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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Hasisadra's Adventure, by Huxley
+#10 in our series by Thomas Henry Huxley
+This is Essay #7 from "Science and Hebrew Tradition"
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+Title: Hasisadra's Adventure
+Title: This is Essay #7 from "Science and Hebrew Tradition"
+
+Author: Thomas Henry Huxley
+
+May, 2001 [Etext #2633]
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Hasisadra's Adventure, by Huxley
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+Hasisadra's Adventure
+by Thomas Henry Huxley
+This is Essay #7 from "Science and Hebrew Tradition"
+
+
+
+
+Some thousands of years ago there was a city in Mesopotamia
+called Surippak. One night a strange dream came to a dweller
+therein, whose name, if rightly reported, was Hasisadra.
+The dream foretold the speedy coming of a great flood; and it
+warned Hasisadra to lose no time in building a ship, in which,
+when notice was given, he, his family and friends, with their
+domestic animals and a collection of wild creatures and seed of
+plants of the land, might take refuge and be rescued from
+destruction. Hasisadra awoke, and at once acted upon the
+warning. A strong decked ship was built, and her sides were
+paid, inside and out, with the mineral pitch, or bitumen, with
+which the country abounded; the vessel's seaworthiness was
+tested, the cargo was stowed away, and a trusty pilot or
+steersman appointed.
+
+The promised signal arrived. Wife and friends embarked;
+Hasisadra, following, prudently "shut the door," or, as we
+should say, put on the hatches; and Nes-Hea, the pilot, was left
+alone on deck to do his best for the ship. Thereupon a hurricane
+began to rage; rain fell in torrents; the subterranean waters
+burst forth; a deluge swept over the land, and the wind lashed
+it into waves sky high; heaven and earth became mingled in
+chaotic gloom. For six days and seven nights the gale raged, but
+the good ship held out until, on the seventh day, the storm
+lulled. Hasisadra ventured on deck; and, seeing nothing but a
+waste of waters strewed with floating corpses and wreck, wept
+over the destruction of his land and people. Far away, the
+mountains of Nizir were visible; the ship was steered for them
+and ran aground upon the higher land. Yet another seven days
+passed by. On the seventh, Hasisadra sent forth a dove, which
+found no resting place and returned; then he liberated a
+swallow, which also came back; finally, a raven was let loose,
+and that sagacious bird, when it found that the water had
+abated, came near the ship, but refused to return to it.
+Upon this, Hasisadra liberated the rest of the wild animals,
+which immediately dispersed in all directions, while he, with
+his family and friends, ascending a mountain hard by, offered
+sacrifice upon its summit to the gods.
+
+The story thus given in summary abstract, told in an ancient
+Semitic dialect, is inscribed in cuneiform characters upon a
+tablet of burnt clay. Many thousands of such tablets, collected
+by Assurbanipal, King of Assyria in the middle of the seventh
+century B.C., were stored in the library of his palace at
+Nineveh; and, though in a sadly broken and mutilated condition,
+they have yielded a marvellous amount of information to the
+patient and sagacious labour which modern scholars have bestowed
+upon them. Among the multitude of documents of various kinds,
+this narrative of Hasisadra's adventure has been found in a
+tolerably complete state. But Assyriologists agree that it is
+only a copy of a much more ancient work; and there are weighty
+reasons for believing that the story of Hasisadra's flood was
+well known in Mesopotamia before the year 2000 B.C.
+
+No doubt, then, we are in presence of a narrative which has all
+the authority which antiquity can confer; and it is proper to
+deal respectfully with it, even though it is quite as proper,
+and indeed necessary, to act no less respectfully towards
+ourselves; and, before professing to put implicit faith in it,
+to inquire what claim it has to be regarded as a serious account
+of an historical event.
+
+It is of no use to appeal to contemporary history, although the
+annals of Babylonia, no less than those of Egypt, go much
+further back than 2000 B.C. All that can be said is, that the
+former are hardly consistent with the supposition that any
+catastrophe, competent to destroy all the population, has
+befallen the land since civilisation began, and that the latter
+are notoriously silent about deluges. In such a case as this,
+however, the silence of history does not leave the inquirer
+wholly at fault. Natural science has something to say when the
+phenomena of nature are in question. Natural science may be able
+to show, from the nature of the country, either that such an
+event as that described in the story is impossible, or at any
+rate highly improbable; or, on the other hand, that it is
+consonant with probability. In the former case, the narrative
+must be suspected or rejected; in the latter, no such summary
+verdict can be given: on the contrary, it must be admitted that
+the story may be true. And then, if certain strangely prevalent
+canons of criticism are accepted, and if the evidence that an
+event might have happened is to be accepted as proof that it did
+happen, Assyriologists will be at liberty to congratulate one
+another on the "confirmation by modern science" of the authority
+of their ancient books.
+
+It will be interesting, therefore, to inquire how far the
+physical structure and the other conditions of the region in
+which Surippak was situated are compatible with such a flood as
+is described in the Assyrian record.
+
+The scene of Hasisadra's adventure is laid in the broad valley,
+six or seven hundred miles long, and hardly anywhere less than a
+hundred miles in width, which is traversed by the lower courses
+of the rivers Euphrates and Tigris, and which is commonly known
+as the "Euphrates valley." Rising, at the one end, into a hill
+country, which gradually passes into the Alpine heights of
+Armenia; and, at the other, dipping beneath the shallow waters
+of the head of the Persian Gulf, which continues in the same
+direction, from north-west to south-east, for some eight hundred
+miles farther, the floor of the valley presents a gradual slope,
+from eight hundred feet above the sea level to the depths of the
+southern end of the Persian Gulf. The boundary between sea and
+land, formed by the extremest mudflats of the delta of the two
+rivers, is but vaguely defined; and, year by year, it advances
+seaward. On the north-eastern side, the western frontier ranges
+of Persia rise abruptly to great heights; on the south-western
+side, a more gradual ascent leads to a table-land of less
+elevation, which, very broad in the south, where it is occupied
+by the deserts of Arabia and of Southern Syria, narrows,
+northwards, into the highlands of Palestine, and is continued by
+the ranges of the Lebanon, the Antilebanon, and the Taurus, into
+the highlands of Armenia.
+
+The wide and gently inclined plain, thus inclosed between the
+gulf and the highlands, on each side and at its upper extremity,
+is distinguishable into two regions of very different character,
+one of which lies north, and the other south of the parallel of
+Hit, on the Euphrates. Except in the immediate vicinity of the
+river, the northern division is stony and scantily covered with
+vegetation, except in spring. Over the southern division, on the
+contrary, spreads a deep alluvial soil, in which even a pebble
+is rare; and which, though, under the existing misrule, mainly a
+waste of marsh and wilderness, needs only intelligent attention
+to become, as it was of old, the granary of western Asia.
+Except in the extreme south, the rainfall is small and the air
+dry. The heat in summer is intense, while bitterly cold northern
+blasts sweep the plain in winter. Whirlwinds are not uncommon;
+and, in the intervals of the periodical inundations, the fine,
+dry, powdery soil is swept, even by moderate breezes, into
+stifling clouds, or rather fogs, of dust. Low inequalities,
+elevations here and depressions there, diversify the surface of
+the alluvial region. The latter are occupied by enormous
+marshes, while the former support the permanent dwellings of the
+present scanty and miserable population.
+
+In antiquity, so long as the canalisation of the country was
+properly carried out, the fertility of the alluvial plain
+enabled great and prosperous nations to have their home in the
+Euphrates valley. Its abundant clay furnished the materials for
+the masses of sun-dried and burnt bricks, the remains of which,
+in the shape of huge artificial mounds, still testify to both
+the magnitude and the industry of the population, thousands of
+years ago. Good cement is plentiful, while the bitumen, which
+wells from the rocks at Hit and elsewhere, not only answers the
+same purpose, but is used to this day, as it was in Hasisadra's
+time, to pay the inside and the outside of boats.
