircle the whole earth.
For these Asiatic
symbols of the contest of the Sun-God with the Dragon of darkness
and Winter were imported not only into the Zodiac, but into the more
homely circle of European legend; and both Thor and Odin fight with
dragons, as Apollo did with Python, the great scaly snake, Achilles
with the Scamander, and Bellerophon with the Chimĉra. In the
apocryphal book of Esther, dragons herald "a day of darkness and
obscurity"; and St. George of England, a problematic Cappadocian
Prince, was originally only a varying form of Mithras. Jehovah is
said to have "cut Rahab and wounded the dragon." The latter is not
only the type of earthly desolation, the dragon of the deep waters,
but also the leader of the banded conspirators of the sky, of the
rebellious stars, which, according to Enoch, "came not at the right
time"; and his tail drew a third part of the Host of Heaven, and
cast them to the earth. Jehovah "divided the sea by his strength,
and broke the heads of the Dragons in the waters." And according to
the Jewish and Persian belief, the Dragon would, in the latter days,
the Winter of time, enjoy a short period of licensed impunity, which
would be a season of the greatest suffering to the people of the
earth; but he would finally be bound or destroyed in the great
battle of Messiah; or, as it seems intimated by the Rabbinical
figure of being eaten by the faithful, be, like Ahriman or Vasouki,
ultimately absorbed by and united with the Principle of good.
Near the image of
Rhea, in the Temple of Bel at Babylon, were two large serpents of
silver, says Diodorus, each weighing thirty talents; and in the same
temple was an image of Juno, holding in her right hand the head of a
serpent. The Greeks called Bel
Beliar; and Hesychius interprets that word to mean a dragon
or great serpent. We learn from the book of Bel and the Dragon, that
in Babylon was kept a great, live serpent, which the people
worshipped.
The Assyrians, the
Emperors of Constantinople, the Parthians, Scythians, Saxons,
Chinese, and Danes all bore the serpent as a standard, and among the
spoils taken by Aurelian from Zenobia were such standards,
Persici Dracones. The Persians represented Ormuzd and Ahriman by
two serpents, contending for the mundane egg. Mithras is represented
with a lion's head and human body, encircled by a serpent. In the
Sadder is this precept: "When you kill serpents, you will repeat the
Zend-Avesta, and thence you will obtain great merit; for it is the
same as if you had killed so many devils."
Serpents encircling
rings and globes, and issuing from globes, are common in the
Persian, Egyptian, Chinese, and Indian monuments. Vishnu is
represented reposing on a coiled serpent, whose folds form a canopy
over him. Mahadeva is represented with a snake around his neck, one
around his hair, and armlets of serpents on both arms. Bhairava sits
on the coils of a serpent, whose head rises above his own. Parvati
has snakes about her neck and waist. Vishnu is the Preserving
Spirit, Mahadeva is Siva, the Evil Principle, Bhairava is his son,
and Parvati his consort. The King of Evil Demons was called in Hindū
Mythology, Naga, the King of Serpents, in which name we trace
the Hebrew Nachash, serpent.
In Cashmere were
seven hundred places where carved images of serpents were
worshipped; and in Thibet the great Chinese Dragon ornamented the
Temples of the Grand Lama. In China, the dragon was the stamp and
symbol of royalty, sculptured in all the Temples, blazoned on the
furniture of the houses, and interwoven with the vestments of the
chief nobility. The Emperor bears it as his armorial device; it is
engraved on his sceptre and diadem, and on all the vases of the
imperial palace. The Chinese believe that there is a dragon of
extraordinary strength and sovereign power, in Heaven, in the air,
on the waters, and on the mountains. The God Fohi is said to have
had the form of a man, terminating in the tail of a snake, a
combination to be more fully explained to you in a subsequent
Degree.
The dragon and
serpent are the 5th and 6th signs of the Chinese
Zodiac; and the Hindus and Chinese believe that, at every eclipse,
the sun or moon is seized by a huge serpent or dragon, the serpent
Asootee of the Hindus, which enfolds the globe and the
constellation Draco; to which also refers "the War in Heaven, when
Michael and his Angels fought against the dragon."
Sanchoniathon says
that Taaut was the author of the worship of serpents among the
Phnicians. He "consecrated," he says, "the species of dragons and
serpents; and the Phnicians and Egyptians followed him in this
superstition." He was "the first who made an image of Clus"; that
is; who represented the Heavenly Hosts of Stars by visible symbols;
and was probably the same as the Egyptian Thoth. On the Tyrian coins
of the age of Alexander, serpents are represented in many positions
and attitudes, coiled around trees, erect in front of altars, and
crushed by the Syrian Hercules.
The seventh letter of
the Egyptian alphabet, called Zeuta or Life, was
sacred to Thoth, and was expressed by a serpent standing on his
tail; and that Deity, the God of healing, like Ĉsculapius, to whom
the serpent was consecrated, leans on a knotted stick around which
coils a snake. The Isiac tablet, describing the Mysteries of Isis,
is charged with serpents in every part, as her emblems. The Asp
was specially dedicated to her, and is seen on the heads of her
statues, on the bonnets of her priests, and on the tiaras of the
Kings of Egypt. Serapis was sometimes represented with a human head
and serpentine tail: and in one engraving two minor Gods are
represented with him, one by a serpent with a bull's head, and the
other by a serpent with the radiated head of a lion.
On an ancient
sacrificial vessel found in Denmark, having several compartments, a
serpent is represented attacking a kneeling boy, pursuing him,
retreating before him, appealed to beseechingly by him, and
conversing with him. We are at once reminded of the Sun at the new
year represented by a child sitting on a lotus, and of the relations
of the Sun of Spring with the Autumnal Serpent, pursued by and
pursuing him, and in conjunction with him. Other figures on this
vessel belong to the Zodiac.
The base of the
tripod of the Pythian Priestess was a triple-headed serpent of
brass, whose body, folded in circles growing wider and wider toward
the ground, formed a conical column, while the three heads, disposed
triangularly, upheld the tripod of gold. A similar
column was placed on a pillar in the Hippodrome at Constantinople,
by the founder of that city; one of the heads of which is said to
have been broken off by Mahomet the Second, by a blow with his iron
mace.
The British God Hu
was called "The Dragon--Ruler of the World," and his car was drawn
by serpents. His ministers were styled adders. A Druid in a
poem of Taliessin says, "I am a Druid, I am an Architect, I
am a Prophet, I am a Serpent (Gnadi)." The Car of the Goddess
Ceridwen also was drawn by serpents.