+
+In the broad lower course of the Euphrates, the stream rarely
+acquires a velocity of more than three miles an hour, while the
+lower Tigris attains double that rate in times of flood. The
+water of both great rivers is mainly derived from the northern
+and eastern highlands in Armenia and in Kurdistan, and stands at
+its lowest level in early autumn and in January. But when the
+snows accumulated in the upper basins of the great rivers,
+during the winter, melt under the hot sunshine of spring, they
+rapidly rise,<1> and at length overflow their banks, covering
+the alluvial plain with a vast inland sea, interrupted only by
+the higher ridges and hummocks which form islands in a seemingly
+boundless expanse of water.
+
+In the occurrence of these annual inundations lies one of
+several resemblances between the valley of the Euphrates and
+that of the Nile. But there are important differences. The time
+of the annual flood is reversed, the Nile being highest in
+autumn and winter, and lowest in spring and early summer. The
+periodical overflows of the Nile, regulated by the great lake
+basins in the south, are usually punctual in arrival, gradual in
+growth, and beneficial in operation. No lakes are interposed
+between the mountain torrents of the upper basis of the Tigris
+and the Euphrates and their lower courses. Hence, heavy rain, or
+an unusually rapid thaw in the uplands, gives rise to the sudden
+irruption of a vast volume of water which not even the rapid
+Tigris, still less its more sluggish companion, can carry off in
+time to prevent violent and dangerous overflows. Without an
+elaborate system of canalisation, providing an escape for such
+sudden excesses of the supply of water, the annual floods of the
+Euphrates, and especially of the Tigris, must always be attended
+with risk, and often prove harmful.
+
+There are other peculiarities of the Euphrates valley which may
+occasionally tend to exacerbate the evils attendant on the
+inundations. It is very subject to seismic disturbances; and the
+ordinary consequences of a sharp earthquake shock might be
+seriously complicated by its effect on a broad sheet of water.
+Moreover the Indian Ocean lies within the region of typhoons;
+and if, at the height of an inundation, a hurricane from the
+south-east swept up the Persian Gulf, driving its shallow waters
+upon the delta and damming back the outflow, perhaps for
+hundreds of miles up-stream, a diluvial catastrophe, fairly up
+to the mark of Hasisadra's, might easily result.<2>
+
+Thus there seems to be no valid reason for rejecting Hasisadra's
+story on physical grounds. I do not gather from the narrative
+that the "mountains of Nizir" were supposed to be submerged, but
+merely that they came into view above the distant horizon of the
+waters, as the vessel drove in that direction. Certainly the
+ship is not supposed to ground on any of their higher summits,
+for Hasisadra has to ascend a peak in order to offer his
+sacrifice. The country of Nizir lay on the north-eastern side of
+the Euphrates valley, about the courses of the two rivers Zab,
+which enter the Tigris where it traverses the plain of Assyria
+some eight or nine hundred feet above the sea; and, so far as I
+can judge from maps<3> and other sources of information, it is
+possible, under the circumstances supposed, that such a ship as
+Hasisadra's might drive before a southerly gale, over a
+continuously flooded country, until it grounded on some of the
+low hills between which both the lower and the upper Zab enter
+upon the Assyrian plain.
+
+The tablet which contains the story under consideration is the
+eleventh of a series of twelve. Each of these answers to a
+month, and to the corresponding sign of the Zodiac. The Assyrian
+year began with the spring equinox; consequently, the eleventh
+month, called "the rainy," answers to our January-February, and
+to the sign which corresponds with our Aquarius. The aquatic
+adventure of Hasisadra, therefore, is not inappropriately
+placed. It is curious, however, that the season thus indirectly
+assigned to the flood is not that of the present highest level
+of the rivers. It is too late for the winter rise and too early
+for the spring floods.
+
+I think it must be admitted that, so far, the physical cross-
+examination to which Hasisadra has been subjected does not break
+down his story. On the contrary, he proves to have kept it in
+all essential respects<4> within the bounds of probability or
+possibility. However, we have not yet done with him. For the
+conditions which obtained in the Euphrates valley, four or five
+thousand years ago, may have differed to such an extent from
+those which now exist that we should be able to convict him of
+having made up his tale. But here again everything is in favour
+of his credibility. Indeed, he may claim very powerful support,
+for it does not lie in the mouths of those who accept the
+authority of the Pentateuch to deny that the Euphrates valley
+was what it is, even six thousand years back. According to the
+book of Genesis, Phrat and Hiddekel--the Euphrates and the
+Tigris--are coeval with Paradise. An edition of the Scriptures,
+recently published under high authority, with an elaborate
+apparatus of "Helps" for the use of students--and therefore, as
+I am bound to suppose, purged of all statements that could by
+any possibility mislead the young--assigns the year B.C. 4004 as
+the date of Adam's too brief residence in that locality.
+
+But I am far from depending on this authority for the age of the
+Mesopotamian plain. On the contrary, I venture to rely, with
+much more confidence, on another kind of evidence, which tends
+to show that the age of the great rivers must be carried back to
+a date earlier than that at which our ingenuous youth is
+instructed that the earth came into existence. For, the alluvial
+deposit having been brought down by the rivers, they must needs
+be older than the plain it forms, as navvies must needs antecede
+the embankment painfully built up by the contents of their
+wheel-barrows. For thousands of years, heat and cold, rain,
+snow, and frost, the scrubbing of glaciers, and the scouring of
+torrents laden with sand and gravel, have been wearing down the
+rocks of the upper basins of the rivers, over an area of many
+thousand square miles; and these materials, ground to fine
+powder in the course of their long journey, have slowly
+subsided, as the water which carried them spread out and lost
+its velocity in the sea. It is because this process is still
+going on that the shore of the delta constantly encroaches on
+the head of the gulf<5> into which the two rivers are constantly
+throwing the waste of Armenia and of Kurdistan. Hence, as might
+be expected, fluviatile and marine shells are common in the
+alluvial deposit; and Loftus found strata, containing subfossil
+marine shells of species now living, in the Persian Gulf, at
+Warka, two hundred miles in a straight line from the shore of
+the delta.<6> It follows that, if a trustworthy estimate of the
+average rate of growth of the alluvial can be formed, the lowest
+limit (by no means the highest limit) of age of the rivers can
+be determined. All such estimates are beset with sources of
+error of very various kinds; and the best of them can only be
+regarded as approximations to the truth. But I think it will be
+quite safe to assume a maximum rate of growth of four miles in a
+century for the lower half of the alluvial plain.
+
+Now, the cycle of narratives of which Hasisadra's adventure
+forms a part contains allusions not only to Surippak, the exact
+position of which is doubtful, but to other cities, such as
+Erech. The vast ruins at the present village of Warka have been
+carefully explored and determined to be all that remains of that
+once great and flourishing city, "Erech the lofty."
+Supposing that the two hundred miles of alluvial country, which
+separates them from the head of the Persian Gulf at present,
+have been deposited at the very high rate of four miles in a
+century, it will follow that 4000 years ago, or about the year
+2100 B.C., the city of Erech still lay forty miles inland.
+Indeed, the city might have been built a thousand years earlier.
+Moreover, there is plenty of independent archaeological and
+other evidence that in the whole thousand years, 2000 to
+3000 B.C, the alluvial plain was inhabited by a numerous people,
+among whom industry, art, and literature had attained a very
+considerable development. And it can be shown that the physical
+conditions and the climate of the Euphrates valley, at that
+time, must have been extremely similar to what they are now.
+
+Thus, once more, we reach the conclusion that, as a question of
+physical probability, there is no ground for objecting to the
+reality of Hasisadra's adventure. It would be unreasonable to
+doubt that such a flood might have happened, and that such a
+person might have escaped in the way described, any time during
+the last 5000 years. And if the postulate of loose thinkers in
+search of scientific "confirmations" of questionable narratives
+--proof that an event may have happened is evidence that it did
+happen--is to be accepted, surely Hasisadra's story is
+"confirmed by modern scientific investigation" beyond all cavil.
+However, it may be well to pause before adopting this
+conclusion, because the original story, of which I have set
+forth only the broad outlines, contains a great many statements
+which rest upon just the same foundation as those cited, and yet
+are hardly likely to meet with general acceptance. The account
+of the circumstances which led up to the flood, of those under
+which Hasisadra's adventure was made known to his descendant, of
+certain remarkable incidents before and after the flood, are
+inseparably bound up with the details already given. And I am
+unable to discover any justification for arbitrarily picking out
+some of these and dubbing them historical verities, while
+rejecting the rest as legendary fictions. They stand or
+fall together.
+
+Before proceeding to the consideration of these less
+satisfactory details, it is needful to remark that Hasisadra's
+adventure is a mere episode in a cycle of stories of which a
+personage, whose name is provisionally read "Izdubar," is the
+centre. The nature of Izdubar hovers vaguely between the heroic
+and the divine; sometimes he seems a mere man, sometimes
+approaches so closely to the divinities of fire and of the sun
+as to be hardly distinguishable from them. As I have already
+mentioned, the tablet which sets forth Hasisadra's perils is one
+of twelve; and, since each of these represents a month and bears
+a story appropriate to the corresponding sign of the Zodiac,
+great weight must be attached to Sir Henry Rawlinson's
+suggestion that the epos of Izdubar is a poetical embodiment of
+solar mythology.
+
+In the earlier books of the epos, the hero, not content with
+rejecting the proffered love of the Chaldaean Aphrodite, Istar,
+freely expresses his very low estimate of her character; and it
+is interesting to observe that, even in this early stage of
+human experience, men had reached a conception of that law of
+nature which expresses the inevitable consequences of an
+imperfect appreciation of feminine charms. The injured goddess
+makes Izdubar's life a burden to him, until at last, sick in
+body and sorry in mind, he is driven to seek aid and comfort
+from his forbears in the world of spirits. So this antitype of
+Odysseus journeys to the shore of the waters of death, and there
+takes ship with a Chaldaean Charon, who carries him within hail
+of his ancestor Hasisadra. That venerable personage not only
+gives Izdubar instructions how to regain his health, but tells
+him, somewhat <i>a propos des bottes</i> (after the manner of
+venerable personages), the long story of his perilous adventure;
+and how it befell that he, his wife, and his steersman came to
+dwell among the blessed gods, without passing through the
+portals of death like ordinary mortals.
+
+According to the full story, the sins of mankind had become
+grievous; and, at a council of the gods, it was resolved to
+extirpate the whole race by a great flood. And, once more, let
+us note the uniformity of human experience. It would appear
+that, four thousand years ago, the obligations of confidential
+intercourse about matters of state were sometimes violated--
+of course from the best of motives. Ea, one of the three chiefs
+of the Chaldaean Pantheon, the god of justice and of practical
+wisdom, was also the god of the sea; and, yielding to the
+temptation to do a friend a good turn, irresistible to kindly
+seafaring folks of all ranks, he warned Hasisadra of what was
+coming. When Bel subsequently reproached him for this breach of
+confidence, Ea defended himself by declaring that he did not
+tell Hasisadra anything; he only sent him a dream. This was
+undoubtedly sailing very near the wind; but the attribution of a
+little benevolent obliquity of conduct to one of the highest of
+the gods is a trifle compared with the truly Homeric
+anthropomorphism which characterises other parts of the epos.
+
+The Chaldĉan deities are, in truth, extremely human; and,
+occasionally, the narrator does not scruple to represent them in
+a manner which is not only inconsistent with our idea of
+reverence, but is sometimes distinctly humorous.<7> When the
+storm is at its height, he exhibits them flying in a state of
+panic to Anu, the god of heaven, and crouching before his portal
+like frightened dogs. As the smoke of Hasisadra's sacrifice
+arises, the gods, attracted by the sweet savour, are compared to
+swarms of flies. I have already remarked that the lady Istar's
+reputation is torn to shreds; while she and Ea scold Bel
+handsomely for his ferocity and injustice in destroying the
+innocent along with the guilty. One is reminded of Here hung up
+with weighted heels; of misleading dreams sent by Zeus; of Ares
+howling as he flies from the Trojan battlefield; and of the very
+questionable dealings of Aphrodite with Helen and Paris.
+
+But to return to the story. Bel was, at first, excluded from the
+sacrifice as the author of all the mischief; which really was
+somewhat hard upon him, since the other gods agreed to his
+proposal. But eventually a reconciliation takes place; the great
+bow of Anu is displayed in the heavens; Bel agrees that he will
+be satisfied with what war, pestilence, famine, and wild beasts
+can do in the way of destroying men; and that, henceforward, he
+will not have recourse to extraordinary measures. Finally, it is
+Bel himself who, by way of making amends, transports Hasisadra,
+his wife, and the faithful Nes-Hea to the abode of the gods.
+
+It is as indubitable as it is incomprehensible to most of us,
+that, for thousands of years, a great people, quite as
+intelligent as we are, and living in as high a state of
+civilisation as that which had been attained in the greater part
+of Europe a few centuries ago, entertained not the slightest
+doubt that Anu, Bel, Ea, Istar, and the rest, were real
+personages, possessed of boundless powers for good and evil.
+The sincerity of the monarchs whose inscriptions gratefully
+attribute their victories to Merodach, or to Assur, is as little
+to be questioned as that of the authors of the hymns and
+penitential psalms which give full expression to the heights and
+depths of religious devotion. An "infidel" bold enough to deny
+the existence, or to doubt the influence, of these deities
+probably did not exist in all Mesopotamia; and even constructive
+rebellion against their authority was apt to end in the
+deprivation, not merely of the good name, but of the skin of the
+offender. The adherents of modern theological systems dismiss
+these objects of the love and fear of a hundred generations of
+their equals, offhand, as "gods of the heathen," mere creations
+of a wicked and idolatrous imagination; and, along with them,
+they disown, as senseless, the crude theology, with its gross
+anthropomorphism and its low ethical conception of the divinity,
+which satisfied the pious souls of Chaldaea.
+
+I imagine, though I do not presume to be sure, that any
+endeavour to save the intellectual and moral credit of Chaldaean
+religion, by suggesting the application to it of that universal
+solvent of absurdities, the allegorical method, would be
+scouted; I will not even suggest that any ingenuity can be equal
+to the discovery of the antitypes of the personifications
+effected by the religious imagination of later ages, in the
+triad Anu, Ea, and Bel, still less in Istar. Therefore, unless
+some plausible reconciliatory scheme should be propounded by a
+Neo-Chaldaean devotee (and, with Neo-Buddhists to the fore, this
+supposition is not so wild as it looks), I suppose the moderns
+will continue to smile, in a superior way, at the grievous
+absurdity of the polytheistic idolatry of these ancient people.