In the elegy of Uther
Pendragon, this passage occurs in a description of the religious
rites of the Druids: "While the Sanctuary is earnestly invoking
The Gliding King, before whom the Fair One retreats, upon
the evil that covers the huge stones; whilst the Dragon moves round
over the places which contain vessels of drink-offering, whilst the
drink-offering is in the Golden Horns;" in which we readily
discover the mystic and obscure allusion to the Autumnal Serpent
pursuing the Sun along the circle of the Zodiac, to the celestial
cup or crater, and the Golden horns of Virgil's milk-white Bull;
and, a line or two further on, we find the Priest imploring the
victorious Beli, the Sun-God of the Babylonians.
With the serpent, in
the Ancient Monuments, is very often found associated the Cross. The
Serpent upon a Cross was an Egyptian Standard. It occurs repeatedly
upon the Grand Stair-case of the Temple of Osiris at Philĉ; and on
the pyramid of Ghizeh are represented two kneeling figures erecting
a Cross, on the top of which is a serpent erect. The Crux Ansata
was a Cross with a coiled Serpent above it; and it is perhaps the
most common of all emblems on the Egyptian Monuments, carried in the
hand of almost every figure of a Deity or a Priest. It was, as we
learn by the monuments, the form of the iron tether-pins, used for
making fast to the ground the cords by which young animals were
confined: and as used by shepherds, became a symbol of Royalty to
the Shepherd Kings.
A Cross like a
Teutonic or Maltese one, formed by four curved lines within a
circle, is also common on the Monuments, and represented the Tropics
and the Colures.
The Caduceus, borne
by Hermes or Mercury, and also by Cybele, Minerva, Anubis, Hercules
Ogmius the God of the Celts, and the personified Constellation
Virgo, was a winged wand, entwined by two serpents. It was
originally a simple Cross, symbolizing the equator and equinoctial
Colure, and the four elements proceeding from a common centre. This
Cross, surmounted by a circle, and that by a crescent, became an
emblem of the Supreme Deity--or of the active power of generation
and the passive power of production conjoined,--and was appropriated
to Thoth or Mercury. It then assumed an improved form, the arms of
the Cross being changed into wings, and the circle and crescent
being formed by two snakes, springing from the wand, forming a
circle by crossing each other, and their heads making the horns of
the crescent; in which form it is seen in the hands of Anubis.
The triple Tau, in
the centre of a circle and a triangle, typifies the Sacred Name; and
represents the Sacred Triad, the Creating, Preserving, and
Destroying Powers; as well as the three great lights of Masonry. If
to the Masonic point within a Circle, and the two parallel lines, we
add the single Tau Cross, we have the Ancient Egyptian Triple Tau.
A column in the form
of a cross, with a circle over it, was used by the Egyptians to
measure the increase of the inundations of the Nile. The Tau and
Triple Tau are found in many Ancient Alphabets.
With the Tau or the
Triple Tau may be connected, within two circles, the double cube, or
perfection; or the perfect ashlar.
The Crux Ansata
is found on the sculptures of Khorsabad; on the ivories from
Nimroud, of the same age, carried by an Assyrian Monarch; and on
cylinders of the later Assyrian period.
As the single Tau
represents the one God, so, no doubt, the Triple Tau, the origin of
which cannot be traced, was meant to represent the Trinity of his
attributes, the three Masonic pillars, WISDOM, STRENGTH, and
HARMONY.
The Prophet Ezekiel,
in the 4th verse of the 9th chapter, says: "And the Lord said unto
him, 'Go through the midst of the city, through the midst of
Jerusalem, and mark the letter TAU upon the foreheads of those that
sigh and mourn for all the abominations that be done in the midst
thereof." So the Latin Vulgate, and the probably most ancient copies
of the Septuagint translate the passage. This Tau was in the
form of the cross of this Degree, and it was the emblem of life
and salvation. The Samaritan Tau and the Ethiopic Tavvi
are the evident prototype of the Greek τ; and we learn from
Tertullian, Origen, and St. Jerome, that the Hebrew
Tau was anciently written in the form of a Cross.
In ancient times the
mark Tau was set on those who had been acquitted by their
judges, as a symbol of innocence. The military commanders placed it
on soldiers who escaped unhurt from the field of battle, as a sign
of their safety under the Divine Protection.
It was a sacred
symbol among the Druids. Divesting a tree of part of its branches,
they left it in the shape of a Tau Cross, preserved it carefully,
and consecrated it with solemn ceremonies. On the tree they cut
deeply the word THAU, by which they meant God. On the right arm of
the Cross, they inscribed the word HESULS, on the left BELEN or
BELENUS, and on the middle of the trunk THARAMIS. This represented
the sacred Triad.
It is certain that
the Indians, Egyptians, and Arabians paid veneration to the sign of
the Cross, thousands of years before the coming of Christ.
Everywhere it was a sacred symbol. The Hindus and the Celtic Druids
built many of their Temples in the form of a Cross, as the ruins
still remaining clearly show, and particularly the ancient Druidical
Temple at Classerniss in the Island of Lewis in Scotland. The Circle
is of 12 Stones. On each of the sides, east, west, and south, are
three. In the centre was the image of the Deity; and on the north an
avenue of twice nineteen stones, and one at the entrance. The
Supernal Pagoda at Benares is in the form of a Cross; and the
Druidical subterranean grotto at New Grange in Ireland.
The Statue of Osiris
at Rome had the same emblem. Isis and Ceres also bore it; and the
caverns of initiation were constructed in that shape with a pyramid
over the Sacellum.
Crosses were cut in
the stones of the Temple of Serapis in Alexandria; and many Tau
Crosses are to be seen in the sculptures of Alabastion and Esné, in
Egypt. On coins, the symbol of the Egyptian God Kneph was a Cross
within a Circle.
The Crux Ansata was
the particular emblem of Osiris, and his sceptre ended with that
figure. It was also the emblem of Hermes, and was considered a
Sublime Hieroglyphic, possessing mysterious powers and virtues, as a
wonder-working amulet.
The Sacred Tau occurs
in the hands of the mummy-shaped figures between the forelegs of the
row of Sphynxes, in the great avenue leading from Luxor to Karnac.
By the Tau Cross the Cabalists expressed the number 10, a perfect number, denoting
Heaven, and the Pythagorean Tetractys, or incommunicable name of
God. The Taft Cross is also found on the stones in front of the door
of the Temple of Amunoth III, at Thebes, who reigned about the time
when the Israelites took possession of Canaan: and the Egyptian
Priests carried it in all the sacred processions.