+
+It is probably a congenital absence of some faculty which I
+ought to possess which withholds me from adopting this summary
+procedure. But I am not ashamed to share David Hume's want of
+ability to discover that polytheism is, in itself, altogether
+absurd. If we are bound, or permitted, to judge the government
+of the world by human standards, it appears to me that
+directorates are proved, by familiar experience, to conduct the
+largest and the most complicated concerns quite as well as
+solitary despots. I have never been able to see why the
+hypothesis of a divine syndicate should be found guilty of
+innate absurdity. Those Assyrians, in particular, who held Assur
+to be the one supreme and creative deity, to whom all the other
+supernal powers were subordinate, might fairly ask that the
+essential difference between their system and that which obtains
+among the great majority of their modern theological critics
+should be demonstrated. In my apprehension, it is not the
+quantity, but the quality, of the persons, among whom the
+attributes of divinity are distributed, which is the serious
+matter. If the divine might is associated with no higher ethical
+attributes than those which obtain among ordinary men; if the
+divine intelligence is supposed to be so imperfect that it
+cannot foresee the consequences of its own contrivances; if the
+supernal powers can become furiously angry with the creatures of
+their omnipotence and, in their senseless wrath, destroy the
+innocent along with the guilty; or if they can show themselves
+to be as easily placated by presents and gross flattery as any
+oriental or occidental despot; if, in short, they are only
+stronger than mortal men and no better, as it must be admitted
+Hasisadra's deities proved themselves to be--then, surely, it is
+time for us to look somewhat closely into their credentials, and
+to accept none but conclusive evidence of their existence.
+
+To the majority of my respected contemporaries this reasoning
+will doubtless appear feeble, if not worse. However, to my mind,
+such are the only arguments by which the Chaldaean theology can
+be satisfactorily upset. So far from there being any ground for
+the belief that Ea, Anu, and Bel are, or ever were, real
+entities, it seems to me quite infinitely more probable that
+they are products of the religious imagination, such as are to
+be found everywhere and in all ages, so long as that imagination
+riots uncontrolled by scientific criticism.
+
+It is on these grounds that I venture, at the risk of being
+called an atheist by the ghosts of all the principals of all the
+colleges of Babylonia, or by their living successors among the
+Neo-Chaldaeans, if that sect should arise, to express my utter
+disbelief in the gods of Hasisadra. Hence, it follows, that I
+find Hasisadra's account of their share in his adventure
+incredible; and, as the physical details of the flood are
+inseparable from its theophanic accompaniments, and are
+guaranteed by the same authority, I must let them go with the
+rest. The consistency of such details with probability counts
+for nothing. The inhabitants of Chaldaea must always have been
+familiar with inundations; probably no generation failed to
+witness an inundation which rose unusually high, or was rendered
+serious by coincident atmospheric or other disturbances. And the
+memory of the general features of any exceptionally severe and
+devastating flood, would be preserved by popular tradition for
+long ages. What, then, could be more natural than that a
+Chaldaean poet should seek for the incidents of a great
+catastrophe among such phenomena? In what other way than by such
+an appeal to their experience could he so surely awaken in his
+audience the tragic pity and terror? What possible ground is
+there for insisting that he must have had some individual good
+in view, and that his history is historical, in the sense that
+the account of the effects of a hurricane in the Bay of Bengal,
+in the year 1875, is historical?
+
+
+More than three centuries after the time of Assurbanipal,
+Berosus of Babylon, born in the reign of Alexander the Great,
+wrote an account of the history of his country in Greek.
+The work of Berosus has vanished; but extracts from it--how far
+faithful is uncertain--have been preserved by later writers.
+Among these occurs the well-known story of the Deluge of
+Xisuthros, which is evidently built upon the same foundation as
+that of Hasisadra. The incidents of the divine warning, the
+building of the ship, the sending out of birds, the ascension of
+the hero, betray their common origin. But stories, like Madeira,
+acquire a heightened flavour with time and travel; and the
+version of Berosus is characterised by those circumstantial
+improbabilities which habitually gather round the legend of a
+legend. The later narrator knows the exact day of the month on
+which the flood began. The dimensions of the ship are stated
+with Munchausenian precision at five stadia by two--say, half by
+one-fifth of an English mile. The ship runs aground among the
+"Gordaean mountains" to the south of Lake Van, in Armenia,
+beyond the limits of any imaginable real inundation of the
+Euphrates valley; and, by way of climax, we have the assertion,
+worthy of the sailor who said that he had brought up one of
+Pharaoh's chariot wheels on the fluke of his anchor in the Red
+Sea, that pilgrims visited the locality and made amulets of the
+bitumen which they scraped off from the still extant remains of
+the mighty ship of Xisuthros.
+
+Suppose that some later polyhistor, as devoid of critical
+faculty as most of his tribe, had found the version of Berosus,
+as well as another much nearer the original story; that, having
+too much respect for his authorities to make up a <i>tertium
+quid</i> of his own, out of the materials offered, he followed a
+practice, common enough among ancient and, particularly, among
+Semitic historians, of dividing, both into fragments and piecing
+these together, without troubling himself very much about those
+resulting repetitions and inconsistencies; the product of such a
+primitive editorial operation would be a narrative analogous to
+that which treats of the Noachian deluge in the book of Genesis.
+For the Pentateuchal story is indubitably a patchwork, composed
+of fragments of at least two, different and partly discrepant,
+narratives, quilted together in such an inartistic fashion that
+the seams remain conspicuous. And, in the matter of
+circumstantial exaggeration, it in some respects excels even the
+second-hand legend of Berosus.
+
+There is a certain practicality about the notion of taking
+refuge from floods and storms in a ship provided with a
+steersman; but, surely, no one who had ever seen more water than
+he could wade through would dream of facing even a moderate
+breeze, in a huge three-storied coffer, or box, three hundred
+cubits long, fifty wide and thirty high, left to drift without
+rudder or pilot.<8> Not content with giving the exact year of
+Noah's age in which the flood began, the Pentateuchal story adds
+the month and the day of the month. It is the Deity himself who
+"shuts in" Noah. The modest week assigned to the full deluge in
+Hasisadra's story becomes forty days, in one of the Pentateuchal
+accounts, and a hundred and fifty in the other. The flood,
+which, in the version of Berosus, has grown so high as to cast
+the ship among the mountains of Armenia, is improved upon in the
+Hebrew account until it covers "all the high hills that were
+under the whole heaven"; and, when it begins to subside, the ark
+is left stranded on the summit of the highest peak, commonly
+identified with Ararat itself.
+
+While the details of Hasisadra's adventure are, at least,
+compatible with the physical conditions of the Euphrates valley,
+and, as we have seen, involve no catastrophe greater than such
+as might be brought under those conditions, many of the very
+precisely stated details of Noah's flood contradict some of the
+best established results of scientific inquiry.
+
+If it is certain that the alluvium of the Mesopotamian plain has
+been brought down by the Tigris and the Euphrates, then it is no
+less certain that the physical structure of the whole valley has
+persisted, without material modification, for many thousand
+years before the date assigned to the flood. If the summits,
+even of the moderately elevated ridges which immediately bound
+the valley, still more those of the Kurdish and Armenian
+mountains, were ever covered by water, for even forty days, that
+water must have extended over the whole earth. If the earth was
+thus covered, anywhere between 4000 and 5000 years ago, or, at
+any other time, since the higher terrestrial animals came into
+existence, they must have been destroyed from the whole face of
+it, as the Pentateuchal account declares they were three several
+times (Genesis vii. 21, 22, 23), in language which cannot be
+made more emphatic, or more solemn, than it is; and the present
+population must consist of the descendants of emigrants from the
+ark. And, if that is the case, then, as has often been pointed
+out, the sloths of the Brazilian forests, the kangaroos of
+Australia, the great tortoises of the Galapagos islands, must
+have respectively hobbled, hopped, and crawled over many
+thousand miles of land and sea from "Ararat" to their present
+habitations. Thus, the unquestionable facts of the geographical
+distribution of recent land animals, alone, form an insuperable
+obstacle to the acceptance of the assertion that the kinds of
+animals composing the present terrestrial fauna have been, at
+any time, universally destroyed in the way described in
+the Pentateuch.