Tertullian, who had
been initiated, informs us that the Tau was inscribed on the
forehead of every person who had been admitted into the Mysteries of
Mithras.
As the simple Tau
represented Life, so, when the Circle, symbol of Eternity, was
added, it represented Eternal Life.
At the Initiation of
a King, the Tau, as the emblem of life and key of the Mysteries, was
impressed upon his lips.
In the Indian
Mysteries, the Tau Cross, under the name of Tiluk, was marked
upon the body of the candidate, as a sign that he was set apart for
the Sacred Mysteries.
On the upright tablet
of the King, discovered at Nimroud, are the names of thirteen Great
Gods (among which are YAV and BEL); and the left-hand character of
every one is a cross composed of two cuneiform characters.
The Cross appears
upon an Ancient Phnician medal found in the ruins of Citium; on the
very ancient Buddhist Obelisk near Ferns in Ross-shire; on the
Buddhist Round Towers in Ireland, and upon the splendid obelisk of
the same era at Forres in Scotland.
Upon the facade of a
temple at Kalabche in Nubia are three regal figures, each holding a
Crux Ansata.
Like the Subterranean
Mithriatic Temple at New Grange in Scotland, the Pagodas of Benares
and Mathura were in the form of a Cross. Magnificent Buddhist
Crosses were erected, and are still standing, at Clonmacnoise,
Finglas, and Kilcullen in Ireland. Wherever the monuments of
Buddhism are found, in India, Ceylon, or Ireland, we find the Cross:
for Buddha or Boudh was represented to have been crucified.
All the planets known
to the Ancients were distinguished by the Mystic Cross, in
conjunction with the solar or lunar symbols; Saturn by a cross over
a crescent, Jupiter by a cross under a crescent, Mars by a cross
resting obliquely on a circle, Venus by a cross under a circle, and
Mercury by a cross surmounted by a circle and that by a crescent.
The Solstices, Cancer
and Capricorn, the two Gates of Heaven, are the two pillars of
Hercules, beyond which he, the Sun, never journeyed: and they still
appear in our Lodges, as the two great columns, Jachin and Boaz, and
also as the two parallel lines that bound the circle, with a point
in the centre, emblem of the Sun, between the two tropics of Cancer
and Capricorn.
The Blazing Star in
our Lodges, we have already said, represents Sirius, Anubis, or
Mercury, Guardian and Guide of Souls. Our Ancient English brethren
also considered it an emblem of the Sun. In the old Lectures they
said: "The Blazing Star or Glory in the centre refers us to that
Grand Luminary the Sun, which enlightens the Earth, and by its
genial influence dispenses blessings to mankind." It is also said in
those lectures to be an emblem of Prudence. The word Prudentia
means, in its original and fullest signification, Foresight:
and accordingly the Blazing Star has been regarded as an emblem of
Omniscience, or the All-Seeing Eye, which to the Ancients was the
Sun.
Even the Dagger of
the Elu of Nine is that used in the Mysteries of Mithras; which,
with its blade black and hilt white, was an emblem of the two
principles of Light and Darkness.
Isis, the same as
Ceres, was, as we learn from Eratosthenes, the Constellation Virgo,
represented by a woman holding an ear of wheat. The different
emblems which accompany her in the description given by Apuleius, a
serpent on either side, a golden vase, with a serpent twined round
the handle, and the animals that marched in procession, the bear,
the ape, and Pegasus, represented the Constellations that, rising
with the. Virgin, when on the day of the Vernal Equinox she stood in
the Oriental gate of Heaven, brilliant with the rays of the full
moon, seemed to march in her train.
The cup, consecrated
in the Mysteries both of Isis and Eleusis, was the Constellation
Crater or the Cup. The sacred vessel of the Isiac ceremony finds its
counterpart in the Heavens. The Olympic robe presented to the
Initiate, a magnificent mantle, covered with figures of serpents and
animals, and under which were twelve other sacred robes, wherewith
he was clothed in the sanctuary, alluded to the starry Heaven and
the twelve signs: while the seven preparatory immersions in the sea
alluded to the seven spheres, through which the soul plunged, to
arrive here below and take up its abode in a body.
The Celestial Virgin,
during the last three centuries that preceded the Christian era,
occupied the horoscope or Oriental point, and that gate of Heaven
through which the Sun and Moon ascended above the horizon at the two
equinoxes. Again it occupied it at midnight, at the Winter Solstice,
the precise moment when the year commenced. Thus it was essentially
connected with the march of times and seasons, of the Sun, the Moon,
and day and night, at the principal epochs of the year. At the
equinoxes were celebrated the greater and lesser Mysteries of Ceres.
When souls descended past the Balance, at the moment when the Sun
occupied that point, the Virgin rose before him; she stood at the
gates of day and opened them to him. Her brilliant Star, Spica
Virginis, and Arcturus, in Boötes, northwest of it, heralded his
coming. When he had returned to the Vernal Equinox, at the moment
when souls were generated, again it was the Celestial Virgin that
led the march of the signs of night; and in her stars came the
beautiful full moon of that month. Night and day were in succession
introduced by her, when they began to diminish in length; and souls,
before arriving at the gates of Hell, were also led by her. In going
through these signs, they passed the Styx in the 8th Degree of
Libra. She was the famous Sibyl who initiated Eneas, and opened to
him the way to the infernal regions.
This peculiar
situation of the Constellation Virgo, has caused it to enter into
all the sacred fables in regard to nature, under different names and
the most varied forms. It often takes the name of Isis or the Moon,
which, when at its full at the Vernal Equinox, was in union with it
or beneath its feet. Mercury (or Anubis) having his domicile and
exaltation in the sign Virgo, was, in all the sacred fables and
Sanctuaries, the inseparable companion of Isis, without whose
counsels she did nothing.
This relation between
the emblems and mysterious recitals of the initiations, and the
Heavenly bodies and order of the world, was still more clear in the
Mysteries of Mithras, adored as the Sun in Asia Minor, Cappadocia,
Armenia, and Persia, and whose Mysteries went to Rome in the time of
Sylla. This is amply proved by the descriptions we have of the
Mithriac cave, in which were figured the two movements of the
Heavens, that of the fixed Stars and that of the Planets, the
Constellations, the eight mystic gates of the spheres, and the
symbols of the elements. So on a celebrated monument of that
religion, found at Rome, were figured, the Serpent or Hydra
under Leo, as in the Heavens, the Celestial Dog, the Bull, the
Scorpion, the Seven Planets, represented by seven altars, the Sun,
Moon, and emblems relating to Light, to Darkness, and to their
succession during the year, where each in turn triumphs for six
months.
The Mysteries of Atys
were celebrated when the Sun entered Aries; and among the emblems
was a ram at the foot of a tree which was being cut down.
Thus, if not the
whole truth, it is yet a large part of it, that the Heathen
Pantheon, in its infinite diversity of names and personifications,
was but a multitudinous, though in its origin unconscious allegory,
of which physical phenomena, and principally the Heavenly Bodies,
were the fundamental types. The glorious images of Divinity which
formed Jehovah's Host, were the Divine Dynasty or real theocracy
which governed the early world; and the men of the golden age, whose
looks held commerce with the skies, and who watched the radiant
rulers bringing Winter and Summer to mortals, might be said with
poetic truth to live in immediate communication with Heaven, and,
like the Hebrew Patriarchs, to see God face to face. Then the Gods
introduced their own worship among mankind: then Oannes, Oe or
Aquarius rose from the Red Sea to impart science to the Babylonians;
then the bright Bull legislated for India and Crete; and the Lights
of Heaven, personified as Liber and Ceres, hung the Botian hills
with vine-yards, and gave the golden sheaf to Eleusis. The children
of men were, in a sense, allied or married, to those sons of God who
sang the jubilee of creation; and the encircling vault with its
countless Stars, which to the excited imagination of the solitary
Chaldĉan wanderer appeared as animated intelligences, might
naturally be compared to a gigantic ladder, on which, in their
rising and setting, the Angel luminaries appeared to be ascending
and descending between earth and Heaven. The original revelation
died out of men's memories; they worshipped the Creature instead of
the Creator; and holding all earthly things as connected by eternal
links of harmony and sympathy with the heavenly bodies, they united
in one view astronomy, astrology, and religion. Long wandering thus
in error, they at length ceased to look upon the Stars and .external
nature as Gods; and by directing their attention to the microcosm or
narrower world of self, they again became acquainted with the True
Ruler and Guide of the Universe, and used the old
fables and superstitions as symbols and allegories, by which to
convey and under which to hide the great truths which had faded out
of most men's remembrance.
In the Hebrew
writings, the term "Heavenly Hosts" includes not only the
counsellors and emissaries of Jehovah, but also the celestial
luminaries; and the stars, imagined in the East to be animated
intelligences, presiding over human weal and woe, are identified
with the more distinctly impersonated messengers or angels, who
execute the Divine decrees, and whose predominance in Heaven is in
mysterious correspondence and relation with the powers and dominions
of the earth. In Job, the Morning Stars and the Sons of God are
identified; they join in the same chorus of praise to the Almighty;
they are both susceptible of joy; they walk in brightness, and are
liable to impurity and imperfection in the sight of God. The Elohim
originally included not only foreign superstitious forms, but also
all that host of Heaven which was revealed in poetry to the
shepherds of the desert, now as an encampment of warriors, now as
careering in chariots of fire, and now as winged messengers,
ascending and descending the vault of Heaven, to communicate the
will of God to mankind.
"The Eternal," says
the Bereshith Rabba to Genesis, "called forth Abraham and his
posterity out of the dominion of the stars; by nature, the Israelite
was a servant to the stars, and born under their influence, as are
the heathen; but by virtue of the law given on Mount Sinai, he
became liberated from this degrading servitude." The Arabs had a
similar legend. The Prophet Amos explicitly asserts that the
Israelites, in the desert, worshipped, not Jehovah, but Moloch, or a
Star-God, equivalent to Saturn. The Gods El or Jehovah were not
merely planetary or solar. Their symbolism, like that of every other
Deity, was coextensive with nature, and with the mind of man. Yet
the astrological character is assigned even to Jehovah. He is
described as seated on the pinnacle of the Universe, leading forth
the Hosts of Heaven, and telling them unerringly by name and number.
His stars are His sons and His eyes, which run through the whole
world, keeping watch over men's deeds. The stars and planets were
properly the angels. In Pharisaic tradition, as in the phraseology
of the New Testament, the Heavenly Host appears as an Angelic Army,
divided into regiments and brigades, under the command of imaginary chiefs,
such as Massaloth, Legion, Kartor Gistra, etc.,--each Gistra being
captain of 365,000 myriads of stars. The Seven Spirits which stand
before the throne, spoken of by several Jewish writers, and
generally presumed to have been immediately derived from the Persian
Amshaspands, were ultimately the seven planetary intelligences, the
original model of the seven-branched golden candlestick exhibited to
Moses on God's mountain. The stars were imagined to have fought in
their courses against Sisera. The heavens were spoken of as holding
a predominance over earth, as governing it by signs and ordinances,
and as containing the elements of that astrological wisdom, more
especially cultivated by the Babylonians and Egyptians.
Each nation was
supposed by the Hebrews to have its own guardian angel, and its own
provincial star. One of the chiefs of the Celestial Powers, at first
Jehovah Himself in the character of the Sun, standing in the height
of Heaven, overlooking and governing all things, afterward one of
the angels or subordinate planetary genii of Babylonian or Persian
mythology, was the patron and protector of their own nation, "the
Prince that standeth for the children of thy people." The discords
of earth were accompanied by a warfare in the sky; and no people
underwent the visitation of the Almighty, without a corresponding
chastisement being inflicted on its tutelary angel.
The fallen Angels
were also fallen Stars; and the first allusion to a feud among the
spiritual powers in early Hebrew Mythology, where Rahab and his
confederates are defeated, like the Titans in a battle against the
Gods, seems to identify the rebellious Spirits as part of the
visible Heavens, where the "high ones on high" are punished or
chained, as a signal proof of God's power and justice. God, it is
said--
"Stirs the sea with
His might by His understanding He smote Rahab--His breath clears the
face of Heaven--His hand pierced the crooked Serpent. . . . God
withdraws not His anger; beneath Him bow the confederates of Rahab."
Rahab always means a
sea-monster: probably some such legendary monstrous dragon, as in
almost all mythologies is the adversary of Heaven and demon of
eclipse, in whose belly, significantly called the belly of Hell,
Hercules, like Jonah, passed three days, ultimately escaping with
the loss of his hair or rays. Chesil, the rebellious giant Orion,
represented in Job as riveted to the sky, was compared to Ninus
or Nimrod, the mythical founder of Nineveh (City of Fish) the mighty
hunter, who slew lions and panthers before the Lord. Rahab's
confederates are probably the "High ones on High," the Chesilim or
constellations in Isaiah, the Heavenly Host or Heavenly Powers,
among whose number were found folly and disobedience.