+
+It is upon this and other unimpeachable grounds that, as I
+ventured to say some time ago, persons who are duly conversant
+with even the elements of natural science decline to take the
+Noachian deluge seriously; and that, as I also pointed out,
+candid theologians, who, without special scientific knowledge,
+have appreciated the weight of scientific arguments, have long
+since given it up. But, as Goethe has remarked, there is nothing
+more terrible than energetic ignorance;<9> and there are, even
+yet, very energetic people, who are neither candid, nor clear-
+headed, nor theologians, still less properly instructed in the
+elements of natural science, who make prodigious efforts to
+obscure the effect of these plain truths, and to conceal their
+real surrender of the historical character of Noah's deluge
+under cover of the smoke of a great discharge of
+pseudoscientific artillery. They seem to imagine that the proofs
+which abound in all parts of the world, of large oscillations of
+the relative level of land and sea, combined with the
+probability that, when the sea-level was rising, sudden
+incursions of the sea like that which broke in over Holland and
+formed the Zuyder Zee, may have often occurred, can be made to
+look like evidence that something that, by courtesy, might be
+called a general Deluge has really taken place. Their discursive
+energy drags misunderstood truth into their service; and "the
+glacial epoch" is as sure to crop up among them as King
+Charles's head in a famous memorial--with about as much
+appropriateness. The old story of the raised beach on Moel
+Tryfaen is trotted out; though, even if the facts are as yet
+rightly interpreted, there is not a shadow of evidence that the
+change of sea-level in that locality was sudden, or that glacial
+Welshmen would have known it was taking place.<10> Surely it is
+difficult to perceive the relevancy of bringing in something
+that happened in the glacial epoch (if it did happen) to account
+for the tradition of a flood in the Euphrates valley between
+2000 and 3000 B.C. But the date of the Noachian flood is solidly
+fixed by the sole authority for it; no shuffling of the
+chronological data will carry it so far back as 3000 B.C.;
+and the Hebrew epos agrees with the Chaldaean in placing it
+after the development of a somewhat advanced civilisation.
+The only authority for the Noachian deluge assures us that,
+before it visited the earth, Cain had built cities; Jubal had
+invented harps and organs; while mankind had advanced so far
+beyond the neolithic, nay even the bronze, stage that Tubal-cain
+was a worker in iron. Therefore, if the Noachian legend is to be
+taken for the history of an event which happened in the glacial
+epoch, we must revise our notions of pleistocene civilisation.
+On the other hand, if the Pentateuchal story only means
+something quite different, that happened somewhere else,
+thousands of years earlier, dressed up, what becomes of its
+credit as history? I wonder what would be said to a modern
+historian who asserted that Pekin was burnt down in 1886, and
+then tried to justify the assertion by adducing evidence of the
+Great Fire of London in 1666. Yet the attempt to save the credit
+of the Noachian story by reference to something which is
+supposed to have happened in the far north, in the glacial
+epoch, is far more preposterous.
+
+Moreover, these dust-raising dialecticians ignore some of the
+most important and well-known facts which bear upon the
+question. Anything more than a parochial acquaintance with
+physical geography and geology would suffice to remind its
+possessor that the Holy Land itself offers a standing protest
+against bringing such a deluge as that of Noah anywhere near it,
+either in historical times or in the course of that pleistocene
+period, of which the "great ice age" formed a part.
+
+Judaea and Galilee, Moab and Gilead, occupy part of that
+extensive tableland at the summit of the western boundary of the
+Euphrates valley, to which I have already referred. If that
+valley had ever been filled with water to a height sufficient,
+not indeed to cover a third of Ararat, in the north, or half of
+some of the mountains of the Persian frontier in the east, but
+to reach even four or five thousand feet, it must have stood
+over the Palestinian hog's back, and have filled, up to the
+brim, every depression on its surface. Therefore it could not
+have failed to fill that remarkable trench in which the Dead
+Sea, the Jordan, and the Sea of Galilee lie, and which is known
+as the "Jordan-Arabah" valley.
+
+This long and deep hollow extends more than 200 miles, from near
+the site of ancient Dan in the north, to the water-parting at
+the head of the Wady Arabah in the south; and its deepest part,
+at the bottom of the basin of the Dead Sea, lies 2500 feet below
+the surface of the adjacent Mediterranean. The lowest portion of
+the rim of the Jordan-Arabah valley is situated at the village
+of El Fuleh, 257 feet above the Mediterranean. Everywhere else
+the circumjacent heights rise to a very much greater altitude.
+Hence, of the water which stood over the Syrian tableland, when
+as much drained off as could run away, enough would remain to
+form a "Mere" without an outlet, 2757 feet deep, over the
+present site of the Dead Sea. From this time forth, the level of
+the Palestinian mere could be lowered only by evaporation. It is
+an extremely interesting fact, which has happily escaped capture
+for the purposes of the energetic misunderstanding, that the
+valley, at one time, was filled, certainly within 150 feet of
+this height--probably higher. And it is almost equally certain,
+that the time at which this great Jordan-Arabah mere reached its
+highest level coincides with the glacial epoch. But then the
+evidence which goes to prove this, also leads to the conclusion
+that this state of things obtained at a period considerably
+older than even 4000 B.C., when the world, according to the
+"Helps" (or shall we say "Hindrances") provided for the simple
+student of the Bible, was created; that it was not brought about
+by any diluvial catastrophe, but was the result of a change in
+the relative activities of certain natural operations which are
+quietly going on now; and that, since the level of the mere
+began to sink, many thousand years ago, no serious catastrophe
+of any description has affected the valley.
+
+The evidence that the Jordan-Arabah valley really was once
+filled with water, the surface of which reached within 160 feet
+of the level of the pass of Jezrael, and possibly stood higher,
+is this: Remains of alluvial strata, containing shells of the
+freshwater mollusks which still inhabit the valley, worn down
+into terraces by waves which long rippled at the same level, and
+furrowed by the channels excavated by modern rainfalls, have
+been found at the former height; and they are repeated, at
+intervals, lower down, until the Ghor, or plain of the Jordan,
+itself an alluvial deposit, is reached. These strata attain a
+considerable thickness; and they indicate that the epoch at
+which the freshwater mere of Palestine reached its highest level
+is extremely remote; that its diminution has taken place very
+slowly, and with periods of rest, during which the first formed
+deposits were cut down into terraces. This conclusion is
+strikingly borne out by other facts. A volcanic region stretches
+from Galilee to Gilead and the Hauran, on each side of the
+northern end of the valley. Some of the streams of basaltic lava
+which have been thrown out from its craters and clefts in times
+of which history has no record, have run athwart the course of
+the Jordan itself, or of that of some of its tributary streams.
+The lava streams, therefore, must be of later date than the
+depressions they fill. And yet, where they have thus temporarily
+dammed the Jordan and the Jermuk, these streams have had time to
+cut through the hard basalts and lay bare the beds, over which,
+before the lava streams invaded them, they flowed.
+
+In fact, the antiquity of the present Jordan-Arabah valley, as a
+hollow in a tableland, out of reach of the sea, and troubled by
+no diluvial or other disturbances, beyond the volcanic eruptions
+of Gilead and of Galilee, is vast, even as estimated by a
+geological standard. No marine deposits of later than miocene
+age occur in or about it; and there is every reason to believe
+that the Syro-Arabian plateau has been dry land, throughout the
+pliocene and later epochs, down to the present time.