"I beheld," says
Pseudo-Enoch, "seven stars like great blazing mountains, and like
Spirits, entreating me. And the angel said, This place, until the
consummation of Heaven and Earth, will be the prison of the Stars
and of the Host of Heaven. These are the Stars which overstepped
God's command before their time arrived; and came not at their
proper season; therefore was he offended with them, and bound them,
until the time of the consummation of their crimes in the secret
year." And again: "These Seven Stars are those which have
transgressed the commandment of the Most High God, and which are
here bound until the number of the days of their crimes be
completed."
The Jewish and early
Christian writers looked on the worship of the sun and the elements
with comparative indulgence. Justin Martyr and Clemens of Alexandria
admit that God had appointed the stars as legitimate objects of
heathen worship, in order to preserve throughout the world some
tolerable notions of natural religion. It seemed a middle point
between Heathenism and Christianity; and to it certain emblems and
ordinances of that faith seemed to relate. The advent of Christ was
announced by a Star from the East; and His nativity was celebrated
on the shortest day of the Julian Calendar, the day when, in the
physical commemorations of Persia and Egypt, Mithras or Osiris was
newly found. It was then that the acclamations of the Host of
Heaven, the unfailing attendants of the Sun, surrounded, as at the
spring-dawn of creation, the cradle of His birth-place, and that, in
the words of Ignatius, "a star, with light inexpressible, shone
forth in the Heavens, to destroy the power of magic and the bonds of
wickedness; for God Himself had appeared, in the form of man, for
the renewal of eternal life."
But however infinite
the variety of objects which helped to develop the notion of Deity,
and eventually assumed its place, substituting the worship of the
creature for that of the creator; of parts of the body, for that of
the soul, of the Universe, still the notion itself was essentially
one of unity. The idea of one
God, of a creative, productive, governing unity, resided in the
earliest exertion of thought: and this monotheism of the primitive
ages, makes every succeeding epoch, unless it be the present, appear
only as a stage in the progress of degeneracy and aberration.
Everywhere in the old faiths we find the idea of a supreme or
presiding Deity. Amun or Osiris presides among the many gods of
Egypt; Pan, with the music of his pipe, directs the chorus of the
constellations, as Zeus leads the solemn procession of the celestial
troops in the astronomical theology of the Pythagoreans. "Amidst an
infinite diversity of opinions on all other subjects," says Maximus
Tyrius, "the whole world is unanimous in the belief of one only
almighty King and Father of all."
There is always a
Sovereign Power, a Zeus or Deus, Mahadeva or Adideva, to whom
belongs the maintenance of the order of the Universe. Among the
thousand gods of India, the doctrine of Divine Unity is never lost
sight of; and the ethereal Jove, worshipped by the Persian in an age
long before Xenophanes or Anaxagoras, appears as supremely
comprehensive and independent of planetary or elemental
subdivisions, as the "Vast One" or "Great Soul" of the Vedas.
But the simplicity of
belief of the patriarchs did not exclude the employment of
symbolical representations. 'Fl mind never rests satisfied with a
mere feeling. That feeling ever strives to assume precision and
durability as an idea, by some outward delineation of its
thought. Even the ideas that are above and beyond the senses, as all
ideas of God are, require the aid of the senses for their expression
and communication. Hence come the representative forms and symbols
which constitute the external investiture of every religion;
attempts to express a religious sentiment that is essentially one,
and that vainly struggles for adequate external utterance, striving
to tell to one man, to paint to him, an idea existing in the
mind of another, and essentially incapable of utterance or
description, in a language all the words of which have a sensuous
meaning. Thus, the idea being perhaps the same in all, its
expressions and utterances are infinitely various, and branch into
an infinite diversity of creeds and sects.
All religious
expression is symbolism; since we can describe only what we see; and
the true objects of religion are unseen. The earliest instruments of
education were symbols; and they and all other religious forms
differed and still differ according to external
circumstances and imagery, and according to differences of knowledge
and mental cultivation. To present a visible symbol to the eye of
another is not to inform him of the meaning which that symbol has to
you. Hence the philosopher soon super-added to these symbols,
explanations addressed to the ear, susceptible of more precision,
but less effective, obvious, and impressive than the painted or
sculptured forms which he despised. Out of these explanations grew
by degrees a variety of narratives, whose true object and meaning
were gradually forgotten. And when these were abandoned, and
philosophy resorted to definitions and formulas, its language was
but a more refined symbolism, grappling with and attempting to
picture ideas impossible to be expressed. For the most abstract
expression for Deity which language can supply, is but a sign
or symbol for an object unknown, and no more truthful and
adequate than the terms Osiris and Vishnu, except as being less
sensuous and explicit. To say that He is a Spirit, is but to
say that He is not matter. What spirit is, we can only define
as the Ancients did, by resorting, as if in despair, to some
sublimized species of matter, as Light, Fire, or Ether.
No symbol of Deity
can be appropriate or durable except in a relative or moral sense.
We cannot exalt words that have only a sensuous meaning, above
sense. To call Him a Power or a Force, or an
Intelligence, is merely to deceive ourselves into the belief
that we use words that have a meaning to us, when they have none, or
at least no more than the ancient visible symbols had. To call Him
Sovereign, Father, Grand Architect of the Universe,
Extension, Time, Beginning, Middle,
and End, whose face is turned on all sides, the Source
of life and death, is but to present other men with symbols by
which we vainly endeavor to communicate to them 'the same vague
ideas which men in all ages have impotently struggled to express.
And it may be doubted whether we have succeeded either in
communicating, or in forming in our own minds, any more distinct and
definite and true and adequate idea of the Deity, with all our
metaphysical conceits and logical subtleties, than the rude ancients
did, who endeavored to symbolize and so to express His attributes,
by the Fire, the Light, the Sun and Stars, the Lotus and the
Scarabĉus; all of them types of what, except by types, more or less
sufficient, could not be expressed at all.
The primitive man
recognized the Divine Presence under a variety of
appearances, without losing his faith in this unity and Supremacy.
The invisible God, manifested and on one of His many sides visible,
did not cease to be God to him. He recognized Him in the evening
breeze of Eden, in the whirlwind of Sinai, in the Stone of Beth-El:
and identified Him with the fire or thunder or the immovable rock
adored in Ancient Arabia. To him the image of the Deity was
reflected in all that was pre-eminent in excellence. He saw Jehovah,
like Osiris and Bel, in the Sun as well as in the Stars, which were
His children, His eyes, "which run through the whole world, and
watch over the Sacred Soil of Palestine, from the year's
commencement to its close." He was the sacred fire of Mount Sinai,
of the burning bush, of the Persians, those Puritans of Paganism.