+Raised beaches, containing recent shells, on the Levantine
+shores of the Mediterranean and on those of the Red Sea, testify
+to a geologically recent change of the sea level to the extent
+of 250 or 300 feet, probably produced by the slow elevation of
+the land; and, as I have already remarked, the alluvial plain of
+the Euphrates and Tigris appears to have been affected in the
+same way, though seemingly to a less extent. But of violent, or
+catastrophic, change there is no trace. Even the volcanic
+outbursts have flowed in even sheets over the old land surface;
+and the long lines of the horizontal terraces which remain,
+testify to the geological insignificance of such earthquakes as
+have taken place. It is, indeed, possible that the original
+formation of the valley may have been determined by the well-
+known fault, along which the western rocks are relatively
+depressed and the eastern elevated. But, whether that fault was
+effected slowly or quickly, and whenever it came into existence,
+the excavation of the valley to its present width, no less than
+the sculpturing of its steep walls and of the innumerable deep
+ravines which score them down to the very bottom, are
+indubitably due to the operation of rain and streams, during an
+enormous length of time, without interruption or disturbance of
+any magnitude. The alluvial deposits which have been mentioned
+are continued into the lateral ravines, and have more or less
+filled them. But, since the waters have been lowered, these
+deposits have been cut down to great depths, and are still being
+excavated by the present temporary, or permanent, streams.
+Hence, it follows, that all these ravines must have existed
+before the time at which the valley was occupied by the great
+mere. This fact acquires a peculiar importance when we proceed
+to consider the grounds for the conclusion that the old
+Palestinian mere attained its highest level in the cold period
+of the pleistocene epoch. It is well known that glaciers
+formerly came low down on the flanks of Lebanon and Antilebanon;
+indeed, the old moraines are the haunts of the few survivors of
+the famous cedars. This implies a perennial snowcap of great
+extent on Hermon; therefore, a vastly greater supply of water to
+the sources of the Jordan which rise on its flanks; and, in
+addition, such a total change in the general climate, that the
+innumerable Wadys, now traversed only by occasional storm
+torrents, must have been occupied by perennial streams. All this
+involves a lower annual temperature and a moist and rainy
+atmosphere. If such a change of meteorological conditions could
+be effected now, when the loss by evaporation from the surface
+of the Dead Sea salt-pan balances all the gain from the Jordan
+and other streams, the scale would be turned in the other
+direction. The waters of the Dead Sea would become diluted;
+its level would rise; it would cover, first the plain of the
+Jordan, then the lake of Galilee, then the middle Jordan between
+this lake and that of Huleh (the ancient Merom); and, finally,
+it would encroach, northwards, along the course of the upper
+Jordan, and, southwards, up the Wady Arabah, until it reached
+some 260 feet above the level of the Mediterranean, when it
+would attain a permanent level, by sending any superfluity
+through the pass of Jezrael to swell the waters of the Kishon,
+and flow thence into the Mediterranean.
+
+Reverse the process, in consequence of the excess of loss by
+evaporation over gain by inflow, which must have set in as the
+climate of Syria changed after the end of the pleistocene epoch,
+and (without taking into consideration any other circumstances)
+the present state of things must eventually be reached--a
+concentrated saline solution in the deepest part of the valley--
+water, rather more charged with saline matter than ordinary
+fresh water, in the lower Jordan and the lake of Galilee--fresh
+waters, still largely derived from the snows of Hermon, in the
+upper Jordan and in Lake Huleh. But, if the full state of the
+Jordan valley marks the glacial epoch, then it follows that the
+excavation of that valley by atmospheric agencies must have
+occupied an immense antecedent time--a large part, perhaps the
+whole, of the pliocene epoch; and we are thus forced to the
+conclusion that, since the miocene epoch, the physical
+conformation of the Holy Land has been substantially what it is
+now. It has been more or less rained upon, searched by
+earthquakes here and there, partially overflowed by lava
+streams, slowly raised (relatively to the sea-level) a few
+hundred feet. But there is not a shadow of ground for supposing
+that, throughout all this time, terrestrial animals have ceased
+to inhabit a large part of its surface; or that, in many parts,
+they have been, in any respect, incommoded by the changes which
+have taken place.
+
+The evidence of the general stability of the physical conditions
+of Western Asia, which is furnished by Palestine and by the
+Euphrates Valley, is only fortified if we extend our view
+northwards to the Black Sea and the Caspian. The Caspian is a
+sort of magnified replica of the Dead Sea. The bottom of the
+deepest part of this vast inland mere is about 3000 feet below
+the level of the Mediterranean, while its surface is lower by 85
+feet. At present, it is separated, on the west, by wide spaces
+of dry land from the Black Sea, which has the same height as the
+Mediterranean; and, on the east, from the Aral, 138 feet above
+that level. The waters of the Black Sea, now in communication
+with the Mediterranean by the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus, are
+salt, but become brackish northwards, where the rivers of the
+steppes pour in a great volume of fresh water. Those of the
+shallower northern half of the Caspian are similarly affected by
+the Volga and the Ural, while, in the shallow bays of the
+southern division, they become extremely saline in consequence
+of the intense evaporation. The Aral Sea, though supplied by the
+Jaxartes and the Oxus, has brackish water. There is evidence
+that, in the pliocene and pleistocene periods, to go no farther
+back, the strait of the Dardanelles did not exist, and that the
+vast area, from the valley of the Danube to that of the
+Jaxartes, was covered by brackish or, in some parts, fresh water
+to a height of at least 200 feet above the level of the
+Mediterranean. At the present time, the water-parting which
+separates the northern part of the basin of the Caspian from the
+vast plains traversed by the Tobol and the Obi, in their course
+to the Arctic Ocean, appears to be less than 200 feet above the
+latter. It would seem, therefore, to be very probable that,
+under the climatal conditions of part of the pleistocene period,
+the valley of the Obi played the same part in relation to the
+Ponto-Aralian sea, as that of the Kishon may have done to the
+great mere of the Jordan valley; and that the outflow formed the
+channel by which the well-known Arctic elements of the fauna of
+the Caspian entered it. For the fossil remains imbedded in the
+strata continuously deposited in the Aralo-Caspian area, since
+the latter end of the miocene epoch, show no sign that, from
+that time onward, it has ever been covered by sea water.
+Therefore, the supposition of a free inflow of the Arctic Ocean,
+which at one time was generally received, as well as that of
+various hypothetical deluges from that quarter, must be
+seriously questioned.
+
+The Caspian and the Aral stand in somewhat the same relation to
+the vast basin of dry land in which they lie, as the Dead Sea
+and the lake of Galilee to the Jordan valley. They are the
+remains of a vast, mostly brackish, mere, which has dried up in
+consequence of the excess of evaporation over supply, since the
+cold and damp climate of the pleistocene epoch gave place to the
+increasing dryness and great summer heats of Central Asia in
+more modern times. The desiccation of the Aralo-Caspian basin,
+which communicated with the Black Sea only by a comparatively
+narrow and shallow strait along the present valley of Manytsch,
+the bottom of which was less than 100 feet above the
+Mediterranean, must have been vastly aided by the erosion of the
+strait of the Dardanelles towards the end of the pleistocene
+epoch, or perhaps later. For the result of thus opening a
+passage for the waters of the Black Sea into the Mediterranean
+must have been the gradual lowering of its level to that of the
+latter sea. When this process had gone so far as to bring down
+the Black Sea water to within less than a hundred feet of its
+present level, the strait of Manytsch ceased to exist; and the
+vast body of fresh water brought down by the Danube, the
+Dnieper, the Don, and other South Russian rivers was cut off
+from the Caspian, and eventually delivered into the
+Mediterranean. Thus, there is as conclusive evidence as one can
+well hope to obtain in these matters, that, north of the
+Euphrates valley, the physical geography of an area as large as
+all Central Europe has remained essentially unchanged, from the
+miocene period down to our time; just as, to the west of the
+Euphrates valley, Palestine has exhibited a similar persistence
+of geographical type. To the south, the valley of the Nile tells
+exactly the same story. The holes bored by miocene mollusks in
+the cliffs east and west of Cairo bear witness that, in the
+miocene epoch, it contained an arm of the sea, the bottom of
+which has since been gradually filled up by the alluvium of the
+Nile, and elevated to its present position. But the higher parts
+of the Mokattam and of the desert about Ghizeh, have been dry
+land from that time to this. Too little is known of the geology
+of Persia, at present, to allow any positive conclusion to be
+enunciated. But, taking the name to indicate the whole
+continental mass of Iran, between the valleys of the Indus and
+the Euphrates, the supposition that its physical geography has
+remained unchanged for an immensely long period is hardly rash.