Naturally it followed
that Symbolism soon became more complicated, and all the, powers of
Heaven were reproduced on earth, until a web of fiction and allegory
was woven, which the wit of man, with his limited means of
explanation, will never unravel. Hebrew Theism itself became
involved in symbolism and image-worship, to which all religions ever
tend. We have already seen what was the symbolism of the Tabernacle,
the Temple, and the Ark. The Hebrew establishment tolerated not only
the use of emblematic vessels, vestments, and cherubs, of Sacred
Pillars and Seraphim, but symbolical representations of Jehovah
Himself, not even confined to poetical or illustrative language.
"Among the Adityas,"
says Chrishna, in the Bagvat Ghita, "I am Vishnu, the radiant Sun
among the Stars; among the waters, I am ocean; among the mountains,
the Himalaya; and among the mountain-tops, Meru." The Psalms and
Isaiah are full of similar attempts to convey to the mind ideas of
God, by ascribing to Him sensual proportions. He rides on the
clouds, and sits on the wings of the wind. Heaven is His pavilion,
and out of His mouth issue lightnings. Men cannot worship a mere
abstraction. They require some outward form in which to clothe their
conceptions, and invest their sympathies. If they do not shape and
carve or paint visible images, they have invisible ones, perhaps
quite as inadequate and unfaithful, within their own minds.
The incongruous and
monstrous in the Oriental images came from the desire to embody the
Infinite, and to convey by multiplied, because individually
inadequate symbols, a notion of the Divine Attributes to the
understanding. Perhaps we should find that we mentally do
the same thing, and make within ourselves images quite as
incongruous, if judged of by our own limited conceptions, if we were
to undertake to analyze and gain a clear idea of the mass of
infinite attributes which we assign to the Deity; and even of His
infinite Justice and infinite Mercy and Love.
We may well say, in
the language of Maximus Tyrius: "If, in the desire to obtain some
faint conception of the Universal Father, the Nameless Lawgiver, men
had recourse to words or names, to silver or gold, to animals or
plants, to mountain-tops or flowing rivers, every one inscribing the
most valued and most beautiful things with the name of Deity, and
with the fondness of a lover clinging with rapture to each trivial
reminiscence of the Beloved, why should we seek to reduce this
universal practice of symbolism, necessary, indeed, since the mind
often needs the excitement of the imagination to rouse it into
activity, to one monotonous standard of formal propriety? Only let
the image duly perform its task, and bring the divine idea with
vividness and truth before the mental eye; if this be effected,
whether by the art of Phidias, the poetry of Homer, the Egyptian
Hieroglyph, or the Persian element, we need not cavil at external
differences, or lament the seeming fertility of unfamiliar creeds,
so long as the great essential is attained, THAT MEN ARE MADE
TO REMEMBER, TO UNDERSTAND, AND TO LOVE."
Certainly, when men
regarded Light and Fire as something spiritual, and above all the
corruptions and exempt from all the decay of matter; when they
looked upon the Sun and Stars and Planets as composed of this finer
element, and as themselves great and mysterious Intelligences,
infinitely superior to man, living Existences, gifted with mighty
powers and wielding vast influences, those elements and bodies
conveyed to them, when used as symbols of Deity, a far more adequate
idea than they can now do to us, or than we can comprehend, now that
Fire and Light are familiar to us as air and water, and the Heavenly
Luminaries are lifeless worlds like our own. Perhaps they gave them
ideas as adequate as we obtain from the mere words by which
we endeavor to symbolize and shadow forth the ineffable mysteries
and infinite attributes of God.
There are, it is
true, dangers inseparable from symbolism, which countervail its
advantages, and afford an impressive lesson in regard to the similar
risks attendant on the use of language. The imagination, invited
to assist the reason, usurps its place, or leaves its ally
helplessly entangled in its web. Names which stand for things are
confounded with them; the means are mistaken for the end: the
instrument of interpretation for the object; and thus symbols come
to usurp an independent character as truths and persons. Though
perhaps a necessary path, they were a dangerous one by which to
approach the Deity; in which "many," says Plutarch, "mistaking the
sign for the thing signified, fell into a ridiculous superstition;
while others, in avoiding one extreme, plunged into the no less
hideous gulf of irreligion and impiety."
All great Reformers
have warred against this evil, deeply feeling the intellectual
mischief arising out of a degraded idea of the Supreme Being: and
have claimed for their own God an existence or personality distinct
from the objects of ancient superstition; disowning in His name the
symbols and images that had profaned His Temple. But they have not
seen that the utmost which can be effected by human effort, is to
substitute impressions relatively correct, for others whose
falsehood has been detected, and to re-place a gross symbolism by a
purer one. Every man, without being aware of it, worships a
conception of his own mind; for all symbolism, as well as all
language, shares the subjective character of the ideas it
represents. The epithets we apply to God only recall either visible
or intellectual symbols to the eye or mind. The modes or forms of
manifestation of the reverential feeling that constitutes the
religious sentiment, are incomplete and progressive; each term and
symbol predicates a partial truth, remaining always amenable to
improvement or modification, and, in its turn, to be superseded by
others more accurate and comprehensive.
Idolatry consists in
confounding the symbol with the thing signified, the substitution of
a material for a mental object of worship, after a higher
spiritualism has become possible; an ill-judged preference of the
inferior to the superior symbol, an inadequate and sensual
conception of the Deity: and every religion and every conception of
God is idolatrous, in so far as it is imperfect, and as it
substitutes a feeble and temporary idea in the shrine of that
Undiscoverable Being who can be known only in part, and who can
therefore be honored, even by the most enlightened among His
worshippers, only in proportion to their limited powers of
understanding and imagining to themselves His perfections.
Like the belief in a
Deity, the belief in the soul's immortality is rather a natural
feeling, an adjunct of self-consciousness, than a dogma belonging to
any particular age or country. It gives eternity to man's nature,
and reconciles its seeming anomalies and contradictions; it makes
him strong in weakness and perfectible in imperfection; and it alone
gives an adequate object for his hopes and energies, and value and
dignity to his pursuits. It is concurrent with the belief in an
infinite, eternal Spirit, since it is chiefly through consciousness
of the dignity of the mind within us, that we learn to appreciate
its evidences in the Universe.