+The country is, in fact, an enormous basin, surrounded on all
+sides by a mountainous rim, and subdivided within by ridges into
+plateaus and hollows, the bottom of the deepest of which, in the
+province of Seistan, probably descends to the level of the
+Indian Ocean. These depressions are occupied by salt marshes and
+deserts, in which the waters of the streams which flow down the
+sides of the basin are now dissipated by evaporation. I am
+acquainted with no evidence that the present Iranian basin was
+ever occupied by the sea; but the accumulations of gravel over a
+great extent of its surface indicate long-continued water
+action. It is, therefore, a fair presumption that large lakes
+have covered much of its present deserts, and that they have
+dried up by the operation of the same changed climatal
+conditions as those which have reduced the Caspian and the Dead
+Sea to their present dimensions.<11>
+
+Thus it would seem that the Euphrates valley, the centre of the
+fabled Noachian deluge, is also the centre of a region covering
+some millions of square miles of the present continents of
+Europe, Asia, and Africa, in which all the facts, relevant to
+the argument, at present known, converge to the conclusion that,
+since the miocene epoch, the essential features of its physical
+geography have remained unchanged; that it has neither been
+depressed below the sea, nor swept by diluvial waters since that
+time; and that the Chaldaean version of the legend of a flood in
+the Euphrates valley is, of all those which are extant, the only
+one which is even consistent with probability, since it depicts
+a local inundation, not more severe than one which might be
+brought about by a concurrence of favourable conditions at the
+present day; and which might probably have been more easily
+effected when the Persian Gulf extended farther north.
+Hence, the recourse to the "glacial epoch" for some event which
+might colourably represent a flood, distinctly asserted by the
+only authority for it to have occurred in historical times, is
+peculiarly unfortunate. Even a Welsh antiquary might hesitate
+over the supposition that a tradition of the fate of Moel
+Tryfaen, in the glacial epoch, had furnished the basis of fact
+for a legend which arose among people whose own experience
+abundantly supplied them with the needful precedents.
+Moreover, if evidence of interchanges of land and sea are to be
+accepted as "confirmations" of Noah's deluge, there are plenty
+of sources for the tradition to be had much nearer than Wales.
+
+The depression now filled by the Red Sea, for example, appears
+to be, geologically, of very recent origin. The later deposits
+found on its shores, two or three hundred feet above the sea
+level, contain no remains older than those of the present fauna;
+while, as I have already mentioned, the valley of the adjacent
+delta of the Nile was a gulf of the sea in miocene times.
+But there is not a particle of evidence that the change of
+relative level which admitted the waters of the Indian Ocean
+between Arabia and Africa, took place any faster than that which
+is now going on in Greenland and Scandinavia, and which has left
+their inhabitants undisturbed. Even more remarkable changes were
+effected, towards the end of, or since, the glacial epoch, over
+the region now occupied by the Levantine Mediterranean and the
+AEgean Sea. The eastern coast region of Asia Minor, the western
+of Greece, and many of the intermediate islands, exhibit thick
+masses of stratified deposits of later tertiary age and of
+purely lacustrine characters; and it is remarkable that, on the
+south side of the island of Crete, such masses present steep
+cliffs facing the sea, so that the southern boundary of the lake
+in which they were formed must have been situated where the sea
+now flows. Indeed, there are valid reasons for the supposition
+that the dry land once extended far to the west of the present
+Levantine coast, and not improbably forced the Nile to seek an
+outlet to the north-east of its present delta--a possibility of
+no small importance in relation to certain puzzling facts in the
+geographical distribution of animals in this region. At any
+rate, continuous land joined Asia Minor with the Balkan
+peninsula; and its surface bore deep fresh-water lakes,
+apparently disconnected with the Ponto-Aralian sea. This state
+of things lasted long enough to allow of the formation of the
+thick lacustrine strata to which I have referred. I am not aware
+that there is the smallest ground for the assumption that the
+AEgean land was broken up in consequence of any of the
+"catastrophes" which are so commonly invoked.<12> For anything
+that appears to the contrary, the narrow, steep-sided, straits
+between the islands of the AEgean archipelago may have been
+originally brought about by ordinary atmospheric and stream
+action; and may then have been filled from the Mediterranean,
+during a slow submergence proceeding from the south northwards.
+The strait of the Dardanelles is bounded by undisturbed
+pleistocene strata forty feet thick, through which, to all
+appearance, the present passage has been quietly cut.
+
+That Olympus and Ossa were torn asunder and the waters of the
+Thessalian basin poured forth, is a very ancient notion, and an
+often cited "confirmation" of Deucalion's flood. It has not yet
+ceased to be in vogue, apparently because those who entertain it
+are not aware that modern geological investigation has
+conclusively proved that the gorge of the Penens is as typical
+an example of a valley of erosion as any to be seen in Auvergne
+or in Colorado.<13>
+
+Thus, in the immediate vicinity of the vast expanse of country
+which can be proved to have been untouched by any catastrophe
+before, during, and since the "glacial epoch," lie the great
+areas of the AEgean and the Red Sea, in which, during or since
+the glacial epoch, changes of the relative positions of land and
+sea have taken place, in comparison with which the submergence
+of Moel Tryfaen, with all Wales and Scotland to boot, does not
+come to much.
+
+What, then, is the relevancy of talk about the "glacial epoch"
+to the question of the historical veracity of the narrator of
+the story of the Noachian deluge? So far as my knowledge goes,
+there is not a particle of evidence that destructive inundations
+were more common, over the general surface of the earth, in the
+glacial epoch than they have been before or since. No doubt the
+fringe of an ice-covered region must be always liable to them;
+but, if we examine the records of such catastrophes in
+historical times, those produced in the deltas of great rivers,
+or in lowlands like Holland, by sudden floods, combined with
+gales of wind or with unusual tides, far excel all others.
+
+With respect to such inundations as are the consequences of
+earthquakes, and other slight movements of the crust of the
+earth, I have never heard of anything to show that they were
+more frequent and severer in the quaternary or tertiary epochs
+than they are now. In the discussion of these, as of all other
+geological problems, the appeal to needless catastrophes is born
+of that impatience of the slow and painful search after
+sufficient causes, in the ordinary course of nature, which is a
+temptation to all, though only energetic ignorance nowadays
+completely succumbs to it.
+
+
+POSTSCRIPT.
+
+My best thanks are due to Mr. Gladstone for his courteous
+withdrawal of one of the statements to which I have thought it
+needful to take exception. The familiarity with controversy, to
+which Mr. Gladstone alludes, will have accustomed him to the
+misadventures which arise when, as sometimes will happen in the
+heat of fence, the buttons come off the foils. I trust that any
+scratch which he may have received will heal as quickly as my
+own flesh wounds have done.
+
+
+A contribution to the last number of this Review (<i>The
+Nineteenth Century</i>) of a different order would be left
+unnoticed, were it not that my silence would convert me into an
+accessory to misrepresentations of a very grave character.
+However, I shall restrict myself to the barest possible
+statement of facts, leaving my readers to draw their
+own conclusions.
+
+In an article entitled "A Great Lesson," published in this
+Review for September, 1887:
+
+(1) The Duke of Argyll says the "overthrow of Darwin's
+speculations" (p. 301) concerning the origin of coral reefs,
+which he fancied had taken place, had been received by men of
+science "with a grudging silence as far as public discussion is
+concerned" (p. 301).
+
+The truth is that, as every one acquainted with the literature
+of the subject was well aware, the views supposed to have
+effected this overthrow had been fully and publicly discussed by
+Dana in the United States; by Geikie, Green, and Prestwich in
+this country; by Lapparent in France; and by Credner in Germany.
+
+(2) The Duke of Argyll says "that no serious reply has ever been
+attempted" (p. 305).
+
+The truth is that the highest living authority on the subject,
+Professor Dana, published a most weighty reply, two years before
+the Duke of Argyll committed himself to this statement.
+
+(3) The Duke of Argyll uses the preceding products of defective
+knowledge, multiplied by excessive imagination, to illustrate
+the manner in which "certain accepted opinions" established "a
+sort of Reign of Terror in their own behalf" (p. 307).
+
+The truth is that no plea, except that of total ignorance of the
+literature of the subject, can excuse the errors cited, and that
+the "Reign of Terror" is a purely subjective phenomenon.
+
+(4) The letter in "Nature" for the 17th of November, 1887, to
+which I am referred, contains neither substantiation, nor
+retractation, of statements 1 and 2. Nevertheless, it repeats
+number 3. The Duke of Argyll says of his article that it "has
+done what I intended it to do. It has called wide attention to
+the influence of mere authority in establishing erroneous
+theories and in retarding the progress of scientific truth."
+
+(5) The Duke of Argyll illustrates the influence of his
+fictitious "Reign of Terror" by the statement that Mr. John
+Murray "was strongly advised against the publication of his
+views in derogation of Darwin's long-accepted theory of the
+coral islands, and was actually induced to delay it for two
+years" (p.307). And in "Nature" for the l7th November, 1887, the
+Duke of Argyll states that he has seen a letter from Sir Wyville
+Thomson in which he "urged and almost insisted that Mr. Murray
+should withdraw the reading of his papers on the subject from
+the Royal Society of Edinburgh. This was in February, 1877."
+The next paragraph, however, contains the confession:
+"No special reason was assigned." The Duke of Argyll proceeds to
+give a speculative opinion that "Sir Wyville dreaded some injury
+to the scientific reputation of the body of which he was the
+chief." Truly, a very probable supposition; but as Sir Wyville
+Thomson's tendencies were notoriously anti-Darwinian, it does
+not appear to me to lend the slightest justification to the Duke
+of Argyll's insinuation that the Darwinian "terror" influenced
+him. However, the question was finally set at rest by a letter
+which appeared in "Nature" (29th of December, 1887), in which
+the writer says that:
+
+"talking with Sir Wyville about 'Murray's new theory,' I asked
+what objection he had to its being brought before the public?
+The answer simply was: he considered that the grounds of the
+theory had not, as yet, been sufficiently investigated or
+sufficiently corroborated, and that therefore any immature
+dogmatic publication of it would do less than little service
+either to science or to the author of the paper."
+
+Sir Wyville Thomson was an intimate friend of mine, and I am
+glad to have been afforded one more opportunity of clearing his
+character from the aspersions which have been so recklessly cast
+upon his good sense and his scientific honour.
+
+(6) As to the "overthrow" of Darwin's theory, which, according
+to the Duke of Argyll, was patent to every unprejudiced person
+four years ago, I have recently become acquainted with a work,
+in which a really competent authority,<14> thoroughly acquainted
+with all the new lights which have been thrown upon the subject
+during the last ten years, pronounces the judgment;
+firstly, that some of the facts brought forward by Messrs.
+Murray and Guppy against Darwin's theory are not facts;
+secondly, that the others are reconcilable with Darwin's theory;
+and, thirdly, that the theories of Messrs. Murray and Guppy "are
+contradicted by a series of important facts" (p. 13).
+
+Perhaps I had better draw attention to the circumstance that
+Dr. Langenbeck writes under shelter of the guns of the fortress
+of Strasburg; and may therefore be presumed to be unaffected by
+those dreams of a "Reign of Terror" which seem to disturb the
+peace of some of us in these islands (April, 1891).
+
+[See, on the subject of this note, the essay entitled "An
+Episcopal Trilogy" in the following volume.]
+
+
+FOOTNOTES
+
+(1) In May 1849 the Tigris at Bagdad rose 22-1/2 feet--5 feet
+above its usual rise--and nearly swept away the town. In 1831 a
+similarly exceptional flood did immense damage, destroying 7000
+houses. See Loftus, <i>Chaldea and Susiana,</i> p. 7.
+
+(2) See the instructive chapter on Hasisadra's flood in Suess,
+<i>Das Antlitz der Erde,</i> Abth. I. Only fifteen years ago a
+cyclone in the Bay of Bengal gave rise to a flood which covered
+3000 square miles of the delta of the Ganges, 3 to 45 feet deep,
+destroying 100,000 people, innumerable cattle, houses, and
+trees. It broke inland on the rising ground of Tipperah, and may
+have swept a vessel from the sea that far, though I do not know
+that it did.
+
+(3) See Cernik's maps in <i>Petermanns Mittheilungen,</i>
+Erganzungashefte 44 and 45, 1875-76.
+
+(4) I have not cited the dimensions given to the ships in most
+translations of the story, because there appears to be a doubt
+about them. Haupt (<i>Keilinschriftliche Sindfluth-Bericht,</i>
+p. 13) says that the figures are illegible.
+
+(5) It is probable that a slow movement of elevation of the land
+at one time contributed to the result--perhaps does so still.
+
+(6) At a comparatively recent period, the littoral margin of the
+Persian Gulf extended certainly 250 miles farther to the
+northwest than the present embouchure of the Shatt-el Arab.
+(Loftus, <i>Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society,</i>
+1853, p. 251.) The actual extent of the marine deposit inland
+cannot be defined, as it is covered by later
+fluviatile deposits.
+
+(7) Tiele (<i>Babylonisch-Assyrische Geschicthe,</i> pp. 572-3)
+has some very just remarks on this aspect of the epos.
+
+(8) In the second volume of the <i>History of the Euphrates,</i>
+p. 637 Col. Chesney gives a very interesting account of the
+simple and rapid manner in which the people about Tekrit and in
+the marshes of Lemlum construct large barges, and make them
+water-tight with bitumen. Doubtless the practice is extremely
+ancient and as Colonel Chesney suggests, may possibly have
+furnished the conception of Noah's ark. But it is one thing to
+build a barge 44ft. long by 11ft. wide and 4ft. deep in the way
+described; and another to get a vessel of ten times the
+dimensions, so constructed, to hold together.
+
+(9) "Es ist nichts schrecklicher als eine thatige Unwissenheit,"
+<i>Maximen und Reflexionen,</i> iii.
+
+(10) The well-known difficulties connected with this case have
+recently been carefully discussed by Mr. Bell in the
+<i>Transactions</i> of the Geological Society of Glasgow.
+
+(11) An instructive parallel is exhibited by the "Great Basin"
+of North America. See the remarkable memoir on <i>Lake
+Bonneville</i> by Mr. G. K. Gilbert, of the United States
+Geological Survey, just published.
+
+(12) It is true that earthquakes are common enough, but they
+are incompetent to produce such changes as those which have
+taken place.
+
+(13) See Teller, <i>Geologische Beschreibung des sud-ostlichen
+Thessalien;</i> Denkschriften d. Akademie der Wissenschaften,
+Wien, Bd. xl. p. 199.
+
+(14) Dr. Langenbeck, <i>Die Theorien uber die Entstehung der
+Korallen-Inseln und Korallen-Riffe</i> (p. 13), 1890.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Hasisadra's Adventure, by Huxley
+This is Essay #7 from "Science and Hebrew Tradition"
+
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