To fortify, and as
far as possible to impart this hope, was the great aim of ancient
wisdom, whether expressed in forms of poetry or philosophy; as it
was of the Mysteries, and as it is of Masonry. Life rising out of
death was the great mystery, which symbolism delighted to represent
under a thousand ingenious forms. Nature was ransacked for
attestations to the grand truth which seems to transcend all other
gifts of imagination, or rather to be their essence and
consummation. Such evidences were easily discovered. They were found
in the olive and the lotus, in the evergreen myrtle of the Mystĉ
and of the grave of Polydorus, in the deadly but self-renewing
serpent, the wonderful moth emerging from the coffin of the worm,
the phenomena of germination, the settings and risings of the sun
and stars, the darkening and growth of the moon, and in sleep, "the
minor mystery of death."
The stories of the
birth of Apollo from Latona, and of dead heroes, like Glaucus,
resuscitated in caves, were allegories of the natural alternations
of life and death in nature, changes that are but expedients to
preserve her virginity and purity inviolable in the general sum of
her operations, whose aggregate presents only a majestic calm,
rebuking alike man's presumption and his despair. The typical death
of the Nature-God, Osiris, Atys, Adonis, Hiram, was a profound but
consolatory mystery: the heating charms of Orpheus were connected
with his destruction; and his bones, those valued pledges of
fertility and victory, were, by a beautiful contrivance, often
buried within the sacred precincts of his immortal equivalent.
In their doctrines as
to the immortality of the soul, the Greek Philosophers merely stated
with more precision ideas long before extant independently among
themselves, in the form of symbolical suggestion. Egypt and Ethiopia
in these matters learned from
India, where, as everywhere else, the origin of the doctrine was as
remote and untraceable as the origin of man himself. Its natural
expression is found in the language of Chrishna, in the Bagvat
Ghita: "I myself never was non-existent, nor thou, nor these princes
of the Earth; nor shall we ever hereafter cease to be. . . The soul
is not a thing of which a man may say, it hath been, or is about to
be, or is to be hereafter; for it is a thing without birth; it is
pre-existent, changeless, eternal, and is not to be destroyed with
this mortal frame."
According to the
dogma of antiquity, the thronging forms of life are a series of
purifying migrations, through which the divine principle re-ascends
to the unity of its source. Inebriated in the bowl of Dionusos, and
dazzled in the mirror of existence, the souls, those fragments or
sparks of the Universal Intelligence, forgot their native dignity,
and passed into the terrestrial frames they coveted. The most usual
type of the spirit's descent was suggested by the sinking of the Sun
and Stars from the upper to the lower hemisphere. When it arrived
within the portals of the proper empire of Dionusos, the God of this
World, the scene of delusion and change, its individuality became
clothed in a material form; and as individual bodies were compared
to a garment, the world was the investiture of the Universal Spirit.
Again, the body was compared to a vase or urn, the soul's recipient;
the world being the mighty bowl which received the descending Deity.
In another image, ancient as the Grottoes of the Magi and the
denunciations of Ezekiel, the world was as a dimly illuminated
cavern, where shadows seem realities, and where the soul becomes
forgetful of its celestial origin in proportion to its proneness to
material fascinations. By another, the period of the Soul's
embodiment is as when exhalations are condensed, and the aerial
element assumes the grosser form of water.
But if vapor falls in
water, it was held, water is again the birth of vapors, which ascend
and adorn the Heavens. If our mortal existence be the death of the
spirit, our death may be the renewal of its life; as physical bodies
are exalted from earth to water, from water to air, from air to
fire, so the man may rise into the Hero, the Hero into the God. In
the course of Nature, the soul, to re-cover its lost estate, must
pass through a series of trials and migrations. The scene of those
trials is the Grand Sanctuary of Initiations, the world: their
primary agents are the elements; and Dionusos, as Sovereign of
Nature, or the sensuous world personified, is official Arbiter
of the Mysteries, and guide of the soul, which he introduces into
the body and dismisses from it. He is the Sun, that liberator of the
elements, and his spiritual mediation was suggested by the same
imagery which made the Zodiac the supposed path of the spirits in
their descent and their return, and Cancer and Capricorn the gates
through which they passed.
He was not only
Creator of the World, but guardian, liberator, and Saviour of the
Soul. Ushered into the world amidst lightning and thunder, he became
the Liberator celebrated in the Mysteries of Thebes, delivering
earth from Winter's chain, conducting the nightly chorus of the
Stars and the celestial revolution of the year. His symbolism was
the inexhaustible imagery employed to fill up the stellar devices of
the Zodiac: he was the Vernal Bull, the Lion, the Ram, the Autumnal
Goat, the Serpent: in short, the varied Deity, the resulting
manifestation personified, the all in the many, the varied year,
life passing into innumerable forms; essentially inferior to none,
yet changing with the seasons, and undergoing their periodical
decay.
He mediates and
intercedes for man, and reconciles the Universal Unseen Mind with
the individualized spirit of which he is emphatically the Perfecter;
a consummation which he effects, first through the vicissitudes of
the elemental ordeal, the alternate fire of Summer and the showers
of Winter, "the trials or test of an immortal Nature"; and
secondarily and symbolically through the Mysteries. He holds not
only the cup of generation, but also that of wisdom or initiation,
whose influence is contrary to that of the former, causing the soul
to abhor its material bonds, and to long for its return. The first
was the Cup of Forgetfulness; while the second is the Urn of
Aquarius, quaffed by the returning spirit, as by the returning Sun
at the Winter Solstice, and emblematic of the exchange of worldly
impressions for the recovered recollections of the glorious sights
and enjoyments of its pre-existence. Water nourishes and purifies;
and the urn from which it flows was thought worthy to be a symbol of
Deity, as of the Osiris-Canobus who with living water irrigated the
soil of Egypt; and also an emblem of Hope that should cheer the
dwellings of the dead.
The second birth of
Dionusos, like the rising of Osiris and Atys from the dead, and the
raising of Khūrūm, is a type of the spiritual regeneration of man.
Psyche (the Soul), like Ariadne, had two lovers, an
earthly and an immortal one. The immortal suitor is Dionusos, the
Eros-Phanes of the Orphici, gradually exalted by the progress of
thought, out of the symbol of Sensuality into the torch-bearer of
the Nuptials of the Gods; the Divine Influence which physically
called the world into being, and which, awakening the soul from its
Stygian trance, restores it from earth to Heaven.
Thus the scientific
theories of the ancients, expounded in the Mysteries, as to the
origin of the soul, its descent, its sojourn here below, and its
return, were not a mere barren contemplation of the nature of the
world, and of the intelligent beings existing there. They were not
an idle speculation as to the order of the world, and about the
soul, but a study of the means for arriving at the great object
proposed, the perfecting of the soul; and, as a necessary
consequence, that of morals and society. This Earth, to them, was
not the Soul's home, but its place of exile. Heaven was its home,
and there was its birth-place. To it, it ought incessantly to turn
its eyes. Man was not a terrestrial plant. His roots were in Heaven.
The soul had lost its wings, clogged by the viscosity of matter. It
would recover them when it extricated itself from matter and
commenced its upward flight.
Matter being, in
their view, as it was in that of St. Paul, the principle of all the
passions that trouble reason, mislead the intelligence, and stain
the purity of the soul, the Mysteries taught man how to enfeeble the
action of matter on the soul, and to restore to the latter its
natural dominion. And lest the stains so contracted should continue
after death, lustrations were used, fastings, expiations,
macerations, continence, and above all, initiations. Many of these
practices were at first merely symbolical,--material signs
indicating the moral purity required of the Initiates; but they
afterward came to be regarded as actual productive causes of that
purity.
The effect of
initiation was meant to be the same as that of philosophy, to purify
the soul of its passions, to weaken the empire of the body over the
divine portion of man, and to give him here below a happiness
anticipatory of the felicity to be one day enjoyed by him, and of
the future vision by him of the Divine Beings. And therefore Proclus
and the other Platonists taught "that the Mysteries and initiations
withdrew souls from this mortal and material life, to re-unite them
to the gods; and dissipated for the adepts the
shades of ignorance by the splendors of the Deity." Such were the
precious fruits of the last Degree of the Mystic Science,--to see
Nature in her springs and sources, and to become familiar with the
causes of things and with real existences.
Cicero says that the
soul must exercise itself in the practice of the virtues, if it
would speedily return to its place of origin. It should, while
imprisoned in the body, free itself therefrom by the contemplation
of superior beings, and in some sort be divorced from the body and
the senses. Those who remain enslaved, subjugated by their passions
and violating the sacred laws of religion and society, will
re-ascend to Heaven, only after they shall have been purified
through a long succession of ages.
The Initiate was
required to emancipate himself from his passions, and to free
himself from the hindrances of the senses and of matter, in order
that he might rise to the contemplation of the Deity, or of that
incorporeal and unchanging light in which live and subsist the
causes of created natures. "We must," says Porphyry, "flee from
everything sensual, that the soul may with ease re-unite itself with
God, and live happily with Him." "This is the great work of
initiation," says Hierocles;--"to recall the soul to what is truly
good and beautiful, and make it familiar therewith, and they its
own; to deliver it from the pains and ills it endures here below,
enchained in matter as in a dark prison; to facilitate its return to
the celestial splendors, and to establish it in the Fortunate Isles,
by restoring it to its first estate. Thereby, when the hour of death
arrives, the soul, freed of its mortal garmenting, which it leaves
behind it as a legacy to earth, will rise buoyantly to its home
among the Stars, there to re-take its ancient condition, and
approach toward the Divine nature as far as man may do."
Plutarch compares
Isis to knowledge, and Typhon to ignorance, obscuring the light of
the sacred doctrine whose 'blaze lights the soul of the Initiate. No
gift of the gods, he holds, is so precious as the knowledge of the
Truth, and that of the Nature of the gods, so far as our limited
capacities allow us to rise toward them. The Valentinians termed
initiation LIGHT. The Initiate, says Psellus, becomes an Epopt, when
admitted to see THE DIVINE LIGHTS. Clemens of Alexandria, imitating
the language of an Initiate in the Mysteries of Bacchus, and
inviting this Initiate, whom he terms blind like Tiresias, to come
to see Christ, Who will blaze upon his eyes
with greater glory than the Sun, exclaims: "Oh Mysteries most truly
holy! Oh pure Light! When the torch of the Dadoukos gleams, Heaven
and the Deity are displayed to my eyes! I am initiated, and become
holy!" This was the true object of initiation; to be sanctified, and
TO SEE, that is, to have just and faithful conceptions of the Deity,
the knowledge of Whom was THE LIGHT of the Mysteries. It was
promised the Initiate at Samothrace, that he should become pure and
just. Clemens says that by baptism, souls are illuminated,
and led to the pure light with which mingles no darkness, nor
anything material. The Initiate, become an Epopt, was called A SEER.
"HAIL, NEW-BORN LIGHT!" the Initiates cried in the Mysteries of
Bacchus.
Such was held to be
the effect of complete initiation. It lighted up the soul with rays
from the Divinity, and became for it, as it were, the eye with
which, according to the Pythagoreans, it con-templates the field of
Truth; in its mystical abstractions, wherein it rises superior to
the body, whose action on it, it annuls for the time, to re-enter
into itself, so as entirely to occupy itself with the view of the
Divinity, and the means of coming to resemble Him.
Thus enfeebling the
dominion of the senses and the passions over the soul, and as it
were freeing the latter from a sordid slavery, and by the steady
practice of all the virtues, active and contemplative, our ancient
brethren strove to fit themselves to return to the bosom of the
Deity. Let not our objects as Masons fall below theirs. We use the
symbols which they used; and teach the same great cardinal doctrines
that they taught, of the existence of an intellectual God, and the
immortality of the soul of man. If the details of their doctrines as
to the soul seem to us to verge on absurdity, let us compare them
with the common notions of our own day, and be silent. If it seems
to us that they regarded the symbol in some cases as the thing
symbolized, and worshipped the sign as if it were itself
Deity, let us reflect how insufficient are our own ideas of Deity,
and how we worship those ideas and images formed and fashioned in
our own minds, and not the Deity Himself: and if we are inclined to
smile at the importance they attached to lustrations and fasts, let
us pause and inquire whether the same weakness of human nature does
not exist to-day, causing rites and ceremonies to be regarded as
actively efficient for the salvation of souls.
And let us ever
remember the words of an old writer, with which we conclude this
lecture: "It is a pleasure to stand on the shore, and to see ships
tossed upon the sea: a pleasure to stand in the window of a castle,
and see a battle and the adventures thereof: but no pleasure is
comparable to the standing on the vantage-ground of TRUTH (a hill
not to be commanded, and where the air is always clear and serene),
and to see the errors and wanderings, and mists and tempests, in the
vale below; so always that this prospect be with pity, and not
with swelling or pride. Certainly it is Heaven upon Earth to
have a man's mind move in charity, rest in Providence, AND TURN UPON
THE POLES OF TRUTH."

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